Birdsong, Toe trucks, Garden buckets
and other lore
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You know how
I love the rains, right? As with grandchildren, I love them more when they
behave. You know. Sunshine days and rain in the early evenings. Another morning
listening to rain pound down while the stupid birds are singing at the top of
their lungs, “Here comes the sun”. Stupid birds. There is a lesson in here
somewhere.
After a
leisurely trip visiting relatives along the route from Mexico to Minnesota,
John and Carol wrote that they are home, having been towed the final 125 miles
of their trip, when their elderly VW camper, Vincent Van Go gave up the power
steering and sulked to the side of the highway.
Tow trucks
bring me mixed memories. The iconic bubblegum pink Toe Truck in Seattle, with the
likeness of a huge human foot atop the cab, advertising towing and recovery
services, now resides at the Museum of History and Industry. I loved driving
past the Toe Truck when I lived in Washington, although it grabbed one’s
attention so strongly it might have been considered by the glum and grumpy to
be a road hazard.
Riding in a
tow truck is a unique experience. My own earlier, memorable and equally iconic
tow truck ride happened in the fall of the year during hunting season. Iconic,
I say, because I’m sure nothing much has changed.
Even then,
when I was still young and not yet crippled, climbing up into the high cab was
a stretch. We were returning from a week-long hunting trip in the mountains,
and in retrospect, we might have been every bit as “ripe” as the driver, who
reeked of cigarette smoke, stale beer, grease and slopped gasoline. Please
forgive me, Mister Driver, if you are the exception.
The floor of
the cab was ankle deep in clumps of mud, iconic Montana gumbo, of course. The
dash cluttered with invoices, candy wrappers, empty cigarette packs, tattered
maps (no GPS in those days), crushed aluminum drink cans, wrenches, and other
everyday detritus.
The driver cheerfully
delivered our ancient pickup truck to the repair shop and us to the bus depot
where we sat on the curb, waiting for the Trailways arrival. Memories are made
of such as this.
Also heard
from my longtime friend Jerry from Washington, who lives on a high bluff
overlooking the Hood Canal. He and a buddy went clam digging. When they’d
filled their bucket, they walked back to thank the landowner, sitting in a
wheelchair on his deck, who’d given them beach access. Jerry noticed tomato
plants in nursery pots.
“May we
plant those for you?” he asked. The gentleman graciously accepted their help
and directed them to the greenhouse-garden shed and for the white five-gallon
industrial buckets. Jerry immediately thought of me with my own Bucket Garden
tomato crop.
I told Jerry
that when I next travel to Washington, he will have to introduce me to my
Bucket Garden soulmate so we can hash over our gardening successes and
failures.
While
friends in Washington and Montana are sweltering, it’s hard to believe, but in
this cool damp weather, mid-afternoon when the wind brings rain, I want my
lambs-wool slippers, which are showing signs of falling apart. I was muttering
to myself about things not being made to last when I had a vivid memory flash
of the day I bought the slippers.
While on a
road trip from Harlem back to my home in Washington, I stopped in a favorite
restaurant/tourist haunt in Hungry Horse for huckleberry ice-cream. This place,
like the Toe Truck, is long gone.
I remember
picking up the slippers, sinking my nose into the wooly softness because I like
the scents of wool and leather. I put them back with a sigh because of the
price tag, wandered around the store, dashed back and bought the shoes before I
could change my mind. That was at least twenty years ago.
I feel
chagrinned. Poor slippers, much stepped into and upon, should be falling apart.
Much like John’s ancient Van Go and the Seattle Toe Truck, we all have a
limited life span.
Thinking of
my own limited life span, I have determined that perhaps in my solo life, I’m
getting to be too selfish. (Does selfish have a scale for measurement?) After
consulting with my Oconahua friends who rescue abandoned street dogs, I’ve
arranged to take Lola for a test drive. I’ve not yet met her, but she sounds
like we might be a good match. She’s a black-haired mutt with a nice smile and
an overall disreputable look about her. You know what they say about dogs and
their humans!
What does
this have to do with selfishness? I have heard that what Lola wants, Lola gets.
Here comes
the sun and the whistling ducks just flew overhead.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
July 8, 2021
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