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PERRIN LOVETT

~ Deo Vindice

PERRIN LOVETT

Tag Archives: Perrin

A Sunny Saturday

27 Saturday May 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ Comments Off on A Sunny Saturday

Tags

beach, blog, Perrin

There’s a lot of stuff going on. All over the place. Yet I almost missed a day – two weeks shy of a year of perfect daily postings. So there’s this:

It was a beautiful day. This kind of day.

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The rest can wait.

Hope you had a fine day out there. I did.

News from Cigar Land

26 Friday May 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

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Tags

cigars, Davidoff, Perrin

Things are great, thanks.

_20170526_121541

With Devin.

Think it’s time for a chisel.

_20170526_122504

Wheeee!

The Killing Chair

01 Monday May 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

green space chickens, Perrin, writing

Happy May Day 2017! And may all your pole dancing (ha!), birthdays, half-birthdays, and protests be merry and bright. One year ago, today, I made the astringent vow to try to do a post each day during May, 2016. I failed. Sorry. I missed two or three days. Then I missed two more in June, the 3rd and the 12th. However, since June 12, 2016, I have made at least one post, here, every single day.

This little number marks the beginning of the 47th week in a row of unbroken ramblings – quite a change from the olden days of me taking a week or six months off. Heck, four or five days aside, I’ve been consistent for a whole year. And this May makes 29 months without a …. break. BTW, this one is post number 1,200!

Next month is the five-year anniversary of this website. Volume increases aside, not much has changed since the humble beginnings. I still don’t care for government. I love cigars. I still workout. I don’t get the culture. And you seem to like (or at least tolerate) it all. Sometimes we even have special features like this one:

The Killing Chair

I write in a variety of settings: cigar shops, bars, coffee houses, hotel rooms, parks, jail cells, Interstate rest areas, etc., etc., etc. Still, much of what I do happens outside, amidst the flowers, birds, and critters, hunkered down in a battered old wicker chair. It’s the kind of chair that one picks up on the side of the road at night when one thinks no one is looking. Or, at least, that’s how I got mine.

It’s uncomfortable, ugly, and sorely in danger of falling apart. If it were a truck or SUV, I’d drive it.

The thing works for me. I have a similarly disheveled “table” at my side which holds coffee, water, or beer, and the flowerpot saucer that I call a cigar ashtray. A place for every thing and every thing in its place.

_20170501_090521

What follows makes Saint Frances bow his head in sadness…

Like I said, I usually prefer to type out-of-doors. This places me at ease and in close proximity to nature (or what semblance of that we have in the cities). My work is assisted by a number of: birds, bees, spiders, lizards, bats, snakes, stray cats, the infrequent possum, toads and frogs. (I do not enjoy the company of mosquitoes).

My dilapidated chair sits out regardless of whether I’m in it; most times I am not. However it is not necessarily empty. Those aforementioned critters must obviously make use of it during my absences. They, some of them, must like it as I do. They’ve become comfortable with it, in it, familiar.

They say familiarity breeds contempt. In this case it has been downright fatal.

One day – morning or evening I cannot remember – I approached the chair. Come to think of it, it must have been daylight or else I would not have discovered the grizzly scene. In the chair, where I normally sit and ramble half-crazed, there was, that day, a spider. It was a small, brown, wood spider, maybe the size of a nickel. And it was flat – flat as a tiny, nickel-sized pancake.

I surmised that some time prior, likely the night before, the little arachnid had been resting there when I happened along. I don’t look when I sit, I just sit. I sit kind of hard. My butt isn’t nearly as large or heavy as it was five or ten years ago but I still generate some force on landing. Enough force to squash a spider.

Many of you, no doubt, do not care for spiders. I like them. They’re my little eight-legged friends. My consolation is that my little buddy probably didn’t feel anything.

I removed the remains and pondered for a second. An anomaly I concluded. It would certainly never happen again. And it hasn’t. The spiders seem to have wised up following the tragedy. The lizards did not.

Maybe a week after the untimely death of Charlotte my back was hurting. Could have been the day after deadlifts. Could be I’m getting old. Anyway, I placed a small cushion in the back of the chair for lumbar support. It worked well … for me.

Feeling I no longer needed a prop, I picked up the pillow one morning. Murder! There lay a fresh (still soft) lizard corpse. He was a little blue-green fellow, maybe three inches long. I suppose resting between the chair seat and the pillow was warm and comfortable for a cold-blooded beast. Out of the way, concealed from predators, he likely felt at home and happy. He also likely felt the air crushed out of his lungs and the cessation of his heart when I sat down. Unlike the spider, I imagine the lizard may have known what hit him.

I’m an animal liker, not necessarily an animal lover. Still I was saddened by this, another senseless loss. I mourned for the departed the entire half-second it took to chuck him in the bushes carefully lay him to rest.

Now my writing place was beginning to feel like somewhere, something out of a King novel – The Killing Chair! I consulted my daughter about the deaths. She said, “that wasn’t very nice.”

It’s not but it’s not the end of the world. Things happen. Things change. Life goes on – for us at the apex. And I do not have all the facts. It could be that both of these animals were dead before I sat down. Or, they could have chosen suicide by chair squashing. I just don’t know. Honestly, the word count is approaching “1,000” and I need to wrap this up (Congressional stupidity calls).

The point of all this is … well, there is no point. Just a Killing Chair. A place where missives are born and animals go to die.

Perhaps, someday soon, an animal punk-rock band, maybe The Dead Lizards, will come out with a song called “Holiday in the Chair”.

So, you’ve been on the porch for an hour or two,

and you know you’re very small.

Sittin’ in Perrin’s Chair, thinking the world’s fair,

You’ll be dead and you can’t crawl…

You get the point. Wait. There is no point…

Happy May!

I’ll Believe This When I Fly One: Dawn of the Flying Car?

11 Tuesday Apr 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

flying cars, green space chickens, Perrin

Little known fact: Perrin is (was) obsessed with flying cars. I have studied these concepts (they’re never anything more than a concept) for over 25 years. Every two or three years it’s the same thing: “The Flying Car is Here! Today! Err…Tomorrow! Soon…ish…. sometime. Sometime soon, maybe in a year or 40….” Like this, today:

IF flying cars are the future, the future is right now.

The first ever production-ready flying car is due to be shown off later this month at the world’s most exclusive supercar show – Top Marques Monaco.

Why chose between driving or flying when you could do both?

Built by Slovak pioneering company AeroMobil, the vehicle was first revealed as a concept in 2014, and now a much improved version is ready for the world’s richest to take for a spin and purchase if they wish.

Fully functional as both an aircraft and a four-wheeled car, it is powered by hybrid propulsion, with wings sweeping back against the body when the vehicle is in driving mode.

nintchdbpict000315908526

The Sun.

“If”. If is the worst, damnedest word in the all of auto-aviation. “The future is here, today! Well, today is next month at the auto show … where the think will be a mock-up. Flight testing in 2019. On sale in 2022 2260 never….”

Spare me. That thing looks cool, much like the Moller Skycar … in 1990…

Moller_Skycar_M400

Never. Took. Off. Moller / Wikipedia.

I’m waiting patiently as I have for the past 1,000 years or so. In spite of my (what?) 1,000,000+ miles driving experience, I really, really hate traffic. That, coupled with my rudimentary and aging flying skills, make me the perfect driver/flyer for this, the Moller, or anything else that will get me up over and off of the Interstates.

Must I duct tape a hang-glider to a dirtbike or something?

How about this?

th_2

This will probably fly first.

*The ready solution is a Cessna and a rental car. Plausible, yes. But the flying car is – well, it’s the all in one package. 

Smoking Whimsy

13 Monday Mar 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

cigars, Gurkha, Perrin

Back at the Southern Command Center.

Today, about to fire up another Gurkha Cellar Reserve 18-Year. A must smoke by anybody’s reckoning.

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Really the perfect accompaniment for the perfect “work” setting. (Can’t believe I get paid to do this…).

The company isn’t bad either.

IMG_20170313_121023108_HDR.jpg

Leah tolerates Yours Truly…

Surprises on the Road

09 Thursday Mar 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns, Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Surprises on the Road

Tags

blog, cigars, Perrin, travel

Wow. What a day! Took the show on the road again today around 4 AM.

1) The traffic report:

I-20, I-95, I-10, I-75, all U.S. Highways, and all side roads are all in terrible shape. Every single mile is under construction, blocked with clover wrecks, and prowled by the Po-Po. Abandon all hope. Stay home.

2) “Check Engine”. On a 500-mile trip! Awesome. I did, she looked fine – if a little dusty.

3) Got into the Southern Command and discovered my auto-post selections from last night did not work. Thanks, Word Press! Now I look as drunk as the Russian with the magic nuclear moles….

All better now.

_20170309_142628

The Davidoff Effect makes everything okay!

Reconstructing a Legend: The Bucanero Canon

06 Monday Mar 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bucanero, Canon, cigars, memories, Perrin

Sitting around in a dark stupor of legislative reform I drifted off into a pleasant dream, a remembrance of a different time. An age ago, or so it now seems, I stumbled across a cigar of uncommon qualities.

**Yes. This is another trip in Perrin’s fuzzy-details time machine…**

Let’s say it was the week around Christmas, 2006 – that sounds about right. Give or take a year and the accuracy is impeccable. Hell, I was there; how am I suppose to recall anything everything?

Anyways, I was at the old beach compound. It was evening. That! I remember. Dark outside. Later too; the youngins were pretty much all tucked away in bed. The rest of the horde was scattered here and yon by television and wine rack. I procured a lantern and ventured onto the front porch.

Behind the screens my little flame danced and flickered in the constant salty breeze. A melody of shifting airs, none too cool, and crashing waves provided the ambiance for my experiment. Or, was it an experience? Huh…

In the near dark I perched in an old rocking chair. A sturdy ale by my side – we’ll say it was S. Smith’s Imperial – I pondered my evening smoke. Back then I was new to the sport and given to trying any and everything. My palate had yet to fully develop. This, I know, may skew my memories. What was fun or all I could handle back then might, now, be passe.

At any rate, THEN, my choice was interesting and excellent (so I thought at the time). Out of my small travel humidor, which I have since misplaced (with a great many other things – like old beach compounds…), I pulled a Gordo-ish, 6X60 beauty. She was dark and fragrant. It was a Bucanero Canon Cubano Maduro. A cannon of a canon.

160817buc0023-Edit-Edit-600x600

Courtesy of Bucanero.

In those days I had little idea of what, exactly, went into a stick. However, based on my research, just now, I can authoritatively say the wrapper is or was a strong Nicaraguan Habano, the dual filler is from Nica and the D.R. The binder remains a mystery product! Bucanero claims it to be on the “Light side of Full Body” with “Complex flavors”. That seems about right. Honestly, I can’t recall the exact notes. I’ll settle for their stock description: “rich creamy flavor with complex cocoa, espresso and assorted subtle spices”.

That seems about right. Patrick A. from Stogie Guys said, in 2008:

Big, black, and bold, this five and ½ inch by 60 ring gauge Bucanero behemoth packs rich, textured flavors of dark chocolate and burning timber. The Nicaraguan, Honduran, Italian, and Costa Rican blend is full-bodied and well-balanced. With decent construction – including a fairly even burn for its large girth – I can recommend this at $7 a pop.

Right, again. I picked his short review because of the close temporal proximity to my memory. His $7 price seems about right too. The chocolate I could see. The timber would be surprising. If I can muster anything from the memory banks, it would be earthiness (from Nica) along with the cocoa and light spices. I find his addition of Honduras, Italy, and Costa Rica interesting as well. Perhaps the blend has changed?

Back to what I can directly recall – this was a damned fine smoke! Seems that it took me around a good two hours. I would have gone slower, then, in fear of being overpowered. And, as I recall, that nearly happened. By the time I finished I was dizzy. This was a combined effect of the ale and the “light side of full body”. However, it was a happy dizzy. It was balanced perfectly on the knife’s edge. Any more and I might have been ill. Any less and I might not be typing this. In short, it was a blissful experience.

It’s one I’d rather like to repeat. Of course, as I mentioned above, a re-creation might be impossible a decade later. Too much smoke under the bridge perhaps. Still, it would be interesting. And difficult.

All of the shops I now generally frequent have stopped carrying Bucaneros. Back then they usually had two facings in stock: my Canon and the more popular Full Sail. There are a few I can think to check without going overly out of my way and without resort to on-line ordering and the mercy of UPS. I’ll do a little pavement pounding in FLA and report back if I strike tobacco gold.

The conditions may not be replicable. However, I’ve tried to rebuild the legend in my mind tonight. And I hope you enjoyed the trip.

Shotgunning Ice From The Trees: A Tale From America

08 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

ice storm, men, Mississippi, Perrin, the good old days, winter

The following I offer as a needed break from tonight’s election mania. You can thank me later.

The year was 1983. I think. We’re going to say it was 1983 and January. Could have been December but January of ’83 sounds about right.

Anyway it was cold. Very cold especially for east-central Mississippi. For the sake of my happy memories let’s also assume this frozen spell closely followed the white Christmas of that age. If you know otherwise, keep it to yourself, Zippy.

Snow began to fall. Actually it was ice. Maybe with freezing rain. Whatever it was that came from the sky the ground was soon completely iced over. Ice on the trees. Ice on the bushes. Ice was everywhere.

It was as beautiful as it was cold. And it was eerie. It all fell for a good long while. The roads became glazed over and utterly impassible. Everything became still and quiet. We didn’t have a heap of vehicular traffic anyways. My parents insisted on building a house on the extreme outskirts of town, about as far from Starkville as one could go and still call it civilization (if one stooped that low). That decision turned out to be fateful and fortunate.

Ice is heavy. As it accumulates, gravity goes to work. Tree limbs sag. Then they snap. They fall on power lines. The lines fall and snap the poles. Transformers explode with both a flash and a bang. This happened town-wide. Everyone lost electrical power. Everyone except the Lovett’s on the extreme outskirts of town.

It seems we tapped into our own grid out there. It must have been new, maybe built just for us. Whatever it was and however it happened we had power. Never so much as a flicker.

We learned of the general neighborhood outage from the pilgrims. Our lot was of greater size. The front yard (side yard really) was an acre or two. It slopped from our house down into a shallow valley formed by a creek. From the creek it rose another acre or two to the Wilsons’ house. The creek was lined with trees, small but numerous, mostly hardwood. Pines and a few ornamentals dotted the approaching properties.

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List 25.

It all looked so picturesque during The Great Ice Storm of ’83. Into that white picture drudged the Wilsons. I can’t remember who spotted them first but we all gathered and watched their coming from the huge window in the kitchen. Bundled up like the inhabitants of Siberia they came on, small uncomfortable figures.

It was just the two of them, Jim and Betty, and their dogs, Pumpkin and Fella. The creek was crossed by a small bridge constructed once upon a time by Dr. Wilson and my father. We first sighted their approach as they passed over it, dogs in tow. After a few minutes they reached our door – the back door under the carport.

It seems they had a premonition about the electrification situation and had come to seek warmth. My parents insisted they stay the duration. In addition to regular heat we also had a huge wood stove that was independently sufficient to heat the house (or most of it).

There was a vague fear our line would go down and we’d lose the juice. We never did. The Wilsons were very much like grandparents to me so I found their extended visit joyful. We all had a great time. Until the second day.

I think it was the morning. Everyone was gathered in the kitchen and enjoyed coffee and cocoa. We made small talk and watched one of our three channels on television (no cable in no-man’s land then).

Suddenly there was a boom like a cannon and the whole house shook. It seemed to have come from the carport, from just outside the door the Wilsons had entered through the day before. We ventured out to find a most unpleasant surprise.

A large, very large pine tree, laden with ice, had collapsed. It fell, luckily, on the corner of the carport. Pines trees, it is said, are good for two things: making cheap furniture and falling on houses. I can attest to both being true. No vehicles or supports were damaged but the roof and eves suffered dramatically. My father immediately searched the attic. Things like that can cause fires. From that we were safe. Safe from fire but not from ice.

A glance around the house revealed an ominous sight. Two dozen older, larger pines were covered and coated thick with ice. They all learned over the house, a silent frozen menace. Now and again one would creak. A little ice would fall. A branch. It was a bit disconcerting.

In modern times, lesser folks would have stupidly posted pictures to Instagram, moaned, and called out for deliverance from FEMA. Ours was a different time and place. The men quickly formulated a battle strategy. Mother Nature started it. They ended it.

My dad and Dr. Wilson, armed with shotguns and high performance #8 (?) birdshot, ventured into the unknown. Both were veterans but neither had experience battling trees or winter precipitation. Undeterred they commenced a short, successful war.

Round and round the house they went, blasting away into the air. Each shot produced a shower of ice, bark, and falling limbs. After a few rounds the subject tree would convulse. All the accumulated ice would cascade down in thunderous ruin. The tree, so dramatically lightened, would spring upright. A few treacherous sways and it would settle in place just as it had been for the days and years before.

I followed them with the dogs. My job, I suppose, was to keep our canine companions from being buried in an avalanche. They, for their part, were genuinely curious but a tad gun shy. Excited one second and cowed the next, they soon gave up and returned to the porch. I followed on.

The men slowed in their work. Look, point, shoot, discuss, and then laugh. The job turned mostly into laughter. They’d blast away and then cackle with delight. Soon it was a purely comical affair. Two grown men made their way through a frigid candy store … with shotguns. I was granted a single shot but that seemed to dampen their fun. They took my gun back, I went back to the dogs, and they hee-hawed away for what seemed like hours.

Eventually the shots died down and the victorious combatants returned for more coffee. All the trees were clear, including a good number nowhere near the house.

Mrs. Wilson, always as witty and sweet as could possibly be, remarked to me that I would always remember the winter when my dad and Dr. Wilson shot trees. I certainly have.

If there is a moral here it is to always have a plan. Always accept and help the neighbors. Keep a stove and some coffee. And beware of trees and ice. And shotguns! Nothing saves a house from being crushed in a winter storm like a shotgun. These marvels of firearms engineering can defeat even the most uncanny of intruders. And men. Men can be silly, courageous, and industrious all at once.

I’ll leave you with this: Ice storms are like elections. They come on hard and make little sense. Always have some birdshot handy.

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Ammunition To Go.

Backdraft

25 Sunday Oct 2015

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

articles, blog, books, drafts, Perrin, perrinlovett.me, procrastination, writing

At least one of my readers is a professional firefighter.  Firemen know what a backdraft is – a serious threat to them when fresh oxygen rapidly enters a fire thus causing an explosive eruption of flames.

I face nothing so dangerous behind my keyboard. However, in place of backdrafts I have back drafts. Semantics? No. When I hit the “publish” button for this feature I will still have 66 draft articles in the hopper. Some of them go back to the beginning of the blog. Some are works in progress (some more actively working than others). Some are obsolete.  Some I have forgotten about and need to re-evaluate. Others, I don’t know what to do with.

By the way, this post you’re reading is NUMBER 300!!!!!

balloons

Party Time!! Google Images.

Okay, where was I? The drafts.  Every week I scan newsworthy events, mostly legal and political in nature, which fit with my ideology and themes.  I then craft articles for you. Of course, I also write wholly original material. I do updates like this.  I’m now hawking books for sale. All this puts a damper on cleaning out the old draft backlog.

What am I to do? Likely, I will keep on keeping on. But, I pledge to speed up some of those best drafts for publication. An axe needs be taken to others. Some may need to simmer a little longer.

Sixty-six is a substantial number. I hate the idea that I hold anything back which might entertain or educate. I don’t want to be selfish.

Thanks again for reading. Post 301 is coming soon!

Kindle Version On Sale Now!

24 Saturday Oct 2015

Posted by perrinlovett in Books For Sale

≈ Comments Off on Kindle Version On Sale Now!

Tags

Amazon, books, buy now, Kindle, Perrin, The Happy Little Cigar Book

I am pleased to announce The Happy Little Cigar Book is now available for Kindle! I also must confess two errors on my part (I am Perrin…).  First, under my own description I say the book will “war the heart” when I clearly meant “WARM the heart.” I made the correction but it obviously takes a little while to show up on Amazon.  Oops. Second, I wrote this book with the paperback version in mind. I have never made an e-book before I knew nothing about the formatting. As such, the Kindle version is a little off – still very readable though. I will fix that foible as soon as I can figure it out. The content is crystal clear though. Think of this like that postage stamp with the backwards airplane; it’s going to be a collector’s item!

Please click on the book here and buy a copy:

BookCoverImage

CLICK HERE!

Please leave me a (good) review and rating (5 stars please). I am working on a bio page for Amazon now. The paperback version (awesome design AND format) will be along sometime next week!

Thanks,

Perrin

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From Green Altar Books, an imprint of Shotwell Publishing

From Green Altar Books, an imprint of Shotwell Publishing

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