Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Raccoons and Crocodiles, Oh My!

 So Wifey and I were on our typical nightly shifts -- she comes to bed around 2:30 am, and I awaken around 3 for a prostate pee break. I settled into the chair by the bed to read what major issues I had missed (I only made it through 30 minutes of the SOTU address, learned everything is terrific, and so went to sleep), and saw a text from Wifey. It was a photo of a mid-sized raccoon she had spotted by our front porch areas, walking in circles. She read that could be a sign of rabies, and we ought to watch out.

Sure enough, I awakened and was getting ready to leave for the gym, and the raccoon was still there, looking like the folks who used to wander away from The Palace or Miami Jewish Home -- circling, not foaming at the mouth, but not leaving. I called 311, the Miami Dade County line, and got Animal Services. The DEI person (Lord, Trump IS getting to me) took my info -- I said we may have a rabid raccoon, walking in circles. The person took down the info and I got an emailed case report. I asked when I might get a visit -- and she said "Within 24 hours you will get a call."

Yeah, no, as we say in Miami. So I recalled a company called Pesky Critters, owned by a guy named Todd Hardwick. His Dad Richard was a long time lawyer in town -- I actually met Todd on a case -- he was an expert when we sued WalMart after my old boss's client got bitten by a pygmy rattlesnake while buying a ficus plant at the Wal Mart nursery. We lost the case! The jury said hey -- it happens. I remember joking with Todd that he decided at a young age he liked working with actual animals as opposed to the wanna be animals lawyers were. His company's business is a-boomin', as Lt. Aldo the Apache says.

Jeff answered -- he could come by closer to noon -- he had to trap an 8 foot crocodile in South Miami. Wow, I said -- sounded worse than our maybe 10 pound raccoon. We laughed, and he called back -- he had the croc in his truck already (it was slow moving in the cool weather) and was on his way.

He pulled up, and I opened the window and pointed to the raccoon like the scared little bitch I was. I never liked raccoons -- they creep me out -- and the thought that this one might send me for the dreaded multiple rabies shots kept me behind the screen. Jeff, a big blonde guy, probably late 40s, said "Oh -- he's moving pretty well, and tried a snare which missed, but the second did the trick, and he caged our unwanted guest. Emboldened, I walked out and saw the raccoon. Rabies? Nah, said Jeff -- probably distemper -- lots of them were getting it in the cold weather.  I didn't ask what fate awaited our guy -- Jeff showed me another in a crate also in the back. 

And then he asked if I wanted to see his first visit's haul? Hell yes, I did, and there was a VERY huge crocodile tied down in the back, not moving. Jeff said he was to be relocated -- they're protected -- but it would be far from the South Miami street where he was enjoying his canal-side constitutional.

I snapped pix for my grandsons, and Jeff and I spoke -- he's a Jersey boy, here for 20 years, with the best job in the world. I told him I was a LI native -- his Mom is from Bayshore, and I asked if he knew about the famous Entenmann's outlet store there. He did. We talked sports -- he was wearing a Panthers jersey, although he grew up a Rangers fan. We talked early Islanders, and he said the Nassau Colisseum was the dreariest arena he ever visited. He was correct.

He left, saying he'd text me the Zelle info, and he did: $175 to remove the critter, which I thought was VERY fair. Of course, 10 minutes after he left, a County van pulled up. I greeted the nice fellow -- "So where's the rabid 'coon?" I told him he just missed him -- Pesky Critters got him, and opined it wasn't rabies, and why did the dispatcher tell me 24 hours?

"Well, they say that, but when we hear 'rabies', we roll fast." No harm, no foul -- for $175 I got to meet, as D2 noted, Crocodile Jeff. Also, Jeff texted me -- he was going to invite the boys and me to their company HQ which is sort of a private zoo of trapped critters. That alone makes the fee worth it.

Then I called Jose, the roofer. He said Final Inspection is Friday or Monday. I asked him about 3 areas where there are no tiles -- I figured they were left that way for drainage, and you can only see them from our bedroom balcony. Sure enough -- code changed -- the water drainage areas must be tile free. But Jose said after inspection, his guys will return and paint the area with terra cotta coating -- to make the 3 triangles look good without compromising wear or effectiveness. I really like Andrew Palmer Roofing.

So Miriam is here -- alone again -- cleaning. He usual helper is at the doctor. I wonder how long this can last with our septugenarian housekeeper.

Tonight is the final session of bible study. Kenny is at sea, so it's just Barry, Norman, and me. We're having some steaks and martinis at Platea -- and will toast to still being able to learn and acquire life wisdom in our 60s.

Like today -- now I know how to spot raccoon distemper versus rabies. The things you learn...

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Who To Leave In; Who To Leave Out

 In my family, my Dad was always seen as the smart one, while Mom, who we loved and adored, was the Edith Bunker -- wise, but not the one you wanted on your "Jeapordy!" team. Dad was a self taught intellectual - very widely read, and prided himself on saying "I am the family psychiatrist -- come to me with your problems." Mom was the opposite -- she'd ask how you were and answer "Oh that's great, Sweetie" before you had the chance to get our your gripes.

Well, as it turns out, Mom's wisdom was the deeper one. There's a LOT to be said for insulating yourself from the negative waves of others, while people like Dad, who internalized the angst and sadness of those he loved, skipped off this planet a few months after turning 63 -- Mom made it to 93.

I had a talk the other day with a family member -- not nuclear -- who mocked my cheerful greeting by telling me all of her manifold woes. She has plenty, of course, mostly due to life choices that led her down a tough road, but on this day her sour mood was about insurance company premiums, and how evil corporations take advantage of regular people -- kind of like a mini Bernie Sanders speech.

I listened, and she asked about my issues, answering before I could -- that my cheerful demeanor MUST mean all was great --- and why wouldn't it be? I have SO many blessings, and money, and dear friends, and, and, and -- my blessings DO feel an embarrassment of riches to me. And typically I'd just go on cheerleading, as I do, but maybe there was something in the air: I was honest.

I told her she was actually in an elite club -- one of the few whose crap I endured based on thinking it's what my Dad would have wanted. But guess what? I had plenty of misery myself -- but choose not to spread it around like manure.

I was reminded of a small but poignant scene from "The Sopranos." Paulie gets pulled over by a local cop who was clearly on the take from Tony's crew -- and apologized to Paulie. Paulie asked how he was, and the cop started venting "Well you know, the wife's cancer is back, and my kid..." Paulie put up his hand, and said "Yeah -- we all got our freaking problems. You REALLY think I need to hear yours???!!!!" Both men laughed because it was true -- we DON'T need to hear the miseries of others, even though politeness demands we ask how things are; how they're going.

Meanwhile, Wifey continues to fight her bad back journey. Her luxury ship sailed without her Thursday -- she put in the claim with insurance for reimbursement. 

But last night, I got a bit tougher. I had told Donna and Barry about a neighborhood fish place, near FIU, Kenny told us about. He, Paul, and I went there last Thursday before we attended a Joelle Crim Pro lecture at the law school. It was delicious. It was VERY moderately priced.

Donna LOVES seafood, and they decided to go -- inviting us. Wifey told me to go along, but I chose not to be a third wheel, and nicely but firmly asked Wifey to come along -- it was only a 24 minute drive, and she could stand as needed. And she did, and we had a fine time!

I figured if she was on the ship, there'd be a nice dinner, and figured she ought to have that, albeit in less luxurious surroundings. We ate -- shared a paella and some ceviche. Donna and Barry LOVED their entrees -- I have a feeling this will become one of their go-tos, although it's a weekend 30 minute drive for them -- down the TPK and past FIU.

It was -- a regular nice Saturday night, with a dear friends -- we talked of our kids and grandkids -- their life choices, some wise, some less than wise.

Wifey told me when we got home she WAS in discomfort, but so be it. It was a needed night, and proved she could still be amongst the living, versus the shut ins -- the last place one ought to be until really much later.

Today the weather is gorgeous. I have some LONG walks planned. Hopefully tomorrow they finish our roof -- it appears largely done except for a few drainage areas near balcony and a stairway joint.

Hopefully I get to see the boys -- probably a fetch from school and maybe a late lunch with their beloved tia, D2. I so love those afternoons -- and now that Little Man adores D2's beloved enormous dog, she loves them, too.

And March draws nigh. The months truly fly by -- just yesterday we were ringing in 2026 in San Juan Harbor as the Canes were beating Ohio State. 

So my delayed New Year's resolution -- minimize the negative allowed into my head. Plenty comes with no choice -- that's life. But allowing non essential downers? Nah -- that was SO 2025.

Friday, February 20, 2026

Tech and Car Service

 So Wifey's car is D1's former SUV -- a Lexus RX350. D1 had leased it, but then when everyone started hating Elon Musk and Teslas got cheap, she wanted one of those instead, and it was $200 less per month. Wifey's SUV was getting long in the tooth, and had been repaired a LOT of times on account of stuff jumping in front of or behind the SUV when Wifey was driving, and so I decided to replace the older SUV with the newer one -- it had only about 12K miles on it.

We sold the old SUV for more than I thought, and D1 and Little Man and I drove up to Margate, to JM Lexus, to do the purchase of the vehicle off lease. It used to be you just sent a check to the finance company, but dealers paid off the Florida GOP to make it that you had to transact this at dealers so they could try to rip you off with fees. JM did NOT -- they were terrific -- and I willingly bought an extended warranty through 2028 to cover repairs -- knowing we'd be keeping this SUV awhile.

Wifey's had it now for 2 years, and it still has less than 20K miles, and this am I went to move it so the roofers could get a vehicle close to the front of the house, and instead of the healthy sound of a vehicle starting, I heard clicks. The thing DID turn over, but I knew a dead battery was imminent, and so called the local Lexus service department, and asked for my long time advisor Isaac. "Sir -- he retired 2 years ago -- he was an older fellow." Isaac is my age...

Anyway, I got some young guy when I drove over, and he told me it indeed seemed like the battery -- did I want a loaner? Batteries were covered by the warranty. No thanks -- and I walked the 3.7 miles home in lovely weather.

A bit ago, I got a text to watch a video from the dealer. I did, and it was Wifey's SUV, with a tech showing how he had topped off the fluids, the tires were still fine, but the cabin and AC filers were schmutz -ridden. Then I got a text asking if I wanted the replacements -- I accepted 2, but declined an evaporator cleaning service. Man -- everything is high tech now -- even mechanics video and text you!

The SUV will be ready later -- I can drop Wifey off to fetch it. We have zero plans to replace this SUV -- hell -- the extended warranty runs until 2028! By then the car will have 30K miles!

Truth is, we can get by fine with a single car -- neither of us typically drives that much, and most of our trips -- to the Ds or Wifey's many doctor visits -- I take her anyway.

My SUV lease is up in June -- my laziness will probably cause me to simply lease the same vehicle again -- a man-sized Cadillac -- that ought to get me to 68 years old, and Wifey -- well, her age cannot be mentioned. Might this be our final foray into 2 car territory? I guess time will tell.

Meanwhile, the roofers have most of the job done, and it looks terrific -- like when we moved in 25 years ago! They'll either finish today or Monday. We're in a drought, which is bad for everything BUT roof jobs -- but as I have learned, eventually the rains in Miami WILL Come.

For now, a weekend is upon us, and another cold front coming. I have plenty of firewood for my firepit. Firepits are still very low tech...

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

The Alpha and Beta of Sunniland

 So I just learned a new Gen Z or Millennial term: beta. It refers to an inconsequential man -- the guy who is wimpy and overlooked. Apparently it evolved as an antonym to alpha, as in dominant, or lead man. Turns out I know PLENTY of betas -- little guys, not just in stature, but those who think small and try to overcompensate by acting tough or knowledgeable while they are anything other than alpha.

But today, I decided to use opposites in a culinary way -- this am I visited the North part of beloved strip center Sunniland. Newcomers pronounce it "Sooney-land" but we longtimers know it rhymes with sunny.

H and H Bagels opened, a famed NY bagelry that opened to fanfare in Boca last year and now has an outpost here in Pinecrest. They had a "soft opening" yesterday, and my visit showed they were still working out the kinks. A young NY Jewish guy was at the register and running stuff, while the Latina preparers were making their way to deli-barista status. I got a classic nova spread with a VERY fresh and delicious everything bagel -- it was indeed delicious. After my coffee, I stepped back into line behind a svelte blonde Latina young Mom type -- guessing a Beth Am Mom -- possibly Judea.

She turned to me and said in perfect pitch B and T accent: "I am soooo excited. We moved here last year, and honestly the only thing I miss about The City (shorthand for Manhattan) was H and H!" I turned to the manager and said "Hey -- maybe hire her as a spokes-maidlach." He laughed -- I don't think she knew much Yiddish -- too many generations between the Lower East Side, or Bronx, and Scarsdale or Rosyln.

I got Wifey a fresh out of the oven (when they bring them out, the yell "Fresh bagels!" egg and cheese sandwich with tomato. I saw her in the kitchen, hiding the bag behind my back, and regaled her with the tale of the delicious bagel, while she looked like a started Retriever whose owner is hiding a strip of beef. And then I said "Just kidding!" and gave her the sandwich, which she pronounced delicious, but responded in the exact way her mother would have "They don't have bialys?"

I today hereby adopt "They don't have bialys?" as the new expression signaling her soft disappointment -- yes, this is good, BUT...

Anyway, I tried. I always try.

As for the omega of Sunniland -- that comes tonight. They opened a Sergios where  IHOP used to be, on the southern cap of the Center. Barry, Norman, Kenny and I will muster there at 5:30 for our dinner before Bible Class -- have some good Cuban before we, as Kenny noted, debate how many angels fit on the head of a pin. It's actually much more interesting than that.

Sergio's is a small chain of decent Cuban restaurants, and I read the new one got a liquor license. That may give ME license to order a favorite drink -- a vodka mojito. I was taught about this permutation of the Cuban mint julep by a Cubana friend who, like me, doesn't favor rum. The vodka mojito is less sweet, but still quite good.

Meanwhile, the roof tile installation continues in earnest -- affable Jose sent me photos of some completed sections and it looks terrific. Jose said the job will be done either this Friday, or early next week. Next -- refinishing kitchen cabinets, so we can be ready for the duration.

I love that expression. I first learned it from my Dad, when I asked about his WW II service -- how long did they tell him he would be in the Army? "For the Duration" was the answer -- which for him was from April of 1942 until December of 1945 --December 7th -- Pearl Harbor Day, no less.

Long time when you're 22 -- his age at draft time.  I hope my "for the duration" - time spent in Villa Wifey, spans a few decades. We'll see.

All I know is, I plan to keep on taking care of my family. Ain't no one better call ME no beta...

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Strange Days Indeed

 So in keeping with my Canes chat nickname, "Obituary Dave," there have been a couple of famous ones the past 2 days. One was a real loss, the other, to my view, "eh."

I LOVED Robert Duvall -- to me -- one of the finest actors of our generation. Of course, he was in two of my favorite films of all I and II. If you have to ask what those Roman numerals refer to, you don't know me at all. I also loved him in "Great Santini," and "Second Hand Lions," where he was well into his 80s and still kicking it. "The Apostle?" And of course loving the smell of napalm in the morning.

Wifey and I plan to watch "Lonesome Dove," which we missed when it was on TV, and apparently was one of the great actor's favorite roles -- saying the cowboy he played was an American version of Hamlet.

He was also in another favorite movie, "To Kill a Mockingbird." His role was silent, as the child saving Boo Radley, but you could see in his eyes he was destined for thespian greatness. We will not see his like again.

The other death making headlines: Jesse Jackson. They say he taught so much to so many. In my case, it's true -- I had never heard NYC referred to as "Hymietown" before he slurred the city thusly. Originally he denied he said it, when reported by WAPO, and later said part of the Jewish conspiracy made it up. Later, he admitted it and apologized.

But he also hugged Farrahkan and Arafat. Yeah -- best thing I read about him was how impressive it was that he made it to 84 without ever working a single day in his life. See ya.

Further showing the strange days was the shooting in Rhode Island -- a trans Dad killed his ex wife, one child, and then him/herself. 2 other kids are in critical. The photos of the killer showed he NAILED the look first presented by great character actor Lou Jacobi as a transvestite in the Woody Allen film "Everything you Ever Wanted To Know About Sex." I mean -- the photos show a guy with arms most of the guys in my gym would kill to have -- shoulders, too.

I know anti LGBTQRSTU folks (I always add extra letters for permutations yet to be uncovered) will blame the killer's sexual identity on the awful crime. That's silly, of course -- he was, like Jacobi's wife character noted, just a sick individual.

Meanwhile, the tile installers were here yesterday and are back today -- the final step in what has now been a 5 week re-roofing job. My payments have now risen to the 6 figures, which blows my mind -- more than our first house cost! But, as Paul reminds me, the house is a big asset, and paying for the new roof is just rearranging assets.

Villa Wifey has given us so much joy -- so many great memories -- unlike shares of Apple or Pfizer -- which have let us PAY for stuff but aren't inherently joyful.

Jose tells me MOST of the tile work will be done by Friday -- and hopefully completion next week.

Wifey, who still wants to move, got some promising news. I assured her I would NOT be involved in another re-roofing -- and the lifespan of this roof is 35 years -- so sometime in the next 35 years, before I turn 100, we WILL move.

Ha. If I get my way, there'll be just one more move for me -- to the tiny real estate we own off the Palmetto near Dadeland, currently known as Mt. Nebo cemetery. I guess we'll see.

As John Lennon sang: nobody told me there'd be days like these. It's true. But for now, it's nice to simply keep on, keepin' on, as Rev. Hymietown may have said.

Monday, February 16, 2026

Ageism on President's Day

 So we had a delayed Valentine's Day celebration last night, based on the 800th episode of "The Simpsons" airing. My two dear law school friends and I were big fans, as were our wives, though truth be told, none of us has watched in a decade. But there was no school or court work today, so I took it as a sign -- ordered some pizza and wings and cannolis, fired up the firepit though it was kind of warm, poured adult and adulteress beverages, and we had a time.

Of the six of us, only one is still in what I call the "Old People Biz" -- caring for a 90 something parents. The other 11 of our beloved Moms and Dads have shuttled off this mortal coil -- and one remains -- and is the subject of tensosity between her friend and a brother who really only wants to "do what Mom wants" without taking control. I really feel for my friend -- this will only get worse before, blissfully, peace will come.

Wifey and I had three clients in the Old People Biz -- primary caregivers for my Mom and her parents. The relationship is fraught -- we were really deeply involved in raising the Ds,and all that entailed, and still had to coordinate care. We started out being deferential to their wishes, though they were often idiotic -- my Mother insisting on living alone in her condo, for example, when most of her day was spent trying to clean up the accidents she had on her carpet -- knowing if we saw them -- ALF was coming.

There's a bad twilight between stubbornness and actual incompetence -- when the latter comes, things go more smoothly. In Mom's case, one of her many falls landed her at Delray Hospital, and Eric said she was starving to death based on her serum albumin. Then we took away control -- down to Miami Jewish for the final 11 months, where she was cared for humanely and visited, mostly by my sister of another mister Mirta.

My suegra was the toughest -- staying in her Pembroke Pines condo for years while my suegro was at Miami Jewish -- and the day he died, it was "no longer mine home" and demanded to be moved -- but not to ALF. So Wifey and I kicked out the comical tenant Lenny -- a classic example of a word I just learned: beta. A beta is a loser guy -- the one who is dominated by the alpha. That was Lenny to a T -- made an ok living but we thing put a lot of it up his nose -- used to bounce the $1K rent checks all the time -- I'd have to meet him at a Starbucks for the cash. I kept his rent the same for 5 years, and when I told him I needed the unit back, he protested "But this is my HOME!" even though it was a month to monthe lease. The problem was by then any similar place was 2.5 times more expensive. When he moved, we found he had lived like a frat boy -- missing toilet tank covers, for example.

So Wifey worked with our handy man Nestor, and made the place lovely, only to have her Mother whine about how lonely she was there, despite Wifey getting her drivers to take her to the local casinos, and our many meals with her.

Before her final years, Wifey learned the lesson: YOU make the calls for the 90 something -- trying to keep them happy is a fools' errand.

This whole thing with the missing TV anchor's mother is absurd to me. 84 and sick? Hey kidnappers -- she's all yours! You'll get caught and put in prison for life -- but a national search and demand for $6M?

Again -- I know it's ageist, but I want my Ds to know if I'm in my mid 80s and in failing health, and some moron kidnaps me -- do NOT pay the ransom. Far more important resources by used for those with real futures.

And hey -- I'm 5 years into old age, so I get to say this, right? Like only old people can use the "O word."

We Boomers are TOO involved in the life our our kids and grandkids -- every one of my friends, to varying degrees, cares for their adult kids financially or otherwise. One relative has a hub-son, a great neologism I learned yesterday from Bill Maher. Her troubled boy is in his mid 40s, and they speak daily, if not multiple times per day. Ha. Hub-son -- a son who in many ways is like a husband.

But the point is, on TOP of these responsibilities, you pop that of ancient parents. Basta. Enough.

Wifey and I acquitted our responsibilities to our 3 olds with love and compassion. We have zero regrets. We loved them, and honored them until their Rewards. Do we wish we could still visit them in the nursing homes? No -- the grandsons and Ds have futures and need us.

Wifey remarked how old one of our group looked last night. She was right -- we're all mid to late 60s -- one of us could pass for mid to late 70s. So our time here is limited as it is. Let us focus on our kids and grandkids, and savoring our days.

Ageist, I know, but happy to be out of that business.

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Everything's Quiet On Valentine's Day

 Ah, the Dia de Amor is upon us. Yesterday was National Mistress Day, which is apparently a thing, where you celebrate your side piece. I imagine more lingerie and fewer chocolates...

We used to celebrate, since I'm a hopeless (and helpless) romantic -- moonlight concerts at Deering Bay, nice dinners at Christy's, and for several years I set up a table in the front of our VERY romantic house and hosted dinners. The first was 2001, soon after Wifey and the Ds and I moved it. I brought in DiNapoli and we toasted our family in our new home. Later, we invited Pat and Susan, Jeff and Lili, Mike and Loni,and Dave and Maureen. I would buy nice costume bracelets for the wives and hide them under the dishes. One year the Ds were our servers. We all enjoyed it.

This year Mike and Loni invited us to dinner at Platea, followed by a trip to ZooMiami for Ron Magill's wildly entertaining "Sex and the Animals." We went years ago -- terrific. A talk on the exotic mating habits of exotic animals -- presented by the wonderful Magill, sort of a Neil DeGrasse Tyson of Zoology.

Alas, Wifey's hip and back keep her from attending, and instead I fetched Little Man after a lunch with D2. We just came from breakfast with Mike and Chris, followed by a visit to Mike and Loni's house, the closest thing there is to the Addams Family mansion -- he was fascinated by the tiki bar with mummies and skulls, and a visit with Mr. Tortoise, the large pet who ate a green pepper to Little Man's delight.

I may bring him to Greer Park later. We invited the super genius neighbor girl, but haven't heard back. At some point, I shall re-home Little Man, and maybe have a cocktail with D2 and Jonathan -- they've learned that dinner on VD is amateur hour -- paying double just because.

If the timing works, I may stop in the Grove on the way back, too -- to see Joelle, Kenny, and their cool buddy Claude, a retired Navy ortho surgeon. His wife, a retired Navy eye doc, had to attend to a family matter, and so missed the trip to the Grove for the Arts Festival, which I joke has gotten far too crowded and so no one goes there anymore. Does anyone even know who Yogi Berra was?

But last night, after Little Man finally fell asleep following some snuggle time, Wifey and I agreed this was the BEST type of Valentine's Day -- one celebrating the true love that led to beloved grandchildren. I truly hope all of my friends get to experience it -- turns out being a grandpa is a nice gig.

Wifey was supposed to leave on her Oceania mah jong cruise Thursday. She hasn't canceled yet, since her trip insurance said she didn't need to file the claim until departure day. I joke the odds from Vegas as to whether she goes keep shifting. Latest: no go, as she told Barry and Donna last night on our FaceTime call.

I hope she does get to go -- I think a week at sea woud be good for her psyche -- but totally her call. I remain DaveBer, available to schlep, or not. I just want to be given 5 stars after the journey.

So I hope Cupid has drawn back his bow, as Sam Cooke sang, and let his arrow go. Nice to have a day recognize love -- in all its manifestations.