From Voyageurs National Park on FB:
From Voyageurs National Park on FB: Called “Catamaran” by locals, Bert Upton is among the strangest of historical characters on area waters. He lived in a hut built over a dug-out at Squirrel Narrows. Found frozen to death in the 1930s by Kettle Falls pioneer Oliver Knox; Upton was perched lifeless in the snow just a half-mile from his home. Shunning civilization, Upton defined the word hermit. First spotted rowing his crude log raft on Namakan, no one knows how he got there. Upton’s accent implied an English heritage but any personal inquiries brought a stony silence. Some suspected him a man fleeing the law; others saw a bizarre outcast; everyone knew he was peculiar. Just five feet tall and wildly unkempt, Catamaran wore hacked-off pants and walked barefoot with a stick. Winter demanded shoes but no socks, a cast-off Mackinaw, and a trailing cap made from the leg of old underwear. He was oddly religious, and suspicious of being poisoned. Surviving on snared rabbits and fish, he ofte...
Gingersnap!!!
ReplyDeleteThe weirdness never changes. I could play a hundred games of Euchre with my in-laws and still feel completely out of place.
ReplyDeleteAfter 30 years, Pinochle has become second nature.
ReplyDeleteI never got the hang of pinochle.
ReplyDeleteI can neither confirm nor deny that Amy Davis went through this stage.
ReplyDeleteI married a Slovak, Casey G.! It was that or polkas!
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