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A lane was closed to ease congestion

September 19, 2022 by Al Batt

Fillmore County Journal - Al Batt
Fillmore County Journal - Al Batt
Al Batt

A turtle passed me.

It was a bafflement.

I’d been humming the theme from “Jeopardy” as I paused on a busy highway.

The turtle gave me a keen grasp of my situation. I don’t know what kind of turtle it was because it zoomed by so quickly. It might have been a Mitsubishi, but I think that was what I was driving.

Upon further investigation, I discovered it was Labor Day and I was on I-70. I’d been working in Steamboat Springs and was on my way to the Denver International Airport. The traffic was heavy, it took me over 3 1/2 hours to travel 84 miles. Lord, have mercy on those who get what they deserve. I know many of you have had worse travel and I may have, too, but this one was a doozy. In general, I never, sometimes, always make good time. After humming the theme to “Jeopardy” for a couple of hours, I expanded my repertoire to include Roger Miller’s “King of the Road” and “On the Road Again” by Canned Heat.

Red foxes can run 31 mph, jump over 6-foot high fences and can swim. ​That makes them triathletes. The males are called dog foxes (or dogs), the female vixens and the young are kits, pups or cubs.
Photo by Al Batt

There are side effects to being in a traffic jam in 99° weather — overheating cars, running out of gas and seeing vehicles painted ghastly colors.

I sat unmoving for a long time at the start of those 84 miles, making the same number of miles as that Peloton gathering dust in someone’s home. I like traffic lights, but only the green ones — I want to keep moving. There was a drastic reduction in the usual crackle of energy and exuberance inside my vehicle.

I have time to think while mired in a traffic jam. I wondered how many driver’s ed instructors there were on that highway. I hoped the next mile would be better than the last mile. I wanted to argue with the traffic, but I’m not the kind to do that.

I considered my predicament and found a sunny side. It’s amazing how tasty an ancient, stale cracker that had fallen between the seats can be. I wasn’t in this thing alone and there were no flies on me. It does a man good to have no flies on him. I’d enjoyed cranes, canapes and conversations with friends in Steamboat Springs. A meadowhawk landed on my hat. People tried to take a photo of the lovely critter, but it would have none of it. When a camera came near, the dragonfly went far. So, I’d had a fly on me—a red dragonfly called a meadowhawk—but it was a good thing. It was September. Septem means “seven” and it’s the ninth month of the year. That’s because the Last Bank of Two Bits gave their better customers a calendar each year and created July and August because the bank needed more holidays. I rib the Last Bank of Two Bits. September is the ninth month of the year in the Julian and Gregorian calendars, one of four months to have a length of 30 days, and one of five months to have fewer than 31 days. September is an odd month, just like the other 11. It covers a bit of two of our top four seasons. September 22 is the first day of fall. September is a month-long goodbye to summer when leaf blowers that destroy the hearing of trees are made ready. It’s a reminder to floss the leaf rake regularly and we start mumbling nasty things about winter. It’s an important month, as without it, we’d go from August right into October.

I was on my way home. Another year of my wedded bliss had gone into the annals in September. How long would I think I’ve been married if I didn’t know the date of our wedding? Together is my favorite place to be. Home is no longer a place, it’s a person. I like who I am when I’m around my wife.

I made predictions while hoping my vehicle had a chance to gain another inch of the highway. My winter weather prediction is that it will be colder than the summer.

Albert Camus wrote, “Autumn is a second spring when every leaf is a flower.”

A leaf doesn’t fight the wind.

A driver of a rented Mitsubishi doesn’t fight the traffic.

Filed Under: Columnists

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