I just got back last night from an interesting week in Atlanta, Georgia. My trip down there was quite stressful and felt very much like Planes, Trains, and Automobiles. There was a snowstorm in Moncton the day I left so the flights in and out were either really delayed or canceled outright. My flight was canceled, so I rented a car to Saint John to catch a flight to Toronto from there. Got there in plenty of time, but by the time we boarded, some cold air had settled in and we ended up sitting on the tarmac for 45 minutes while they deiced the runway and then the plane. When we got into Toronto, I had 20 minutes to get through customs, pass through security, and make it to my gate. Luckily, there was nobody at customs, security was a breeze, and my forty two year old lungs allowed me the dash to the gate. However, the gate was closed. The plane was already loaded and getting ready to leave. An airline attendant saw me there with a blank look on my face and said “Are you Mr. Melee? We had given up on you.” She quickly called the plane, and walked me to down the ramp. We landed in Atlanta and I started walking… and walking. The signs said that ground transportation was straight ahead, but they didn’t say how far ahead. After 20 minutes of walking, I finally gave in and jumped on the train that ran parallel to the walkway. The pleasant automated voice on the train said, “Ground transportation, next stop.” Sigh.
I was in Atlanta for training, but in the evening I wandered across the street from the hotel to the Hard Rock Cafe. I took a seat at the bar and the bartender came over. He was a tall, large man with long hair tied back into a ponytail. He could have easily come across intimidating, but he was exactly the opposite. You could tell right away that he was a genuinely friendly guy and enjoyed the interaction with people that his job afforded him. I asked for a dark beer and he suggested a local amber ale called Sweetwaters. The guy chatted with his customers, many of them by their first names, about anything. He came back around to me and refilled my beer, asking where I was from. I told him Canada, specifically Newfoundland. “Hey!”, he said, and I’m paraphrasing, “My mother married this guy from Newfoundland! He’s an author. He wrote a book about Newfoundland called My Father Is A Tweener. I don’t know what it’s about, but I always thought a “tweener” was someone started, but not finished, a sex change procedure!” I whipped out the iPhone, and found the book… My Father Is A Twiner by Reg Faust. Too cool… Newfoundlanders have truly touched the earth far and wide, in many ways. I told the guy, his name is Ray, that this would make my blog, for sure. He seemed quite pleased by that, because his wife follows several blogs but now he would have a blog of his own to follow.
Well, Ray obviously visited my site, because the next time I came in, he came right over, Sweetwaters Ale in hand and told me that he told his partner behind the bar, Joe, that he was expecting me in. He said that I would order a Sweetwaters and that he should pretend to know me, saying something like, “Hey, aren’t you that guy in Flashpoint St. John’s?” Well, when I walked in, Ray nudged Joe and said there he is. Well, Joe didn’t see me, he saw some other dude. And THAT dude ordered a Sweetwaters. And THAT dude also looked VERY confused when Joe said “Hey! Aren’t you that guy in Flashpoint St. John’s?”
So, here it is, Ray… tell your wife that you are famous! Tell her she can keep The Pioneer Woman, the fine site that it is… You’ve got OhMeNerves.com!








Lloyd Rowe
December 16, 2009 at 10:04 am
Great story Steve. No matter where you go in this world you will always find a Newfoundlander or someone related to a Newfoundlander. There is a conversation I had with a bartender in New Orleans.
Bartender: “where did you get that t-shirt?” I was wearing a shirt with Canada on the front.
Me: “got it in Canada.”
“You live in Canada?”
“Yes”
“Where in Canada?”
“Newfoundland”
“Where in Newfoundland?”
“Mount Pearl”
” Is the Old Mill still on Brookfield Road?”
He use to work the bar at the Old Mill when it was still a bar and not a bingo hall. When I told him is was not used for bingo, he asked where the glass dance floor went. He also wanted to know why I was drinking American beer if I was use to drinking beer in Newfoundland. Unfortunately he didn’t have a Black Horse for me.
Steve
December 16, 2009 at 10:38 am
Hey Lloyd! Good to have you drop by!
One of the evenings I was in Atlanta, another guy came up to the bar and ordered a beer. He started making small talk. He was from Texas, worked for the Federal government. He chatted about his mother, his kids, etc. He asked where I was from and I told him Canada. He said, “I was in Canada once. Hmmm… where was that? It was with the military. Does the name Gander sound familiar to you? I was there for training for 6 weeks.”
Truly a small world! Newfoundlanders are everywhere and everywhere you will find someone with some connection to Newfoundland.
Phillip
December 17, 2009 at 3:19 pm
The same kind of things happen to me in my travels when I tell people I’m from Nova Scotia.
Pender
December 17, 2009 at 4:13 pm
Nobody gives a shit about nova scotia.
Steve
December 18, 2009 at 3:17 pm
Pender! I almost spit Pepsi out my nose!