A New Jersey Company Town

Yesterday afternoon, as part of our two- day exploration of south jersey, NoCoins, Leah and myself set off in search of a village called Whitesbog, where cranberries and blueberries were historically (and presently) grown.

For those who haven’t been taught much about this fair state where I was born, the South of New Jersey has a large area of Pine Barrens, where there are a plethora of state parks. The Whitesbog village is located in Lebanon State Forest, strangely renamed the Brendan T. Byrne state forest, but Im just going to keep calling it Lebanon because I think its a more beautiful name.

So I had a general idea where to drive to, and after an hour or so of riding in circles through narrow roads between the pine forests, we suddenly came upon the little sign for Whitesbog Village. From there, a very skinny and bumpy road, which passed several fields of what I assume were blueberries, eventually came to a clearing and a whole series of houses which looked very 1800’s. Even stranger was the fact that no one was around; each house was closed up and perfectly silent, as if everyone had fled the town and left it for accidental tourists like us to discover.

We managed to find a map on a rickety bulletin board, and decided to walk the village in search of strange buildings and eventually – blueberry fields. Apparently it is Maine that produces the most blueberries in north america, 25% of all blueberries to be exact. In Europe it is France and Austria that grow the most. New Jersey, meanwhile, comes in just behind Maine, along with a few other states, as a major producer of high-bush blueberries.

As lovely as it was, to walk around what seemed to be a ghost town and among the wild blueberry bushes, it was also extremely erie. NoCoins talked about how it was mostly Italian workers, who were hired from South Philly as seasonal workers, who lived in these little bungalows in the middle of nowhere. He talked about how they would be paid with credit and then use this credit to purchase food and goods from the company store, a pseudo slavery, in many ways.

I kept thinking of those Italian workers, as we snapped photo after photo. What happened to them. How terrible or wonderful was their time in this village? And what of their children and children’s children?

Seemed like alot of sacrafices were required, so that people could have their berries.

Greetings from Asbury Park

I see alot of highway. North, South, East, West. I am bicyclemark and I therefore hate to drive and I never drive, except when I come visit this state, where one cannot exist without a car.

Needless to say, I miss my bicycle and I hate driving.

I do, however, like the nooks and crannys of New Jersey. Tonight, when I finally have a chance to sit down and write, I will tell the tale of the cranberry fields and labor camp where I spent yesterday afternoon.

There will also be a citizen journalism vlog from Asbury Park with a celebrity guide. But it isn’t ready yet, so here’s a photo, and I’m happy to report, if you can read french, Cecilia in Malawi checks in.

Down With the Pine Trees

Greetings from Southern New Jersey.. where Im hiding out for two days with my oldest of old friends nocoins and the leah. We’re exploring the jersey shore and tomorrow the cranberry something something bogs which apparently are the only ones in the US or the world or the solar system or this town. Internet is spotty, so Im parked outside the house borrow the neighbors wifi.. thanks retirement community!

One thought before I go, besides the beauty of this state, which I will save for tomorrow; Bill Clinton.

Lots of people kiss clinton’s ass. He was so great.. he was so cool.. bla bla bla the nation misses him. I understand why they say that when you compare him to the current torturer-n-chief. But as I listened to him today on meet the press, going on and on about killing Bin Laden.. and how he tried to kill and wanted to kill and kill kill kill. All I I could hear after a while was clinton saying kill kill kill. It reminded me about what I dont like about the man and how i think the nostalgia is un-deserving for such a conservative democrat who claims to be a champion of all things human rights and international law. I don’t like the nostalgia and i think its miss placed. Furthermore i find it pathetic that he’s appearing everywhere defending his record. If his record wasn’t so spotty on everything.. he wouldnt have to be doing this.

I digress, I just don’t like clinton and his post presidency coolness. Carter is still the coolest ex-president and a man who really knows how to roll up his sleaves and work to make a slightly better world.

Anyway.. i think its tea time out here in the jersey shore retirement community.

JetLAgged

Hit me today while watching the Cobert Report.. Jetlag with a Vengence. Where am I.. who am I.. what year is it. Must.. go .. to .. sleep.

Ive noticed Soda everywhere. Everyones drinking soda. Terrible Terrible High-Fructose Corn Syrup and Phosphate whats-it-called and all the tooth decay and the pestisides… why do these soda companies do this to people? And why do people volunteer to ingest this crap?

The Soda wars continue in India. The US needs some Soda wars of its own. Starting with the childen.. keep soda out of the hands of children.

Flew Past The Big Apple

I’m just in off the KLM flight from Amsterdam. Badly in need of sleep, and what better place to sleep then the bed which I basically grew up sleeping on, not including the new-er mattress.

Before I head off to jet-lag-sleep-land, I wanted to mention something I noticed as the tanks rolled through Bangkok earlier this week: Josh Wolf, the very active citizen journalist, who you may have heard on Democracy Now last week, is heading back to jail. Once again the authorities want him silenced and used as an example for all citizen journalists to be afraid when it comes to doing their work. Josh gets my utmost respect for the way he has gone to jail and does not run from the idea of having to go back. Myself I imagine I would be finding ways to fly off to some safe haven country somewhere, out of fear of incarseration.

So watch his video, and like the man says… talk about this on your blog, at work, etc. Spread the word and do not let such battles go unnoticed.

A Nice Coup of Soup

Much has been made of the announcement of a coup in Thailand. Some people use that word that I find hard to spell: pusch. Although at first I was a little concerned for Thai people, at the idea of military driving around and squashing their civil rights, I’ve since formed a more solid opinion based on observation.

I watched the fun today through various video sources, as the king appeared on TV and the military publicly apologized for carrying out a coup. What A Country! They apologized!

It is one of those moments where I’m glad to have Thai blogs to explain to me what is really going on. Of course, Thai friends also help, but a look at the blogs like Bangkok expat mama or Thai Blogs dot com, where this guy writes about the lighter side of the coup, it all helps me to better get the feel of things and reach my own conclusions.

The BBC just ran some footage where teenagers and coming up to soldiers and handing them flowers. Reminds me of Portugal 1974 in some ways. Not too many ways.. but some.