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The Dead - Printable Version

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RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-02-2025

Manatees? Srsly spelchuk?

8 miles & 3 restraints. I’m a wee bit sore this morning..


RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-03-2025

Well today was a big day. I caught most of sturgill who was making me think of Gilmore if he was a cowboy. 
Caught set 1.
The s me with Rosa addled because I missed a call yesterday. She was a 19 year old gal student of CS Monterey majoring in psych. She followed along diligently, I also had a tracker so I could see everyone else with trackers ,
(All the teams) and they could see me. They gave us 2 more, Ana & Byron but they bailed after a few songs. 
Psych got hoppin again for 2nd set and I was fully engaged for the rest of the night. Did a mudra talk down with this gal on lsd & lithium. I got her to wobble in time with my force pushes but no one saw that (I was pleased tho ) 
Had a dirty takedown towards the end. Dude was cooperative and we were headed to the transport when he spiked and threw some punches at Gabriel. I was already in the cart so it took me a moment to help. Gabriel did a nice reversal after eating some fists to his temple and we all piled on. We had a backboard but no poseys. I had one, plus my lucky Velcro so we got two point until more were brought. Then we worked with him to put his brain back together. His nose and upper lip was comically smeared with ketamine (we found it - DONT DO THR GREEN BAG KETAMINE - that caused much woe over the last two days. We got him back enough to release him back into the wild. 
Only got $40 for food. Only ate $20 - dirty queso nachos. Dirty is seldom a sell point for food but it was very satisfying. 
Was texting with a good friend in Taiwan who was watching the simulcast. That was fun. 

Mid nite hour
Bertha
Jack straw
Fantasy>jude
Passenger 
Brown eyed
Morning Dew wsturgill

Ujb
Help>slip>franklin
At Stephen

Lost track after that.


RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-03-2025

6.6 miles
I have $60 worth of meal tix and they’ll likely give me more today
Gonna splurge on the $40 lobster roll methinks.

Just watched a vid of Billy Strings sitting in on Wharf Rat Friday. Sounded better than what I heard but I was back at Skip’s Place where sound was muddled.


RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-03-2025

Day 3
Suns out for Sunday.


RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-03-2025

Trey got me with Mission


RE: The Dead - thatguy - 08-03-2025

Isn’t primus tonight? Who’s handling the RM duties there?

—tg


RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-04-2025

(08-03-2025, 09:51 PM)thatguy Wrote: Isn’t primus tonight? Who’s handling the RM duties there?

—tg

I placed a team. Same with reggae on the River.

I am home. 

So much to report

Code blue

Good times
China > ride
They love each other 
Stranger cor
Deal 
 
Scarlet > fire
Broken arrow
Hell
Cumberland
Drumz
Sotm
Sugaree
Sugar mag
Touch


RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-04-2025

9.1 miles. 

report coming eventually, while I still remember...


RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-04-2025

Had a lovely breakfast with Bri at a crepe place in the Haight. They made a delish salmon evgs bene. The. Bri dropped me off near the.bandshell and I paid a surprise visit to some Kung Fu relatives who work out there on Sunday. That was fun.

Walked from there to Shakedown. Perused their wares once more but the last thing I need is more dead crap. Popped into RM and there was a shuffle about who to assign as my radio person/mentee. It ended up being Rosa again and in the end, she wound up being great. Two more people were assigned to me - N & Byron - but they bailed early. Not sure what that was even about - I think they were friends of one of the supes. Whatev. Happy to be a tour guides

Watching some of the noob RMers turn on to the Dead was so adorbs. I keep more of the lore of the dead, so I could unravel the iconography and behaviors, which was fun. I made a sticker from an old RM ‘Heal your face’ piece I did in the early 90s for an RM Cal Expo show. Those were well received.

Had the $40 crab roll (not lobster, misread that earlier). It was good and it cost me 2 of my food coupons. Went for poke nachos later but they messed up my order and gave me crab fries, which were also quite good so I went with it. All real crab, which I haven’t had in a while. Ate well.

Caught most all of Trey & D&C. Good shows. Trey got me with a Mission in the Rain, a Jerry song that anyone whose ever spent time in the mission loves, and a reggae tune that was simple for Trey but sweet for me. 

During Feels Like a Stranger, we had a full on code. The patient was older and obese. I didn’t do compressions or defibbing, just helped bring the gurney, manage the crowd, and carry gear. CPR in progress is always super intense. Havent been in one of those jn years, not since before the pandemic.

At some point, before the show started I think, I joined Reya Hart (Mickey’s daughter) who I’ve known since she was a little girl (she’s now 30!) because she’s very close with my psych guru Babs, who just had a knee replacement. Reya had a cart and the three of us went to shakedown, which was mobbed at this point. Reya recert my started writing and has published in the Atlantic & Rolling Stone. I’m so jealous and told her so. She’s quite a good writer, despite having her foot in the door with rock legends (her RS piece is an interview with Mick Jagger). She shared some funny stories about herself and they other dead kids. Fascinating. Babs’ couldn’t walk too far, and Gordon (the director) came out and got her with his vehicle. Babs ordered me to follow Reya to make sure no one dosed her (she’s 30 and so street smart) but I was happy to accept because I enjoy her company. However I lost her in the crowd immediately. She had this spectacular glittery halter top (Arabic maybe?) and I still lost her. It was packed with deadheads which can be so distracting.

I rejoined Babs & Gordon after a long fruitless search. However, I spotted Reya when she came back with bags of deadhead crap, & all was well. She gave me & Babs a ride back. I asked her ‘dont hou have enough deadhead crap by now?’ She replied ‘Never enough!’ 

Rey joined several of the other GD kids (now all adults of course) in introducing D&C. Babs wanted me to film it but I forgot my phone in the charger because I thought the tracker was my phone (we have to carry these stupid trackers now). A second fail with Reya but the footage appeared later.

The funny part was I ditched my team & RM to do this Reya adventure. When they asked, I said I was on a special mission to escort one of the band’s daughters (totally true) and Gordon was with me. We also bumped into Mary Conde, who is the boss at Another Planet and friends with Babs & Reya (she knows me  ecaide we did dead tour together back in the early 90s and we always say hi bit were more professional acquaintances than close friends). So That was some major posing on my part.

Table service was having some dysfunctional issues. They called me for ‘IPRs’ twice. The first one was a dude who lost his phone. He was having a bad trip but so would I if I lost my phone. He was trippin but it was more about his phone. I escorted him to lost & found. The other was a guy who sat down at table service and they were all worried but he was cool. He just needed a break. He was trippin too but not badly. He was just tired. We started chatting and it turned out he was from Felton so we shared some deadhead friends. We were laughing & talking deadhead crap in no time. We both thought that despite it all, it was a great moment to be there and we both seams we’d cherish it and remember it when the default world would get us down on Monday, and that worked for me today. So both cases were soft balls for me, handled with my usual panache (gotta keep my legend alive, ya know?)

Later we spotted a dude climbing on top of the windmill. As I pointed at him, he began climbing down, so I acted like it was some sort of force push i was projecting. Most laughed but some of the noobs might’ve believed me at that point. Keeping that legend alive.

I predicted Trey would sit in on Scarlet>fire when texting my dear deadhead friend in Taiwan the night prior. So validating that I can still call it. What’s more, i was wearing my Dragon with Matches lid, which I bought at RotR alongside my Taiwan friend - it was a strain of her and came with a free joint which we enjoyed together afterwards. It was a great moment of deadhead synching.

Standing on the Moon was our wedding song, and that got me misty. I’ve seen many a ‘last Dead show’ by now and they always hit hard on day 3. So grateful for all of it. The Grateful Dead runs so deep within me. Nothing resonates so much. Who says you don’t get flashbacks?

It was a long trip home, the walk back to Tara’s and the drive back to the bungalow, but I love that late night 280 drive with my stereo blasting. The Bollywood station has a late show - Stealth mode - which is  bolly edm and that’s so fun to drive to.

What a grateful weekend. Pure mischievous magic, merry prankster style. I miss regular doses of this in my life, like I had in the 90s, but i was half my age. I couldn’t sustain it now like o could back then,

That being said, on to OSL.


RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-05-2025

Posted to fb 

Quote:Fred Cothard was & is my love. We spent the last 10 days together, professed our love for each other & traveled to SF together which we had planned & booked even before the shows were officially announced. I am blessed & honored to have been there with him every moment yesterday before, during & after his passing. I was holding him, talking to him about his kids, & kissing him until hours after the doctor pronounced him, until I got in touch with his daughter. This is the last photo of us, about 2 hours before he collapsed while we were dancing to, "They Love Each Other."



RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-05-2025

[quote pid="79591" dateline="1754372800"]
Drunk MonkLater we spotted a dude climbing on top of the windmill. As I pointed at him, he began climbing down, so I acted like it was some sort of force push i was projecting. Most laughed but some of the noobs might’ve believed me at that point. Keeping that legend alive.
[/quote]

Quote:Deadhead scales Golden Gate Park windmill during Dead finale
SFGATE travel editor Silas Valentino follows a Grateful Dead truism by not missing the last show of the weekend
[Image: ratio3x2_1440.webp]
Dead & Company perform in Golden Gate Park during Grateful Dead 60 on Aug. 3, 2025.
Alive Coverage
By Silas Valentino, Travel EditorAug 4, 2025
[/url]


A baby boomer-aged Deadhead turns to his friend to share a joke as they shuffle past security into the Dead & Company concert on Sunday in Golden Gate Park. “What did the old man and the old Deadhead say to each other?” he begins the setup. “The old man says, ‘Help, I’ve fallen and I can’t get up.’ And the Deadhead replies, ‘Help, I’m tripping and I can’t come down!’”

The atmosphere for the Dead’s final show of the weekend was as buoyant as a fattie balloon wafting over the Polo Field, where a melange of tie-dye shirts and some white men in dreadlocks found space on the grass for one final bash before facing the inevitable comedown: a Monday morning. 
The three-day concert series commemorated 60 years of the Grateful Dead — dubbed “GD60” — who launched their global genre, brand and lifestyle from a house on Ashbury Street a few miles from the stage. Only one member of the original lineup remains, guitarist and singer Bob Weir, who resurrected the band as Dead & Company in 2015 with longtime percussionist Mickey Hart. John Mayer, filling Jerry Garcia’s sandals, rounds out the sound and keeps the band on track. 

Quote:



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For GD60, a consensus among fans was that they got off on a slow foot Friday night, even though bluegrass superstar Billy Strings opened with rapt energy. Saturday’s set with Sturgill Simpson opening earned much higher praise. Joshua Malan from Sonoma, who told SFGATE he’s seen the Dead nearly 100 times in all their variations, said Saturday was a knockout.
“In all my experiences, it was a top five show,” he said.
About 15 hours later, Malan was back on the polo field with about 60,000 other fans abiding by a certain credo held among Deadheads. “Never miss a Sunday show!” an attendee named Mark Bowers said near the water refill station as the crowd started to fill the field in the early afternoon. 
Among Deadheads and jam band fans in general, the third and final day of the weekend run is a sacred event. Some argue it’s when the band performs at their best, having loosened up over the previous two nights, while others speculate that the Dead reward fans willing to embrace a hungover Monday with a specially curated set list.
“It’s the lore,” said Rob and Jeannie Toutkoushian from Georgia. “It’s when they bust out the best songs.”
Others held a more sentimental perspective. “It was the last day of Jerry,” John Wiggle said.
This Deadhead wisdom may be scientifically proven. A couple of years ago, a fan utilized data science to explore the popularity of Grateful Dead shows by weekday for every year the band performed. The analysis found that recordings of Sunday shows had the highest average downloads of any day. 
[Image: ratio3x2_960.webp]
To cap off GD60, Trey Anastasio Band commenced the Sunday show. It was a special event in and of itself, since the Phish frontman performed with the Dead during their Fare Thee Well run a decade ago. 
Anastasio appeared with gratitude, genuinely thanking the crowd for this chance to play. Supported by a brass horn section that evoked a New Orleans procession, Anastasio’s band weaved in a couple of Phish covers before the guitarist paused to address the audience. 
He said he first saw the Dead in 1981 at the New Haven Coliseum and “fell in love with all of it.” Anastasio dedicated the next song to the bygone Dead frontman, covering “Mission in the Rain” by the Jerry Garcia Band. Anastasio played the somber and reflective cut with reverence, capturing the San Francisco neighborhood on a misty midnight stroll. 
The cover felt all the more relevant since the city of San Francisco commemoratedGarcia’s childhood street on Friday. Harrington Street in the Excelsior is now also known as Jerry Garcia Street.
[Image: ratio3x2_960.webp]
The Jerry Garcia Street sign is shown after its unveiling in San Francisco, Friday, Aug. 1, 2025.
Godofredo A. Vásquez/AP
By 6:30 p.m., Dead & Co. appeared for a 17-song set that would have to meet the 10 p.m. curfew. They opened with a breezy cover of “Good Times” by Sam Cooke that ended with a short a capella between Weir and Mayer. “We’re going to stay here till we soothe our souls,” they sang, as if it was a promise to the barefoot and bewildered beyond the stage. 
They swiftly backed up their claim by moving into a one-two punch with “China Cat Sunflower” and “I Know You Rider,” forever entwined since they appear side-by-side on the band’s seminal album “Europe ’72.” Weir’s sharp guitar notes laid the groundwork for Mayer to blast off, who worked the tight end of his fretboard with gentle ease. A major part of Dead & Co. is Mayer’s noodling. His solos are the cohesion that tether these decades-old songs together and fasten them to the present. 
However, Mayer’s inclusion is still sometimes debated among Deadheads. The self-professed purveyor of “Sob Rock” seemed like an unusual choice, but his dexterity and respect for the elders has won over fans since 2015. It’s been a gradual softening of the “Dead and Bro” image he brought to the band. 
When Dead & Co. last played San Francisco in summer 2023, Mayer seemed to secure his place in many Deadhead hearts with an enrapturing rendition of “Althea” that helped listeners hear past his long history of sexist, racist and immature public comments. 
[Image: ratio3x2_960.webp]
Trey Anastasio joins Dead & Company in Golden Gate Park during Grateful Dead 60 on Aug. 3, 2025.
Following their mid-set break, Dead & Co. returned with Anastasio onboard to play “Scarlet Begonias” and “Fire on the Mountain” for nearly 30 consecutive minutes. It was a moment fit for a Sunday, with Weir flanked by Mayer and Anastasio. 
The two guitarists are heralded as some of the finest players alive. As the song drifted into a mid-tempo jam, Weir took a step back to let Anastasio and Mayer feed off each other. They locked in their bluesy licks and occasionally tilted their guitars in the air like an orchestra conductor leading the charge. Both players deployed exuberant facial expressions to complement the wailing; Mayer buttoned his lips, crinkled his face while Anastasio blankly stared back at him, mouth slightly ajar, as their fingers found every note.
When Deadheads opine that you can never miss a Sunday show, moments like this affirm their position. 
As the set wound down, another memorable moment came during “Sugaree” when a fan in dreadlocks and wavy clothes scaled the windmill in the middle of the Polo Field. As the band jammed on, the Deadhead threw his arms into the air with his dreads billowing in the wind. From the crowd, someone cried out, “It’s a wook on the windmill!”
One of the last songs of the evening was “Standing on the Moon,” which Weir sang solo without support. The 77-year-old wore his signature sandals and a dark cloak over jeans. At times, it sounded as though he was forcing out the words, gasping to keep up with the mild tempo. But nobody seemed to mind the haggard vocals as listeners clung to every lyric, especially in the middle when Weir sang: “But I would rather be with you/Somewhere in San Francisco/On a back porch in July/Just looking up at heaven/At this crescent in the sky.”
At that moment, numerous Deadheads jolted their attention to the left of the stage, where a half-lit moon hung south of the city. It was a celestial happenstance that’s typical for a Dead show, and among the many reasons that lure fans back, 60 years and counting.
“Who knows how much longer these guys will have,” said David Khine of Redwood City during the afternoon. “If they’re going to give us music, we’re going to come for it.”



RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-06-2025

Quote:Specially-developed Grateful Dead roses on display at Golden Gate Park Rose Garden

ByZach Fuentes  
Friday, August 1, 2025 2:34PM


A brand new, specially developed rose, inspired by the Grateful Dead, is now home at the Rose Garden in Golden Gate Park.

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- A brand new, specially-developed rose is now home at the Rose Garden in Golden Gate Park.
"We are planting the Grateful Dead rose, the official Grateful Dead rose," said Brooks Guyer, a partner at Las Palmas de Ojai, the company that grew the babies of the flower.
The rose was requested by Wendy Weir, the sister of Grateful Dead guitarist Bob Weir.
It was bred specifically by JB Williams and Associates, the same company that's bred other iconic roses like the ones for the Rose Parade and for other legends like Celine Dion.
Creating a rose for the Grateful Dead was one of the company's most fitting assignments.
"The Grateful Dead and the rose are synonymous with each other." Guyer said. "There's a number of songs that relate to the rose, and they've used the rose iconography as long, as well as the skeleton, for many, many years."
The ruby red Grateful Dead rose is hybridized from two different flowers. Creating it was a two-year process involving intricate work.
"Two flowers put together, and then you come up with a proprietary rose that. Then, if you clone it, that flower stays consistent throughout," Guyer said.
Now twelve of those rose bushes will be in one of the most visible spots at the Golden Gate Park's Rose Garden, with plenty of time for dead heads and others to see.
"The Dead and its traveling circus will come and go, but this rose will be here for a long, long time," said Phil Ginsburg, general manager of the San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department.
A limited number of Grateful Dead roses are going to launch later this year for the public.
 Sorry I missed this...


RE: The Dead - thatguy - 08-06-2025

Remember to dead head your roses after they've bloomed.



--tg


RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-06-2025

Yes
I’ve always thought that was a funny use of the term
They did have an album called American Beauty which is how roses entered into our iconography


RE: The Dead - Drunk Monk - 08-07-2025

https://archive.org/details/deadco2025-08-01.GoldenGatePark2025

https://archive.org/details/deadco2025-08-02.GoldenGatePark2025

https://archive.org/details/deadco2025-08-03.GoldenGatePark2025