Friday, September 19, 2025

Still my strength and shield

Imma ignore the events—outrageous, ridiculous and pathetic—of this week and give you the opening hymn from last Saturday’s memorial service for my friend Dick.

This isn’t perhaps the most rousing rendition of “Guide Me, O Though Great Redeemer”, but all the Welsh male choruses I heard just…didn’t click with me, for some reason.

But Dick would definitely have enjoyed the purpose of this setting—the service marking the centenary of the establishment of the Royal Air Force, held in Westminster Abbey in July, 2018.

You don’t get the full effect of the basses echoing the refrain, but you should still crank it up and let it fill your space.


©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Foraging

A couple of weeks ago I noticed some incipient mushrooms along one of my walking routes:

I didn’t go that way for a few days, but when I did—wow:














I’m seriously tempted to harvest them and make soup.

 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Paws, claws & feet

A couple of weeks ago I went to the Costco in Fairfax instead of the one in Sterling. Dunno if that fact is relevant, but this is the first time I’ve seen this product available in a Costco:


Actually, this is the first time I’ve ever seen anything calling itself “chicken paws”. I once had chicken feet at a Chinese restaurant in Milpitas. (They were delicious, but difficult to eat with chopsticks. Slippery little buggers.) Actually—even “feet” is odd; technically they’re claws.

I should have got a shot of the price, but fell down on the job. Sorry.

 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

 

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

So it is

After the shitstorm of last week, I think we could use some beauty. So here’s the latest sidewalk art in my ‘hood.

 



©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Monday, September 15, 2025

Gratitude Monday: Take joy!

I spent part of Saturday afternoon at the memorial service for my friend Dick Kovar, one of the best exemplars of how to live a full life I’ve ever known.

Dick died in June, at age 96. But it’s not just the number of years that’s impressive, it’s that he and his wife Carolyn celebrated his 96th birthday on Valentine’s Day with a romantic dinner at their favorite restaurant in Vienna (Virginia), and there was a family Easter celebration six weeks before his death at L’Auberge Chez François. He grasped life with a joyful zest that radiated out to all around him.

I last wrote about Dick in 2015, so you can get the basics there. (That was the occasion of the little kerfuffle at the Dresden train station on his and Carolyn’s Mittel Europa tour, where he ended up in hospital for about a week or so.) I was the transponder of his holiday reports in the days before he got an iPad—he’d laboriously write out his daily thoughts on his iPod and send them and photos to me; I’d transmit them on to an email list of about 30 people. I loved those trips almost as much as if I’d taken them myself.

(In fact, when I decided in 2018 to go to Prague, Berlin and Paris, I stayed in hotels that had the Kovar seal of approval in each city.)

Dick’s long career in public service is outlined in this obituary—30 years at the CIA as an editor, analyst and other things. Postings around the world—which I found out about in dribs and drabs as, for example, he’d mention that the French officers club in Saigon had great champagne brunches, or that he acquired his taste for gin and tonic at parties thrown by the British embassy in Nigeria.

(Fun fact: the last few trips that Dick and Carolyn took before Covid were to Italy. Naturally, they dined on wonderful meals, but there was a problem with getting bartenders to make a proper, Kovar-quality martini; they didn’t seem to understand the concept of dry vermouth. IIRC, he ended up taking a flask of vermouth on the last trip or two so that he could enjoy his pre-prandial cocktail fully.)

On the subject of booze, back in 2014 I posted some stats on global drinking, where the US turned out to be somewhat…not on top in terms of whiskey; India—while behind Ireland and the UK—was still a contender. When Dick read it, he commented that when he visited an Indian military base one time, his observation was that the officers could definitely put it away.

There’s one more anecdote I want to share. I may have mixed up the specifics, but either way, it’s illustrative of the kind of world Dick created around him. In an email (or possibly a Facebook post), Dick mentioned a party he and his wife had thrown for the international community somewhere; in the course of it, a guest—a Sikh—managed some expansive gesture (I can’t recall). Dick’s elder daughter Elspeth corrected him: it wasn’t a Sikh, it was a Gurkha, and he’d done a back flip over a terrace railing into the garden below without spilling a drop of his drink.

Regardless of whether it was a Sikh or a Gurkha doing a dance move or a back flip—that’s what I call a party.

Dick was in the CIA across our involvement in Southeast Asia, some of the periodic blowups in the Middle East, Central American skullduggery and other sundry geopolitical hot times. I don’t know this, but I assume he would have been right in the thick of it—his job at some point entailed preparing and delivering the President’s Daily Brief (back in the days before that had to be reduced to two bullet points and a cartoon). He took early retirement in 1980, worked as an editor for Time-Life Books and returned to the agency as a contractor/consultant. He did this in one form or another until 2015, when he finally really retired, at age 86.

One story that encapsulates his career for me is his 1987 testimony at the trial when General William Westmoreland sued CBS for defamation in a documentary the network aired about US forces in Vietnam under counting enemy forces. Dick shed light on the ways governments can “reshape” reality to conform to their preconceived notions—at the price of individual integrity, citizen trust and thousands of lives. You should read WaPo’s report. (Dick at one point sent round a paper about this, but I can’t find it.)

Throughout this, the continuo of Dick’s life was music, both sacred and secular. I met him in the church choir, where he was the linchpin of the bass-baritone section. But for decades his great musical joy was performing in the annual Washington Revels at Christmas time. This WaPo story gives you a bit of the flavor of those performances.

Photo by Kate Patterson for WaPo

(There were about 20 Revelers at Dick’s memorial service; they both sang and reminisced about the joy he added to their productions. He was, it seems, a natural ham.) He loved Welsh hymns, and they permeated the service on Saturday, starting with “Guide Me, O Thou Great Jehovah”, to the tune of “Cwm Rhondda”—one of the most majestic melodies ever, with a fabulous bass echo, which Dick always relished when we sang it in church.

But Dick also had a deep, through-the-bone faith. We had a couple of convos about that over the years; the resurrection and the life were not in any respect theoretical to him, they existed as the alpha and the omega, and so he was comfortable with the notion of death. Far from being something to be dreaded or feared, it’s just the threshold to the next life, so why not step through it with the same anticipation that you experience when you go from the kitchen to the living room on Christmas Day? (My paraphrase.)

In this vein, Dick was endlessly curious about near death experiences. He would send round accounts of the experiences people who’ve been clinically dead and restored to life report. The white light, the benevolent welcome. But I don’t think he needed them as proof—he already knew.

The last time I spoke with Dick in person was in 2023. I think that was the only time I’ve ever seen him not wearing a tie—it was a very nice polo shirt, buttoned to the top, under a sport coat. Most of our relationship since choir days (which was in the last century) was via email and Facebook. I’m sorry about that, but I’m also cognizant of that fact that writing, to him, was his element, just like music was; I didn’t get to hear the voice, but I definitely got the spirit.

On the subject of writing—I ragged on Dick for years to write his memoirs. I don’t know if he did, or even if there’s just an outline or a draft or a collection of anecdotes; I hope to God there is, because—in whatever form or condition—it is pure gold.

So I’m grateful for the decades of exchanges, jokes, minor tech crises, travel reports, links to Katherine Jenkins videos and everything else Dick gave me. When I heard the news of his death, my first response was, “Oh, no. No.” My second—almost immediately—was, “What an amazing, spectacular life, and thank you for gracing mine with your friendship.”

I’ll leave you with two things. The first is a letter from Fra Giovanni Giacondo (a Dominican and then Franciscan priest, architect and archaeologist) to his friend, Contessina Allagia degli Aldobrandeschi, on Christmas Eve, 1515. (There’s historical dispute about the authorship of this, but it’s immaterial to the present discussion.) Dick read this version at his younger daughter Carrie’s wedding:

“I salute you. There is nothing I can give you which you have not. But there is much that, while I cannot give, you can take. No heaven can come to us unless our hearts find rest in it today. Take heaven! No peace lies in the future which is not hidden in this present instant. Take peace! The gloom of the world is but a shadow. Behind it, yet within our reach is joy. Take joy!

“And so I greet you, with the prayer that for you, now and forever, the day breaks and the shadows flee away.”

And I cannot write about Dick without music. “It Is Well with my Soul” was not part of Saturday’s service, but I just feel that it’s right. So here’s the Jehovah Shalom Acapella group of Uganda singing it. They’ve got a good bass singer anchoring it.

Oh—Saturday evening, I made a little toast to Dick. Not a martini—I don't like gin and I've reached the point in my life where I have to spend my alcohol calories wisely, so I don't drink anything I don't like. So I had a little slurp of Highland Park 12. Sláinte mbaith, Dick.



©2025 Bas Bleu