Monday, September 30, 2013

Clearance For Take Off--Our first trip as retirees in 2013...and a fisherman's wife lament

Due to circumstances we could have not dreamed of or wished on anyone, Chris and I are both retired now.  It’s all about the carpe diem and bucket list fulfillment and, in this vain, we wanted to explore the whole “open-ended” adventure—just take off with our trailer and go wherever we wanted without the constraints of having to go back to work.

The only extra consideration had to do with our beloved 9-year-old tiger-striped calico cat Shoppie who is totally in-door and, like most cats, not real tickled about any change.  We discussed different care methods and the money involved with boarding her made our decision for us.  Shoppie was to become a travelling cat!  We had taken a practice run to the coast for a week in March with mixed results—we had success using the sedative the vet gave us to help with the travelling panic part, but Shoppie stayed hidden most of the week and hardly ate, drank, or used her box.  Hmmm.  We decided to chance it and see how she did on our open-ended foray…and she ended up surprising us—not only adapting but seeming to enjoy all the variety of “kitty television”—Chris’ son Dustin’s term for the view out the window for cats—the trailer had to offer in various settings.

Eastern Oregon Fix, April 2013
(Chicahominy, Mann Lake, Page Springs, Krumbo Lake, Strawberry Mountains)

Well I’d like to say, “Wow, from start to finish, a fantastic trip!” But I’d be lying if I did.  Truth is, I discovered something about myself I’m not all that proud of—actually, it’s not like I just discovered it—it just became evident in a big way as our trip commenced this time:  I’ve become somewhat of an outdoor wimp.  Forget the Mount Hood climb in my 20’s, the back-packing I’ve done and hiking that I love to do.  If the weather sucks, I don’t care how great the fishing is, I’m not having a great time outside.

Okay, first off, a little vacation perspective Preuitt-style:  For me, it’s all about the weather, the peace, the beauty.  I can be anywhere reading a good book or walking, or just sitting and enjoying nature, if the weather isn’t brutal and the bugs are at a minimum; if there’s a boat involved, there are extra points for me because I love being on a boat.  For Chris, it’s all about the fishing—it doesn’t matter what the weather (rain, hail, wind, cold), if the fish are biting, he’s happy.  And, bless his heart, he has tried to share or pass on this passion to me—to the point that he ties on my hook, baits up my hook, makes most of the casts, takes care of and cleans the fish, and enthusiastically cheers me on when I have a fish on (on the plus side for him, he gets one more pole in the water with my fishing license).  There are times when I’ve been charged up (especially when there’s a boat involved), but mostly I want to get back to the quiet, the peace, and the beauty.  Which means, I actually enjoy the times when the fish aren’t biting (uh-oh, did I just hear the thunder and roar of the fishing gods smacking me down for even whispering this?).

So, I can read a book and do other stuff inside if needed—and I’ve done that—but this trip I wanted to make sure Chris got the filming he wanted.  I know how hard it is to try and film activities you’re doing yourself, so I felt compelled to accompany him--regardless of harsh weather--as he did his fishing thing.

Thurs., 4/18/13
We arrived in Chicahominy Thursday night, April 18th and the scene coming in was breath-taking.  The beauty of the lake, a spectacular sunset beginning, and evident walking paths everywhere—I got excited and thought, “Awesome!”  Then the wind picked up.  And then the cold (really cold) started in, and some rain began to fall.  And…of course…after setting up camp, we took off for some fishing!

But not to worry—Chris had devised a new way of fishing that I really took to in the cold and wind:  He got the poles all set up, we filmed a little, then ran back inside the cab of the truck to listen to books on tape while waiting for fish to bite.  Ahhhh, yes!!  Now we’re onto something!  And Chris was excited because he was catching some really nice Rainbow Trout.

Fri., 4/19/13
Chris got us up bright and early to go fishing and I bundled up (burrrrr!)—long underwear, pants, 3 tops plus an overcoat, hat, gloves, 3 pairs of socks—and I was still cold out in the wind (wind chill factor felt like about 10 degrees).  I was leaping into the truck after we did obligatory filming and fishing.  Thank goodness for the warm trailer.  Shoppie had the best plan—rolled up underneath the quilt on top of the bed.  I took a peak at her undercover and she looked at me like, “You better NOT ruin this for me!”

Chris’ buddy Steve Biddinger arrived that day and we visited in our trailer with him that evening before turning in with the plan for some early-morning fishing.

Sat., 4/20/13
Day 3 and it’s cold (really) and windy (really).  All the layering in the world didn’t help with 6 hours of fishing (6 a.m. to noon).  I had an excuse to make a trip back to camp and took my time—ran the heater full blast in the truck, then kinda lingered before heading back.  It took exactly 20 minutes before I was freezing again.

Okay, so at this point, I can detect all the fisherman types exclaiming, “Wow!  Worth all of that wind and cold—the fishing must’ve been great, huh?!!?  Talk about that, would you?”  I will.  Chris was catching some nice big trout (18” or so)—we ate some (yum!) and he did some excited catching and releasing along with those he kept.  His buddies Steve (Biddinger) and Steve (Fossholm—he and his wife Lori arrived Saturday) went out and had at them as well.

So here’s the thing I’ve learned about fishing people.  You’re probably wondering (as I do myself sometimes) why I even go along on these fishing trips.  It’s simple.   Most fishing people seem to seek out the best of places for reflection—the beautiful, peaceful and quiet spots.  They also seem to have figured out the aspect of life that many religious groups have been striving to achieve for centuries:  living in the moment—a kind of zen-like oneness with nature if you will.  It’s about what’s at the end of the line—the mystery, the surprise, the anticipation.  As meditators around the world strive to empty their minds of everything and focus on breathing in and breathing out, fishermen are already empty-headed (evidenced by the o-dark-thirty windy, cold attraction “thang”) and focused on catching and not catching fish.  Some of the most crazed of fishing peeps (Chris included) aren’t catching to eat the fish—Steve Fossholm doesn’t even like seafood!—No, no.  It’s worth getting up at crack-o’-dawn o-dark-thirty, and freezing in wind-chill 10 degree weather in order to catch fish to let them go…or keep them to maybe eat (or maybe not). I have failed to achieve that oneness as I still think “Okay, I’m pretty sure there’s a fish at the end of that line.”  Period.  The zen thing gets kind of muddied for me when I can’t feel my toes.  But if I want the perfect place to relax and enjoy the surroundings, I’ll keep coming along because I sure would hate to miss the good days.

And there were lots of those good weather days ahead, but I would not have known this by Day 5.  By Day 5 of the wind and the cold, I was ready to go into hair-styling or something—anything indoors—and those of you who really know me, know what a desperate time that was for me!  I had pretty much decided that cold and wind could easily be used as a torture device; any of my classified secrets would all have been shared by Day 5.

Luckily, the trailer was warm and the food was great.  We also had some fun shared times with the Steves and Lori, and eventually their buddy Dylan as well on the trailer (watching movies, laughing).

Sun., 4/21/13
Today Chris suggested I take a break from filming duties and relax on the trailer while he and the Steves battled the early cold to fish—yay!!  I burrowed under the covers with Shoppie (I really do think this cat has the right idea), read my book, and got dressed.  I saw Lori walking about and invited her in—we had a nice time, ate a little breakfast and both expressed our gratitude for not having to face the cold out there.  Once the wind died down, we took a walk-about on some of the paths.

The guys got back with not much of a fishing report (Steve F. caught one) and Chris and I did some walking around/filming after Chris helped Steve F. get his boat launched. 

Mon., 4/22/13
Chris came up with a side trip idea which was great, even though a flat tire sent us back to Burns for a couple of hours just a couple of miles away from our first destination.  We finally ventured into Yellow Jacket Lake (don’t be scared, it’s just a name) on brand new tires, which was beautiful--listened to books on tape, stopped by Moon Reservoir, then headed back to camp.  Chris was not impressed by the fishing at either spot, but we both enjoyed the drive.

Steve F.’s friend Dylan arrived, and Steve B. decided to head on down to Mann Lake.

We finished up with an evening of fishing and freezing our butts (but we did do the cab-style fishing method which took the edge off of that—whew!).

Tue., 4/23/13
Steve B. had invited us to come join him at Mann Lake and when Chris excitedly asked me about it, my first inclination was to decline and entertain indoor wind-free, chill-free activities (reading, writing, snuggling with Shoppie).  I’d been to Mann Lake when it was not fun (windy, cold) and frankly, to use a little fishing jargon here—I had limited out on the joys of that.  Nope—indoor sounded much better.

But then that nagging pull inside of me won over—what if Chris had the most exciting day ever and I wasn’t there to capture it on film?  Aghghghgh!!!  Off I went.

And my soul was restored for the effort.  It was a picture-perfect day, Steens Mountain was glorious—a filming mecca—beautiful!!  Steve and Chris caught some nice cutthroat trout and I got some great stuff on film (pelicans in flight, egrets, muskrats, etc.).  Not to mention, my legs and hands warmed up to normal outdoors—what a treat!

Renewed and happy with the turn in the weather, we returned back to camp and the evening fishing wasn’t torture for me—yay!!—it was actually pretty pleasant out there (no truck cab needed, thank you).

Wed., 4/24/13
Another beautiful day in store, and I got to hang with Lori—she and I did mellow nice-day stuff (chatted, walked around, read books) while Steve F. and Chris drove around scouting for elk.  When they got back I asked if they had seen any—nope.  “But,” Steve said, “I heard one—really close to where Chris was at—a great bugling!”  It turned out to be Chris—that guy!  Mr. Dances with Crows strikes again (his “animal talk” knows no bounds).

Chris and I did an evening at the ol’ “D” fishing spot again on the Chicahominy—were even able to sit out in our chairs—it was beautiful!  I’m thinking, “Wow, I could do this forever…”  But guess what happened?  The fish stopped biting.  Guess what that means?  Time to move on.  We had a nice last evening and prepared for leaving the next day.

Thurs., 4/25/13
We packed up and headed to Page Springs campground in Malheur (one of our favorite spots) for a change of fishing—uh—scenery!

First we had to tend to chores in Burns—doing laundry at the “Jiffy Wash”—quite the catchy little spot (dumpy little place on an unmarked corner—you have to ASK to find it), dumping the holding tanks, loading up with water, gas, and filling up the propane tanks…we also hit the library so that we could catch up on email and Facebook Scrabble games.  Then off we went.

Another gorgeous day—and Page Springs wasn’t crowded at all!  In fact, the best spot in the house as far as we are concerned (corner lot, secluded) was all ours.

Shoppie had traveled drug-free and took right to the new spot—she’s a bona fide camping cat now—woo-hoo!

Fri., 4/26/13
Malheur refuge has always been a favorite of mine.  There’s nothing more enjoyable than scouting along “Patrol Road”—a 10-mile dirt road through the refuge full of wildlife viewing—in the early morning and early evening when critters seem to be most active.  We did both runs today and enjoyed another glorious day.  We saw lots of antelope, 2 otters that we just missed on film (dang!), pheasant, deer, ducks, egrets, cranes, and some long-billed birds that stopped us several times.  It’s fun to be driving along and suddenly one of us gasps—oh!  And the brakes slam on, cameras come out, excitement ensues.  Great fun.

We hiked up into the hills looking for Indian artifacts and ended up running into a different kind of artifact spot—some kind of mining camp with old bottles and jars (one was an old Listerine bottle from about 60 years ago—kinda cool).  When we got back to camp, we interviewed our neighbors, Steve and Sharon, who had a really interesting military-looking rig that they used to camp in.  Turns out they bought it from a Dutch couple and had quite the adventure (went to the arctic circle, South America and all over the place—lots of stories to tell).  Fascinating!

Beautiful water spots have a way of attracting the mosquitos which definitely come out in full force in the evenings.  I got to test out the Listerine bug repellant theory that my Dad and others had suggested—worked really well but got rather sticky.  I became slayer-of-the-winged beasts in the trailer—hey, so call me territorial!  And poor Shoppie thought I was somehow scolding her every time I slapped my hands together to mutilate one of the pests but over time she got used to it—“Oh, just Mom being weird again.”  And on one occasion she actually double-teamed with me—swatted one down on the table and I finished her off (Chris was quick to remind me that the biting ones are the females—I had other female-like names for them as I avenged their intrusions into our trailer).

A word about Mr. Preuitt and bugs.  He is NOT affected whatsoever—like his Mom, they have tough skin that I guess protects from all kinds of atrocities that seem to find their way to me and make my life miserable.  Chris can leap into a wad of Poison Oak and not even itch; mosquitos hover around but don’t bite him.  I’ll be slapping away and miserable and he’s simply flicking fingers to get them out of his vision or to keep their wings from tickling.  I’m not the only who has witnessed this.  Just ask Steve B. about Big (he calls it—with no apparent affection—“Bug”) Lake in Alaska.  Chris came back unscathed; Steve welted up and sprayed up from then on.  I’m not fond of Deet and poisoning myself which is why the Listerine attracted me…it allows me to be “like Chris”—they hover but don’t bite (except for the parts I didn’t get sprayed/doused—dang!).  Chris doesn’t understand quite what all the fuss is about and just looks at me with disbelief as I slap, smack, and flail about ridding myself of those pests.

The Listerine allowed me to be somewhat composed outside, but I was relieved to be back on the trailer during evening “feeding times”.  We supped well (as always), played with the cat, and watched a movie…toughing it out as usual!

Sat., 4/27/13
Today’s opening day at Krumbo Reservoir—one of Chris’ big goals—and we headed out at o-dark-thirty (well, 5:30) and ended up LATE—people were out on the lake in their boats already and the parking lot was packed—so we got set up quickly on the bank (tried higher up at first but clambering down and up the rocks was a bit much) and wow—never better fishing—bang! Bang! Bang!  Chris was thrilled and it was a busy, busy time—great opening day—never had time to drink our coffee—caught 15 fish, kept 4 and Chris (yes, Chris) was DONE after 2 ½ hours.  Double WOW.

We then had time to kill and Chris once again had eyes for the weird and made us a fun couple of hours in the desert crafting some art-in-nature rock gargoyles.  Gotta love that guy!!  He busied about gathering rocks (for eyes and teeth), sage and shrub for eybrows, etc., to enhance some already oddly-shaped rocks into his “masterpieces”.  We filmed them out, naturally, and I realized another reason why I married this man—he’s nuts!  I love it!

We listened to our book and napped back at camp before hitting Patrol Road once again.  Amazing weather again—verrrrrry relaxing.

Chris decided we should do some “interviewing” in our camp chairs, so I took the on-camera opportunity to show how one lathers up with Listerine.  Chris’ eyes about rolled out of their sockets from eye-rolling.  Poor guy—what he has to put up with—hah!!

Sun., 4/28/13
Of course, after the success on opening day (yesterday), Krumbo was calling Mr. Preuitt for more fishing—as it turned out, it was not so hot and Chris then lost his pole.  The fish swam off with it and then began jumping out a way’s from us—Chris cast out and was at least able to catch and free the fish, but alas, his pole didn’t make it back.

We took our time getting back to base and then took off on a nature trail up through some really pretty forest, then into the sage brush.  On top, it looked like there was another trail heading back, so we started on it, only to realize it was a cattle trail…

At the top of the ridge, we could see the Steens Loop Road, so we headed across the windy “savannah” of sage brush to take the road back to camp.  Well, that was the plan and that’s the one I stuck to.  Chris had other “short cut” ideas and I had been on enough of his “short cuts” to opt out of it.  He ended up on top of the cliffs overlooking our camp site—and I could see him up there when I got back to base.  He scared the poop out of me because it looked like he was going to scale down the cliff, but I guess he was just hamming it up for the camera.  Oh well—I was pretty miffed with him for that, but I got over it.  And he was thrilled—got his adventure of the day in.

Had some more good eats for supper and turned in kinda early with a comedy DVD—and were pretty sure we’d be packing up to go to our next destination (the mountains) in the morning.

Mon., 4/29/13
With morning came a turn in the weather and we opted to stay another day and relax—to see what the weather brought.  We talked of playing Scrabble and such as we made our lazy way through the morning Patrol run after breakfast. 

By the time we got back to camp, I was entertaining notions of book-reading, writing, and taking a shower.  That’s how I relax.  Here’s how Chris relaxes:  about 2 minutes after we got back to base, he announced, “You know, I’m thinking of doing something really stupid.”  Uh-oh.  “Yes, I believe I’m going to go fish for my lost fishing pole.”  So off he went. 

I stayed with Shoppie, took care of some cleaning chores (around the trailer and for me), read, filmed a little, wrote, drank tea, sat and enjoyed the weather.  And…with the slightly chillier & breezier weather, I could actually sit outside bug-free—wee-hawww!!

Chris had himself an adventure and a rip-snorting time fishing.  He had Krumbo to himself and the fishing was absolutely hot—he’s pretty sure he had that 24”-er hooked but it snapped his line—he had the time of his life.  He also had quite the story on the fishing pole—he caught a fish and as he was reeling it in saw another line attached—could it be his fishing rod?  Then a flasher and some other gear appeared—he pulled in someone ELSE’s other line…!!  On the way back, he stopped at another junk pile and brought back 2 more old jars.  Only sour note—the refrigerator appeared to be having issues and we thought we might have to change our plans.  So goes RVing sometimes…things can come up unexpectedly like that.

Tue., 4/30/13
Our 14th wedding anniversary today (18th year of being together) and my 53rd birthday.  We celebrated in the usual way—hugged each other.  We agreed that my present to him would be to film him catching the 24-incher and his to me to play some Scrabble or Cribbage.

But then we got into messing with the frig again—hoping to figure out a way to make it work.  It may mean going to Bend (where there are RV places) and figuring out something from there once it’s fixed.  Wait—a “reboot” (off/on) and it appears to be working—yay!

We had breakfast and off to original plans—off to fish (Chris) and film (me)—of course!!

How do I love thee?  Let me count thy ways.  For starters, it was 28 degrees in Burns at about 7:00 a.m., so about that at camp (though we were plenty warm while on the trailer!).  I’m wearing the usual 3 pairs of socks, 3 shirts with coat over, long johns & jeans on the legs.  We got to the fishing spot and Chris had caught a fish by 9:00 a.m.  He wanted to film us arriving at the spot, so I went ahead with the camera, down the rocks, set up the camera, hit record, clambered back up with my armload of stuff, then we went down as though we had professionals filming us…thus it goes for amateurs on a fixed income.  I have a book to read, coffee to drink, and Chris even brought in a chair for me since it’s my birthday—no sitting on cold rocks this morning—yay!!

With no wind and the sun out, it’s really not bad and it’s an absolutely gorgeous day—nice, quiet, peaceful here (and no bugs so far—weee!).  Chris is predicting we’ll be sorry we have our long johns on later in the day.  I beg to differ, but we’ll see.  I don’t mean to work against the guy, but when the fishing’s not so great, I do get more relaxed reading time.  Just sayin’.  So when he says, “Well, it’s not looking too good right now,”—this from a man who estimates that he’s caught about 30 good-sized (over 16”) trout out of Krumbo so far—I’m enjoying the peace.  Right now, no bites…sunshine sparkling on the water, sun’s out, geese and other birds are making their sounds (some are songs, others are squawks).

I mellowed right out and the fishing was good too—we were both happy (Happy Anniversary!)—Chris caught about a dozen good ones, then landed one over 20 inches after it crossed his line and picked up some OTHER gear once again (a new-found talent of his).  At 11:00, we decided we’d “hang” a little longer.  Sun shining, a beautiful day, great book, can’t complain!

Chris wanted to move to the dock where a buddy’s father had fished for 20 years—he caught a fish there for his memory.  Then upon reeling up his last line, the 2-footer he was after followed his line all the way up to the dock!  This just made him laugh—a good cap on the day.

We ran the Patrol road (slow way back) and saw the group of 10 deer we’ve been spotting but no otters (we kept hoping to see them again).  Gassed up in Frenchglen, then snacked, played Scrabble, called my Mom & Dad, then sister Kris, ate dinner, watched Jeopardy/Wheel of Fortune, played more Scrabble, watched more stuff, and played with Shoppie.  All in all, a perfect day.  Oh yeah…and I won the last 2 Scrabble games—woo-hoo!!

Wed., 5/1/13
Another beautiful day but we’ve decided to head over the mountains for a spell before heading home.  Had an incident with shifting as Chris was cranking down the trailer and poor Shoppie thought we were having an earthquake—I found her hiding in the bathtub with huge black eyes, looking at me as if to say, “The world as we know it is over!”  I put her in the carrier and up in the truck cab and she seemed to calm down quite a bit.

On to Burns to gas up and dump, then on up north (395) south of Seneca to the Silvies River—took a break at a campsite to practice with Shoppie (for longer journeys, she’s going to need to “take breaks”)—played Cribbage and she ran around the trailer. 

Found a glorious camp spot right on the Silvies and then took a walk—saw a deer cross the river, ducks, geese—but no turkeys (Chris has a turkey tag in case).  No fish are biting either but it was still a beautiful spot.  Having ribs for dinner (zucchinis, onion, potato mix, and salad)—yum!  Entertaining ourselves with DVD’s tonight—no Satellite—we’ll have to survive somehow.  J

Thur., 5/2/13
Something to make us all feel better about aging:  Think of all the activities you would miss out on in life if you never lost or misplaced things.  Rather than dwell on what’s being forgotten, think of how finely tuned our synapses are becoming as we wrack our brains to figure out the where’s and the when’s—and then the physical fitness as we retrace our steps!

I’m pondering these things today because we seemed to have hit the Twilight Zone vortex with bad “sunglass karma” events.  If we had been paying attention, we would have realized that yesterday had provided some foreshadowing when I backed up and crunched a pair of my sunglasses on the trailer during our Burns gas-up stop.  A dreaded sound—Crunch!—but not to worry!  I wasn’t a Girl Scout in my day for nothing!  I was prepared—I had my handy-dandy 2nd pair—a fine polarized special hiking pair that I had come to love on this trip.

So, imagine my Girl-Scout-preparedness smugness as Chris dealt with his own sunglass karma later in the day.  He managed to lose his sunglasses on the hike we took once we set up camp, and we had to backtrack until we found them—whew!  Okay.  Then we were back at camp and he once again didn’t have his beloved pair of sunglasses—wow!!  We looked everywhere—must’ve been on the hike—too late to go looking for them now—he had to squint and I felt sorry for him but also felt that bit of smugness by the fact that I had MY pair.  Chris did manage to find a cheapo not-so-hot backup pair so he made do, but we decided to look for his main pair the following day… 

And that brings us to today.  Okay.  Cold morning—so cold, our wet socks had frozen solid on the bushes where we’d put them to dry (why were they wet?—Preuitt short-cut through the creek yesterday, naturally).  After breakfast, we prepared to take that walk to find his sunglasses. 

While gathering my stuff together to hike, I went to get MY sunglasses in their usual spot by the couch—not there.  No problem, I probably just stuck them in my purse—my other usual spot.  Not there either.  Okay, they’ve GOT to be here somewhere—dropped?  Nope.  Under the couch?  Nope.  By the river where we sat last night?  Nope.  Hmmmm---now the hunt was on in camp.  Finally, we gave up on my missing sunglasses and decided to go ahead and look for Chris’ lost pair—that way, at least we’d have 1 pair each. 

We were not holding our breath on the success of this venture but off we went nonetheless.  Halfway to our turn-around spot from yesterday—Voila!—found ‘em right there on the path!!  Okay!  Now all that’s left is the trailer/camp hunt for my pair.

We exhausted all places that we could think of—even searched the garbage—nope!  Finally—as I was looking around the bed, I noticed that Chris’ side had extra space between the mattress and dresser that my side didn’t.  Upon pushing the mattress towards his side to allow for more space on my side, the glasses popped out.  Woo-hoooo! 

All the excitement and happiness was ours to be had after that—we were full of ecstatic cheering over wasted hours of looking and hair-pulling—amazing huh?  And it gave us such a sense of accomplishment which, if we really examined it closer, we’d have realized that there was no great progress because we were at the same point we were before the loss.  Oh well.  We’re adults.  We can take this.  Onward we go.

We broke camp and made our way to Detroit Lake for our final night.  We had a fun drive (book-on-tape company, of course), and Chris spotted an odd exchange between a farmer on a tractor and a crow—it appeared to him that they were playing a game they played often, like they were “buds”—the crow swooped down like he wanted to take the farmer’s hat off and the farmer swatted and laughed at him—they did this ritual as if they did it often.

Detroit Lake was packed—not the serenity that we had been used to, but we made the most of it.  With full hookups, you relax a little more (no generator needed, water abundant), so we hooked up, and went to the dock to fish (of course!) and reflect on the trip.

We agreed that we were ready to return home the next day, but it had been a really great trip.  Chris likes to point out that you take pleasures in the small things (must be that fisherman zen-like thing), and I have to agree there.  We came back to mounds of mail and email and Facebook posts and it makes you realize how subtly complicated life is on a daily basis—stuff we all take for granted anymore.  If it takes “empty-headedness” to feel this relaxed and recharged after being so disconnected, then so be it.

Preparing for the next Take-Off, Captain!


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