Complete text -- "The Canyon"
Posted Tuesday 12 February 2008
The Canyon
Henrietta, Texas, 1952-1957. To the northwest of town, the homes came to a sudden stop, at the Canyon. We boys called it the Canyon, but our town being built on Texas rolling hills, it wasn't exceptionally magnificent. Except to us, of course.A stream or creek emerged from the rock, and fell twenty feet into a small pool, in which lived a legendary large fish. From the pool, when there was rain, the outbound creek trickled and cut through a wide and expanding sandy basin.
To either side, the long arms of rocky shelf stretched, reaching down to meet the plain, and beyond, a hazard of tumbled woods, open plains, and a great and empty distance.
For us boys, this was Heaven.
For one thing, no grown-ups. For another, the mind could range free, because a quarter-hour hike took you beyond civilization. That is, beyond houses, roads, telephone poles. It was wild country, and roaming free in the Canyon, we were wild creatures.
With my gang of friends, on a long Saturday hike, eventually we became lost. We'd found some burrows near the bank of a winding stream. We'd crawled into these burrows, and back out again. We'd followed a blue racer, a dark-colored snake capable of great speed upon the grasslands. It ran from us and finally glided up into an ancient mesquite tree.
We'd walked through a wood, never seen before or since. When the sun was high overhead, we became disoriented. Opinion differed as to the correct direction. Just like in the horror movies, where the incredibly stupid people decide to split up, we decided to split up.
The reason being that three of us believed that town lay over that way, and the other four were pretty sure that the town lay over in this other direction. As it turned out, both groups made their way back to town. This was just perfect for a Saturday adventure for us boys. We felt like mighty woodsmen.
In early teen years, Bobby M. and I used to head out to the Canyon after school. We were learning to smoke cigarettes. It takes a certain amount of practice. We got pretty good at it.
Then things changed. In Texas, you can get a driver's license at age 14 1/2, if you take Driver's Ed. That summer following, Driver's Ed was a popular class. Most of the mighty woodmen were there, going to school in the summer, because automobiles beckoned.
With licenses, we began importuning parents to drive the family car. Some earned and bought their own. With my parents help, I managed a green 1951 Chevrolet which my mom had traded on a Chrysler. I was very proud of this green car, and managed to get into a wreck soon after, the repairs of which gave me an outstanding two-toned color scheme.
The canyon? Forgotten. Abandoned. In all these years following, I've never been back, and I'll wager the others haven't either.
But don't feel bad for the Canyon. All of us had younger brothers. Some of those had brothers younger still. And now, many of the mighty woodmen have sons, and these now grown up with boys of their own. No, the Canyon isn't lonely.
You can trust boys. They will find the Canyon.
Comments
mairn wrote:
Why is it you boys had all the fun??
Do all these remembrances just pop in your head? Can you think about a certain experience and recall it enough to write about it (like the time we saw the Beatles, and the trip from Houston to Galveston, etc.), or does it have to just be spontaneous?
Do all these remembrances just pop in your head? Can you think about a certain experience and recall it enough to write about it (like the time we saw the Beatles, and the trip from Houston to Galveston, etc.), or does it have to just be spontaneous?
06/04/03 12:20:35
Bill and SuiYee wrote:
amazingly well written, kept us spellbound.. talented writer!......syf
beautiful word pictures, with strong emotional impact....reminisent of my youthful adventures in the Hills of So. Pasadena.....wsf
beautiful word pictures, with strong emotional impact....reminisent of my youthful adventures in the Hills of So. Pasadena.....wsf
06/04/03 15:07:49
Russell Orrell wrote:
As it turns out I have been back to the canyon. On a trip some years ago I walked down I think it was Archer Street to Marvin Oliver's old driveway. I followed it down and took the trail that goes down the north wall of the canyon.
It has gotten a good deal smaller since I was last there. There were some new slides. The stream still spilled down the water fall and the legendary fish was still there. Didn't see him but I knew he was still there.
How many boys went down there do you figure? I know I wouldn't be able to count.
It has gotten a good deal smaller since I was last there. There were some new slides. The stream still spilled down the water fall and the legendary fish was still there. Didn't see him but I knew he was still there.
How many boys went down there do you figure? I know I wouldn't be able to count.
03/25/04 18:28:00
bloggard wrote:
So it became smaller. Perhaps it is receding away from us. But it will loom all the larger to the next small boy who wanders there.
03/25/04 19:52:16
Mack Hammock wrote:
How similar, the boyhood of young boys.
Near Hubbard, Texas it was horseshoe bluff. Rumor was that a young lover had fallen while walking his girl and died of a broken neck. We were properly respectful and afraid at the same time. Fifty years later, after an absence of forty years, I purchased the property adjoining the bluff but could never find it. Unless, as stated earlier, it had shrunk to the point that I walked over or past and didn't see it. How sad.
Near Hubbard, Texas it was horseshoe bluff. Rumor was that a young lover had fallen while walking his girl and died of a broken neck. We were properly respectful and afraid at the same time. Fifty years later, after an absence of forty years, I purchased the property adjoining the bluff but could never find it. Unless, as stated earlier, it had shrunk to the point that I walked over or past and didn't see it. How sad.
05/03/04 12:59:20
bloggard wrote:
How similar, the legends of youth.
In Henrietta, Texas, it was the broken ledge on the courthouse near the fire escape slide. (See the "death ledge" in http://www.bloggard.com/blo...).
Horseshoe bluff disappeared? It seems impossible! I say send a small boy to look. Perhaps he'll find it. If not, well ... time recedes away from us, even as it opens around us this very minute.
Odd, the way it does that.
In Henrietta, Texas, it was the broken ledge on the courthouse near the fire escape slide. (See the "death ledge" in http://www.bloggard.com/blo...).
Horseshoe bluff disappeared? It seems impossible! I say send a small boy to look. Perhaps he'll find it. If not, well ... time recedes away from us, even as it opens around us this very minute.
Odd, the way it does that.
05/03/04 13:25:09
Mack Hammock wrote:
a young boy looked for the fabled site
but nothing like it appeared,
he wondered if it ever existed and his
heart raced as he neared
a place in the ground that was eroded away
that was much like the banks of a stream!
a child is far too knowing today
to be wooed by the haunts of our dreams.
but nothing like it appeared,
he wondered if it ever existed and his
heart raced as he neared
a place in the ground that was eroded away
that was much like the banks of a stream!
a child is far too knowing today
to be wooed by the haunts of our dreams.
05/19/04 07:45:28
bloggard wrote:
Nice, Mack!
Is it yours?
Is it yours?
05/19/04 09:00:16
Mack Hammock wrote:
Written just for this site.
06/18/04 14:48:41
bloggard wrote:
Wow, Mack!
Thanks!
Thanks!
06/18/04 16:02:17
Add Comments
This item is closed, it's not possible to add new comments to it or to vote on it