Note: A prologue from my upcoming autobiography, Life’s Too Short to Smoke Cheap Cigars (Or to Drink Cheap Whiskey.)
You Ever Wonder Why…
It’s well known that teenage boys are driven by testosterone; your typical teenage boy is basically a pair of testicles with legs, and I was certainly no exception. At this sensitive age boys are prone to doing stupid things, sometimes to impress girls (that rarely works out like intended) or sometimes just because.
Country kids, of course, have many opportunities to risk life and limb in pursuit of… well, who knows? I certainly don’t. Back then, in the glory days of the late Seventies back in Allamakee County, I didn’t know either. And that probably explains a lot.
This One Time…
One of those “just because” times came in the autumn of 1976. My grandfather had passed away the year before, and my grandmother was preparing to pass off the big farmhouse to my uncle and move into a smaller structure on the property, and so had been clearing out a lot of my late grandfather’s stuff.
By the early November day when my cousin Jeff and I went out to the farm to shoot some pheasants, most of Grandpa’s stuff was already gone, but after we had knocked over a few birds, we went in to the house where Grandma had offered to feed us lunch. As we were eating, Grandma let us know about the few things left.
“Boys,” she told us, “out in the barn, there are a couple of old boxes of Grandad’s things. You two go look through them when you’re done eating. If there’s anything you want, take it; I’m going to have your uncle Norman haul all the rest to the dump.”
So, once we finished eating, we went back outside. We stood in the drive for a few moments. As Jeff was lighting a cigarette, I walked over and poked my head in the small entry door on the side of the barn.
“Hey,” I told Jeff, “there’s a couple boxes in there, just like Grandma said.”
“Well, let’s have a look,” Jeff responded.
There wasn’t much of any use in the boxes. As I recall at this distance in time, there was a small stash of Grandpa’s girlie magazines that gave us a chuckle (a few years later I was mildly horrified when I suddenly realized why Grandpa kept that stash in the barn and not the house), a broken socket wrench and, down in the bottom of one of the boxes, two old sticks of dynamite.
Lots of folks who haven’t worked with explosives don’t know that old dynamite sweats. This isn’t sweat in the human sense, it’s more like an old D-cell battery breaking open. A gritty, crystalline white crust exudes from the paper covering of the dynamite sticks, eventually heavily covering the stick. The main substance of that gritty crust? Nitroglycerine.
This, understandably, makes these old sticks of dynamite tetchy to handle.
Now, then and there, the smart thing to do would have been to leave the sticks where they were, to tell Uncle Norman, who was taking over the farm, about them, and leave him to find someone experienced and equipped to deal with these hazardous objects. But not us – oh, no, not us!
Holding one of the sticks, my cousin looked at me. “Hey,” he said, “I’ve got my .22 in my truck. I wonder if these would go off if we shot ‘em?”
Jeff was four years older than me, and, I assumed, wiser. So, my reply seemed obvious: “Let’s find out!”
Some instinct made us go a good way from the house before commencing our experiment, so once Jeff retried his old .22 bolt gun, we walked through the orchard and out to the far side of the south cornfield. There we propped the sweaty old dynamite sticks up against a dirt clod, backed off about fifty yards and commenced experimenting.
We each had fired off a five-round magazine at the two sticks with no result. After carefully approaching the sticks, we saw several inarguable bullet holes through them. But no explosion had commenced.
It was this moment that Jeff realized the real, physical danger of what we were doing. “You know,” he said, “if Grandma hears the .22 and comes out here and sees what we’re doing, she’ll cut a switch and wallop the tar of us both.”
Jeff and I were big tough country boys. Jeff was about 5’10”, maybe 160 pounds, and hard as rock; at fifteen, I was already a six-footer pushing 200 pounds and could easily toss around 75-pound hay bales. Grandma was 4’10”, weighed maybe a hundred pounds soaking wet, and was in her middle seventies, and we had no doubt whatsoever that she could beat the hell out of us both without breaking a sweat – or that she would certainly do so if she figured out what we were up to.
“Yeah,” I agreed. “We’d better do the smart thing, I guess.”
So, Jeff got a shovel from the tool shed, we dug a four-foot deep hole in the fencerow and buried those two sticks, tamping the dirt down good and hard and scattering dry leaves over the filled hole. Nothing more was said about the incident by either of us for many years, and as far as we know nobody ever got blown up, so presumably the damp earth rendered the dynamite, eventually, inert.
I’m no expert on dynamite, though. For all I know those sticks, buried in the ground all these years, may well still be ert. Personally, even now, I don’t think I’d go back and try digging in that fencerow, but then there’s lots of things I wouldn’t do nowadays.
Youth, Testosterone and Beer
Now, add a couple years and some beer to the mix.
Back in these days, the age of majority for almost everything was still eighteen. I could buy beer at eighteen, any kind of alcohol for that matter, which resulted in my being a legal drinker through most of my senior year of high school. This was the cause of some consternation on the part of teachers, especially since my high school had open campus for seniors. We generally went downtown for lunch, usually grabbing a sandwich and a brew at one of the local taverns.
“These boys are coming to afternoon classes smelling of beer!” the teachers protested to the principal. Bear in mind that this was a time when some semblance of common sense still held sway in a significant portion of the population. So, the principal’s reply was, shall we say, principled; “Are they drunk?”
“No,” the teachers replied.
“Are they disruptive?”
“No.”
“They’re legal. If they have a beer with lunch, and they’re paying attention after that, there’s nothing you can do about it.”
The teachers withdrew their complaints, we went on having a beer or two with lunch, and everybody was, if not content, at least accepting the inevitable.
On schooldays at lunch, see, we were mostly responsible. But add girls to the mix! That’s when the old saying about “hold my beer and watch this” really gains some traction.
At This Dance…
Fast forward to the summer after I was manumitted from high school. That summer of 1980 I was working at some odd jobs (bouncer, car repo guy, various farm jobs) while I tried to decide what to do next. But the highlights of that long-ago summer took place in the little town of Highlandville, about six miles from the Old Man’s place. That little unincorporated village contained an old one-room schoolhouse that had been converted into a little social center and, that summer, there were danced there every Saturday night. There was always a local band, usually a few unofficial kegs of beer in crates of ice, and local farm boys and girls from miles around came in to check out the other farm girls and boys.
One particular Saturday found my folks leaving to go to an Audubon Society conference down in Decorah. Dad was annoyed with me for some reason I can’t recall and so, when he and Mom left in Mom’s car, he took the keys to his pickup. He knew my old 66 Ford’s gas tank was dry as a fart and the big gas tank out by the shed was likewise empty, and so presumed I’d be left to sit out a Saturday night at home.
But there was one thing he forgot.
After the folks left, I walked around a little bit, grumbling to myself and considering possibilities. It was a beautiful July afternoon getting along towards evening; the afternoon heat was giving way to the cool of the evening, and the cicadas were still calling from the big box-elders along the driveway; a perfect evening to find a girl and enjoy some of the finer things in my eighteen-year-old life.
For a few mad moments I considered getting my old bike out of the shed and riding it to Highlandville, but I would not garner any respect from the other local kids if I had to resort to that, and so dismissed the idea out of hand. It was too far to walk, and I wasn’t interested in driving the tractor that far.
Then, as I stood irresolutely in the yard, a bright light dawned: It was the sun, glancing off the windshield of Dad’s 1954 F-500 six-yard dump truck, parked in the orchard.
I hopped in. The old truck, being an unlicensed farm vehicle that had nevertheless seen many years of hard use on northeast Iowa’s graveled roads and farm fields, didn’t have a conventional ignition switch any more, the key switch being replaced by a simple old Radio Shack toggle. To start the truck, one had to flip the toggle to On, pump the gas pedal three times – not twice, not four times, but three times – and then step on the starter button on the floor, at which point the truck’s old 312 Y-block engine would cough, sputter and come to life with a flatulent roar.
At least, it did so on this occasion. I had been driving the truck for several years already, hauling dirt and gravel for various jobs around the place, and so was already well familiar with its operation. I crawled the old vehicle out to the road, stuck the two-speed rear axle in High, and headed for town.
I arrived without incident. The old dumper, parked at the edge of the parking lot, occasioned some comment from the dancegoers, but otherwise my evening went well. I danced with a few girls, drank more than a few beers.
About ten o’clock, having had no luck with the local girls at the dance, I went outside to grab a beer. A group of local rowdies were gathered around the keg in the back of Miles Duffy’s pickup. As I was filling my cup, one of them asked me, “Hey, are you the guy who drove the dump truck in?”
“Yup,” I agreed. “Was either that or walk.”
“I hear ya,” he agreed easily. He drained his beer at a single pull. “Say,” he went on, “if a fella was to climb in the back of that, and you were to dump it out, how long you reckon a guy could hang on?”
“I can’t think of but one way to find out,” I answered.
We found out. Not one guy but about six climbed in the back of the truck. I started the old monster up and, after letting the engine run a moment to build up hydraulic pressure, pulled the knob to dump the box out.
Bear in mind that this vehicle, like a lot of old dumpers, had a tailgate that was hinged not at the bottom but at the top, allowing it to swing open at the bottom to release the contents. I had undogged the latches on the tailgate before climbing in the cab. As the box upended, I heard scrabbling as the fellows tried to hold on to the rusty surface of the dump box, and then sliding sounds, followed by a few hard thumps as a couple of them hit the tailgate hard before sliding out.
Leaving the engine running, I climbed out to see the results. The first guy to have the idea had a welt on his forehead and a swelling under one eye that looked like it would turn into a beautiful shiner. “Hey!” he yelled. “Let’s go again! I think I can do better!”
We ended up trying it four or five times. At one point I tried a run in the back myself and managed to slide out without breaking any bones.
None of the local gals were impressed, of course, even though at the time we young guys had considered it a serious possibility that they would be. Eventually an older fellow, certainly on the wrong side of twenty and therefore expected to be responsible, walked over and pointed out, “you know, if you guys keep doing that, someone is gonna get hurt.”
We all looked at each other, with our collection of bruises, scrapes, cuts and sprains, and agreed that he was likely right.
Thus, ended the great dump truck experiment. Eventually, girl-less and bruised, I finished my last beer, climbed in the old dumper, put the axle in Low to keep the speed down to match my impaired reflexes, and guided the waddling, farting old beast back home.
As It Stands
Many years later I told my Mom of the incident, one in a series of things that I revealed to the folks after enough years had passed that they would hopefully find the stories amusing rather than enraging. I had generally been surprised to find out how much they already knew of my escapades, but that one they weren’t too sure of, although Mom remembered one time when they came back from a weekend in town when Dad swore the dump truck wasn’t quite where he left it.
Nowadays I’m a much more settled sort of fellow, and a phrase like “hold my beer and watch this” will only pass my lips in jest. Then again, there’s the time I crossed a flooded Arizona creek in the middle of the night in my old Bronco by hitting the stream at about sixty miles per hour and skipping the truck like a rock across the water…
…but that’s a story for another time.
It’s well known that teenage boys are driven by testosterone – LIES. in the very first paragraph. hormones have no effect on behavior. I read it in The Guardian.
Nice read. Man, I lived a sheltered youth.
I guess it’s a good thing no girls were impressed. One that was, could made you a daddy at eighteen, I think.
nonsense. Animal loved women but he denied them his essence
You didn’t miss it by much. I was twenty.
Great stories, Animal!
The dynamite one made me smile. A couple of buddies came back from camp one year with a couple sticks of dynamite, not sweating as badly as yours, but definitely on the way. Being the bright young T-sacs that we were, we attempted to make out own fireworks. Happily, nothing else happened.
There are times when I am truly shocked to be here, 52 years old and pretty much intact. I could write a book about our car-related stupidity.
*shakes head*
Thanks for the laughs, man.
When I was about 11 a friend and I found a box of 12 gauge shells in his Dad’s garage and tried to set one off by hitting it with a sledge on the garage floor. That failed, so we cut several open and made patterns on the floor with the powder then lit it to see what would happen. He got grounded for a month, but he didn’t rat me out so I escaped unscathed except for the nasty burn on my thumb.
I found a piece of rusted iron once…
Used thusly?
In about the third grade, I found a shotgun shell at my grandpa’s house. He had a lupara. So, I took it to school and showed it to some kids. One of them wanted to try and set it off, so he took it all the way to the back of the field, where there was a sandy spot (the school was 1 block from the beach) and he buried it exposing just the primer and built a tiny fire on it. The janitor saw the smoke and came running. He stamped it out and found the shotgun shell. We were trying to tell him not to stamp on it, but he wasn’t gonna listen to us. Got in some trouble for that one.
We used to pry the shells open, empty the shot, tape a marble to the primer end, throw them high into the air, laugh like idiots when they hit the pavement.
BANG!
That’s a good friend.
“There are times when I am truly shocked to be here, 52 years old and pretty much intact. ”
Me too.
A 1970 Oldsmobile Gutless Cutlass will make it across a 100 yard soybean field given enough speed at the start. It would be wise, though, to not leave a mud trail all the way back to your house. It would be even wiser to not talk back to the angry farmer who tracked you all the way back to your house.
Surfing on top of a 1978 Ford Pinto station wagon on a “minimum maintenance road” driven by your best friend who you just taught to drive a manual transmission? Wicked smahrt.
Driving through the soccer goals (no nets)
Driving around Leech Lake without using your hands.
We might be brothers.
Add motorcycles, lots of police interaction and zero parental input and you have my youthhood. Emphasis on hood.
Momma dint allow no motorcycles (or guns).
Those came later.
I still claim to temporarily lose 20 IQ points anytime I swing a leg over a motorcycle.
We drove around in a Ford Maverick with no windshield for a few months. Only got two tickets in that thing. Very windy.
We were just driving some trails on a friend’s property in a Jeep a couple years ago. We started having people grab the roof rack and ride on the back. We finally stopped after my buddy fell off . . . He decided he was in his 30s and his 3 kids might like it if he didn’t die.
Thanks Animal.
I shot many an explosive item in my teenage years, but never a full stick.
That’s a good bit about the dynamite. Reminds me of my dad’s friend growing up. When they were sixteen (in the mid seventies) they made pipe bombs, like you do, for no particular reason other than it seemed like it would be fun. His friend was a touch sloppy in the handling and blew two fingers off. Ironically, he went on to make a very comfortable living as a construction manager.
File footage of young Animal
Fun read Animal. Thanks.
That which doesn’t kill us makes us stronger.
I suspect taking Mangus Mangnuson and amputating all his limbs would NOT make him stronger.
That which doesn’t kill us, comes back to cause us major pain in about a half a century.
Hey, you played rugby too?!
Bad weight lifting form and martial arts for me.
I was always partial to the phrase. “That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error.” /internet tuff guy.
girl-less and bruised
Nice album name.
I prefer Heartbroken, in Disrepair.
Wait, so Animal is Justin Trudeau?
Srsly, good stories. Like others upthread, I, too, had a sheltered childhood.
A joke for you.
A cowboy named Bud was overseeing his herd in a remote mountainous pasture in California when suddenly a brand-new BMW advanced toward him out of a cloud of dust.
The driver, a young man in a Brioni suit, Gucci shoes, RayBan sunglasses and YSL tie, leaned out the window and asked the cowboy, “If I tell you exactly how many cows and calves you have in your herd, Will you give me a calf?”
Bud looks at the man, obviously a yuppie, then looks at his peacefully grazing herd and calmly answers, “Sure, Why not?”
The yuppie parks his car, whips out his Dell notebook computer, connects it to his Cingular RAZR V3 cell phone, and surfs to a NASA page on the Internet, where he calls up a GPS satellite to get an exact fix on his location which he then feeds to another NASA satellite that scans the area in an ultra-high-resolution photo.
The young man then opens the digital photo in Adobe Photoshop and exports it to an image processing facility in Hamburg , Germany.
Within seconds, he receives an email on his Palm Pilot that the image has been processed and the data stored. He then accesses an MS-SQL database through an ODBC connected Excel spreadsheet with email on his Blackberry and, after a few minutes, receives a response.
Finally, he prints out a full-color, 150-page report on his hi-tech, miniaturized HP LaserJet printer, turns to the cowboy and says, “You have exactly 1,586 cows and calves.”
“That’s right. Well, I guess you can take one of my calves,” says Bud.
He watches the young man select one of the animals and looks on with amusement as the young man stuffs it into the trunk of his car.
Then Bud says to the young man, “Hey, if I can tell you exactly what your business is, will you give me back my calf?”
The young man thinks about it for a second and then says, “Okay, why not?”
“You’re a Congressman for the U.S. Government”, says Bud.
“Wow! That’s correct,” says the yuppie, “but how did you guess that?”
“No guessing required.” answered the cowboy. “You showed up here even though nobody called you. You want to get paid for an answer I already knew, to a question I never asked. You used millions of dollars worth of equipment trying to show me how much smarter than me you are, and you don’t know a thing about how working people make a living, or about cows for that matter. This is a herd of sheep.
Now give me back my dog.
*applause*
I’m about 12 and hanging with a friend whose family had a small dairy operation while he’s cleaning up and sterilizing the milking equipment. It involved some really stong-smelling chemicals. He say the faous lines “Wanna see something neat?” Of course I say “Sure.”
He finds a small glass bottle, hands it to me and as he starts to put some of the cleaning chemicals in the bottle tells me to put the lid on and throw it. It was supposed to be a kind of hand grenade. Well. I get the lid on and it goes off in my hand. Something smashes me in the head near my eye and blood starts pouring down my face. I run the block to my grandparents where Grandma sees the blood gushing from under my hand covering my eye thinks I’ve lost my eye. Turns out it was just a big cut on my eye brow. She was relieved for a moment then furious at my stupidty. I’ve still got the scar.
Another great Animal anecdote.
We had a case of dynamite, fuse and caps on the farm, my dad took great care to show my brother and me how to care for the stuff, he knew we’d be tempted and we were. He told us that 40% (nitro) wouldn’t react to a gun shot, he was wrong. I was smart enough to try that away from the house where the tree crotch split open wouldn’t be do obvious.
A drilling company was working behind our house and left their shack unlocked, with a box of electric caps. Ah, something new, I claimed a few, 3 or 4, and a stick of dynamite from home and drove the tractor to the lake, with a long piece of electrical wire. Wired the cap, stuck it into 1/4 stick of dynamite, rolled out the wire and touched the tractor battery. It was beautiful and I rolled up a lot of little sunfish
My dad enjoyed using the powder as much as us kids and we always had a stump that needed removing.
A tale about shot gun shells and primers but that’s for another time.
Always enjoy the stories, Animal, even not being there I’ll vouch for you.
Not dynamite but I did have a bad experience with sparklers once……
When I was around 6 years old I found the stash of sparklers and snakes my Dad had bought for the 4th of July on top of the fridge. My dad was at work and my mom was in the other room so I jumped on the counter and took the bag of fireworks out to the garage. With my younger brothers assistance we tried to light one of the sparklers with a match. It would not light so the obvious solution was to pour some gasoline on it. That did the trick, not only did the sparkler ignite but also the gas can which in turn lighted the bag of fireworks. Then the garage caught on fire. I grabbed an empty bucket and went into the kitchen and calmly asked my Mom if she could fill it with water. She asked why and then she smelled smoke…..and then saw smoke coming in from under the door. My Mom was able to put out the fire with the garden hose. I still remember my Dad coming home and my Mom explaining how me and my brother almost burned the house down. My Dad started unbuckling his belt, we knew we were in for it…….
Best way to light sparkler I have found is with a small propane torch normally used for plumbing.
Another great one Animal! No dynamite or dumps trucks in anymof my stories, but I can just imagine if we had had access.
OT: co-founder of Communism on who will build the roads.
http://www.stephenhicks.org/2019/10/13/friedrich-engels-answers-who-will-build-the-roads/
” These improvements, too, like the railroads and roadways, are nearly all the work of private individuals and companies.”
Thank you, Animal. I love these.
I didn’t grow up on a farm, but my dad’s family did, so a lot of my cousins did. I got to witness a lot of the same mischief, although not instigate or even partake because I was one of the youngest of the cousins. Young kids – boys and girls both in my family – will do seriously bizarre shit out of boredom.
“boys and girls both in my family – will do seriously bizarre shit out of boredom.”
The euphemisms
That sentence works literally or figuratively.
Was discussing this with the wife the other day. As I kid, I remember being bored out of my skull, most of the time. I despised traveling anywhere because it meant hours of sitting in the back seat with nothing to do but antagonize my little brother. With modern tech, I don’t think this is the case anymore, for better or worse. This might have something to do with many younger people being snowflakes. Harder to get in trouble when you spend all your time on a tablet.
Back when I was a kid there was only one television in the full sized custom conversion van . . .we were the first family I knew that got a vhs hooked up to it. On that bus, my brother watched “krull” and “Tommy tricker and the stamp traveller” almost exclusively specifically because I didn’t like them. Life was so much harder then.
OT . . A co-worker of mine clips his fingernails at his desk. I don’t like this, but he sits far enough away that I’ll the girls that sit by him complain if they care.
I had a co-worker that had a hair-mole on his upper arm, about the size of a quarter, with about 10 really thick black hairs.
He would clip them with nail clippers while holding a conversation with you.
*hurk* *hurk* *hurk*
LOL
Good lord.
Elizabeth Warren Recalls How She Lost Her Teaching Job When Her Fake Mustache Fell Off Revealing She’s A Woman
“It was tough for a woman back then,” Warren said at a campaign stop. “You had to wear fake facial hair and talk in a deep voice, or people would fire you.” Warren then detailed an incident from back when she was 22 years old and holding a teaching position. Somehow the spirit gum wore off, and her mustache fell off in the middle of a meeting. She was met with cries of “That’s a woman!” before being chased out of the building followed by shouts of “Jobs are for men!”
Some right-wing news outlets have disputed the story, citing a 2007 interview in which Warren talked about losing the job. In it, she mentions problems with a teaching certificate but nothing about fake facial hair. Still, others have backed up Warren, saying it was very common for women to lose jobs in the ’70s when a fake mustache or beard or other disguise failed, revealing the employee’s actual gender.
Holy crap. That sounds like one of my stories. Except I was still in high school and I went in the dump truck with my brothers when my parents left for town. Ours was a 1956 Ford with air over hydraulic brakes and a slow leak which let the brakes fail if you were just idling for a while. Would’ve been about 1981.
OT: Fort Worth cop resigns after shooting, killing woman inside her home
Step 1: Investigate selves
Step 2: Conclude proper procedure followed
Step 3: Decline to prosecute
Step 4: Cop goes to work for some other department somewhere else
Step 5: Never hear about it again
I told Mr. Mojeaux that if anybody riots about this, I wouldn’t blame them.
There is an alternate that could possibly replace steps 4 and 5. Sir.for back pay saying they were pressured to resign.
Sue not sir . . .stupid mobile posting
Pretty serious talk there Chief.
But since he’s not fired he gets to keep his almighty pension, right?
Right there with you. This looks like murder to me.
Animal, great story!
Re “This one time…”
I saw this on the internet once: Every story that starts out, “Sittin’ on the pot one day … ”
I’m going to use that some day.
Now I have that in my head, to the tune of ZZ Top’s “Waitin’ on the bus all day”.
Fairy Tale = “Once upon a time…”
War Story = “Not shit, there I was…”
Not sure where “see this scar…” would fit.
*looks at accidentally self-inflicted scar on stomach from a butterfly knife wound*
Yes, I believe this to be true.
Very entertaining read, Animal.
Young Whiz was sheltered, too. I’m guessing growing up on a farm, or in a small town in a rural area, lends itself to such adventures. My dad grew up on a farm, but went off to college and never looked back; i.e., he was a city boy after that, and I inherited it from him.
My first real job, when I was 18, was blaster’s helper in an open pit iron mine. The foreman took me down into the pit, introduced me to the blaster and drove away. Bill the Blaster said, “See that shovel and wheelbarrow”? I nodded, he said “Those are yours, fill the wheel barrow and dump it into every hole that has primer cord sticking out”
My first day on the job and already had my own tools. The next day I got promoted sideways to driller’s helper. Dirtiest job in the mine but I looked like a real miner by the end of the shift, red and muddy. Those early experiences convinced me that I wasn’t a career oriented miner.
I believe you wrote something about this, 4×20, n’est-ce pas? I really enjoyed that piece. Didn’t you leave the mine to join the Army, or am I misremembering?
Yes, after the union called a strike I volunteered for the draft at 19. I’d been there a little over a year and had worked about 7-8 months. Turned out the union had did me a favor.
Great stories Animal.
Enjoyed reading your story, like your style. Of course it helps to have good material.