I’m happy to say that our terrible Indian Summer (a phrase,
by the way, that Native Americans must resent) here in Seattle in finally
over. Throughout August and
September and into October (!) the sky was a boring, featureless blue, the air
was balmy, and people were saying, ‘If we wanted this crap we would’ve stayed
in San Diego.” Now, however,
Seattle is back. The sky has
returned to its default color, varying from yogurt to dust bunny, and the
background audio is once again the tip-tap of raindrops on foliage, every
miniute of every day. That means
that the 2013 Seattle Rain Festival is about to kick off and are we pumped! If you’ve never been to the SRF, you’ve
got a treat coming—it’s like Burning Man except without the loud music and instead of naked girls morose Swedes dressed in layers. So hurry on down! It only lasts until July. As a foretaste, here’s my report
on last year's event.
As usual, the thrills begin at the festival center, five
acres of glistening asphalt, which we enter under an arch announcing this
year's theme: "Seattle: The City Phlegmatic." We pass by Lars Eric Nilson's heroic
bronze of the Norwegian carpenter, officially titled "Man Who Left His
3/8th Drill on the Truck," which symbolizes the limited horizons that mean
so much to this city. Beyond, we
see through the showers what must be one of the supreme examples of the art of
flat-roof concrete-block stucco architecture anywhere in the world, the famous
Rectangle Building. Let's go in!
In the center ring, we're just in time for the slime mold
judging. Iridescent life forms writhe on their "logs" while their
nervous owners make last minute primps.
The slime mold is not only the state bird of Washington--it's a local
mascot as well. Nearly everybody
owns one or two, but these here are not your common basement lurkers. No, these are true aristocrats of the
myxomycete world, trained not to move or make a sound despite the most intense
prodding. Here come the
judges--the throng holds its breath--and the blue ribbon goes to Mrs. Irma
D. Christiansen of Enumclaw for
her fine gray-green Lycogala bitch, Ch. Rum-bum Altair Domino III. Way to go, Irma!
Next, we head for the gallery area, where we take in the fascinating
exhibit, A Century of Galoshes, and move on to The World of Rain, in which
different kinds of raindrops are preserved in lucite. A continuous video
show—Our Fogs--delights the eye, and we marvel at Old Mingo, at 29.7 pounds the
largest raindrop ever recorded.
And it fell right here in Seattle, in 1957! To my mind, however, the
most endearing feature here is the Kiddie Park, where children born after the
beginning of the festival, and who have thus never seen the sun, are shown
photos of the solar orb and allowed to stand for a few seconds under a sunlamp,
just enough to raise a few blisters. What fun they have spraying one another
with Solarcaine! And other
kids are poking fingers into this year’s special guest mascot, the Pillsbury
Doughboy. Nice tan, dude!
Of course, the climax of the festival is attained on Derby
Day, when racing banana slugs from all over converge on the Dixie Lee Ray Memorial
Track in Tukwila. (For those not
in the know, Tukwila, The Queen City of Apple Maggot Quarantine Area #7, is
located some ten miles south of Seattle and is famous for having more motel
rooms under $25 than all but seven other US cities.) We had intended to race
our blue-spot mare "Penny" this year, but she bruised a slime gland
on a bit of ornamental ironwork and went lame. Nevertheless, it was a thrill to sit in the stands, chomping
on the track's special gray weiners, chugging on a Rainier Beer, Seattle’s
beloved Green Death, and watch the noble molluscs tear around the wooden
oval. The track this year was
well-mucoused and quite fast. The
favorite, Degoutant, having been scratched (it failed a slime test) the palm
went to a fleet two-year-old, Slubbergullion, who finished in the astonishing
time of 8 hours, 20 minutes, 4 seconds, paying $14.50.As the crowd left the old
wood-bowl for another year, sad but happy, sorry to see the old festival fade
away but taking comfort in the fact that the next one starts in a mere sixty
days. Hope to see you there!.
3 comments:
Are you for real... please tell me this is sarcasim...
Um, it's a joke. Although it does really rain here a lot.
Loved it.
I even have a favorite bit: "Beyond, we see through the showers what must be one of the supreme examples of the art of flat-roof concrete-block stucco architecture anywhere in the world, the famous Rectangle Building. Let's go in! "
No, wait, maybe my favorite is the town with more rooms under $25 than all but seven other cities.
Of course, the excitement of the race is hard to forget ...
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