My Quality Revealed

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Royalty.

Yours truly.

No, seriously.

And I don’t mean royalty like that Johnny-come-lately Windsor crew. I’m talking about a divine right stretching back to the dim and darkly days when the dapper Duke of Cambridge’s clan wore mostly dirt and ate boiled peat for breakfast, lunch and tiffin. But hey, I’m not here to run down my noble cousins.

That would be common.

I’m here to talk about the social media’s awesome ability to socially elevate. Sure, I’m an extreme case, but several other examples pompously strode across my Facebook wall this month, each instructive of how reg’lar folk can exploit the reality-altering power of the Internet to raise themselves above the common swamp and achieve a mossy perch of marginal respectability.

Case in point:

asparagus-finger-sandwiches-R081990-ssA few weeks ago, Linda Morris posted a photograph of, and link to, a fancy-pants “tea sandwich” recipe. They’re dainty little morsels, full of hifalutin ingredients like Persian cucumbers, chopped scallions, and a cheese that has, if I understand correctly, been “creamed” in some way. Thing is, I’ve learned through semi-reliable channels that Linda subsists almost exclusively on a diet of Slim Jims, Pringles and Mountain Dew. And yet, in a stroke, she’s now perceived in more credulous circles as a woman of taste and refinement. I downloaded the recipe because it looks like the sort of thing that hereditary kings probably eat a lot of.

Without the crusts.

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Tom Carby raised his public stock by sweatier means, posting this self-congratulatory notice on Apr. 10: “This is the 100th day of 2012. I completed my 10,000th pushup today. 100 pushups a day for 100 days. What’s next?”

Surgery would be my guess, but you can see how Tom, who once refused to get up off his La-Z-Boy and open the door for the Publishers Clearing House Prize Patrol because “I just got comfortable”, has, with a few keystrokes, turned a dreary exercise regimen into a solid cyber-reputation for physical prowess. Of course, once I assume my rightful place atop society’s Olympus, I’ll doubtless have people to do my pushups for me.

You know – little people.

On the other hand, while a fitness cred might evoke a certain grudging deference from Buchanan’s stationary-bike crowd, it won’t cut much ice with the pomegranite-martini-and-brie-brouchee brigade down Gotham-way. That’s probably why John Steinle shunned gym shorts in favor of a smart blue double-breasted with gold piping and two shiny rows of brass. No, he didn’t dress up as Cap’n Crunch, but that was a good guess. He was impersonating Capt. Edward Smith, by which artifice he secured a berth at the Molly Brown House Titanic Dinner and Gala at the Oxford Hotel.

10418597-captain-edward-smithImplausible? Not at all. Consider – Capt. Smith had a beard and mustache; John has a beard and mustache. Smith was born in on Jan. 27, 1850, in Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent, England; John was also born. Capt. Smith’s last words are purportly “Be British”; The last words John said to me were “be quiet.” A masterful illusion, and by posting a photograph of himself in the guise of the unfortunate ship’s unfortunate skipper, John has achieved a new and superior social status by virtue of contrived association. Good show! But you may be wondering what all that has to do with my own claim to majesty.

Not as much as you’d think.

Late last month, Kayte Christopher-Walker posted a simple diagram professing to describe the three most common types of human toe arrangement – Greek, Roman and Egyptian. It came as quite a revelation, as I had not previously imagined that somebody might take the time and effort to codify such information.

“Did I really just pull my sock off to find out which way my toes are aligned?” Kayte wrote. Of course she did, and I did too. When Socrates said “know thyself,” he appended no exemption of the pedal extremities. Meticulous examination reveal my toes to be an artistic blending of the blunt Roman and tapering Egyptian styles. The conclusion is as obvious as it is inescapable – I am directly descended from a heretofore unidentified love-child of well-heeled Roman general Mark Antony and Cleopatra VII Philopater, the last of Egypt’s cash-flush Ptolemy line. I’ve checked my findings twice, on both feet, and there can be no mistake.

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It’s science.

 

 

The way I’ve got it figured, I’m entitled to either a triumphal arch on the Piazza del Popolo and my own province (Calabria or better), or else clear title to Alexandria. Either way, as soon as I submit my evidence to the proper agencies, I don’t expect you’ll be detecting my haunting fragrance behind you at the supermarket checkout anymore because I’ll be reclining on a silk divan in my Mamluk palace nibbling crust-less tea sandwiches and seeing to it that my valet de chambre does at least 100 power-crunches a day.

For my fitness cred.

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Why Don’t You Never Call?

Try to follow along: Mr. and Mrs. A, a middle-aged couple, have been renting a cabin from the kindly Ms. B, a lady in her 60s. Mr. A recently left his wife and installed himself in the manor house with Ms. B. On May 3, a harried Ms. B summoned sheriff’s deputies to her South Turkey Creek Road address because Mrs. A has been burning her telephone down to the jack looking for Mr. A. In her complaint, Ms. B said that Mrs. A had called her at least 20 times just that day, leaving annoying messages ranging from pleas to talk to her husband, to lamenting that she no longer rings her sweetheart’s bell, to protesting that Ms. B’s relationship with Mr. A is too chummy by half. Ms. B said she doesn’t mind Mrs. A phoning, but felt some restraint was in order. When confronted, a well-oiled Mrs. A angrily howled that her absent husband and “best friend” never return her calls, except for the several messages they’d left her at about 9 o’clock that very morning, which was entirely too early because she “doesn’t function well” at that hour. When the officer explained that Mr. A and Ms. B didn’t want her calling so often, Mrs. A became incensed and vowed never to call either of them again. Her husband and best friend said they’d try to adjust.

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Joining the Movement

 

Ahh, Nature!

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Colorado is certainly blessed with a generous portion of it, plus a goodly share of hardy folk who embrace its primitive charms. Unfortunately, the armies of avid outdoor enthusiasts answering the siren call of Nature’s scenic bounty must also heed a call more urgent, though decidedly less agreeable, and too often heap malodorous indignities upon the very Eden they’ve come to exalt.

bearPoopWe’re talking about poop, of course, and pee, and the astonishing quantities of both that are deposited each year at Nature’s most popular franchises. Because the least trammeled localities are rarely provided with even primitive public conveniences, most hikers’ burdens wind up in a shallow grave or simply dropped onto the forest’s green carpet behind a likely rock or bush. Either way, out of sight doesn’t necessarily mean out of mind, and busy trail heads and inviting arbors can quickly become noxious mine fields thickly strewn with pungent ordnance. Must it always be thus? Not if Lara Usinowicz can help it.

restopPeeA devoted mountain-biker who’s seen Colorado from atop all of its 14ers, Evergreen resident Usinowicz has wrinkled her nose at many an improvised wilderness latrine, so when she learned that a California company was looking for a motivated individual to market its portable powder rooms to the tent-and-trail-mix set, she didn’t piddle around.

“It just sounded like me, so I went for it,” she says. Today, Usinowicz is the main pipeline for Restop portable human waste disposal pouches to nature-lovers the world over. “I’m a believer,” she smiles, “but then you really have to be. I’ll never become a billionaire selling poop bags.”

foxpoopBy “poop-bag,” Usinowicz means Restop’s tidy Wilderness Waste Containment Pouch, a five-pack of feather-light, wafer-thin, tough-as-nails, sacks-within-sacks that can accept the most charitable donations without complaint and tightly confine their cargo’s scent and substance till trail’s end. Each landfill-friendly unit comes with toilet paper, an antiseptic wipe and a measure of hungry enzymes that get nature’s recycling work off to a brisk start.

restopPoopbagNumber 2, though, is but a single part of the dietary equation and with chocolate must come lemonade, for which Usinowicz recommends Restop 1. A durable, unisex plastic pouch designed with a one-way internal spout and ample 20-ounce capacity, Restop 1 contains both enzymes and a space-age powdered polymer that instantly transforms Number 1 into a thick gel that couldn’t escape into one’s socks and map-kit even if given the chance.

As remarkable as they sound, Restop’s products aren’t new, and for nearly 20 years the company has sold them by the boxcar load to the military and various utility-related industries where employees routinely find themselves up a figurative creek with neither pot nor window. By hiring Usinowicz, Restop hopes to bring their expedient effluent-management systems to a leisure market that badly needs them.

“They wanted to base their wilderness-marketing in Colorado because there’s so much outdoor activity here,” Usinowicz says. “500,000 people hike the 14ers per year, and Fruita has become a mountain-biking Mecca. All of these areas are impacted by human waste.”

deerpoopSo far, her biggest clients are raft companies, particularly those plying the mighty Arkansas. “The Arkansas River is the most commercially-rafted in the world,” Usinowicz says, “and in a canyon on the river there’s just no place to go.” Given the greater payload possible aboard an inflatable boat, rafters are able to enjoy two other Restop products – a small plastic stool upon where one can perch and take ease, and a pop-up privacy tent for shrinking violets that become self-conscious when defecating before an audience. “They’re just more convenient if you have the space and don’t care about a little extra weight.”

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More than one skeptic has suggested to Usinowicz that, because all manner of woodland creatures are wont to loose their bowels upon the virgin land, humans should do no less, an argument she rejects out of hand. “The human diet is full of chemicals, preservatives and a lot of other things that wild animals don’t eat,” she says. “If bears dig through our garbage and eat our trash, I think they should pack out their waste, too.”

While Usinowicz freely admits that, across most of Colorado’s vast wild lands, a few pounds of people-scat aren’t apt to upset nature’s perfect balance. At dozens of the state’s heavily-trafficked areas, however, even the time-honored expedient of excavating a small “cat-hole” in which to bury one’s depleted rations is no longer practical.

“The Chicago Basin is horrendous,” Usinowicz says. “You can’t dig a hole anywhere without digging up somebody else’s waste.”

Several national parks and wilderness areas now recommend – some even require – that all hikers and campers carry sufficient waste containment pouches to supply their back-country itinerary. While that’s good for business, Usinowicz believes that anyone who enjoys vacationing in a pristine wilderness should accept some responsibility for keeping it that way.

restop%20004“I like to think I’m helping them do that,” she says, flashing a here-it-comes grin. “I’m saving the world one poop at a time.”

 

If it’s Death, say I’m not here

At about 9:30 p.m. on April 12, a very upset Kerr Gulch Road resident called JCSO dispatch after receiving a sinister phone call. According to the woman’s statement, an anonymous female caller decreed “you’ll die in seven days” and hung up. Lacking caller ID, the woman asked Verizon to provide her prescient caller’s phone number, but was advised that she’d need an attorney to obtain that information. The incident had upset her so because, in 2007, someone left her a message saying “I hate you, I’m going to steal your stuff and kill you.” Then, during a snow storm last winter, a strange woman had appeared at her door asking for a ride to a gas station. Instead, the resident helpfully dialed a number the mysterious visitor provided and told the man who answered that his friend needed a lift. Rather than rushing to aid his lady-friend, the man cursed at the homeowner and suggested that she “just give her a ride.” When she refused and hung up, the man called back and demanded she put the stranded woman on the line, which she didn’t. Given that history of weirdness, the complainant hoped that JCSO could help. The officer promised to arrange an extra patrol for her neighborhood.

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Sighs Didn’t Matter

While parked along eastbound Interstate 70 at Floyd Hill at about noon on March 21, a radar-equipped JCSO deputy clocked a sharp, Pontiac G6 with four occupants hurtling toward Denver at a blistering 103 mph. Lights flashing and siren wailing, the officer pursued the speeding rental nearly to El Rancho, giving him a chance to appreciate his quarry’s highly developed tail-gating and crowd-weaving skills. Identified by his foreign drivers license and passport as a 20-year-old citizen of the Republic of Chile, the driver assumed “a look of despair” and “sighed deeply” when the deputy handed him summons for reckless driving and told him he’d need to appear in court in May. He would be back in Chile by the end of March, he explained, with some passion. Even at 103 mph, the 5,000-mile trip to Golden would take at least five full days driving. Standing firm before the young man’s heart-wrenching supplications, the officer explained that, should he fail to appear in court, a warrant would be issued for his arrest and he could say adios to any hope of getting another U.S. visa. Since he’s already arranged for a stateside job next year, the man at last gave in and promised to get square with the county.

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