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Bob and Neely lived in the middle of this bottom land in a house that sat on 3 or 4 foot stumps. It was a 2 room cabin with screen porches that ran the length of the house. The back porch had studs that were chewed by the goats that were put there when the river flooded. During deer season the place filled with hunters. During the night when I couldn’t sleep I would lie awake and listen to ’em snore -talk about sleep apnea!
We went there most weekends to squirrel hunt and what not. They had a pump house where we would pump buckets of water. We would carry those buckets up on the porch just by the door. We would put a tin dipper in the bucket. The dipper was used to dip a drink of water or fill a bottle.
The 1960’s was the early days of plastic. The plastic water bottle and canteen was yet to be designed. If you wanted to carry water with you while hunting you had to have an old metal Army surplus canteen and the webbed belt that could carry it. Most of us used a bottle. That bottle would have been a half pint or pint whiskey bottle, depending on how thirsty you thought you would be. We would fill those bottles at the bucket by the door using the dipper. Then we stick them in the game sack of our hunting coats.
This was before plastic or the popularization of the metal flask. The whiskey bottle was perfect for the job. It was slim and fit nicely against the back side and for the time it was not too heavy. Of course now, we would throw them in the recycle bin and use a plastic version of the same thing.
Picture this: A ten or twelve year old standing in the bottom lands next to a slough with cypress trees, holding a shot gun – a 410 or 20 gauge, slung over his arm. The kid with the gun reaches behind into his game sack and removes a whiskey bottle. The whiskey bottle is filled with a clear liquid. He opens the bottle and takes a swig, closes it returns it to the game sack and then continues to search for a squirrel he might shoot at it. Ah yes! life before plastic! My life and I loved it.
]]>When I was a teenager I got in an argument with my mom, not an unusual occurrence because I was a long haired teenager with an attitude, but my mom understood that part. Anyways, this particular argument ended with me stomping out of the room. Nothing unusual, except when I rose to stomp out my jean pocket caught in the ladder back chair! That did not deter me. I proceeded to stomp off with the chair attach to my back side! My mom and I both began to laugh at the site of me stomping off with youthful anger with a chair stuck in my pants! Suffice it to say we no longer remember what we were arguing about due to the comical circumstances.
When we were in Waco a couple of weeks ago my mom was sending us home with all kinds of family things like Fiesta ware that was hers and grandma’s. Gene, wanted the ladder back chairs from the funeral home in Rison. I had not even thought about them.
We loaded these chairs in the VUE for the trip back to Hoosierville. My mom explained that the rubber chair ends were critical. She had colored them with a magic marker because she could only find white ones. She said that this was the key to keeping them from sticking in your jeans.
We got them home safely and when I sat in them they did not feel right. Tonight while listening to some old vinyl records I decided the rubber stoppers should be removed. I took the channel locks and pulled those suckers off.
Low and behold those chairs sat like the should. Why! I could feel the pentecost while sitting in ’em. I took to singing along to those old songs from the 70’s like I was channeling someone like Janis Joplin!
I think I will move those funeral parlor chairs up to the guitar room. They seem just right for playing a Mississippi John Hurt tune – like “Blessed be his name” or “Corrina”.
]]>There are many McClain stories. I remember my mom telling about when the preacher came to the house when she was a kid. The grown ups were playing poker on an Army blanket. When the preacher, a Baptist, came they threw the blanket over the cards and money or match sticks and prepared to make nice. That was in the big house not far from the square in Star City.
I have also written about staying with E.K. (Emily King) in his apartment on the square above the drug store. The teenagers were listening to Herman Hermits’ “I’m Henery the Eight I am”. E.K. taught me how to play solitaire dominoes. We also painted some schools and a church.
But there is one story that E.K. told me that no one else in the family knows. My mom even says it ain’t so. E.K. told it to me so I know it is true. And here it is.
One December I was taking E.K. back to the nursing home in Star City. When we got to Pine Bluff I chose to a different route down an old state road. We had just passed Pine Bluff when we changed course. As we were traveling along E.K. (Papaw) said he had not been on the road for along time. He said he remembered it fondly. He then precedes to tell me that he used the route when he was younger because it was less traveled than the other routes. He said that was handy because he had filled the trunk with liquor during prohibition. He was running the liquor down to Star City and a less traveled road was an advantage for such activity.
When I returned home I went the regular route -the one by the old cotton gin where Sport, the lost hunting dog got a spell of diarrhea and we lost my dad’s favorite goat horn used to call the dogs. When I got home I told the story to my mom. She said it was not true, but then of course a father would not tell his daughter everything he did. But, he sure would tell some of those tales to his grandson. Thanks E.K. for the memories.
]]>He would wear a head light attached to an elastic band with wires that went down to a battery. This way you could see what you was gigging. Also the little beast would be tranquilized looking into the light until it met its end and ultimately ended up in a burlap sack sitting in a jon boat.
I remember this gigging experience because one night my dad took me and mom with him. We were on the Saline River down by Rison where JW, my granddaddy lived. My dad carried his 22 pistol cross arm style just in case a snake got in the boat. All in all it was a little bit spooky being on the river at night. It was also one hell of an adventure!
My dad and Bill had decided that we were going to have a “frog leg” party. Their plan was to gig a mess of frogs and then we would dip in a little fish fry mix and fry ’em up. Serve with some butter and beer, for the adults and coke for the kids. I remember it was some good eatin’. After moving to Indiana and working in Whiting I discovered that frog legs was some fancy restaurant food up at Phil Schmidt’s, the butter bowl as I called it.
To prepare for this party my dad and Bill had to gig enough frogs to fill several burlap sacks or tow sacks as we called them. This required several weekends of frog giggin’ and probably a few draws on the Old Crow or Old Taylor whiskey bottle.
These trips took place in a jon boat on Fourche Creek which ran just down from our house and by a park. In fact it ran from University Avenue (once known as Hayes Street before my time) through this area where a guy had a ranch with an airport. I remember it twisted and turned through an area that was not in the city limits. The road twisted and turned crossing the creek several times. It was a route from Asher Avenue and Woody’s Liquor Store toward Geyer Springs where we lived.
On one trip that summer that I recall Dad and Bill took EG Murphy from across the street, he was a fireman. They floated down near Benny Craig park and decided to get off the creek and set out for home. They were walking along the railroad track carrying the aluminum jon boat. They got tired and sat it down. All of sudden the railroad gates nearby starting flashing and dinging and going down. They quickly grabbed the boat and got of the tracks. No train came so they started walking down the tracks again. When they got tired they sat the boat on the tracks and the gates and lights went off. Once again they quickly got off the tracks, but no train came. Low and behold the sensor for them railroad gates were magnetic and when they sat that jon boat on the tracks the gates went down.
When they got home they had a full tow sack full of frogs and a story to tell. We laughed about that story while we was fryin’ the frog legs and chowing down.
]]>Frank Hart (I could use both names because he has not touched a computer since they first came out with them and it is highly unlikely to ever view this post) called me up and asked if I wanted to float Cadron Creek.
The question wouldn’t have been so amazing except that it was like January or February and even in Arkansas it was cold. I couldn’t imagine taking the risk of swamping a canoe in frigid waters. Of course now that I’m a Hoosier I know that waters in Arkansas in February is comparable to Lake Michigan in July!
I agreed that it would be fun and we scheduled a weekend. I showed up at Frank’s and there was not a canoe in sight. Instead there were two flat bottom boat type crafts. They looked just like a Ouachita flat bottom boat. The only difference was the bow and stern was pointed like a canoe.
This type of craft would best be called a pirogue, like “Jambalya filet gumbo, me gotta go pole the pirogue down the bayou”. Of course we had paddles and the water was colder and deeper than the bayou.
The trip, as float trips go, was pretty uneventful in terms of rapids. It was neat seeing some icicles hanging from the bluffs, albeit small bluffs like the ones you can see in the Ozark foothills just north of Toadsuck. For those unfamiliar with Arkansas that would be near Conway, but why say Conway when you can say Toad Suck?
Toad Suck is the site of a ferry crossing on the Arkansas River near Conway. I am a little fuzzy if it is a real place or not, but I do know that they have a little celebration called Toad Suck Daze -Frank sent me a hat and T-shirt from the celebration.
I think the whole thing is related to the fact that ferry operators took most of their pay for the crossing in trade – corn liquor. The way I figure the ferry operators are related to the inventors of the personal PC. I mean really! Who comes up with the mouse and it’s associated roller ball that must be cleaned. “Excuse me, I must clean my mouse balls!” Or the SCIS – small computer interface system- commonly referred to as the scuzzy cable. Yep, not such great leap from ferry operator to geek!
Of course I am bird walking! This float trip was unique because of the time of year. It was a bit of a risk because of the temperature and beautiful as a result. That pirogue thing was neat too for a non-cajun kid. Which makes me think of a different story on the Lake Ouachita. I tell it later.
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I forget exactly where we put in, but the plan was to float from there on down to where the Buffalo met the White River and then on down the White River somewhere below Calico Rock – always loved the name of that town.
Anyway, it was a nice summer day when we put our canoes in the water on a very calm part of the river. Mike Wood was my partner in the bow of the canoe.
Just a short float from putting in we hit our first rapid. The river split into two channels, separating around an old railroad trestle. Mike and I stuck to the right and barely missed the trestle. After we made it through the rapid the water was not nearly so swift. But, it was fast enough for stuff to float by, and soon it did. First, a pack and then a sleeping bag! Yep, someone had swamped. We started to collect the stuff and look for little heads sticking out of life jackets. We didn’t see any so we beached the canoe and hiked up stream.
There we encountered a fiberglass canoe that was broken in half stuck near the trestle and an aluminum canoe wrapped around the concrete pillar like a candy wrapper.
Seemed that Frank Hart and his partner didn’t make it far enough to the right!
The other event of the trip was a rain storm on the White River just below Calico Rock. In those days our sleeping bags were filled with polyester stuffing and flannel lined. Most of them were red or plaid on the inside and green cotton on the outside. They were practically useless in the rain. The other downside was the next morning the troop woke up with an outbreak of the “red man” disease. Seems all the red linings had stained our bare chests and legs red after they got wet.
Right after that rain storm all kinds of things were floating down the river. Bentley, who was addicted to Coca Cola and had not had one for a week saw a Coke box floating down the river. He ed permission to fetch it. Mr. Tenney told him to put his life jacket off and in he went. Of course he and the Coke disappeared around the bend. We hopped in the flat bottom with the motor, the bonehead (Mr.Tenney and his nickname for us scouts) craft and headed down river to fetch Bentley. We found him, but the Coke box had been empty when he found it.
We also crossed the river and went caving. There were hundreds of bats on the ceiling of the opening and when we left the cave they starting swarming, what adventure.
All things considered it was a great trip and the first of many float trips to follow.
]]>I also recall receiving an invitation from him and his son, Mike, to float the Mulberry River. I was in college at the time and drove down to meet them. It wasn’t far, just a few miles on down the “pig trail”, an alternative to US 71 from I 40 to Fayetteville.
That float trip found us only swamping once a piece for the two canoes that represented our party. But it did put us all in position of confronting recreation and life.
On that trip we encountered flood stage waters. The river route steered the river runners into waters off the main flow. We encountered many folks pulled to the side with lots of anxiety.
A canoe had capsized and become trapped underneath a fallen tree. The paddler was trapped between the canoe and the tree without room to breathe. When we arrived the rescue workers were attempting to retrieve the body.
This incident made a striking impression on Sam Wood. Perhaps more than it made on Mike, his son, or myself. But then again, this incident has never escaped my memory. Perhaps because of the loss of life or perhaps because of Mr. Wood’s reaction to the loss of life. We stood in the rain until Sam said, “It’s time we get off this river.”
As I think about my own loss of hearing and recall this story along with Sam’s girls’ recollections of “Stepped in What” I can’t help but recall this wonderful man and how he valued life and youth.
So here’s to Sam Wood, to float trips, and all the things he taught us -value life and be safe. “Stepped in what?’
]]>I am certain that people will give me directives in a tone loud enough for me to hear. So, maybe I don’t need any assistance in the hearing. I can wait for them to yell at me. I am sure they will!
“Stepped in What?” worked for Sam Wood so maybe it will work for me.
But then again, it might be nice to stand beside that trout stream in Michigan in June and not hear any buzzing from the tinnitus.
]]>I went for a hearing test today, my second time since I turned 38. The first time I was sick of the family telling me to turn the TV down. Turned out I had some hearing loss in the right and the left ear was better. This time the right had not changed much, but the left took a nose dive!
Hearing loss runs in the family –both sides! We shouted at JW most of our childhood and he shouted at me, “play damn it!” and I learned my addition facts playing dominoes. My mom always said to keep track of the hearing because the Millers and Fish family members from Star City and the plantation all had bad hearing. And then of course our family reunions are like a heated teachers’ negotiations session –everybody’s talking loud and it’s all about school.
The morning began filling out one those medical questionnaires. I have completed so many of those privacy notice things that the whole planet probably has a right to know what my health issues are! I usually have a little fun with them by editorializing rather than just circling the answer. If it’s my first visit I usually arrive early so I have time to write a dissertation of bullshit and shinola. You know they ask stuff like how much alcohol do you drink, answer-not enough to prohibit driving to your office. This time the question was, “Have you been exposed to loud music? “I circled yes and wrote on the side, “I am 54 and went to college in the 70’s!”
After filling out the forms and handing over the insurance card the doctor came and took me to the sound room. It had a little window and I could see her making notes. These hearing test things have progressed since the 80’s. I did not have to raise my hand. I could say yes when I heard the “beep, beep”. I actually said yes a bunch of times. Then I had to listen to the doctor say words, real words, none of that Diebels nonsense! She stopped me and told me to look the other way. I knew what was up. She caught me reading lips and guessing. It was hard to hear some of the “beep, beeps” because my stomach kept growling. I think it wanted to answer for me. It was so quiet in the room my ear even buzzed.
The buzzing is tinnitus, so the doc said. She asked me if it bothered me. I told it was not too bad, I mean I ain’t hearing little voices or anything! She moved her chair back a little bit and continued telling me about the graph and how I did. The left ear on the higher tones was worse the right. The right was just below normal and the left was going “down, down, down!” So we tried a hearing aid on the left. There was an improvement.
The doctor started to talk about the technology and asked if I was interested in that sort of thing. I said, “I have a Facebook page.” So she gave me the details. These hearing aids have made lots of progress. They are digital, they block wind and other noise, they shift high tones to lower tones, and they screen out external noise. This interested me. Maybe this would help me hear in a crowded restaurant or gym. So I told the doc to start the quotes with the high end and middle end.
She gave me the prices –not cheap! I said, “You know, maybe I don’t care what people are saying to me.” Really, all I needed to know was which ear to hold my cupped hand over.
I asked if the hearing aid had switches so you could turn them off or down. I figured that would come in handy when the bullshit got deep and the complaints were too much to bare.
Then she explained some of the more advanced features telling me that the digital ones have Wi-Fi and can hook up to Bluetooth. I said my teeth are yellow from coffee and cigars and besides I use the speaker phone. Then I asked if by Wi-Fi that meant I could get the internet on a hearing aid. She yes and you can even download fly fishing images in holographic forms – what a quack!
Next, was picking out the color. I was drawn to the lime green one and the red one, but figured I should tone it down some. We tried a brown that looked good with my brow line 1950’s eyeglass frames, and a gray one. I picked a gray one because it blended in with my hair. I should have gotten the green one and gone with my secretary’s idea. She said that if they recommended a hearing aid I could grow my hair long again. Guess I will stick with the gray, but I might use that excuse and grow the hair out, you know well over the ears and collar or maybe even a mullet or just a full blown pony tail! This hearing aid thing is sounding pretty good.
]]>They’re going to leave their lights on all night
Everything’s gonna be alright”
Songwriters have a way of expressing feelings that are memorable. We smile when we hear them and we love to sing along. Some songwriters live their songs and some give us much more than a song. This post has been the better part of a year in making. It is about a songwriter, guitarist, but most of all a friend.
On March 18, 2010 I was driving to Indianapolis for work. It was the first day of the NCAA tournament and my car was headed south on I-65, as it had on many trips to Louisville and Nashville. I found myself recalling standing in Zena’s, a blues bar in downtown Louisville, watching the Cardinals play in the tournament and waiting for the Tim Krekel to play. I watched the game with Tim and the band as if we were old buddies watching the home team play. That is the way is was for Gene and I when it came to Tim and Louisville. Tim always made it feel that way.
The month before Gene and I married we went on our honeymoon (no laughing, it’s the modern way!). We went to Nashville, Tennessee. We had reservations for the Bluebird Café to hear songwriters in the round. We sat behind this songwriter that couldn’t help but play a few links on the other songs. He sang a song about the falling in love in a holding tank on the first Friday in May, getting out in time to whoop it up on Derby Day. He had CD’s for sale and we bought one. Much to our surprise it was a rockin’ piece of music. Later that summer we went to Louisville to hear Tim plan in St. John’s Parish.
We made several trips each year to Louisville to see Tim play. He would always dedicate a song to his friends from Chicago. Tim always remembered us and always seemed appreciative that we would drive to Louisville to hear him play. Nothing compares to hearing Tim Krekel playing at Air Devils Inn!
One summer we went down and heard him play at Air Devils and stayed on to hear him on Sunday at a different establishment. We arrived early and sat out front chatting with him and Debra. They were headed to Maine to play and visit Jason and the Mad Tea Party. Tim said we should have emailed that we were coming down and then we could have gone for dinner. Made me think of the first time we drove down to hear him and he asked where we were staying, almost as if he was going to invite us to crash at his place. I have met musicians and songwriters before, sometimes back stage and sometimes after the show or even at a guitar workshop. I have never met musician or songwriter who wanted to be your friend like Tim Krekel was for Gene and I.
Tim passed away last year from cancer. Gene and I went to a New Orleans style funeral procession held in his memory. It was quite the celebration of a musician. Everyone gathered to hear music and celebrate Tim with different musicians passing his guitars around and playing his songs. Since that time Gene and I have found ourselves thinking of Tim almost monthly. For both us it has involved a moistened eye. How we can feel so close to someone who for all practical purposes was only a songwriter and performer to us is a testimony to the person that Tim Krekel was. He entertained and wrote songs from the heart. He believed in people. He made people feel welcomed. He was always appreciative that you listened to his music. Most of all Tim Krekel loved everybody. He truly modeled this spirit. I believe that Gene and I were his friends because he treated us that way. That he could be the musician he was and know us as fans, but make us feel like friends is proof of his love for life and people. I will probably continue to recall Tim Krekel and the joy he brought to Gene and I, but I will also continue listening to his music and dancing in living room while it plays. Tim enriched our lives and taught us to love one another.
This post does not seem timely since it has been almost a year since Tim past. It took me a year to be able to write about Tim Krekel and his passing. I know that this would be expected from a family member rather than an acquaintance, but that is type of impression that Tim made on our lives.
It has been my custom to make a whiskey toast to my Dad on Kentucky Derby Day because he loved the horse races at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs. This year I will add a toast to Tim Krekel, a great songwriter and guitar player who I consider to be my friend – Love Everybody.
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