ClimbingSky

Why Baseball, Books, and the Grateful Dead matter


DAILY BLOG

  • Throwback Thursdays” at ClimbingSky feature posts I wrote over a 15 year period for various blogs. This was first posted on January 29, 2011 There is a peculiar irony that this poem about a famous poet’s death was written by a poet who died so anonymously that his body was not found for several days… Read more

  • The Need for Speed in 2025

    Writing this as I am in late June, I am merely guessing at the direction my Local Nine, the Minnesota Twins, have gone. I suspect though it has not been pretty. The Twins in late June are considered the slowest team in the Major Leagues. With the exception of Byron Buxton and Harrison Bader the… Read more

  • Literary Coffee Invasion

    Mayor Orden looked at his watch and when Joseph came in, carrying a small cup of black coffee, he took it absent-mindedly. “Thank you,” he said, and he sipped it. “I should be clear,” he said apologetically to Doctor Winter. “I should be—do you know how many men the invader has?” “Not many,” the doctor… Read more

  • Full summer has come to the North Country. 90-degrees and sticky days. Raised in the semi-arid West, I have never fully acclimated to humidity. To heat that stays around even after the sun goes down, and to shade that does not cool you down. I grew up in houses without air-conditioning and now cannot imagine… Read more

  • “As for me and my house, we will follow Fulham.” ~ Mark Hinton Today, August 16th marks the opening weekend of the Premier League’s 25-26 season. This means, Peacock willing, I am watching Fulham at Brighton at 9:00AM Central Standard Time. Over my soccer watching career, I have tried to claim as my own various… Read more

  • Stupid Injuries

    On August 16th, 1954, In a throwing contest between Jim Piersall and Willie Mays before a Red Sox-Giants charity game in Boston, Piersall hurt his arm. He started the game but left midway. He woke up the following morning with a sore arm that stayed with him a year, and he would never throw quite as well again. Injuries are part… Read more

  • A writer who does not speak out of a full experience uses torpid words, wooden or lifeless words, such words as “humanitary,” which have a paralysis in their tails. Thoreau, Henry David. The Journal of Henry David Thoreau, 1837-1861 Read more

  • Throwback Thursdays” at ClimbingSky feature posts I wrote over a 15 year period for various blogs. This was first posted on July 18, 2011. In the North Country, it is high summer. The heat and humidity weigh upon us and we live indoors as much as possible… just like we do in January. Again, we… Read more

  • Bert Campaneris

    On August 13th, 1962, Minor League infielder Bert Campaneris of Daytona Beach (Florida State League) pitched ambidextrously in a relief appearance. Bert Campaneris made 6 Major League All-Star Games over his 19-year career. As an OAKLAND Athletics fan growing up, he was one of my favorite players. I collected his cards and had a picture of him… Read more

  • On August 12th, 1994, The Major League Players Union went on strike for the sport’s eighth work stoppage since 1972. In August of 1994, I had a one-year-old daughter and another on the way. And since it was summer, I had baseball to watch. The Twins were struggling but everything in my life was good.… Read more