Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Starry! Starry! Night!

 
Starry! Starry! Night!
 
My first pair of ice skates were used-“hockey”-style with straight-blades.
They had been my dad’s 8 ½ when he was a kid. His first pair, he had
told me, were a huge men’s size 11 which had cost him $3.00 way
back somewhere in his day. He said that the local shoe store only
had one pair when he went in with his hard earned and long-saved
3-one dollar bills (they didn’t yet have “sales tax” back then). Mr.
Salger, the proprietor, said it would be the last pair he ordered for
the year as spring was in the offing. It was now or “next-year”!?
 
Grandma-the-Pragmatic (ever---frugal) wanted dad to wait. Of course!
 
Dad-the Practical (ever---resourceful) bought the “monster”-blades;
Half-filling the shoe, he stuffed crumpled-up newspaper in the toes.
Reckon! Sure enough! It worked. Dad was one fine ice skater!
 
On winter-nights when we had endured three days of 10° weather,
Dad determined the pond ice would be frozen thick enough for one
of our infamous nighttime skating adventures. The “key” to a safe-
thickness of the ice was 4-inches. Keen as he was on the intricacies
of Mother Nature and her demands for safety, he always took the ax
to chop a hole in the ice to be sure of the ice-depth. Ever-careful!
 
He and I would schlep on down to the pond under the clear night sky
punctuated with myriad twinkling blue-white diamonds inviting.
On the side of the natural “ice-rink” where no one would skate and
hit the “hole”, he would do his magic “chop-chop” safety-test.
 
Satisfied with the thickness, we would go to the cattle loafing shed
where Poppy kept the butchering wood-pile, select several pieces for
our bon-fire, gather some dry bark and sticks for kindling and shuttle
the makings to the edge of the “rink”. Quite the adventure for a
fledgeling of seven with an appetite for all things natural. Wow!
What a “special”-treat to be with dad in the “manly”-preparations!
 
Once we had a toasty fire crackling, we would trek back to Poppy  and
Grandma’s farmhouse where the women and “children” awaited our
arrival to announce the “Ice is safe!” And, “The fire is warm!”
 
Then we would each grab a bucket to utilize as “seats” around the comfort-
fire as we donned skates; the adults checked for tight-fit in the lacings.
After a couple of hours whizzing around the pond and the fire burned down,
a tired crew returned to the house for Poppy’s infamous Sugar-popcorn!
 
Ah!---Precious-memories!...Starry! Starry! Night!


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