Chestnut Hill Local Local Photo
LettersOpinionNewsLocal LifeobitsThis WeekSportsNews Makers About Us

  September 4, 2008 Issue                                       

This Week's Issue
Previous Issues


this site web

Classified
Subscribe
E-Mail Us
Place a Classified Ad
Advertising Information
Links

Chestnut Hill Local
8434 Germantown Avenue
Philadelphia, PA 19118
215-248-8800
Please note our new fax number
215-248-8814


Webmaster
E-mail: Nick Tsigos
215-248-8809

Don't Miss an Issue,
Subscribe to the Local!


Who Links Here

Tell us what you see or
what we are missing here.
Send an e-mail to
Editor Peter Mazzaccaro.

Winner of Two
2007 Keystone Award

subs

Don't Miss an Issue!

©2007 The Chestnut Hill Local

This fall: the perfect time to get Mike Todd’s goat
by MIKE TODD

During the long drive last week to join my family for vacation in Rangeley, Maine, deep in the woods where no interstate dares to venture, my wife Kara and I witnessed something very disconcerting: the leaves, quite without permission, were already starting to change.

Perhaps our proximity to Labor Day should have been a pretty good indicator that the time had almost arrived to start girding our collective loins with fleece outerwear. Still, now that we’re back home, we can’t get it out of our minds that fall is out there, slowly creeping across the Great North Woods, inexorably making its way south.

It’s like that terrible thing that spread across the country in the last M. Night Shyamalan movie, The Happening, except instead of killing everyone, it makes us put our shorts in storage. At least I think something like that happened in the last M. Night Shyamalan movie; I only watch his previews anymore. His recent movies are like tomato slices on sandwiches: it seems like life would be more fun if I liked them, but I just can’t make myself. 

With fall sneaking up on us, the reader(s) of this column would probably like to see a Fall Fashion Blowout written by someone who hasn’t been wearing his big sister’s Spring Fling T-shirt since 1995, but I picked up on a new trend in Maine last week that everyone needs to know about, and it’s much more useful than having a magazine tell you that wearing giant sunglasses makes you look like a celebrity heiress.

After a long hike, as my family finished resting at the top of Tumbledown Mountain and prepared to come back down, a small group of hikers wandered into the clearing with a medium-sized dog trailing behind them.

“What a funny-looking dog,” I thought, noticing its long, floppy ears, its short snout and its black hooves.  Hooves?

“This is Moony,” one of the hikers said, patting the creature on its haunches.  “He’s training to be a pack goat.”

As we stared in admiring disbelief, the hiker went on, “Pack goats are big out West.  They’re starting to show up on the East Coast now. Moony’s an American Gray Nubian.  He was originally supposed to be a meat goat, but we liked him so much, we decided to keep him instead of eating him.”   

You heard it here first: this fall’s hottest new fashion accessory comes with bleats.  If you’ve ever thought, “Man, I’m sick of lugging this laptop bag into my cubicle every day,” now you have a solution.  Finally, the fashion industry has given us something functional.

And if you ever find yourself thinking that it’s too much trouble to be nice to people, just think of Moony, who proved that you never know when having a winning personality will keep you off the dinner table.

When we returned from the hike, Kara observed summer’s last parting shot. 

“Oh no, babe” she said from behind me, in the voice that she uses when she’s just noticed something horribly awry. Unfortunately, this happens often enough that I recognize the voice. 

I froze, waiting for her to brush the spider off my back. But it was worse than that.

“Your, um, bald spot is looking a little red,” she said.

When your bald spot begins to require sunscreen, there’s no denying it anymore. You can avoid holding one mirror behind your head in an effort to remain blissfully ignorant, but UV rays never lie. I’m pretty sure that getting sunburned on my scalp officially marks my first Indignity of Old Age. If I’m lucky, I’ll live long enough to have many more.

Ed. Note: Mike Todd is reporting exclusively that the company called Linen & Things is going to declare bankruptcy next week. The problem is that the company has been selling lots of linen but almost no things … Mike insists that red meat is not bad for you; it’s nasty-looking green meat that’s bad for you … And he says that 99 percent of all lawyers give the rest of them a bad name … And very few people know that the Alabama state motto is: “At least we’re not Mississippi.” … Mike conducted a thorough survey recently which revealed that three out of four people make up 75 percent of the population … I don’t know this for an absolute fact, but one of my generally unreliable sources says that Mike was pulled over by a state trooper last week, and Mike said right away, “Sorry, Officer, I didn’t realize my radar detector wasn’t plugged  in. By the way, aren’t you the guy from the Village People?”