Month: August 2019

Mama Was a Rock Star

This post comes from a Carrot Ranch Literary Community 99-word challenge. The challenge word/phrase this time was “rock star. You should try it.

She starred with big band orchestras in cities along the Eastern Seaboard and around the Great Lakes. Then she married a Nebraska farmer. He moved her to a stark little square house with a hip roof in the middle of a howling wilderness. In less than three years, she ran back to city lights—nightclubs—singing all night. .

But she came back. She adapted to the prairie’s silences and its screaming winds, the outhouse, the washboard, and the tyranny of crops and livestock. She became a better farm wife than many women who grew up on farms—she rocked.

Snow-covered farmstead with little relief from stark white.
This is a few years later (about 1950) and some of Daddy’s trees had started to grow. The volunteer mulberry tree (bottom right) still stands.

Attending Church

For my grandfather, prairie was church.

(Audio podcast here.)

Sundays he would wander his 480 acres, checking its health. He might walk the fences with a bucket of staples, fencing pliers, and a fence stretcher, or hitch the horses to a wagon with a roll of barbed wire and the other fencing materials.  Later, I can remember him going out with the tractor and wagon on the same errand.

George on right and another man in baseball uniform with gloves.
On Sundays, George also played baseball sometimes. His tight community was also a kind of church.

As he drove around the fenceline, he could hear the rhythm of the tractor engine and the jingle of stapes and tools bouncing in the wagon bed. When he found a breach, he’d turn off the tractor so he could hear grass wind, the smooth legato call of a meadowlark, and the gentle clank of the windmill pumping water at the top of the hill. A breeze might ruffle his hair and sing in the tightly-strung fence wires. He might be semi-conscious of pinpricks of wildflowers, blue verbena like tiny candelabras, purple poppy mallow hiding in the grass, and the persistent sunflowers. He probably carried a machete to cut them when he found them, releasing their strong, acrid scent. He would smell cool sweet-grass crushed by the tractor wheels, like sliced cucumbers.  

He could see the patterns of his mind on the land—terraces and waterways to hold the soil against tillage; a passage for cattle, from pasture to pasture, under the bridge; dams across the seasonal creeks to hold spring run-off; habitat areas set aside for wild creatures; osage orange posts and barbed wire confining cattle to the least productive acres.

I removed the last hedge post in 1992, remembering that it had been there for three generations—the very last of a carload he’d bought when he moved his family onto the home quarter in 1926. I imagined him digging the hole that post sat in for seventy years—by hand through concrete-hard yellow clay.

I found something spiritual about digging out the remains of that broken post, something composed of family and land and abiding mystery.

Herding Sheep

This post resulted from another GirlieOnTheEdge six-sentence, flash-fiction challenge. The challenge word this time was pad and the first thing that came to mind was a happy, smiling dog padding around. You can check out the challenge, maybe write your own six sentences, here.

1. Freckles crept, nose near the ground, rump high, legs ready in case she needed to sprint, eyes riveted on an old ewe. 2. The ewe stomped once, twice, and looked over her shoulder. 3. The rest of the flock stood motionless behind her, watching. 4. Freckles crept another few inches and the ewe raised her head, turned, and dashed through middle of the flock, into the gate. 5. The rest of the sheep scurried in behind her. 6. Freckles padded over to her shepherd, smiling, head high, tail wagging, for a gentle pat on the head—job well done. Check this pinterest image: https://pin.it/zbfmzju4d4g2p4  Or here is an audio file.