SERENDIPITY PHOTO STORY PROMPT
WEDNESDAY – June 10, 2015 #9
Welcome, again, to Frisbee Wednesday. Today I have wonderful pictures of my favorite local dam. And a story to go with it. Two of the best pictures were taken by Garry.
You may write about any of these pictures. Or any of your pictures or someone else’s picture. Write a little, write a lot. At your pleasure.
The picture for this week is by Garry Armstrong, who is coincidentally, the subject of today’s story.
Please add your own ping back (links) or put your link in a comment, then link back to this post so other people can find you and me. My effort for this week follows.
BITE OF THE SPIDER
Garry has been feeling unwell. Something happened and it started with a bug bite. My first guess would be a brown recluse spider, but according to the authorities, that’s impossible because “they don’t live here.” We do have black widows … even the experts admit that … and giant wolf spiders (let us hope I never encounter one because I would probably die of fright) … but no brown recluses.
Whatever it was, the bite was painless and the culprit got away. The experts get to retain plausible deniability for their contention “it didn’t really happen.”
Only the spider — if it was a spider — knows for sure, and he isn’t talking. Yet.
Garry started to feel not-so-good shortly after Kaity’s graduation. He was energetic during the event, the picture of a proud grandfather with field producer experience.
The day after The Big Event, a different story emerged. His left leg hurt. Shooting pains. He was limping. Both of us assumed (never assume) this was because he’d pushed too hard the previous day.
That wasn’t it, because it got steadily worse. On Thursday, while towelling off post-shower, he noticed something nasty on the back of his left calf, down near the ankle. He showed me.
It was an ugly wound. Two areas affected, the larger one had two big gray-blue, oddly shaped blisters surrounded by dark red inflammation plus a smaller version lower on the ankle. I lanced the blisters, cauterized everything with surgical iodine, slathered it with antibiotic ointment and bandaged him like a wounded soldier on the battlefield.
He said he felt better. Friday passed, but on Saturday morning, I didn’t like the way it looked. It seemed redder and the area of redness had expanded. I called the doctor. Drove him there.. Brought him home, then went out to the pharmacy for antibiotics. It was the first time I had driven since before the heart surgery in March 2014.
Just a day later — Sunday — the weather being fine and Garry feeling a little better, I suggested an airing. Manchaug. I’d drive. It would be low impact.
I should have known better.
I left with Garry, my husband, but arrived in Manchaug with director John Ford. Squatting in the tall grass to get that great shot of the dam with the wild daisies in the foreground, leaving me wondering if he’d be able to get up — as I pondered how many biting insects were hiding in that grass. I would have thought he’s had enough of getting bit. But it’s not about me. Who am I to keep an artist from his moment?
The doctor was worried about Lyme. Although I saw no evidence of a tick, that doesn’t mean he wasn’t bitten by one or several. Ticks drop off when they’ve completed their meal and Lyme is endemic to this region.
I’m counting on it not being Lyme. Or anything serious. Because the maestro needs his space — and I need the maestro.
Categories: #Health, #Photography, Humor, Marriage, Relationships
Ouch. I once got bitten six times by a black widow (at once). Not anything I’d care to repeat.
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That must have made you thoroughly sick for quite a while. Garry must have been bitten at least twice, in two different places. I never imagined these bites could make a grown person so very sick! I hope you never get bit again. Garry neither!!
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Garry’s shots are really wonderful. Thank heavens he is recovering now.
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He has a marvelous eye. He just needs to carry a camera more often and take more pictures.
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