Seems almost surreal this morning (Friday) with the total stillness outside, after we have been ravaged and about driven nuts by wind! It is a paradise outside as I write this at 8 a.m. Forecast yesterday seemed to call for intense wind out of the west today. We're getting it from all directions, n'est-ce pas?
Climate change? Remember that climate change means more "extreme weather." Now that I have written that, you have me pegged as a political "liberal." We're in western Minnesota where such a position is rare and maybe even a little risky to hold. I probably voted for Kamala Harris, right? Well, maybe I did. And if y'all are basking in the perverse pleasure of supporting our president, I feel sorry for you.
One thing is for sure: there is no point in arguing with you. Enjoy church on Sunday where you can rub shoulders with all your kindred souls. Jesus would be MAGA, right? I do differ on that. "Blessed are the poor."
The wind up through yesterday has me thinking that outside high school sports would have been miserable. It had to be. But the games plunged forward. I see where our MACA softball team survived its challenge from a strong Border West team. Score was 4-3 at home. There won't be a rematch in post-season because the two teams are in different classes.
Did the Thursday game draw a good fan turnout? The Morris facility is a miserable place to try to find a good vantage point. Have I written about that enough?
Sad how our high school athletes are subjected to the vagaries of springtime weather. The winter season is indoors and with no such impediment.
This is a special post for me to write because the focus is going to be on Hancock softball. I hardly ever write about Hancock these days. For years and years I did all the sportswriting for the Hancock Record newspaper when it existed. And now this morning I am told that the Hancock graduation is tonight.
This year's grads were not born yet when I covered my last Hancock graduation for the area print media. My last one there was in 2006. It was emotionally rough. The Hancock graduation sort of tugs at your heartstrings. Small school charm. The romance of tradition. I wonder if it all pretty much follows the same script. I remember the song recording that was played for the slide show that showed the grads through the years. I remember how band director Ken Grunig had his percussion section start off "Pomp and Circumstance" in such a sudden way, I would literally jump in my chair! The grads deserved something grandiose like that.
I was charmed with all the proceedings. I often sat next to Katie Erdman. I hope a few people remember me. I absolutely was not ready to give any of this up in 2006. When life gives you lemons, I guess you have to just accept the bitterness. Forum Communications eventually left Stevens County.
I remember that in 2006, the Grunig twins graduated! The old counselor Gary Olson was back to extend best wishes.
Owls 7, Dawson-Boyd 4
The Owls and Blackjacks got together on the softball diamond at Hancock. Both teams scored in the early innings. Hancock scored two runs each in the first and second, and D-B did likewise. But the D-B girls would score no more. Hancock enjoyed a three-run fifth.
The Owls survived four errors. They were outhit 5-3. I see familiar names in the stat report like "Nuest." Abby Nuest reached on HBP, stole a base and scored a run. She drove in two runs. Mariah Hoberg had a hit and stole two bases. She scored a run and drove in a run.
Abigail
Boon went two-for-three with a run scored and RBI. Sophia Nagler walked
and scored a run. It was ditto for Diana Rodriguez: a walk and a run
scored. Taylor Nesvig walked, stole two bases and scored a run.
Nagler
got the pitching win with five innings of work, three strikeouts, one
walk, four hits allowed. Nesvig put her arm to work for two innings,
four strikeouts, two walks, one hit allowed.
Tragedy up north
Peril of the strong winds? We get word of a tragedy up north that took the life of a UMM student. Cameron Walker lost his life in a drowning accident on Little Emily Lake, Crow Wing County. Walker was 19 years of age.
We just had the joyous UMM graduation, now the joy is tempered.
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| Cameron Walker |
"Voice of Alexandia" tells us "Walker told dispatchers he and two women were in the water before the call unexpectedly disconnected."
The two women were also UMM students. They survived. The three students were visiting the area.
IMHO when in doubt about getting out on the water, stay away. There are news reports quite often about people making questionable decisions. They fail to assess all the possibilities. A canoe can get "swamped."
I remember when I was a kid, my father would take me duck hunting and we'd go out on a lake in an old small wooden boat. And of course we were wearing heavy outerwear. Falling into the water could easily be life-threatening. Would I have been alert enough to realize I had to peel off my outerwear as fast as possible? I may not have been.
We survived. I wish we had never done that. It wasn't even fun. I remember flocks of bluebills going overhead late in the season and sounding like a jet plane! The exotic ducks came from up north late in the season. The bufflehead!
- Brian Williams - morris mn minnesota - musicstuff54@gmail.com














