Yes, it's a depressing time to root for the Mets, and this World Series hasn't made it any easier. Perhaps the biggest driver of my grudging respect for the Yankees this year and through the playoffs has been the fact that, no matter what you want to say about the Yanks buying a championship, they invested in the right players. If you want to prove that money isn't everything in baseball, look no further than the Mets, who with the second-highest payroll in baseball could manage nothing more than a pathetic 70-92 finish this season.
Besides, Mets fans will never be able to stand up to the Yankees in terms of success on the baseball field. We just won't -- the score is now 27-2 in terms of World Series championships... 8-2 since the Mets entered the league in 1962. If you really want to hit a Yankee fan where it hurts, remind them about how their greedy owners tore down an 85-year old piece of baseball history (the real Yankee stadium), in order to build an ugly, tacky replica with nothing additional to offer except more luxury boxes and some nice sushi restaurants for rich people with $300 box seats. I kept reminding both Yankee fans next to me how much better this World Series would have been had it been played in the old stadium.
But apart from the six little pieces of me that died inside this past week, one for each agonizing game of this World Series from hell, Game 6 was actually somewhat enjoyable to watch. As much as I normally root for the collective agony of Yankees fans everywhere, I actually felt good for my two friends -- far from bandwagoners, these kids are legitimate lifelong fans -- who were watching next to me and got to see their team win. Much better than Phillies fans, anyway, who would have been even more insufferable after winning a second straight title. Beyond that, it was kind of fun sitting around explaining baseball to a couple of kids who got the main idea but are far more used to watching cricket, even if it's a bit of a shame that their first introduction was a Yankees World Series victory. I even learned a few things about cricket in the process, as we compared the various similarities and differences between the two distant cousins throughout the game.
In any case, I'm glad this whole World Series thing is over. In a baseball season that started with some reservations on my part that I might be out of the country for that relished Mets championship run, I was disabused of any such notions by June, and in the end my location in far-away New Zealand became a very fortunate means for maintaining my sanity while my two most hated teams battled it out. With little pain, I even got my preferred outcome. Congratulations to the 2009 New York Yankees.
Perhaps, given my distance from it all, the 2009 baseball season can be written off as nothing more than a bad dream, a nightmare that served as a disturbing but fortunately minor blight on an otherwise great trip to a beautiful part of the world. This one should be a little easier to erase from my memory.
At least I'll keep telling myself that.
****
There's nothing to take your mind off a terrible World Series like a trip to the beach, and one way I was able to avoid following Games 4 and 5 was by traveling up north again to the Bay of Islands for an "overnight cruise" aboard New Zealand's finest oceanic hostel, The Rock. A converted houseboat, the Rock has been transformed by a husband and wife into the floating headquarters for a 22-hour trip in which you basically do as many things as you can that involve the ocean.
The Rock is quite spacious, actually -- the top level has sleeping space with capacity for around 40, including crew. The bottom level features a bar, a small dinner and lounging area, space for kayaks, fishing poles, and other supplies, and even a pool table at the front. Pool is not necessarily the best game for a boat, but the water was fairly calm and the balls stayed in place quite well despite the occasional swell which made for a few interesting shots, and a new wild card for any balls lingering too close to the pockets. We cruised out to our mooring, fishing in the process but not catching anything. Once we were anchored we fished for another couple hours... a few people caught small fish, but nothing significant. The idea was to catch some red snapper, apparently fairly abundant in the Bay of Islands, to then eat for dinner. Some guy lured a small shark, but we couldn't really eat that either, so the crew went to the backup plan and put some steaks on the grill for everyone.
We got into some kayaks after dinner and paddled around for a bit. It was a cloudy night, but the water was about as calm as the ocean gets and gradually the moon, full if not close to it, rose high enough to escape the low cloud cover. After a bit of kayaking and some after-dinner drinks, we all turned into our small bunks pretty early, falling asleep to the gentle movement of boat on water. Apparently it can get pretty rowdy aboard the Rock, but we went on a Monday night and the majority of the other passengers were either couples or older, more middle-aged folks, so things remained calm like the ocean that night and we went with it.
If you've never seen a sunrise at sea, I'd highly recommend it. When I awoke at about 6:30 Tuesday morning and walked out onto the deck, it was actually the second time I'd seen the sun rise over the ocean since coming to New Zealand. It had been overcast the first time, and there were a few clouds out Tuesday morning as well, but the sun eventually filled the sky and the water's reflection with a brilliant shade of orange as the day began. We put a few more fishing lures in the water, commencing what may have been the most peaceful morning of my life. Rod in hand, casting off the back of the boat with a cup of tea and the sun steadily emerging in the sky, I stood there quietly and took in the sights and sounds of a new day. Seeing the world in such a state of profound peace was an inspiring reminder that even with my two least favorite teams battling out to be the World Champion of my favorite sport, things are never as bad as they may sometimes seem.
I didn't catch any fish that morning either, but that wasn't really the point. We ate breakfast shortly after sunrise and the boat left its overnight spot, taking us to the small rock where we were to go snorkeling and diving for mussels. The water was a little rough, and apparently there's also a bit of an algae problem in the Bay of Islands, so you couldn't really see much in the way of fish or other cool marine life. It was also freezing. I grew up taking family vacations to Maine, where the ocean in the summer might hit 70 degrees on a good day. They also gave us wetsuits. But it was still freezing.
Still, diving for mussels was probably one of the most satisfying things I've done recently. I normally don't have much patience for any sort of diving -- I've got poor breath control, and I'm not a very good swimmer. But you can often find mussels attached to rocks just below the ocean's surface, and as I braced myself against the large snorkeling rock with one hand, I atoned for my failures as a fisherman by pulling off mussel after mussel with the other. Mussel "diving" included very little actual diving, which suited me nicely. By the time I was done I alone had probably pulled off close to a dozen mussels... clearly I was quite proud of myself.
Around 1 o'clock we anchored at our next spot, a short kayak's paddle away from a large uninhabited island with a couple of hiking trails. Though it's now uninhabited, supposedly this island was actually the sight in the early 1800s of a series of events that ultimately led to New Zealand's first official public execution.
When the British first came to New Zealand, the Bay of Islands was an important point of interaction between Europeans and Maori. The legend in this case goes that there was a British fisherman who brought his family out to this small, isolated island and built them a house. When the fisherman was tragically lost at sea, his family was left without a provider, or anyone else to do the tough tasks necessary to survive in such isolation. Eventually, the man's wife was assisted by two men, one British and one Maori, who fished for food and helped the family in their daily living while she cared for the children. The arrangement worked out well for a time, but eventually the Englishman, a gruff seafarer type with a lust for women and alcohol, began bullying the Maori man and pushing him around. The Maori man apparently couldn't take it anymore one day and drove an axe into the back of the Englishman's head. From there he essentially went crazy, burning down the British family's house with the mother and children inside after she objected to the axe he put in the back of the Englishman's head. When one of the children escaped, he chased the boy, killed him with another axe to the head, and threw him off the highest point of the island.
Here's where the public execution part comes in: at this point the Maori man may have felt he was in the clear, but many other local chiefs had seen the smoke rising from the island as the house burned, and upon paddling their canoes to the island to investigate, soon found out what had happened. Fearing that the situation could be damaging to the cooperative relationship British and Maori had cultivated in the Bay of Islands during that time, the chiefs decided to turn the Maori man into the authorities, which resulted in his ultimate hanging some number of weeks later in the fledging city of Auckland.
This story may or may not be true, but it certainly came from somewhere, and it made for some good entertainment as one of the crew members shared it with us while we stood at the top of the island's highest hill, from which the Maori man is alleged to have thrown the British boy. The site where the family's house supposedly stood is now a flat grassy area that certainly looks like it could have once had a structure on it.
In any event, the lookout at the top of the island was absolutely magnificent. You could see straight out the mouth of the bay... if you follow that course long enough, you'll find yourself somewhere on the far northeast coast of Russia.
We came down from the lookout, got back in the kayaks, and returned to the Rock. From there it was time to cruise back to shore in Paihia, but on the way back the crew cooked up all the mussels we had caught earlier in the day, and I learned that sea urchins are in fact edible. The process of eating a sea urchin might seem a bit grotesque, if it involved a species that most people know is alive -- sea urchins are those ovular things that are covered in hedgehog-like spikes... you've probably seen one if you've ever been to a rocky beach. After catching a sea urchin, which continues to move its spiky legs even after being removed from the water, one proceeds by driving a knife into the hole at the top (its mouth), tearing the shell apart, and eating the eggs on the inside. It sounds disgusting, but they're actually quite good.
At any rate, we got back to the wharf at Paihia after a little over the promised 22 hours, and drove back to Auckland with a car full of satisfied, World Series-escaping customers. Game 5 was being played as we drove back -- had the Yankees won that game, I would have missed the end of the series altogether, which would have been the best possible scenario. As fate would have it, however, the Phils extended the Fall Classic for one more game, and I ended up sitting in my room on Thursday night here, watching Game 6 on an mlb.com live webcast. With a couple of Yankee fan friends, it was like being forced to watch a car wreck in slow motion, in that I probably wouldn't have put myself through the agony ordinarily.
Perhaps it was good that I got away for a night and day, in order to prepare myself for the trauma of watching these events unfold. As I've mentioned, with this stinker of a baseball season, I'm lucky to have been so far from the action in the first place. I've now survived, though, and I can talk all about my baseball-related feelings. Maybe the Mets will be good next year. Right now, however, if you haven't seen them yet, I've got some pictures of another beautiful place in New Zealand that helped me get through the end of this one:
The Rock overnight cruise (facebook)
It was a great time, and I'd highly recommend it if anyone ever finds themselves out around these parts. Random, I know, but I'm continually surprised how many people in my life are connected somehow to this crazy country, so it's not completely unrealistic that that situation could present itself.
Anyway, to everyone reading, I hope all is well --
Cheers,
Matt
World Series logo image courtesy midwestdiamondreport.com

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