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Letter from the Canyon


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<img src="http://forums.egullet.org/uploads/1183450732/gallery_29805_1195_22311.jpg" hspace="8" align="left">by Priscilla

In just exactly the same way that some days a city can be a Holden Caulfield playground and others a full-on Nathanael Westian Day of the Locust, the canyon is sometimes Anne Shirley’s Avonlea and sometimes something a bit more Shirley Jackson’s "The Lottery." Fourth of July, for instance, skews Shirley Jackson.

Yes, yes, this probably says more about me than about the actual goings-on, which include a parade organized by a shadowy cohort calling itself the Parade Committee. Shadowy is no exaggeration -- no one knows its exact composition, and yet it wields such power. See, the perspicacity of apostasy.

The committee puts forth a “grand marshal” of unclear achievement other than residency, who rides on the back of an open convertible as per unwritten Parade Law. But the amenable folks with the cool 1966 Mustang convertible moved away . . . wonder what the committee will find instead. Like thousands of other Fourth of July parades, this one is comprised of children and pets, equestrians and equines of various sizes and colors, cub scouts, Brownies, the local unicycle-riding family, an antique and some modern fire trucks, the latter staffed by jovial firemen spraying the spectators with fire hoses and throwing candy to children. It winds up down at the elementary school, where the fire trucks put themselves on display, hot dogs and drinks are for sale, parade awards bestowed, and an inexorable, benighted death march of a raffle excruciates, whose tickets were sold by the more committed members of the local women’s club trolling early-assembled parade spectators, and whose prizes are SO not worth standing around on the schoolyard tarmac in 100 degree heat it is not even funny.

The hot dogs are perhaps the scariest thing. Bought in bulk unknown years prior, stored in the temperature vicissitudes of sundry home freezers, on the day they are not-quite-heated on borrowed gas grills, installed in industrial buns, individually wrapped in foil, and then stacked in a cardboard box. The earliest barely-heateders of course start at the bottom of the box, and there they remain, last-inners stacked atop, all of ‘em certainly quickly attaining and holding a perfect HACCP Danger Zone temp. There has been a little grumbling about improving the fundraising food, if not its safe delivery, now and again, dunno whether it’s been attempted.

Several years ago, caught up in the throes of I don’t know what, we were actually IN the parade. We borrowed a friend’s groovy Audi convertible and affixed beautiful banners identifying Ivan as HONORARY GRAND MARSHAL, and Ivan, resplendent in violet Irish linen jacket, pale orchid shirt, paisley silk tie, and Ray-Ban aviator shades, waved and saluted with grave enthusiasm, and at the (many) stops got out and gave flowers to ladies in lawn chairs along the short parade route. I drove, and blasted “Secret Agent Man” and “Agent OO Soul” as appropriate, or, constantly.

The firemen from the local station, undeniably hunky but unfortunately still living in Mustache Nation, who traditionally judge all such neighborhood competitions, awarded us first place in our category! Said category: General. We were the sole entry. There were whispers that we shouldn’t have gotten a trophy even so. The vagaries of guerrilla theater, eh? Ivan has an idea percolating for another entry, three guys in dirty torn t-shirts and do-rags, one behind the wheel and two pushing a broken-down car accented with plenty of primer, no motor but its stereo playing “Sweet Home Alabama” (his choice; facile, I think) or “Green Grass and High Tides” (mine; I actually like this song.) So far the necessary throes elude us.

Our Fourth of July habit now is to flee. We plan for later grilling, but leave for the day, before the road becomes impassable, have a meal, see a movie, preferably something on the theme of cold. One year March of the Penguins was perfect, for instance. I understand there is another penguin movie out just now; that might suffice. We somehow skipped the penguin movie between this one and that one, I note. Ratatouille is a strong contender, too. By the time we return, the steaming asphalt at the school is empty, and at home we grill and drink cold things, and hear from neighbors stopping by for a drinkie or a bite what we missed. Only, we already know.

<div align="center">* * * * *</div>

Priscilla writes from a Southern California canyon with the predictable attendant population of militant environmentalists, amateur naturalists, itinerant notaries, entrepreneurial winemakers, and llama farmers.

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Priscilla, Dear,

I love your missives, and the thought of that CANYON stirs longings for an early-morning horseback jaunt, just as the sun peeks through, with the scent of campfire coffee beckoning at the end of the trail. I think of that every time I read one of your letters.

Loved it.

PS Don't knock the Bama Boys---I'm married to one. Torn T-shirts :wub:

ETA five minutes later---I can hear him right now, out in the back yard, cracking his new whip he bought yesterday. He teaches all that frontier stuff to Boy Scout troops, and I guess soon I'll hear the "thunk" of the tomahawk hitting that big ole slice out of a sawed-down tree.

Edited by racheld (log)
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Don't knock the Bama Boys---I'm married to one. 

Aw Rachel I never would!

In Girl Scouts we never did anything cool like learn to throw a tomahawk with accuracy. However, I am confident I could still lash together a bamboo-and-clothesline washing-up rig that would withstand nuclear annihilation.

Priscilla

Writer, cook, & c. ●  Twitter

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

What a delicious slice of American Pie . . . I'm mean slice-of-life essay. Sounds just like our little town's July 4th parade. I actually like all the local color, and get a front-porch viewing from our store, which is right on the parade route.

That said, I would never eat the hot dogs. You're probably right about them being in someone's freezer for years -- kind of like the fruit cakes they try to sell at our Lighted Christmas Parade.

Thanks for sharing this story and showing the big city folk what they're missing!

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What a wonderful read!

As a 12 year old, I was a dancing peanut in Sylvester, GA's annual peanut parade - I think the costume was 12 years old as well, and had been worn by other 12 year olds for the previous 11 years... :rolleyes:

Thanks for the memories.

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Thank you, Rob. I like the local color too. Extra points for dogs dressed in bunting.

Thank you, Anne. Reflecting the intense regionalism of these events, no dancing GA peanuts in our parade -- dancing CA live oaks instead.

Priscilla

Writer, cook, & c. ●  Twitter

 

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Thank you, Rob.  I like the local color too.  Extra points for dogs dressed in bunting.

Thank you, Anne.  Reflecting the intense regionalism of these events, no dancing GA peanuts in our parade -- dancing CA live oaks instead.

Dancing in those parades in those getups does have sort of a tribal feel to it, doesn't it?

We most certainly ate the hot dogs, though. They were Jimmy's Hot Dogs out of Albany, GA. The best chili dog in Georgia. The Pool Room in Cordele and the Shady Lane in Tifton close seconds.

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We laugh every year because there are always throngs of people "in the parade" that don't have a sign or any other indication as to who they are or why they're walking. They get sandwiched in between the baseball teams which always make us wonder where these kids are from - I never see them around - maybe they bus them in to make our parade bigger. If you've never seen a small town parade, its an event not to be missed.

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