Notice the trees. Please. |
When I was fourteen, Dad decided to combine the best of all worlds.
He sold the old family ranch twenty miles from the town of Milk River and bought a new spread.
Somewhat closer.
Situated immediately adjacent to the town – and I do mean immediately – it retained all the charm of living in the country.
Within walking distance of everything ‘town’.
Perfect.
There was just one drawback.
The ranch grew from the ashes of the old town slaughter house.
Quite literally.
The slaughter house had burned to the ground and the town butcher had taken it as a sign that it was time to retire.
Dad was only too happy to help him out and bought the almost bare patch of ground.
Oh, there was pasture. Plenty of it.
But no buildings to speak of.
My parents had to start from scratch.
After several months of construction, corrals, barns, outbuildings, quonset and finally, home, appeared.
But that was just the first part.
Now, I should point out, here, that the town of Milk River lies nestled in a crook of the actual Milk River on the prairies.
The rolling, grassy, windswept, breathtakingly beautiful, treeless prairies.
Our recently vacated old ranch had been planted, sometime in the thirties, with acres of trees. Trees that stood tall and straight and looked like they had been there forever. Tress so lush and beautiful that is was rather difficult to see the ranch house.
Though this new place had many, many amenities, its treeless state was achingly obvious.
Mom set out to do something about it.
And roped us kids into helping.
Sigh.
We planted trees.
Acres of them.
And then, if that weren’t enough, we watered trees.
Acres of them.
Oh, we used the garden hose – for as far as it would reach. Then we used a little water tank on wheels.
It was aching, back-breaking work.
But who is going to sneak away to happier pursuits when one’s mother is out there, sweating beneath yet another bucket of water?
No one could be that heartless.
Okay, well, Dad would have had something to say about it if we disappeared . . .
We hand-fed those trees the entire time we lived there.
Then dad, he of the itchy feet, bought another ranch, this time near Fort MacLeod, Alberta.
One that was, mercifully, well treed.
Happily, we packed our buckets and moved.
But we often drive past the old place, whose trees are now nearly fifty years old.
Trees that stand tall and straight and look like they’ve been there forever. Tress so lush and beautiful that is was rather difficult to see the ranch house.
I guess we gave them a good start.
And, really, that’s all that matters.
This seems so foreign to me that it could almost be a work of fiction. :) maybe I will get to see it some day. More than in my mind, I mean!
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by the blog and for your sweet words. We are excited. See you around the blogosphere.
This flat that I currently live in is the only home I've ever had where I haven't planted at least one tree. I've left trees in Sydney, Melbourne, several different homes here in Adelaide, pretty much everywhere I've been. Here, there is no need, the blocks of flats already have many trees. So I've planted flowers and bulbs instead.
ReplyDeleteSo your Dad had wanderlust too. It's rather unsettling isn't it?
ReplyDeleteThat does it. I love your Mom. She was such a trooper! Many people would be discouraged by all the moving and the prospect of so much work. She just knuckled down and ... worked. What a wonderful person.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful legacy of your work, to see those trees so tall. I love how this piece points out the pros and cons of living different places!
ReplyDeleteWhen we go back to KY we sometimes drive by my childhood home that mom sold back quite a few years ago 20 now! That's the first thing I look at daddy's trees that he lovingly planted and nurtured and of course we had to water!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the memories, Sis. Love you!
ReplyDeleteChris