Recently I
stepped into a rural cemetery to see if I could find the gravestone of an old
neighbor.
She hasn’t been
thought of in such a long time. Suddenly she seemed important to find out
about.
It’s as when my
sister brought up a forgotten neighbor. It generated much discussion for
awhile as we reminisced. We wondered where the family moved and what their further
story might be.
The woman whose
grave marker I was seeking was largely unknown to us, like the other neighbor
thought about out of the blue.
This woman was a widow.
She had an adult daughter who wasn’t quite right. I'm sure I was some years along before I realized this.
A little slow is what she'd have been called. There was kindness
if not an actual concept of the nature of her condition. Things like that
weren’t talked about.
She was always with her mother. She was neatly dressed,
perfectly polite.
They had a farm off a gravel road we seldom used. I suppose the two coming alone to church Sunday after Sunday made an impression on me.
The mother was well
past middle age. She was weathered but not worn down. You felt she could
master any situation.
It was a
strength held in common with the farm women of her generation. They
could meet anything, deal with it and survive. They were very elemental.
She was
self-sufficient and sporting as I took her in. She competently drove what surely
was a 1946 Hudson sedan.
It was a beauty. It was big old classic. It was recognizable as her car as it turned into the church
parking lot.
I recall going by their place one time. The Hudson was poised at the entrance of their long farm driveway as we came along.
Township roads didn't see a lot of traffic. There wasn't a whole lot of passing cars or getting
behind a moving tractor. Meeting a car pulled up in a driveway was therefore pretty exciting.
This
was as
close to a traffic moment as this road had. On top of that we knew the driver. Score another point we thought from out of our admittedly
small fund of worldly experience.
The two were on their way somewhere. This seemed neat to me. It was a glimpse of their life which can be like pushing back shutters. A little can reveal a lot.
Mom knew that this woman
lived here. For me it was different. The idea of people
living separately from the places you associate them with, which was church in this woman's case, was just beginning to sink in.
We were on this
particular road so seldom it really was a chance meeting of cars. The flash of
her face through the windshield, and the daughter alongside in the front seat, sank
in deep.
Their last name, and this one sure memory, is about all I had on her. My family was approached to see what they
remembered.They drew blanks.
Brothers latch on to other things or recall not at all. My sister in this case
couldn’t be of help. It was up to me to connect with this person as best the
trail led.
The cemetery visited
is small as laid out. There are neat rows, not too many, which made the search
somewhat simple to carry out.
It’s peopled, if
the term is correct, by families known to me. Almost all the names mean
something.
We’re connected by geography, faith and time. We’re largely a flock
that hasn’t gone far from home.
The years of
birth and dates of passing make the former neighbors a true and ongoing
part of the countryside.
Their span of
time registered in the churchyard signifies their living years. Remembrance is palpable
in the stillness of the green plots aligned within sight of their church.
Emma’s gravestone
was come upon as I was entertaining the possibility that her resting spot was elsewhere.
By the dates on
her gravestone she lived into her 90s. Helen, whose name I learned along with Emma's, preceded her mother by ten years.
Helen’s
birthdate indicates she was born much earlier than I guessed.
As a girl I assigned no age to this constant companion of her mother. She wasn't a girl even though she had that as part of her. She was a woman who didn't grow old.
She had the same day of birth as one
of my brothers. It was noted because common ground suits me.
I think back to those
long ago summers. I like to think of a decorated cake set out for
Helen in a hot late August kitchen.
There, and at our place across the lake, it's similarly a day for cake made festive with icing and candles. Mutual birthdays and we had no clue.
You think of folks
from your early years, maybe especially those who fill a country church with
you. It’s a happy addition to include Emma and Helen among those we once knew.
Our pot of tomatoes on the deck
is showing off early thanks to the heat.
One tomato was perfectly ripe when we
came back from a few days in the country.
Dragging in laundry to wash, and
the additional bags of paraphernalia you gather on even short stays out of town, we were
predisposed to an easy supper as the vacation clothing went directly to the
washer.
Maybe it was the tomato, noticed
when we first got home, that made us think of ordering in pizza.
The tomato looked too pretty
on the vine to pick when first exclaimed over. Then we forgot about it in the throes of unpacking.
We ate the pizza unadorned
except for the cheese and bacon toppings with which it arrived.
The tomato, fixed with some
basil, could have been an excellent pizza garnish. Instead the juicy red globe gained some extra
minutes in the sun.
It was eaten later with a
shake of salt. Tomatoes taste best fresh and on the spot.
We sweltered the whole time we
were away. One assumes it’ll be cooler leaving behind the asphalt and diesel
fumes of the city. That's not always so.
The hot air dome is a tight cap over the
Midwest. Whether it's skyscrapers or silos out your back door broiling temperatures this month are pretty much the case.
Most of us can deal with the
heat. It’s harder with sticky hot. If you’re outside any length of time you’re
dripping wet. Dew points are the points of reference picking away at our summer enthusiasm.
We aren’t letting the
inconvenience of major perspiration outbreaks get in the way of our planned
activities. Summer is over too soon to get reliant on central air and stale TV
reruns.
It feels good to be on the move outside
even in dew point country. We go slower, find shade and drink plenty of water.
This was our strategy at a recent
outdoor art festival, which has the good fortune to be set along one of our
cool flowing Minnesota rivers.
The white tents arranged under
the trees gave the aspect of a medieval fair. It looked jaunty as viewed on
approach.
I expected to hear the clank of armor or see the flowing gowns of fair
ladies of the castle with wide baskets strolling through the archaic lanes.
It was only a dream, however. The
brisk business of buying and selling materialized with the opening of the admission
gate.
My method with any outdoor emporium
is to cover the grounds swiftly, get a feel for what’s there and zero in on
what attracts me. Familiarity with the general layout helps me scope out my interests and saves time with the rest.
Many depend on the map handouts for orientation.
For me nothing takes the place of scouting with your own set of eyes.
Eventually the handout is referred to but it's held in reserve as used by me.
An abundance of merchandise with an up North theme was immediately noted. Possibly the pieces stand out
because they fit so well with the distinctly bucolic setting.
If you don’t own a cabin or lake
home these items make you want to acquire lakeshore property pronto.
It’s hard
to resist the breezy banners, cute plaques, carvings, Man Cave objects, stained
glass suncatchers, wind chimes and assortment of wooden furniture from tiny
benches on up.
They’re so suited for lake décor you
can almost hear the waves as you walk by. You can justify the cabin purchase on this basis
alone. The artsy choices call for a relaxed second home they can
spiff up.
You’re struck by the industry behind all these wares. You picture the studios or workshops or simple kitchen
tables where these examples of skill and labors of love are conceived, prepared, completed
and packed to bring.
Displays of handcrafted jewelry,
meanwhile, take you in a different direction. They play on your dress-up whims
which begin with your mother’s multi-strand pearls fastened
around your neck when you're small.
You admire the delicate designs
or the bold workings of metal and stone or intricate beaded fabrications.
You
want to put on a raft of necklaces, or maybe just one perfect pendant, and slip
into a caftan and sashay to a place that serves wine and outdoor poetry
readings if you only knew where such a place might be.
With this same unique jewelry,
but with towel and swimsuit tossed into one of the commodious carryalls also for sale
(and which I virtuously resisted, my tote bag shelf being full), you might opt instead
to a game of volleyball on the beach.
A large component of art fairs is
the creativity that it causes to circulate. It begins in the mind, eye, heart and
hands of the artist. It travels to those inspired by their work, each with the
various influences derived from it.
A few tents offered books with
the authors not exactly hiding behind the piles of their copies but likely
trying to read interest on your face as the title makes contact with you.
Authors must come to book-signings
with tight throats. They recognize their work is being sized up. The value of
their product is established by the willingness of the public to buy.
The food tents and music and
entertainment venues draw their crowds. Many of us were in the queues for drinks and refreshments
as the steamy afternoon pressed on.
Certain members of my group were
intent on one specific thing. They were here for the pork chops.
The cooked pork chops are
possibly the festival’s biggest attraction. They’re cooked on location with a
great deal of smoke and the smell of the meat to mark their territory.
Champing at the bit for pork
chops my group managed to rein in their appetites until we could all be
together. They made it longer than one determined gal.
Perhaps she’d waited all year for
pork chops in the park. She was oblivious to all things as she sat over her pork
chop, enjoying every bite of her forenoon chew.
We sat at the picnic table by the
river with our pork chops. The smoke from the cooking area hung in the heavy air. It was in our hair and on our clothes and in our
eyes.
At the moment it didn’t matter. To avoid the smoke was to be absent from the festival. Having allergies or sensitivities can rule out many things. Smoke very much bothers me but here I was nevertheless.
Nearby was the music and we ate
and enjoyed. And then someone thought of ice cream cones for dessert. Maybe an art festival
is really the art of enjoyment practiced on a large scale.
Now for some summer fun
nearer to home. We’re in the midst of the Minneapolis Aquatennial and it puts July in the city in lights.
Called the best days of summer
the annual event has something for everyone. For us it’s the milk carton races
on Lake Calhoun and also the fireworks that stream and blaze and arc high above
the Mississippi River on the final night.
Summer rightfully is a succession
of community celebrations and events planned to take us out and about in the embrace of nature at her best.
There’s no need to refer to the
calendar for weeks on end. We cross off each event as it comes along and mark
the next one we aim to attend.
It’s a lovely way to do summer. Dratted dew
points and all.
Fourth of July celebrations nicely take care of the first week or so. It
shortens all the rest.
A rather big
group of us were together for the holiday already sliding into the past.
This included the out-of-state
contingent. They and the July heat arrived simultaneously.
It was a steamy
4th. We kept active despite the warmth. We jumped in the water a bunch
of times and found room for all the good food and the watermelon besides.
After sampling
smoothies made in the blender, and the salted nut rolls and banana cake, we talked once again of compiling a family cookbook. We advocate for it every year as we linger over the spread of items brought.
A collection of recipes
from our different backgrounds was suggested when the cookbook came up this time. It was welcomed as a good idea.
The hypothetical cookbook would reflect a diverse heritage. The family has become a tasty stew seasoned with many nationalities.
My contribution to
the get-together was a white bean salad made spunky with chopped red onion, feta
cheese and fresh basil. It went well with the hamburgers done on the grill.
Triple digit temperatures melted parts of the state. We kept cool by
remembering ice cream snacks enjoyed when young.
Fudgesicles were mentioned. A
trip to Dairy Queen was always a hit. For me you
couldn’t top the Drumstick cone dipped in nuts.
This is certainly a summer to
indulge in ice cream or take a glass of lemonade into the shade with you. You
beat the heat when you succumb to it, as dear friends of mine believe.
Sweltering weather isn't slowing visitors to the Arboretum from what I can judge, being among them.
On more than a few toasty afternoons we've strolled the grounds, taking pictures and bending to admire the blooms.
After several trips I feel a concentrated course in botany has been
achieved. All the plants have been noted and studied. Everything is so
beautiful.
The daylilies in
particular are stunning. Ordinarily they’re not my favorite flower. But this
year an exception will be made.
The mild winter has boosted the local deer population. They’re everywhere and in broad daylight. Perhaps
the pesky mosquitoes are driving them into the open areas.
We’re careful as
we drive. We’re learning to expect deer in front of us as happened last week. A
doe leapt ahead of the car.
She bounded safely across thanks to two sets of car brakes applied quickly. We were glad the other driver was paying attention as we were.
In the car after church a couple days
later I pointed out another deer. It was reaching up to browse on branches.
“Sunday brunch”
I said of the forenoon graze. “Tree pizza,” Al
replied. His comment earned a laugh.
All this greenery is free pizza to the deer. They must think that of our strawberries and hostas too. They help themselves liberally, such as the buck working on our strawberry crop in the garden.
On a walk about
this same time I came past a large deer lawn ornament.
The artist got it lifelike entered my mind as I drew even with the yard embellishment. It must be a recent acquisition. I hadn’t noticed it before.
With a start I realized
it was a real deer. We were close. Only the fronds of a spruce tree shielded it from me.
The deer didn’t
flinch. It was up to me to widen the distance between.
It stood bolted to the spot long after I went by. Like Lot’s wife in the Bible I turned back to look.
It's aiming for 97 degrees today which will break records and
perhaps our hearts a little as we cede to the press of the heat.
We’re not promised much
letup. Get accustomed to it is the best of the advice we hear. The dog days of
summer jumped the gun this year.
Tank tops I vowed never to wear
again in public are working their way to the front of the closet.
Suddenly as scrutinized they
look more appropriate for the melting temperatures than gauged by the light of September when they were folded and
put away.
Throw in the dew point and it certainly is lake weather. Many of us are at the
lake already.
The 4th of July gets things rolling and lots of people get a head start. It’s
smart thinking to wrap a vacation around the national holiday.
Others of us find the lakes in
our midst sufficient for all the picnicking, 4th of July barbecuing and
chilling we plan to do.
Packing to go out of town to the
lake when lakes are right here can perhaps justifiably be construed as more effort
than one needs to go through.
It really doesn’t matter how we
catch our refreshing breeze as long as we do. It can be the fast whir of the portable
fan or the opening of the refrigerator door in response to a request for another
glass of lemonade, please.
The 4th of July, as indeed all the
summer, should be a time when we let the breezes play lightly and teasingly over
us.
Wherever
we are to be in position for the holiday we’re ready for a safe and glorious
Fourth.
It was fortuitous, back in 1776, that
the signers of the Declaration of Independence adopted Thomas Jefferson’s masterfully
composed document on July 4. I can’t imagine celebrating in this grand style at
any other time.
I make Rice Krispie bars every
year with the first sticky outbreak. We’ve had a couple previous
opportunities for the bars. Steamy conditions are gaining as a characteristic
of this summer.
We didn't then have Rice
Krispies on hand. That’s a severe drawback for making the bars. Now I’m equipped.
It seems to me the recipe once was
standard on the Rice Krispies box. It was as dependable a feature as Nutrition
Facts (1¼ cups of cereal with or without milk provide 50% of your recommended
daily iron)) or the Snap, Crackle and Pop boys.
Maybe the box has had a makeover.
I don’t pay much attention as swift selection is made along the cereal aisle. Often I don’t even notice the
price.
It was at home I noted the recipe is gone. It's not on the side panel. It’s not
at the top or the bottom of the Rice Krispies box either.
It was turned every which way with no luck. I remembered it wasn't on the last box either.
There's not a hint of the recipe on the box. You can get the recipe at kelloggs.com, which is information on the box, but the web site could make the recipe easier to find.
I was prepared with a backup. The recipe is on an index
card in my no-bake file.
Perhaps I feared for this eventuality, the day when the Rice
Krispie bar recipe would disappear.
Summer is a trifle cooler when
you sit down to a plate of Rice Krispie bars.
Today, with bars to serve, this theory gets tested. It’d be great if it makes it feel less a scorcher. Maybe it will pass for a mere ninety degrees.
Rice Krispie Bars
Melt 3 Tablespoons butter and
1-10 oz. bag regular marshmallows (about 40) over low heat. When marshmallows
are completely melted remove from heat. Add 6 cups Rice Krispie cereal. Stir
until well coated.
Press mixture into 9 x 13”
greased pan. Cut into 2 x 2” squares when cool. Yield: 24 bars.