Picnic Day

Written
2010

 Picnic Day

 

So you would like to live

       in this quaint little village of Davis?

We would love to have you here

       and promise you many great things.

Once a year you will have a picnic and parade -

       and what a parade!

Bands and floats

       and bicycles galore.

Antique tractors

       with creaking iron tracks.

Cheerleaders and clowns

       on tall one- wheel bicycles.

Balloons everywhere,

       cotton candy and loud horns.

But to old-timers, like me,

       the real parade is the 75,000

       watching the parade.

They sit, move and stand three deep for blocks,

       waiting for hours

       as the marching bands play someplace close.

Many move up and down the street

       as if they too are on parade.

And they are a most diverse audience.

Equally varied are the dogs

       brought to enjoy the outing.

There is not a size, color or breed of dog

       that is not represented.

And figure it out,

       if there are 75,000 people,

       close to half will be male.

And half of those will have on

       a tee shirt

       with a message.

The parade- watchers become signboards

       for a national sampling

       of sports teams, politics and beers.

Named beers suggest a possible sampling a day

       without repeat for eternity.

The recent election is advertised

       without any shirt favoring a loser.

And when the street parade arrives,

      a cacophony suggests that really

       the parade participants pass to view the crowd.      

The viewers are why I go to the parade

       and go so early.

Once a year I get to see what is cool

       in this quaint village.

All this and a picnic, too.

 

 

 

Notes
I have not missed a Picnic Parade ,except for a couple of out of town days, for the past 50 years They are a sheer delight. Many visitors use the day as it was meant to be used, a time to visit the campus so a possible future student and family could get to know UC Davis. In the old days I would go on campus for the picnic. Now the parade is enough for me, .