25 August 2009

My Grandmother

I talk about her a lot, I know. She was, and is, a huge influence in my life.

My grandmother planted a garden every year. It was small by the standards of other folks in the town, but she was only feeding three. She planted lettuce, peas, corn, potatoes (LOTS of potatoes), onions, beets, radishes, beans (I always hated their sticky, furry feel; they always seemed to pull at your fingers), spinach, carrots, cabbage, and some other stuff that rotated from year to year. Her garden was behind the house, behind the hedge, next to Grandpa's workshop (a dark, oily-smelling mysterious place full of old license plates, rusted tools, a few hidden bottles, tins of tobacco, and log books full of flowing, spidery script written in pencil), between the granaries and the neighbour's burning bin. Together, we weeded that garden (I pulled out more than a few of my share of beets and radishes), we took the hoe to it. We watered it after the blistering sun had passed its zenith, leaving waves of chattery grasshoppers, popping caragana pods, and the smell of burnt grass in its wake.

When she talked, sometimes her teeth clattered where they oughtn't have; I didn't know until many years later that many people with ill-fitting dentures spoke that way. I thought it was only my Nama. Together, when the sun was at its most hot, we made pastry, washed berries, and shelled peas. Together we sorted laundry, folded towels and sheets, and changed the linens on the beds. Together we scrubbed the bathroom, vacuumed the floor, and swept the stairs. Together we made sandwiches for the men in the field, made iced tea for them, and together we rode out, she sitting on a phone book in the driver's seat, me holding the iced tea on my lap.

In the field, the soil tossed itself about on the breath of the wind. Dry, dry, dry. The newly-swathed rows of wheat would stab into my ankles. Nama would lay out a thick denim quilt between the swaths, and we'd lay out the potatoes, the beans, and the roast. The iced tea, we put on the tailgate, along with a basket full of plates and cups and cutlery.

The meals we had in the field were always special. They were my favourite. I got to drive the swather, or the combine. I got to sit on my grandfather's lap, and he'd tell me how to steer. How to gauge where the header would catch the standing wheat. Or I'd sit with my uncle, as my grandfather had a little nip or two. My uncle, more like a big brother than like an uncle, would tell me how much bread would be made from the wheat I was cutting. He would point to the sky and show me how to tell the difference between hail and rain on the horizon. Or he would just sit back, let me drive, and he would sing.

We'd get back to the truck, and the meal would be packed up, and I would jump down from the tractor and slide in beside my Nama.

Then, at night, the men would come in. Nama always let me stay up until they came in. It didn't matter if it was ten, or midnight, or two - she would wake me up and bring me out to the kitchen and we would serve the men a late-night sandwich lunch. I loved the smell of diesel and dust that came in with the men. I loved the look of their work boots, lined up at the door; their gloves, laid gently on top of the boots. I loved the look of their sock feet, under the table...revealed and somewhat bashful, it always seemed to me.

These are some things I remember in August.

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14 August 2009

Out here

I happened to glance out the window this morning as I woke.
Clouds, like tufts of soap bubbles, dotted the mountainside.
Even mountains get bedhead, I thought.
To the east, clouds embrace everything above the blue tin roofs at the ranch
just visible through the spruce across the river.
I could believe there was nothing behind them, nothing inside that ephemeral touch.
I could believe this was a valley in Scotland
(even though I've never been in a valley in Scotland)
but that's dangerous.
I hear out in these parts, they giggle at you if you let your brogue show.

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11 August 2009

Whack Unprintable

His Nibs and his "Sinister", as he calls her, took me 'gophing' (The Nipper for two years referred to golfers as 'gophers', which quite confused many people for a bit) yesterday. I rather enjoy gophing. But here's the thing - I don't give a fiddler's fart whether there are people behind me - if they're faster than me they can skip ahead of me (they call this "playing through", don't you know). I don't much care what you're supposed to wear or not wear. I don't really care about all that 'gentlemenly' business.

So this means I get to save rather a lot of money by *not* playing on courses where these things matter.

His Nibs can be somewhat ...insistent... that, even on little par-three courses where, according to the really good gophers around here, that kind of stuff doesn't matter, we follow The Rules. Rules, I say, rules are suggestions, really. People don't *actually* care if you wear sandals on this course. People don't *actually* care if your Sinister and I share a set of clubs. Besides, knowing the way your Sinister gophs, she'll probably hit anyone from the staff with a ball, so we have nothing to worry about.

"Be nice," His Nibs says.

"No, she's right," his Sinister says. "Last time I was here, I think I just about hit someone on every hole."

"And you hit every tree on the course!" I say helpfully to His Nibs.

His Nibs sighs *meaningfully* and begins some crazy stretching thing.

But here's the deal - it's terribly fun. When it doesn't matter, it's terribly fun. His Nibs said, "should we keep score?"

And I said, "the only person who's going to be bothered by the score you keep is you, so it's probably a Bad Idea for your own enjoyment of the morning."

We don't keep score. Fun should not include arithmetic and figurin'.

Here, I have to say to Sean-by-the-Sea, "You told me so. And you were right."

Gophing. Huh. Who knew?

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14 June 2009

Something's on Fire

One of the smells I associate most strongly with summer is the smell of smoke. But it doesn't work unless the smoke is drifting in on the morning wind. It has to be a grass/wood smoke, thicker in the morning...in the summers in Prince Albert, every morning on the radio, there was a Forest Fire report, and there was a 'smoke index'. Some days, you were advised to stay indoors because the smoke was so thick.

You'd be wiping ashes off your windowsills every morning, washing the ashes off the car every morning.

At night, the smoke in the air made the sun look like a huge crimson yolk, suspended mystically in an umber-coloured sky.

Sometimes the flames licked a little too close to the city, and people were evacuated in to the local high school, or sports stadium, or girl guide hall. The fellow I was in love with one summer had a family home on 24 hour watch every summer. One year, I went out there to help them back-burn and dig burn ditches. His mum spent most of one day watering the yard, the sheds, and the house, to protect it from the sparks.

I hear these 'forest fire reports' down here, and they make me smile. Generally, double the number of forest fires they report. Pretend at night you can hear the crackle of distant flames, or that your eyes sting every day. Pretend that all your clothes smell like campfire, after five minutes out of the dryer.

These are summer things.

*summer*!

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08 March 2009

GiST #12/365

  1. I used to go to the lake with my best friend Sarah in the summers.
  2. Her grandparents' cabin had a room with a double bed, a room with twin beds, a master bedroom with a queen size bed, and a room with a single bed. When we stayed in the summers, we either slept in the double bed or in the twin beds. We stayed up all night making beadwork, yarn, and origami crafts.
  3. Sometimes, we read books together. It was the first time I read the Narnia series. She would finish a book and hand it to me. We went through all seven books in four nights and five days.
  4. The lake had algal blooms that looked like slices of kiwi. We called them jellyfish, but they weren't. We would tear them apart and squish them and we thought we were helping the lake. Or at least, we pretended we were.
  5. Her grandparents had an old duck boat/plyboard dory that we would row out in around the lake and sing bawdy sailor songs Very Loudly. We knew some Very Naughty Songs.


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07 March 2009

A Swiftly Tilting Planet

Last night, I drove home in bright sunlight.

The sun is closer now, you see, because our planet (the third!) is tilting tilting toward the sun. I lowered the windows and smelled the warm air. Then something happened. Something amazing.

The side of my face facing the sun grew warm then hot, despite the cool air blowing in from the open window. I couldn't stop smiling. Memories of lying in the yard with laughing children and a book and a pitcher of ice water flood my mind.

Ah, summer is coming. Hot days, warm nights...tents and swimming and beaches and digging holes in the grass....

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