"Write without pay until someone offers pay. If nobody offers pay within three years, the candidate may look upon this circumstance as the sign . . . that sawing wood is what he was intended for." — Mark Twain


Sawing Wood chronicles the travels and artistic ventures of a young family as they move from San Francisco to Boise to Boulder, CO in pursuit of a place to call home.


Tuesday, August 24, 2010

All for His Country

15 May 10, Kuna, Idaho

We drive out onto the Snake River Plain to see my old professor and friend EB. It's been a warm weekend and the maples, elms, oaks, and lilacs are in full canopy as the dainty flowers have wilted away. The anticipation of summer is mixed with a sentimentality of spring's passing. When we pull up EB is sitting on his front porch, in the shade of his birch and Russian Olive trees, enjoying the panorama of his five acre property with a view of the snow-streaked Owyhees to the south above his fruit trees. EB hobbles across the yard to greet us. The tough old bird, gone portly and half-blind with illness, gives us hugs and smiles and lights up like a kerosene lamp when Ada reaches her hand out to him. We install ourselves on his porch and get re-acquainted. It's been two years since Anna and I last saw EB, and while his wits are still sharp, his humor still playfully cutting, his spirit tough and independent as ever, his body has suffered from the mysterious ailments that have beset him since the week he drove his truck to New York City and volunteered to help in the aftermath of the bombing of the World Trade Centers.

Polymailgia is what the doc says I have. Many pains. Hell, I could've told him that,” quips EB. He shows me how he can move his left thumb like a flipper. “I broke it reaching for something that wasn't there. When the doctor looked at it, he said, 'I don't see it on your records.' That's cause I didn't come in. The doc wanted to know why not. I told him, 'You know, my dad used to say, if it doesn't hurt worse than a mule kicking you, walk it off.”

EB's story of late is an unjust one. Here is a man who flew reconnaissance flights over the USSR during the cold war, and over Algeria, Lebanon and Egypt during the years of struggle for self-rule in those countries, and who again volunteered his services for his country during 9-11, an effort that resulted in his present afflictions. Yet somehow he doesn't qualify for VA health care benefits and therefore must pay close to three thousand dollars a month for his health insurance and myriad medications, a cost that is fast eating away his retirement savings. Add to this scenario the temperament of its protagonist, an authentically independent Westerner, a man who's voted Republican his whole life and has rarely asked for help from anybody except when the orchard or fields demanded it (and then he paid for that help), and you get a very ironic study of the present state of health care in this country; of a society that promulgates the ideals of rugged individualism alongside heroic sacrifice for country, yet provides little or no reward, or social safety net, for those who act out those ideals. A man fights for his country, suffers for it, votes for a political party that is antagonistic to health care overhaul, and thereby must continue fighting the rest of his life just to keep alive. It's a story Anna has urged me to write, and one, as we sit around talking and catching up on our lives, I consider asking EB about. But the timing never feels quite right, and I holster the urge for another day.

After a little while we get up to walk around the property. I lend EB a hand to get him out of his chair. If he sits or lies still for more than twenty minutes, his body starts to seize up with pains. It makes for a rough night of sleep, he tells me, without a hint of complaint. We stroll through the tall grass down to the orchard. EB points out the tiny apricots starting on a bough and names all the different apple and apricot and nectarine trees. Every tree on the verdant property was planted by him, except for one big blue spruce, over the last twenty-two years. I hold Ada up so she can put her nose in an apple blossom. She's learning to smell flowers, artlessly breathing in through her nostrils as she clamps her mouth shut, her face pensive as if it were a vintage wine or cod liver oil being sampled.

It's been a hell of a spring,” says EB. “I keep a weather journal, and this is the coldest, windiest spring I can remember. We used to pick cherries in early June. Now it won't be till July at the earliest. The farmers are all having to replant because the soil temperature hasn't gotten above forty-five. We're mid May, for cryin' out loud. Look at my roses there, died off from the frost.”

Anna asks when the fruit trees will be ready for picking, and EB tells her in August. He invites us to come out. “Hundreds of pounds of fruit that'll just rot on the ground if you don't come pick it. I can't do it anymore.”

“I'd like to can some of it,” says Anna.

“That's easy enough. Apple sauce is my favorite. Core, peal and chop, put it into a cooker, go off with a six-pack, and when you come back, apple sauce. Can it, and later you pour it into pies. That's what I like to do.”

I ask him about the plastic detergent bottles hanging from random boughs. “Fly traps. For the European fruit fly, also known as the … maggot around here. Put water and a little detergent in the bottles and the flies can't get out. Better than pouring pesticides everywhere. I don't go for all that. Besides, what's a little worm here and there? Cut around it, use what's good. The worm won't hurt you anyway.”

Listening to him makes me think of the summer afternoons I'd spend with my grandma cutting and canning fruit, and doing just as he described with worms or bad portions. Simple, practical, unsqueamish attitudes about food and making it.

The orchard is a serene and dreamy place, it's white- and pink-flowering limbs delicate against a pale blue sky marbled with clouds stretching above the Snake River Plain. Ada is as content as ever, and I want the feeling of the orchard to sink deep within her, to be there as a place, both of memory and of aspiration, a dreamy childhood sensation, and perhaps an artful hope and pursuit of her latter years. Speaking of pursuits, EB asks of our search for a property in the North End, and I tell him if we could find a place that had even a portion of his open garden space, we'd be delighted.

We make our way around the back of the house, past his bird feeders and the back porch that faces to the north, to his wide-open garage. There, among yard and hand tools and lawn mowers and old bicycles, EB shows us the project he's been working on the last years. From willow and other semi-hard wood limbs he's stripped and lacquered walking sticks of all proportions, fastening them with leather laces through a bored hole at the top and a rubber shoe at the bottom. He sizes us up each with a stick.

“You'll have to make one for Ada,” I suggest.

EB's eyes widen with the charge. He then instructs me to pick through some of his “redundant” garden tools, and encourages us to get to work planting. “At least tomatoes and peppers, in pots, so you can take them when you move.”

We sit again in the shade, and make plans to visit again when the fruit is ready, and soon it's time to go. As we say our goodbyes, EB hugs Ada and Anna, and reaches out shake my hand. There is a funny precedent here, one that EB and I have a habit of re-enacting. Nearly twenty years ago, after EB and I had first become friends at the University, I hugged the old codger after a long afternoon of walking out on the Plain. It took the man aback, and he said to me quite seriously, “You're the only man I ever hugged.” Since then he would bemoan the act, yet somehow expect it, whenever we parted or greeted each other. So now, after Anna has gotten her hug, I say to EB, “What about mine?” The old mule laughs, says, “You make fun of me every time,” and then gives me a warm embrace. “I don't hug men,” he re-affirms to Anna, “Unless they're gay. Gay men, I'll hug. That's what they do.”

As we pull out along the dirt road and drive around the back of his property, I give a couple taps of the horn, in lieu of the waves we used to exchange when he could make it to the top of the knoll in time to see me off through the olive trees.






Saturday, August 14, 2010

Down from the Roof into the Garden

6-10 May 10, Boise

Coupeau, a roofer who occupied a 10-franc room on the top floor, had his tool bag on his back . . . “Say, what weather this is for May! It's biting cold this morning.”

Emile Zola's L'Assomoir

Six am; the thermostat reads twenty-nine degrees as I happen to read this passage in Zola's novel and start at the coincidence; a little cozy reading before I go out into the cold to work on the roof and install siding on the neighbor's place. It's damn cold; how dearly I'd rather be reading about Coupeau's toils than have to go out and endure them myself.

It's been a blustery, dramatic spring. Whereas the winter was mild, with snow fall at sixty to eighty percent of normal around the state, its passing has been a convulsive death throe. There was one warm spell in March, but since then the weather has been at turns frigidly blue or stormy wet, providing only a handful of days warm enough to go out without a coat. The lilacs have bloomed early, their cones of purple and ivory held in the air pertinaciously as hail lashes down from torn skies. But if this sounds like a complaint, it's not. Yesterday, two stories up on scaffolding, I looked out over the greening trees at the tall white islands of cumulus drifting across the turquoise sky, the clouds shining and coved with shadow, the ranks of them going on as far as you could imagine to the west and possibly even to the sea. This last week our weather has arrived from Alaska, the chilled currents whipsawed down here by the jet stream.

A new friend of mine, M.L., who owns a modern furniture store here, loves the weather. He's from Boise and is accustomed to the usual warmer, more gradual springs. Yet being a gardener, he likes what this prolonged cool spell is doing to his garden. “The roots really get a chance to sink in, establish themselves, before the heat comes on.” I don't know much about that. I do know my hands are rough and split and the mornings require a hat, down vest, jacket and shell to keep the breezy cold from paralysing me up on the scaffolding. And that I'd rather be inside reading. But that's often my plight, regardless the weather.

And I know the Boise river is flowing high, nearly bank-full, though not as high as last spring. And if you go to the farmer's market on Saturday morning all you'll find for produce are hot-house varieties and starters and herbs. But most of the shade trees are in leaf now, their green a bright new shade that should darken in the coming weeks. Only the catalpas and sycamores in town and the alders and willows in the hills are holdouts. The warmth will come. And then the hard-driving heat. And hopefully by then we'll be inside doing the finish carpentry on the house.

- - - - - -

Yesterday we were the picture of domestic pastoral bliss: me mowing the lawn that had grown tall as alfalfa in the front yard, Anna pulling weeds from the flower beds and sweeping clean the sidewalk as Ada toddled about the mown portion of the yard, pushing up on three points while trying to put a stick in her mouth. The clouds had broken and the warm breeze tossed white shreds across the blue sky while we worked contentedly outside for an hour or so. I was tired from work, but nothing like a cold beer and a kiss from the wife to give you your pep back.

Going round the yard, ducking under the thick-leaved maple trees, watching Anna sweep, her fine brown arms showing from her blouse, glancing over to be sure Ada wasn't getting into trouble, I had the thought: “wow, we're Boiseans now. We're playing house and tending the yard and I've got a steady job and Anna has her routine and has found her way about town and it could be 1950, or even farther back, if it weren't for the cars passing on the street, and we're a little pioneer family settling the outskirts of the new town on the edge of the Rockies.” Or something a little silly like that. All we needed was a cow in her stall and chickens floating about the yard. (The neighbors do have chickens, by the way.)

There was such a serene and industrious pleasure in our all being at work together. I think that's my single greatest complaint about having a job: spending eight-plus hours a day with people who aren't my family, aren't even good friends. Certainly working with family has it's strains and dangers. But Anna and I work well together. We've got similarly proportioned senses of industry, completeness, aesthetics. . . and we've talked about going into business together. The field that keeps popping up is interior design. Anna with her artistic and design and color-consultant skills; me with my building, electrical and lighting and cabinet installing abilities, and my own decent eye for design. We might have something there.

Last weekend we went to the Boise Green Expo, where we made some good contacts that could provide a means of getting Anna more experience with interior design. Anna's big worry is that neither of us have any business sense: we're not coin-chasing capitalists, or even small-business savvy in the least. Of course that's key. But I think we've got something more than that. We've got taste. And the schooling and experience to back up that taste. And that's something most business types don't have. You see proof of it everyday here with poorly laid-out or decorated stores and shops (faux finish! faux finish!) and houses that cost half a million but look like they hatched right out of the suburbs. There are some good designers here, certainly. The question is whether there's enough demand to go around for them and ourselves, the new couple in town, looking like a pair of hayseeds in our front yard working away until the sky goes pink in the west and Ada starts to get fussy for dinner. We're all pioneers in some way or another, when you start out at something new.