Remembering the ancient 4th of July
July 3rd, 2017
Back in the log cabin days, I remember the 4th of July fondly. My
Back in the log cabin days, I remember the 4th of July fondly. My
spinning a sparkler around, and
round until it went out and then my Dad would light another until
the package was empty and we were done. The folks let some of us stay
up until almost midnight on the front porch. One year we even dragged
pillows and blankets onto the swing or floor just in case there were
more BOOM!
Some how we awoke in our beds. Maybe I
dreamed it or maybe the Fireworks Ferry carried us up to bed. The 5th
of July was spent searching for remnants of the explosives that we
had watched. A fragment of paper or string was a prize worth a lot of
marbles in any trade.
We never heard an Ambulance that I can
recall. We heard all the gory stories around the baseball fields but
never saw anyone missing fingers or eyes. There was one man with
Angela Jolie lips on our paper route who had put a dud firecracker in
his mouth as a young boy while he struggled to light another match.
Boom.
I remember him not for his lips but his young wife who liked to work on her tan in the afternoon on their
front yard. She'd nearly stop the heart of a 13 year old paperboy
just by modestly catching some rays while the kiddies slept in the
shade on the stoop. We never threw her paper but handed it over.
As years passed and we grew older.
There were drive-ins and firework displays over several near-by
lakes. That was when I discovered that teenage girls had similar
desires as boys but a lot more discipline. Well most of them, anyway.
After my distinguished military career
and too many years of
drinking railroad paychecks, I settled down with a wife. For some reason (shrinks will have a field day with this one) I became fascinated with fireworks that shot high in the air and exploded. I blew a lot of money blowing things up and up! Only on the 4th.
drinking railroad paychecks, I settled down with a wife. For some reason (shrinks will have a field day with this one) I became fascinated with fireworks that shot high in the air and exploded. I blew a lot of money blowing things up and up! Only on the 4th.
My wife liked to entertain family at
our new home so we combined fireworks with picnics. She always
admonished, “Not to close to the house!” But I crept closer to
give our families a better look. I set off the rockets from a
railroad ties that lined the driveway and the level platform only
failed me once.
The errant rocket was perfectly shaped
as it stood on its guide fins. My match hand was steady and resolute.
Just light the fuse and step back like I'd done a dozen times that
day. The rocket rose nearly 6 feet before it took a bee line
for our open Master Bedroom window. It penetrated the screen like a
hot knife through butter and then exploded.
I remember hearing a scream but didn't
realize it was me screaming until I saw my wife at a dead run towards
me. I've been in plenty of bar fights with guys as big or bigger but
I realized that I couldn't win this one. I turned and ran into the
house just ahead of her and made it to the bedroom with her hot on my
heels.
I was trying to remember where the fire
extinguishers were when I entered. To my surprise there was no fire,
very little smoke and hardly any signs of the doom I imagined. The
sound of the twin window fan on high speed exhaust banging one blade
against the damage wire guard nearly made me cry for joy. We had no
A.C. So we used those fans to keep our upstairs cool on warm days.
I didn't have to use any of my
pugilistic skills but I did buy a new bed spread, a new window screen
and despite my most heroic efforts at straightening the fan, I bought
a new $20 (1980 price) window fan. I upgraded to four speed just 'cause I was so
happy! I also swore off fireworks!
HAPPY FOURTH!
This blog/column is meant for educational purposes only. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. All images are merely for humor and not meant to comment on subject. Void where prohibited. Some assembly required. Do not read while operating a vehicle or heavy machinery. Keep sending those great questions and comments! (Contact) boatguied@aol.com
Comments