Friday, February 20, 2009

Decisions, Decisions, Decisions


It is late in the summer and in the next couple of weeks I will be going to college. The family has decided to take a trip to Chicago to visit my sister. I have decided that a 44 hour road trip is not my idea of a vacation and declined the invitation to go along. There were not any discussions or attempts to convince me to change my mind. I think all involved realized that one less person in the car was going to make the long trip that much easier. As I am sitting in the front yard enjoying a summer evening my father approaches me and says that his uncle Earcel from California is going to be in town while they are in Chicago. Dad says that he has only met this uncle Earcel once and can’t remember too much about him. He remembers that he owns a hardware store in California somewhere and that he did like the guy. Uncle Earcel told him that he is disappointed that they won’t be able to meet and was counting on him to take him fishing on the Big Horns. So dad decides that it would be a nice gesture for a family member to go to town and meet Earcel and if I could find the time, take him fishing. I am between jobs and waiting for school to start and decide that while they are gone I will meet up with this distant relative and do a little fishing on the Big Horns.

Right on cue Grandma calls me and says uncle Earcel is at her house and is anxious to go. I gather my fishing pole, a change of clothes in case we spend the night and a jacket for those high altitude evenings. As I arrive at Grandmas, uncle Earcel is sitting in a lawn chair out front, he has California written all over him. He is wearing leather sandals and khaki shorts. His skin is weather beaten and dark brown. He was an older man than I expected and as we visited I knew that I wouldn’t mind spending a day fishing with him. He had a very likeable personality. He did own a hardware store, he lived in Palm Springs and he flew his own plane from California to the Cowley airport. He said it wasn’t much of a plane, very old, and he had modified it some to take on fishing trips. What he wanted to do was fly to the Moss ranch and land in their hayfields and fish the two streams that feed into Devils Canyon. I told him that this was his lucky week because my brother Ron was working at the Moss ranch and if we buzzed the ranch house on the way in, he would come out and meet us and we could probably use his pickup to do some fishing. Uncle Earcel did not see any reason to wait and so we said good-by to Grandma , told her we would be back in two or three days and headed for the airport.

As we pull up to the plane the romantic idea of flying to Moss Ranch just got a little scarier. He was right, it was an old plane, and it look liked bailing wire was the only thing holding it together. What paint was left on it was so bleached out that I couldn’t tell what the original color was. Whatever cloth or leather that was on the interior was long gone and it was now bare steel. He had made some modifications to it. He installed big balloon tires on it so he could land on rough fields. I threw my gear in the back of the plane on top of a box of crackers and some canned meat and it looked like enough food to get us by for a couple of days. He hits the starter and the engine fires right up. We taxi to the end of the strip and in less than a minute we are in the air. He decides to do some site seeing on the way there so we buzz over the Pryors, Crooked Creek and up the Big Horn canyon and then up Devils Canyon. As we come over Devils Canyon we veer North and can see the hayfields of Moss Ranch. We buzz the ranch house just barely clearing the trees. I spot my brother Ron working in one of the hayfields and we buzz him , then land near by. As the plane touches down hay, dirt and bugs are flying everywhere. We bounce all over the cab and the gear I threw in the back is bouncing off the roof. We finally roll to a stop and Earcel says that the landing was smoother than he thought it would be. I don’t think I will ever forget the look on Ron’s face when he pulls up to the plane and I climb out.

For the next two days we fly fish the streams feeding into Devils Canyon and even take one afternoon to fish the river in Devils Canyon. We release most of what we catch but save just enough for a fish fry in the evening back at the Ranch. Ron joins us when he can and the fishing can’t be any better. Uncle Earcel and I become good friends and thoroughly enjoy the trip. Earcel decides on the second night that is it time to move on and try one more fishing spot. He wants to leave while the air is cool and can get good lift for take off. We say our goodbyes, jump into the old plane, bounce over hayfields, irrigation rows and rocks, then finally lift off into the air. We make one more stop in a hayfield in Tensleep to fish in a nearby stream and sleep under the wings of the airplane . The next morning we fly back to Cowley. I give Earcel a ride back to Grandmas and he wants to spend the rest of the day cleaning up and preparing to fly home to California the next day. I offer to come and pick him up the next day and give him a ride back to his plane. He takes me up on the offer.

The next day I head to town and pick up uncle Earcel. I pull up to his plane and help him load his stuff. He says that he appreciates what I have done for him and that it is good to be with family. He wants to make me an offer I shouldn’t turn down. He has an empty apartment above the hardware store in Palm Springs and I can stay in it for free, work in the store and he will pay for my collage tuition in California. I tell him that it is a generous offer but I don’t want to leave family and Wyoming. As I watch him and the old plane lift off the runway and head west, I thought how different my life would be living in California. Many years later Uncle Earcel dies and a family member sends me his obituary. He not only owned the hardware store in Palm Springs, but seven other hardware stores throughout California, a ranch in Columbia and he died without any children.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Hanging Out With The President of the United States of America


As I stand staring at the back of an udder on a Holstein cow, I am glad that this is the last group of animals to judge. It is cold and getting colder, my toes are frozen in my new pair of cowboy boots and this FFA jacket is too thin for this weather. It is St. Patty’s day and winter is still present in Laramie, Wyoming. At least I know the other contestants in this contest are feeling just as miserable because they are dressed the same way I am.

This journey started three months ago in Ag class. We were all supposed to visit four different farms, each with a different species of animals… Dairy, Swine, Beef and Sheep. On each farm there were four different animals. We were to pick the best to worst and classify it as A,B,C or D. At the end of this exercise all scores were accumulated and the four best scores in the class would form a team. This team would compete in a regional contest and if you won the regional, you would then compete in the State contest. If you won that then you would go to Kansas City and compete in the national contest. My team had won the regional contest and now we were in Laramie competing in the State contest.

I verify my choices, sign the score card and turn it in. We are done judging, and as a team we feel that we are pretty good, but none of us think we are good enough to go to the national contest. We are to gather the next day on the campus of the University of
Wyoming and get the results and be awarded individual and team trophies. I had already come to the conclusion that no matter what the awards were, I was a winner. I was not in some boring class back in Lovell High School and I was on a all expense paid trip to Laramie so my victory had already come. We were supposed to gather at the motel and wait for the instructors and chaperones to show up and tell us where to meet for supper and get tomorrow’s schedule.
They finally showed up and gave us vouchers to use at a café two blocks from the motel.
They gave us the standard talk about staying out of trouble. There would be a bed check at 10 PM and everyone was supposed to meet in the lobby at 8 AM for breakfast. We would then go to the conference center on campus for the awards ceremony. The 10 PM bed check was going to be a problem . I had a friend going to school there and plans had already been made for my night. I was quite sure that 10 PM was just a starting time. As the instructor gave me the food voucher I noticed that his teeth were green and thought that it was a strange thing to see, but my upbringing kept me from mentioning it. Some of us wandered on down to the café and had dinner and decided that we had plenty of time to walk down the main street of Laramie and check things out. As we passed a particular bar in Laramie I noticed that in honor of St. Patty’s day they were serving green beer and I also noticed that those who drank the beer would have green teeth. That bit of knowledge pretty much made the 10 PM bed check moot. I met my friends and got back in time for breakfast. We again gathered in a big hall and the awards were presented to the winners.

Our team took third, I placed in the top ten, and I was quite satisfied with our standings. At the conclusion of the ceremony it was announced that John F. Kennedy, the President of the United States was in town giving a speech on campus and that they were saving seats just for us to attend. The building he was speaking in was only a short distance
from our conference site so we all walked down the street to take our seats. As we approached the auditorium, two men approached our group and said that they were expecting us and that they would guide us to our seats. As we followed them we made our way past people standing in line and hundreds of filled seats. Finally at the very front row we took the seats that were assigned to us. The president was in Laramie to give a speech on a new Ag bill he was trying to push through congress and they had decided that a front row of young men wearing FFA jackets would be a great photo op. We arrived 30 minutes early and had to wait for the president to arrive. When it was finally time for
his speech, he came across the stage and stopped six feet in front of me . I was not particularly political but was mesmerized by this man and his gift of communication. When the speech ended and he stepped off the stage, he looked me straight in the eyes, shook my hand and thanked me for coming. He then went on down the line, shook hands with about twenty more people and left. Seven months later he was shot and killed in Dallas. I cried.