Winter Ailments Part of Island Living by Clint Bennetsen

Archived in the category: Featured Writers, Island Life
Posted by The Dolphin Talk on 12 Jan 11 - 3 Comments

A dolphin leaps in the wake of an outbound tanker ship as it passes the big jetties. -Photo by Bruce Wakefield

Greetings from the island everyone.  Hope all of you are doing well and had a nice Christmas and are successfully trudging through the new year. I’m not a fan of New Year’s resolutions, my only goal is that my family and I stay healthy from one January to the next, and that’s easily achieved through prayer.

I finally got a little rain this past weekend, of course I had to endure 50 mph wind gusts out of the west to get it, but hey I’ll take it.   I later talked to my mom in Seadrift and they had lost electricity due to the high winds.  Of course her main gripe was not being able to make morning coffee, but I talked her through how to hook up her little propane Coleman stove and she was saved.  Oh how we coffee drinkers must have our morning fix.

I’m hoping the one inch of rain will kick start the rye grass seed that I spread out for the winter.  It did really well last year here on the island, and provided the chickens with fresh green grass through Spring.  I’ve learned that happy chickens are good egg laying chickens.

As I sit here Monday morning, another cold front is expected tonight and the temps on the island will dip into the low 30’s for much of the week.  I ran in a few days ago to stock up on supplies as I’ll be dry-docked for at least five days.

I always have to make certain that I keep at least essential type medications on hand out here, especially during the winter months when colds and sinus and crud related health issues are much more common.  Thanks to some evil inherited gene from my dad, sinus related problems have always haunted my sister and I.  I’m very rarely ever really sick (pause to knock on the wooden kitchen table), but I do occasionally have sinus headaches and congestion.

And I so hate taking any type of medication for it, as my system is then wondering what this strange medicinal substance is because it rarely needs it.  And when the medicine kicks in, my whole body feels discombobulated for the entire day.  Most of the time I forego the medicines and just try to breathe in more salty air to fend off my ailments, and I think it actually works.  Sun and salty air, natures organic medicine, maybe I should try to bottle that.

Well the duck hunters should be one happy bunch around here.  For the past few weeks there have been at least 400-500 ducks flying in bunches and sitting out on the front shoreline during the day.  I’ve heard lots of shooting on the weekend mornings, so dishes of duck are being enjoyed this winter.  I never had any desire to hunt those things, it seems as though they are most abundant when the weather is at its worst, no thank you.

Well that’s it from the island for now; everyone take care and have a great day.

3 comments for “Winter Ailments Part of Island Living by Clint Bennetsen”

1
Richard & Rhonda Hart

sounds like you have a good life over there,my wife wanted to move over there when we inherited a acre about 10 yrs ago,still plan to some day when we get all the kids raised,spent a lot of days & weekends surfing on both sides of the jetties,fought many a mosquito camping over there,got married on decroes point 25 yrs ago,so We do envy you,after all it is the safest place to be with the world getting the way it is today,live in oklahoma now but POC is home,come down a couple times a year to visit family,will have to look you up next time,do love that Island time,take care brother,hope to see you soon

January 18th, 2011 at 2:57 am
2
Clint Bennetsen

Hello Richard and Rhonda, thank you for your comment. I certainly do enjoy living here on the island and have no desire to live on the mainland again. It’s very unique that the two of you were married at Decros twenty five years ago. There have been two couples married on the island beach since i’ve been here. It sounds like you would have some interesting stories to tell. Take care and thanks again. Clint Bennetsen

January 18th, 2011 at 7:45 pm
3
Denise Caddell

Hi, Clint!

Mother sent me the write up of you in the paper. Sounds like you have found yourself a haven there on the island. I don’t make it down to Seadrift often but promise to look you up the next time I’m on the coast. Even though I grew up there, you know so much more about the area. Would love to just sit and listen to you talk. By the way, you should be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for standing in the face of unrelenting danger – South Texas Mosquitoes!!! I plan on making a trip in the Spring. Hope to see you then. Denise Caddell

January 28th, 2011 at 9:19 pm

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