Date: Fri 24-May-1996
Date: Fri 24-May-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
mountain-storm-manners
Full Text:
TOP OF THE MOUNTAIN
Trees and limbs were strewn across Newtown's roads and lawns during Tuesday's
mid-afternoon storm, but Sandy Hook School's Joanne DiDonato had more than
that covering her yard. "I called my daughter to tell her to bring in the
laundry from the line, but she said, `too late, mom.'"
When the storm started, Edie Tschorn raced from her office to put the top up
on her convertible parked in the lot behind Edmond Town Hall. Just as she was
struggling with it, she heard an enormous crack and saw a huge tree fall
across part of the entrance of the Hook & Ladder Firehouse. Edie decided to
move her car to a safer area. It had already been damaged once this year when
her barn collapsed onto it and she wasn't going to take any chances this time.
Peggy Gross also realized that her car window was open a crack - because the
temperature was so hot - but, as quick as she was, she wasn't fast enough. The
car was full of sand and grit blown in by the wind, she complained.
I heard winds reached 80 mphs in the state during that storm. Even my claws
wouldn't have been able to keep me hanging on a limb, so I ran for some place
dry and well lit. I found several of my friends throughout town had power
outages caused by the storm, but those residents in the Taunton Lake Road area
of town seemed to be hit hardest. Many had no power until five o'clock
Wednesday morning.
Bill Meyer found the storm was good for something: it blew all the golfers off
the Newtown Country Club Course. While everyone else was running around town
checking for damage to their trees, houses, and cars, Bill was teeing up on
the first hole of the Country Club for a round of clear-sailing golf.
It's a good thing the storm didn't hit last Saturday when a line of residents
holding their cats and dogs swung around the backside of town hall, trailing
out of the gymnasium where the clinic was held and toward the Newtown Hook and
Ladder Firehouse. It was a sight to see!
Big dogs, small dogs, aggressive dogs, timid dogs.
The plentiful pooches at the town's annual rabies clinic at Edmond Town Hall
last Saturday thoughtfully brought their owners along to watch them be
inoculated with rabies vaccine.
Besides the canines, there were cats, cats, cats. In fact more cats than dogs
received the rabies vaccine. My favorite animals are cats, as you well know.
Fantastic Felines, I call them.
All told, 248 animals received their shots --- 141 cats and 107 dogs.
Meow, meow! Woof, woof!
Owners and their pets waited patiently to sign up for the shots at the clinic
which has become one of the largest rabies vaccine programs in Connecticut.
Happy Birthday to my buddy Bill Watts. He celebrated with his wife, Evelyn,
and all the other members of the Congregational Church Women's Fellowship at
their annual dinner meeting last Wednesday. He didn't win any of the door
prizes (Evelyn did) but the waitress at the Fireside Inn surprised him with a
big piece of chocolate cake with one candle. (I think he was a bit
disappointed to find it wasn't a trick candle - the kind that you can't blow
out.) Someone mentioned it was a "big" birthday, but, now that Ginger
Philbrick has taught me something about social graces,... well, I knew it
would be impolite to ask how big .
Yes, Ginger has ruined a lot of fun for me. I can't cat nap at the dinner
table with a clear conscience anymore. I'm constantly dabbing a napkin at my
whiskers as I try not to slurp my milk. And I can't tell any furball jokes in
mixed company (cats and dogs). Ah well, I'm still a fan. Anyone, like Ginger,
who can get kids to sit still for five seconds has my vote of confidence. I
think Ginger would agree that it would be impolite not to...
Read me again.
