I don’t like winter; I think anything below 65 is
freezing. I have often contemplated
moving further south, like to Mexico.
But my language skills have always been a barrier. I know a few Spanish cuss words, but the
balance of my espanol is pretty slim. I
suspect that I would probably get beat up if I moved down there and not even
know why. So I will stick to the gulf
coast of Texas, where winters are a total of 20-30 cold days and the rest are
pretty good. Of course this is just my
opinion, but then I’m doing the writing...so mine’s the only one that counts
right now!
Now when I was a kid, growing up in southeastern Colorado,
there was plenty of winter to go around.
There were weeks that we would be snowed in and could not get out of our
driveway. And being in the “kid” stage,
snow was still fun. Of course fun was
defined as when we could do what we wanted to do and not what Dad wanted us to
do. So “fun” varied from day to day when
there was snow on the ground. Snow was
fun when you sliding down a hill and not so much fun when you were holding wood
for the chainsaw. Of course, when you
have snow you also have ice. Ice is fun
when you are sticking it down your sister’s neck. It’s not much fun when you have to chop it
out of a stock tank and therein lays the story…
My Dad was, as still is, full of good advice. One of these pearls of wisdom was on the skill
of chopping ice. Whether you are
chopping a hole in a pond or a stock tank, you always chop a bigger hole than
you need and scoop the ice out. The hole
will freeze up smaller, so if it is bigger…it will stay open longer. If you don’t fork out the chopped ice, it
will freeze faster…thus your animals will not have anything to drink. Looking back, this makes perfect sense. As a young hon-yak, I tended to only do
enough to keep me out of trouble and would take the least amount of time. So I was always chopping a small hole in the
ice. After all the cows and horses noses
weren’t more than eight, or so, inches around…right? I never forked the broken ice out, any animal
worth its salt, could push right through that ice…right? I was a dumb little nut.
One day my brother and I were riding the scoop shovel down
the hill by the hay meadow (isn’t that what any kid worth a flip would be
doing?) and had been happily doing this for most of the day. It had been my turn to chop the ice and I,
being the unreliable little degenerate that I was, had only chopped a small
hole in the ice. I knew this would
probably come back to bite me later, but there was sledding to be done and I
wanted to do my fair share. I always
figured I could chop it out later in the day. Ain’t that like a young cowboy…just living for
the moment!
That particular day it had been way below freezing all day
and Dad happened to check the tanks.
Wouldn’t you know it; there was no longer any hole in the ice. He, being the stockman that he is, went ahead
and fixed the problem. Then he came
looking for my brother and me. I sure he
was mad at us, me for not doing a complete job and Cully just for being
associated with me. When he found us we
got a lecture and a job. The lecture was
on our responsibility as owners of animals and the job was because Dad wasn’t a
big spanker. I would have rather had the
spanking because it over in a minute.
Dad punishments tended to last all day.
I think that day he had us start shoveling the driveway instead of
waiting for the county to snow plow it open.
Of course, Cully “Guilt by Association” Johnson (my brother) was a
little peeved at me. The next day, Cully
let me know pretty quickly that I was going to be the guy chopping ice since I
threw him under the bull (so to speak).
So, a little sullenly, I headed down to chop ice. I knew that today, I had better do this
right…I was pretty sure Dad would check up on me later. Needless to say the ice was considerably
thicker than yesterday. But I had an ax,
so I went to choppin’ with gusto. After
about two minutes I had a little tiny hole chopped out, not much bigger than
the ax head. I raised the ax up for what
I know was going to be a mighty ice shattering swing. As my downward swing started I noticed something
was drastically wrong. As I watched in
horrified slow motion, that ax head slid off the end of the ax close to the
bottom of the swing and slipped ever so gently into that miniscule hole in the
ice. Never to be seen again. The next words out of my mouth were of the
variety my uncle George had taught me and I won’t repeat them here. I knew I was going to be in a mess of trouble
and what happened next was right of the bible.
Some would say that I had a temper tantrum. I prefer to think that, at that moment I was
possessed by a demon. I commence to
hollering and cussing and flayin’ around shovels and buckets.
Once the possession was over and I was somewhat returned to
normal, I started trying to think my way out of the situation. I knew that I was supposed to be paying attention
to what I was doing, and I am now pretty sure that Dad would have understood
what had happened, but then I wasn’t so sure about it. At the time, I just understood that I was in
a mess of trouble. Part of any thinking
process is thinking outside the box. In
a flash, I came up with a way to break the ice.
It was still pretty thick, so I figured I could just jump up and down
until I heard it crack. Then I could
take the pitchfork, break it and fork the ice out. Genius, huh?
So there I was, jumping up and down…on a frozen over stock
tank. I was carefully listening for that
telltale crack. But after five minutes,
my patience had worn out. I was just
jumping. I finally said enough is
enough. One final time I gave a mighty
leap and with all of the weight a 60 pound boy can muster, slammed my feet into
the ice. The next moment I found myself
up to my chest in icy cold water, standing in a hole that was just barely
bigger around than my body. I again was
possessed by that demon, because not only my was my body standing in what
amounted to a great big cup of ice, but my new high top boots (that I’d got for
Christmas) were also in the water. I
started flailing around trying to get out, which didn’t amount to much more
than waving my arms and hollering! I
couldn’t do much more than that because those little tiny holes I had been
chopping were the only weak spot in the ice, and that was all that broke. I could get no leverage to pull myself out, I
was for all intent and purposes…trapped.
I knew eventually Dad would come down to check on me when I didn’t show
up at the house by nightfall, but I figured by then I would be a
Corysicle. I was just hoping that I was
yelling loud enough that someone would hear me.
Cully happened to be close enough to hear and came to see
what had happened, and being the good big brother that he was….he fell to his
knees laughing at me. After the proper
amount of brotherly laughter and teasing, which in my mind seemed about ten
hours, I started to think that everything below my chest was about froze off. Cully finally got enough composure to pull me
out and let me tell you, I was dang cold!
My teeth were chattering like a machine gun and I couldn’t feel any of
my lower regions, but then at that point I wasn’t even sure I still had lower
regions. Being the good big brother that
he was, Cully was not about to get in trouble again. He made sure we chopped and forked the ice
out of the hole, he even insisted that we make the hole bigger. Of course, when I say we…I mean he made me do
it while he supervised. I could only
think about two things:
1.
It was
cold and I was cold. If you’ve ever
wondered how cold a well diggers butt was, I probably could have told you that
day.
2.
My new tall top boots were soaking wet and still
full of water, I just knew they were ruint!
After he made me finish, I hot footed it up to the house
(there’s an oxymoron, my feet were anything but hot). I got to the house and realized I had a new
problem. The water in my brand new tall
top boots had created suction and I could not get them off my feet. I had all of my brother’s help I wanted for
the day, so I was not about to ask him.
But I figured that if I could get the water out of the boots they would
eventually come off. I had remembered
reading a John Erickson book where he had a similar problem, so in my eleven
year old brilliance…I thought I would try that process.
I laid down on my back and put my feet in the air, thinking
that the water would drain out and I could get my boots off to change
clothes. There is not an eleven year old
in the world yet that understands the law of gravity and water flow. I was no exception. As I raised my legs that water came cascading
down my legs and too late I realized where that water was headed. I had just thought I was numb from standing
in that stock tank, it turns out that I wasn’t all that frozen after all. Now I won’t go into detail about where that ice
water hit and the results of said ice water bath, but I think it goes unspoken
(by most men anyway) that I had a reason to commence yelling again. Mom came running out to see what had
happened, and all she could do was laugh, what is it with my family? Here I was I dire straits, with frozen nether
regions and all they can do is laugh?
On the plus side, she did help take my boots off and they
were not ruined. Once they had dried and
I had warmed up a little, I headed back outside. After all, wasn’t there some sledding to be
done? And what kid worth his salt wouldn’t
be doing that on a snow day?
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