Month: August 2018

Traveling Again

I’ve been out of town for the Nebraska Book Festival in Lincoln and tomorrow I leave for the Nebraska State Fair, so I’m spending my time trying to catch up all the caning and freezing I need to do to preserve my garden produce. I now have 60 pints of tomatoes and the pasta tomatoes are just beginning to ripen. I have six gallons of green beans frozen and all the lovely pumpkins I expected to use for jack-o-lanterns will have to be processed and used because the bugs got to them before they even got ripe. I’m hoping the homeless shelter can use them because I’ve already canned all the pumpkin and squash my son and daughter-in-law and I can use. Any more green beans will probably go to the shelter too.

Categories: Curiosities

Grandma’s Comet

Grandma Hazel was 100 years old when Hale-Bopp streaked across the silent night sky at thousands of miles per second. For 4,000 years it had burned its way through the Milky Way, out of our sight.

When I realized I could see it through the back door, I asked Grandma to come look. She complied, more to please me, I suspect, than to see one more sight in a lifetime of looking. I pointed and described its position, but she hadn’t the gumption to lift her eyes. Maybe she was already out there, flying among the fire and ice.

Squirrel Yoga

From the rocking chair where I give my grandson his bottles, I look out my front door—all glass. Several times now I’ve noticed a red squirrel clinging head down to the trunk of the gigantic elm that shades my house. For all you yoga enthusiasts, I can describe the squirrel’s posture as cobra pose.

Cobra is difficult enough flat on the floor—lying on your tummy, hands under your shoulders, pushing your chest up and arching your neck backward. And then HOLD. The squirrel seems able to hold indefinitely. Since I’m always feeding the baby when I see him, I’ve been unable to jump up and snap a photo, but I have hope.

I’ve noticed another squirrel streaking up and down the tree. I recognize that one by its blond tail. I noticed it first before Mother’s Day and thought the other squirrels would bully it. I’d seen that happen on East Campus in Lincoln several years earlier. There the squirrel was black. Here, I thought I saw some nastiness at first, but the blond squirrel seems to have found acceptance.

Bruce is just beginning to focus on stark contrasts and movement, but I can hardly wait to start showing him squirrels. I remember how much fun I had showing my sons wildlife—until they became better spotters than me.

A Yellow Tent

Here’s another Carrot Ranch Flash Fiction Challenge. Ninety-nine words, no more, no less.

It was the yellow tent that did it. I hadn’t camped in years, hadn’t taken out the canoe, hadn’t even jumped in a swimming pool. When I went into Scheels for hand weights (gotta keep up my strength), it was in the next aisle. It looked so bright and lovely. I would ignore the aches in my joints and brave the wilds. Like my dad, I only needed a ring of bologna and a loaf of bread—and I’d make concessions to my years. In my yellow tent I would have my turquoise sleeping bag and an air mattress.

July Flurries

Sitting in my platform rocker, looking out at the street with Bruce, my grandson. in my lap, I’m reminded of my grandmother, Hazel. She would also sit in her recliner watching the street from her own little house in town—two doors up from the Methodist Church. By the time she moved to town, her great-grandchildren were in middle and high school and they spent lots of nights in her back bedroom, especially those nights when blizzards tore through the plains.

My lawn, green just a couple of weeks ago, looks like a dirty rag.

Here in North Platte, in late July, I notice snow driven vertically across the window—big wet flakes of early, warmer-weather snow. Actually, it’s not the result of climate change I’m seeing. The snow is cottonwood seeds spreading throughout town. The man across the street told me my tree is the scourge of the neighborhood. I’m inclined to agree. All that cotton chokes the flower beds and whitens the lawn like a yard of dotted Swiss fabric. Even mild winds bring down twigs and clusters of leaves. I mow baby cottonwood trees every time I mow the lawn. I suppose my neighbors do too.

When I was a kid on the farm, though, I knew that cotton from trees volunteered in the windbreak would drift to the pond. It would float for the fish to suck off the surface. We didn’t have carp in our pond, but on those days we could get away and go to the lake we could watch carp vacuuming cottonwood cotton from the water in the bays.

I’ve tipi-camped in the Missouri Basin during February where the ancient cottonwood trees protect the campground. No cotton that time of year, but a thick, wool, Hudson Bay blanket  kept our beds warm, even when fifty-below winds scoured the bluff tops above us.

Here in summer, despite the annoyance of cotton and twigs, the gigantic tree provides shade from morning sun. A spreading American elm takes over throughout the middle of the day. I frequently look at the tree and consider having it removed, especially now when I’m watching flurries of cotton. But I would miss the shade and the cost of cooling the unshaded house.