I remember when Duane and I lived in Glasco , Kansas . At the time we only had Debbie and we lived
in a large farm house on the outskirts of town.
At the time he was stealing walnut trees on the Solomon River
just west of town. Since he had a wench
truck and chain saws it was a rather easy job.
Drop the tree, remove the limbs, wench the trunk and drag it home. The buyer would come by the house and load it
on his trailer. Then he would hand Duane
cold hard cash so it was pretty good money.
It was winter at the time and the
business of trimming trees was pretty slow, so it was pretty much catch as
catch can as far as paying rent and buying groceries went. He had wine fermenting in the root cellar and
plenty of tobacco for “roll your own cigarettes.” We did have a black and white television so
we were not without entertainment. Jeopardy
was the game show of the day. It was not
hosted by Alex Trebec and I think the money amounts ranged from $10-50, but it
was entertainment nonetheless.
Most of the entertainment
consisted of trying to find something edible to eat. Duane shot a lot of Doves that year. Course it takes a lot of Doves to make a
meal. Fishing was also good on the
Solomon river. In central Kansas we caught a lot
of catfish and Bass, but the Soloman had scary fish. Pete pulled out a fish that looked like a
snake which scared him and he beat it to death with a piece of wood. We found out later it was a Gar. Pete also killed a rattlesnake on the back
porch late one night. That scared hell
out of me since I had just returned from getting the diapers out of the car.
There was a feed store in town
and for 25 cents I could buy an old hen.
I had not cleaned a chicken in my life but I had seen my mother do it so
I knew what had to happen. First I had
to put a big bucket of water on to heat.
Duane returned home it the old hen.
Her legs were tied together and I instructed him to chop of her head,
which he did. I dunked her in the
scalding water just like I had seen momma and grandma do. To my amazement the feathers pulled off very
easily and very soon there were none left.
I lit a paper like I had seen them do and singed off the hairs that
remained. Then it was time to clean out
the inside.
I was not very happy to slice
through her abdomen and then reach inside and pull out all her innards, but I
did it. When she was as clean as she
needed to be, I put her on to boil and then turned her to simmer. My 25 cent chicken turned out to be a very
good meal. We bought a package of
noodles in town for 15 cents and ate for
2 days on that one chicken. Course the
coon dogs got the scraps and the bones.
Now the coon dogs and that business was a whole nother story.
Duane and his brothers would go
coon hunting with a man who lived a few miles away. I never went, but he was quick to tell me how
the dogs chased the coon, treed the coon and then ripped it apart when it fell
to the ground and they killed it. Now
when he brought home a coon for me to clean and cook, it was a whole new ball
game. No way was I touching that to
clean it, or cook it and I sure as hell was not going to eat it. I would rather eat the barn cat and that was
not happening either!
I do not know how long we lived
in that farmhouse in Glasco, and I do not know where we went when we left
there. Surely some where better. Funny how somethings just come into our minds. Glasco was that way. I know Duane made wine there. I know Maudie put gas in the diesel
truck. I know that is where I enrolled
in a writing class and Duane bought me my first typewriter. I know I was pregnant with Patty when we left
Glasco. I know there was a championship boxing match that lasted only a few seconds. I think it was Cassius Clay and somebody. Or maybe Sonny Liston, or lord only knows.
Sometimes when my memory fails
me, it is a good thing.