









My Blog
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 I was born
10-18-43 in Rhinebeck, NY, son of a career USAF
officer. My dad was from Rhinecliff, New York on the Hudson River in
Dutchess County, and my mother is from Mize, Mississippi in Sullivan
County. Talk about unlikely connections! Here’s an even more unlikely
one. My mother’s maiden name was Hegwood and she had only to change one
letter to convert to her married name.
I’m a
1961 graduate of Rudyard High School in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula
(Chippewa County). I played football, basketball, baseball, and ran
track.
1965 graduate of Michigan State
University (BA-Journalism). I played on the Michigan State Lacrosse
Club for three years, crease attack, tri-captain in 1965. I was in the
last class of mandatory ROTC for land grant universities and
predictably chose the Air Force.
In 1965, I married Sandra V. Heywood
(1943-2002) of East Lansing. Five children, one dog. Widower.
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My Partner’s a Real Bear Today!
Iron County.
30 x 24 in, acrylic on canvas.
CO Ryan Aho knew of an old bear bait site in Iron County and in
September 2005 went to see if it had been baited. He found a young man
there, who was very chatty and said he had not used the site the
previous year, but had shot a nice bear. More talk led to fact that the
bear had been shot in an area the hunter was not permitted for. Ryan
ended up confiscating the mounted bear and I thought the scene
warranted a painting.
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 One of the most
interesting times to walk and hike visually is right after a good ice
storm. These berries are less than 300 yards from my house in Portage.
 There
are a lot of people who believe we have a self-sustaining population of
cougars in Michigan, yet noone has ever come forward with convincing
evidence. It's also been said that the Wolverine State has never had a
population of wolverines. A few years back this one showed up over in
the thumb and within days it was confirmed and photos flying all over.
Authorities speculate this animal came across the border on a logging
truck, but nobody really knows. Still waiting on similar cougar stuff.
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2010 will mark 33 years that the zany anglers of the Baldwin Bullshido
Club have met at Little L Lake south of Baldwin to fish the lake, the
South and Middle Branches of the Pere Marquette, and the main river
itself. Sometimes we visit PM feeder creeks, or run up to the Little
Manistee or the Pine. But fishing is rarely the primary consideration.
Over the years, I've kept the camp log in the form of a cartoon book;
the meaning of most of the toons resonates primarily with Bullshido,
but I'm sharing some here to give you a feel for what a fishing camp
among friends ought to be. Oh, yeah, it's sexist and old fashioned:
Boys only. Okay amend that: Elderly Men.
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Buckular Dystrophy
Available March 1, 2016
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On October 18, 1974, the Kalamazoo
Wings played their inaugural International Hockey League game. Through
a number of freaky events, I got to know the team's then general
manager and coach, and thought it would be interesting to write a book
about playing minor league hockey. I travelled with the team over two
seasons and took notes, including notes in cartoon form, which appear
in the following pages.
For you devout hockey fans, you will
remember the film, Slapshot, starring Paul Newman. The writer of that
film, Nanacy Dowd, is the sister of Ned Dowd, the First Kalamazoo Wing
to score a goal. Ironically, when Sl;apshot came out it was promoted as
a bitter satire, but those of us with some knowledge of professional
hockey considered it more of a documentary.
Trivia: Ned Dowd played Ogie
Oglethorpe in his sister's film. Enjoy the toons.
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