No U Turn. Michael Taylor

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So, that’s how I can go three—, or 4 days without having to evacuate, sorta speak.

      “But you know, we had a great time and then we had some terrible times. During the rain, in the mud, it was crazy and terrible, and uncomfortable. But everybody was tuned into the same kind of wavelengths, and people were helping their neighbors and we had a couple that invited us into their tent and shared their wine, and their pot with us and these kinds of things. And this happened many, many times throughout the three days. So, you know, from Philadelphia to Woodstock. There you go!”

      ≈ What did you learn from that experience?

      

      “ It was just a feeling of togetherness, I’ve never experienced since. And I had never experienced before. People just felt like we could change the world. You know, here we were twenty—, 21 years old. I was turning twenty-one that month, and we were, I guess, young and naïve and just thought, ‘Here we were four—, 500,000 strong, and if we could get together and pull something like this off, imagine what we could do politically’ and that type of thing. So that’s what we learned! But I also learned never to go to that type of concert again! ‘Cause again, you know, we look back and idolize it and idealize it as being so romantic and great. And it was! But it also was uncomfortable, and a tough experience for a few days as well.”

      ≈ Describe yourself physically and psychologically at that time

      

      “Well, here I was young. I was not really a hippie. But I was in the phase of becoming a hippie, I guess, and not quite as romantic, with that flower-child type of feeling as, I guess, a lot of my peers were. But, also, I was not as heavily into dope as most of them were. I didn’t trip at Woodstock. I, you know, wasn’t into acid. Subsequent to Woodstock, I did try acid a few times and, believe me, that was enough! But, smoking pot and hashish that was that was good to go! You know, that was that was basically what we did, and wine and obviously we, uh, we were always I was always tall and thin and relatively good lookin’ and young and always on the make!” said Boogie with a snort.

      “And those were the years, I guess, a couple—one—, or 2 years before the downer on Quaaludes scene came to be. So people were still, you know, coherent, and thoughtful, and you could carry on conversations with people, rather than a few years later, when people were just totally out of it! So, I guess I would describe myself as young, naïve and on the make,” he chortled with conviction.

      ≈ What were you drinking at that time?

      “My beverage of choice at that time was wine! You know … red wine. We hadn’t really gotten into a lot of alcohol. So, we found that in drinking wine with some of the good hashish at the time, it really kinda powered it out. And you know, you really really got a buzz!”

      ≈ Earlier, you spoke about Kenneth Cagle . Who was that?

      

      “Well, Kenneth is my best and oldest friend. And we know each other since the seventh grade in junior high school, since we were 13 years old. And we went through the junior high school days, and we were part of a click, which all the junior- and senior- and high- schoolers were at the time There were obviously always clicks. And Kenneth was always a good practical joker. He loved to pull jokes on people. And loved to goof on people, so to speak. But a heart of gold, and, you know, a better friend, you couldn’t ask for. And to this day, we’re still very good friends.”

      ≈ Who was Harriet Weitzman?

      

      “Harriet Weitzman. That was the next door the 16-year-old next-door neighbor of my Cousin Mike. And during that summer, Harriet and I would sit out on her front porch and the front lawn—You know, for some reason I picture this big front lawn. Now I go back, and it’s like a postage stamp—We would sit out by the curb and talk about this and that, and here I was—this, you know, worldly 20-year-old, talking to this newbie 16-year-old and she was kind of hanging on every word, and I kinda wooed her over, and took her to some movies, and this and that, and we started to make out, and I’ll never forget the classic line, her mother calling out—with the two of us having been out there for five—, 6 hours—it’s two clock in the morning and Mrs. Weitzman—a holocaust survivor—calling out in her German-American accent, ‘Harriet! Harriet Veitzman. It’s two o’clock in the morning! You’ve got to come in!’ This was actually the night that Neil Armstrong landed on the moon, July of two thousand and No July of 1969.”

      ≈ Why did you leave Philly?

      

      “Well, our summer vacation was over. I was going to school on a student ” explained Boogie, then forgetting where he was going with that thought. “ So, I went back to Miami to continue my studies and then really got more and more into smokin’ dope and less and less into studying.”

      ≈ Maybe that’s why he forgot the last word

      “And just did a lot of partyin’, and uh, not not a lot of studying, so—but I do remember writing many letters to Harriet, where I plagiarized lines from different songs and poems, and she must’ve thought I was just the most romantic guy in the world!”

      ≈ Yes, I’m sure you were

      “But I did learn the importance of family. I was always close with my Cousin Mike, and my Aunt Edith and Uncle Carl. And, you know, always a port in the storm!”

      ≈ That’s being close?

      “I could always go there and have a roof over my head and three squares a day, as we did that summer of ’69; where, basically, I was a bum with no money!” Boogie noted self-deprecatingly, while emitting one of his signature chuckles.

      “But, if I had to do it all over again, I would definitely do it and it was an experience of a lifetime. And, just—the feelings, the atmosphere, and the togetherness—never have I seen it duplicated again, although many have tried. And it was just, you know—the stars aligned!

      “We had a couple of gal—girlfriends from Miami that were up there as well. And we pal-ed around with them. They stayed at a different place than we did—at the Spanner Motel. This was everybody’s second summer up there, but it was my first. So, everything was kind of new and exciting to me, and so forth. I mean, I’ll never forget the first night I’m up there and we’re staying in the staff quarters of the Stevensville Hotel, which is basically a rundown basement with a couple of bunk beds and a couple of pee-stained mattresses. And, you know, four o’clock in the morning some wino—a Bimmy—starts to crawl in through the window, and I’m like ‘Oh my God! What’s going to happen here?’ And one of my friends, Gary Franks, just kind of kicked the guy in the head out the window and goes, ‘Don’t worry, it’s just a Bimmy! Go back to sleep.’ ”

      Following a short snicker, Boogie ended with, “So that was part of my indoctrination to ‘The Mountains.’ ”

      ≈

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