In June 2008, my father and I spent our last Father’s Day together. He and my mother had moved up to an independent living facility in Upstate New York four miles from me. Two years later, his health had deteriorated, and he passed away November 2008. People may remember Bill Cohen for his stores in Keeseville, his community service, his pride in his family. What I remember—and treasure—most about my father were the stories about him that my siblings and I share again and again. Many of them centered on boats, bugs, and bats.
Having spent summers as a child with his grandfather Archik Pearlman on Lake Champlain, my father always dreamed of owning a boat. In 1965, he purchased a pink indoor-outdoor that my mother immediately “christened” Nisht Neytik, Yiddish for “not necessary.” During the summer, Dad rented space on a public dock in Port Kent, five miles from our house. And each Sunday, Dad would coerce us all to take a ride—when we could go. Unfortunately, the boat spent more time in the shop than in the water. And when it was in the water, Dad was always panicking about the weather or the gas situation. One time, we took a long ride out to a nearby island, and my father realized that we may not have enough gas to return. We were nervous wrecks until we finally pulled back into our slot.
In 1966, my parents bought a cottage on Willsboro Bay. Soon after, Dad purchased an outboard with slightly better reliability. Larry and I were married in 1974, and in 1975, we went up to the lake for Memorial Day. Dad gave Larry a pair of waders Dad had picked up second hand and asked him to put up the docks for the boat. Before Larry was knee deep, the waders-riddled with tiny holes filled up with water. Think Lake Champlain in May, when the water temperature barely reaches 60 degrees. Larry has never forgiven him.
For the next several years, the boat was anchored either on the dock or on an anchor about 200 feet from shore. Dad still loved boating, but only if the weather was perfect. For hours before we were supposed to go out, Dad kept his ear near the radio next to his chair, which was set for the weather station. If there was the slightest chance of rain, he refused to go through with the ride. When we children and eventually our spouses were old enough to go on our own, Dad installed a CB radio in the outboard so he could check up on us every few minutes. In an blatant act of defiance, Larry would turn it off. Dad never forgave him.
As much as my father loved boats he DESPISED bugs. He kept a can of Raid next to his favorite chair on the back porch of the cottage and used it frequently—and liberally— to kill any passing fly or wasp. When the Raid wasn’t enough, he got a outdoor fogger which he used with the same careless abandon that he used the aerosol can. One beautiful summer night, Laura was putting food on our set table when my father passed by the outside of the window with the fogger in his hand. A potent cloud of pesticide permeated the air. Laura never forgave him.
When the Raid and the fogger failed, Dad called in the Big Guns. He purchased an electric bug zapper and hung it on the limb of the huge oak in front of the cottage. As the sun set across the lake, we heard from inside the cottage a quick zap as the first bug hit the grid, then a second, then ten, then twenty. Before we knew it, every bug between Willsboro and Burlington five miles across the lake was headed for the bug zapper. It took about 30 minutes for the ten foot machine to become completely clogged. So much for Dad’s war against the bugs.
Dad was more successful with bats. The cottage was always a gathering place for the family. One summer weekend, Larry and I were in one bedroom; my sister Bobbie and her husband and Emil were in another; and my sister Laura was in another. In the middle of the night, I headed to the bathroom. As I reached for the toilet paper, I realized that a bat was sitting on the top of the roll. Trying not to wake anyone, I ran back into our bedroom and shook my husband Larry awake.
“There’s a bat in the bathroom!” I whispered.
Larry awoke groggily with a “Wha……t?” He climbed out of bed, checked out the bat in the dim light of the night light, and suggested we close the door and wait until morning.
“But what is someone else has to go to the bathroom?”
“What are you two doing?” Our whispered conversation had woken up my sister.
The bat, tired of squeezing the Charmin, flew out of the bathroom and began swooping through the cottage.
“Damn!” I cried.
By this time, Emil, Laura, and Mom were wide awake. We watched the bat circle above us, all of us talking at once with suggestions .
“Hit it with the badminton rack?”
“How about a broom?”
“Does Raid work on bats?”
“How about the fogger?
At that moment, my father, who can sleep through a five alarm fire a block from our house (Yes. He did. Keeseville, New York, February 14, 1964. But I will save that story for another time), finally appeared in the doorway of his bedroom in his teeshirt and boxers. Without a word, he crossed the room, grabbed the fishing net that he kept in the corner explicitly for this purpose, and in one fell swoop, caught the bat in its web. He opened the front door, shook the frightened but still alive bat out of the netting, and came back into the cottage.
“Now everyone go back to sleep,” my father stated.
Boat lover. Bug hater. Bat rescuer extraordinaire. But most importantly, My Dad. Whether he is with me or not, I will celebrate every Father’s Day in his memory with love.
Note to my readers: While editing my blog, I realized that I had never published this story I had written in 2019 for Father’s Day about my beloved father, Wilfred “Bill” Cohen (Z’L). It’s a little late for Father’s Day, but it’s never too late to honor my father’s memory.
A version of this article originally appeared in the Jewish World News, a bi-weekly subscription-based newspaper in upstate New York.
Love it, Bunny
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Good Morning Marilyn What a wonderful tribute to your Dad! It really paints a picture of him and his personality.
I particularly liked: The b alliteration (I tend to do that too) The Yiddish, not necessary, made me laugh. Well done with “christened”
Didn’t love nervous wrecks standing alone. Perhaps intertwine with ship wrecks somehow?
As a reader I feel how Dad yearned for adventure but yet he was ever so cautious. I am temperature tolerant but as of this summer I have a new outlook on “checking the weather”. I just passed the North Shore Yacht Club’s assessment to kayak in Lake Michigan which included a capsize. Their fleet cannot be used during a small craft advisory (SCA) or when winds are above a certain velocity. Perhaps it was the wind and not the rain that concerned Dad.
The bug section was adorable. I could just picture him sitting out there with all his weapons. I guess citronella candles and OFF were not around yet.
There is one typo. Sorry I couldn’t locate it again but I believe it was a two letter word if I remember correctly. Keep up the good work! Susanne
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Wonderful story! I can just imagine your father with the bat, then sending all back to bed!
Wonderful story! I can just imagine your father dealing with the bat, then sending everyone back to bed🤣
Great story. Wonderful memories.
And I am forever thankful that your mom and dad adopted me into the family, that was before Eli and i even started dating and i slept in one bedroom and Eli and Joey, Baltimore grandsonslept in other bedroom and your mom gave me an apron, that i still have ,at the lake in Richfield Springs a d your dad told me about the can of Raid, a d we all mb ade lunch, as i was part of a wonderful family. Eli was a bit like your dad with the boat as well, it isn’t just the weather when you start but when you are coming back in. I feel so very blessed and loved, talk soon. Love Marty