I’ll be the first to admit I sometimes come up with crazy ideas. “Harebrained schemes,” as the old-timers might say. These have included:

  • Creating a hamburger-hot dog hybrid called a burgerdog. Not ground beef rolled into the shape of a hot dog; these already exist. I want to take things a step further and stuff a hot dog inside a hamburger, then grill it to meaty perfection.
  • Developing a food-themed fashion line color-coordinated to meals (e.g., a red outfit for spaghetti, green for pesto, etc.). This would eliminate embarrassing stains and dry-cleaning bills. The tagline? “Dressed for ingest.”
  • Marrying Amy Adams so we could “fill our cozy little love nest with red-haired babies.” My reasoning was, besides being single and lonely at the time, we were both artists: she could love my books, I could love her movies, and together, we could love each other.
  • Packaging up the bottom inch of Nestle Drumstick® sundae cones—you know, the best part, with that cone-encrusted chunk of chocolate—and marketing them as “Drumstick Bites,” a delicious and portable dessert.
  • Combining Connecticut, Rhode Island, and New Hampshire into one state because they’re nothing more than bite-sized nuggets that happen to neighbor one another.
  • Opening a Chinese restaurant with fortune cookies designed to stroke the ego (“you are one sexy beast”), egg-shaped egg rolls, edible takeout containers, sporks instead of chopsticks, and a Man v. Food-inspired “one-ton wonton challenge.”

Looking at that list, it’s kind of amazing that I’m not rich by now (or home-schooling a ginger-haired kid or three). In retrospect, my current obsession seems rather bland in comparison: I want to become a rancher. Never mind the fact that I know nothing about agriculture or livestock or farm equipment and machinery, and let’s overlook my fingers (which are only slightly more calloused than a newborn’s) and my bank account (a few million dollars short of what it would take to buy land and hire people who would actually know what the hell they were doing). The devil’s in the details!

I’m sure I’m romanticizing the whole ranching lifestyle. I don’t really want to give up my cushy writing job for a hardscrabble life on the northern plains where you’re subject to the whims of Mother Nature. Today, I worry about missing a deadline or overlooking a crucial apostrophe. If I were a rancher, my livelihood would be in jeopardy due to a million factors beyond my control, a list that includes drought, hail, locusts, and fluctuating cattle prices. I just like the idea of wide open spaces, being my own boss, and living off the land. To me, it’s the very definition of an honest day’s work. But I know myself too well: the first time I was elbow-deep in a cow’s uterus trying to birth a calf, I’d be longing for modern comforts like caramel macchiatos. So, no worries: ranching is a no-go.

I still think the burgerdog could be a runaway hit, though.

Be afraid, Golden Arches. Be very afraid…


43 responses to “Ranch, Dressing”

  1. I’m pretend offended on behalf of the New England states. They all have their own identity–you westerners are just mad you had to learn their names and shape in 4th grade.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. You know, that’s exactly why I proposed merging them together! Ha.

      Liked by 2 people

  2. Well you don’t know much about boating, either, if I remember correctly, and yet, there’s a boat in your current ownership status.. 😛

    Just sayin’.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Holy ship, you’re right!

      Liked by 2 people

    1. It does look pretty good, huh?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I hope, it tastes well too 😊

        Liked by 1 person

  3. Amelie's Twin Avatar
    Amelie’s Twin

    Combining Connecticut, Rhode Island, and New Hampshire into one state because they’re nothing more than bite-sized nuggets that happen to neighbor one another. . .Just call it Lisaville because those are the three states I have lived in.

    Unfortunately you forgot that New Hampshire doesn’t border the other two so you’d have to include those Massholes in your bite, too. *grin*

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Maybe we can get Massachusetts to join the party, too? I was going to include Delaware, but they’re just too far south. You’d have to get New Jersey and New York to merge too, and I doubt anyone is clamoring to take on Jersey.

      Like

  4. If you run with the Nestle Drumstick bites, I’m 100% in!! 😀

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Testimony that this could be my million-dollar idea!!

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Dressed to Ingest is pure gold. Please remember us little people when you become world famous, buy a 100 foot yacht and are cruising the Aegean …..

    Liked by 1 person

    1. And to think the whole idea came about because I wear a red shirt whenever I eat spaghetti…

      Like

  6. P.S. I’m glad you didn’t lump Maine in with those New England nugget states. If nothing else, we have personality.
    🦞

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AND Stephen King!! You’re in a class all your own.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. *blows on fingertips and grins*

        Like

    2. I too wondered why he would leave Maine out. 🙂

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Maine is anything but a nugget!

        Like

  7. “Dress for ingest” nearly made me do a spit take. That whole idea sounds rather Ron Swanson inspired.
    I’ve also dreamed of farming. When we got chickens, a friend warned me they were a gateway livestock. I wanted goats next. Hubs said no. I also love growing my own food in a garden, but most of our plants don’t thrive. So, accepting my limitations, especially because I too love caramel macchiatos.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I would skip the chickens and go straight for the goats myself. Tara and I actually talked about getting one once! Alas, there are city ordinances and whatnot banning them here. I guess the goat will have to wait for our spot in the country.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I’m not sure if we’re zoned for goats or not, but hubby reminded me they would eat all our plants, not just mow the lawn for us. So that was that. Fresh eggs are fun, though.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Oh…good point. Tara has worked so hard on the garden she probably wouldn’t be very happy to see it all disappear into the belly of a hungry goat.

        Like

      3. Visited a petty zoo once and a goat chewed a chunk out of one of the worker’s pant legs. They really will eat anything, it seems.

        Liked by 1 person

      4. That’s just rude. And also kinda badass…

        Liked by 1 person

      5. It was a goat, Mark. Not a donkey.
        😉

        Liked by 2 people

  8. Sounds like you want to be a gentlemen farmer. Those were the days when you could buy low, sell high, take care of some horses, charge some rent for the horses and move along. I hope those days are still here. That was my father’s gig moving from the city to the Catskills so many decades ago.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes. This sounds like the type of ranching I would like!

      Liked by 1 person

  9. By the way, he ended up down South in a shotgun shack on the Gulf of Mexico. Not a bad transformation. He was ahead of his time.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Sounds like a Jimmy Buffet song come to life.

      Liked by 1 person

  10. I enjoy the fortune in fortune cookies and think you could do them justice. Plus I’m on Team Spork, so have at it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I once made a bet with a guy who didn’t think I could eat every meal—breakfast, lunch, and dinner—with a spork for one week. And I blogged about the whole thing! (Spoiler alert: I totally won.)

      Liked by 1 person

  11. All your ideas have merit. As a Minnesotan, I have only one problem with combining those Eastern mini-states: the flag. The stars on the US flag are finally in such a pleasing, symmetrical array. Let’s not mess with that.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. This is why I don’t want to add Puerto Rico or D.C., unless we can subtract a couple of other states!

      Liked by 1 person

  12. Mark, I love your idea about the fortune cookies to stroke the ego. LOL!!!

    And hey, look, you never know what might happen in the future for you. You might very well become a rancher. And you’re in the perfect location for it too. Perhaps that’s one of the subconscious reasons why you moved there.

    Have a super weekend, my friend!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I believe it’s never too late to reinvent yourself, but ranching seems like a stretch. I’ll just drive by and admire all the ranches! Not the same, but also, not nearly the same amount of work.

      Like

  13. Creates a dilemma – mustard or ketchup?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. How about both? There’s already two types of meat…might as well add two different condiments!

      Like

  14. I have seen on the internet…the all knowing dictator of life…. that putting ketchup on a hot dog is the 3rd sign the rapture is around the corner, or something like that.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. We best not tell Tara. She’s team ketchup on this point.

      Liked by 1 person

  15. Burger dog sounds pretty good. I’d support such a chain if it made its way to the west coast!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Sweet! I’ll shoot you info on franchising once I get the business up and running.

      Liked by 1 person

  16. Relying on animals or Mother Nature for an income sounds frightening to me.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Unless you’re a zoologist or a meteorologist!

      Liked by 1 person

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