By Pat Gillum
The summer of '56 brought a new friend and
companion to the farm. Mike Ford, my city boy cousin, arrived from California
one morning in June. We were twelve years old. Mike had never been out of the
Los Angeles area before, and even the routine occurrences on our hill farm
became new adventures to him.
> Soon after Mike's arrival, the raccoons
attacked our corn patch, which was in the roasting ear stage, in force. Every
coon in the bottoms seemed to show up at dark. My dog Tooter, Mike, and I were
assigned the task of protecting our patch. The stage was set for one of our
greatest adventures.
> Early one warm
summer night we headed for the patch. No sooner had we reached it than Tooter
was on a hot trail. Mike and I ran down a corn middle.
We could hear Tooter
running toward us, knocking down corn stalks as he ran. A silent, furry shadow flashed in front of
me, barely visible in the dim
moonlight. Close
behind came Tooter. Reason and common sense left me, and I joined the chase,
momentarily not noticing that I was doing as much damage to the corn as the
coons were, tearing and scattering stalks as I ran. Suddenly, the game changed. The big coon turned to fight. Tooter, having
better control of his senses than anyone else at the moment,jumped aside. I
don't think I
really made a decision
to do what I did next, for I like to think my decision making process is a
little better than this display, and I knew about coons. A coon like this can
be a bundle of screaming and biting fury. They often whip a
dog, and can kill them
if they get on them in the water. I dived at the coon. I like to think I
reconsidered in mid air, but I don't really think I did. I sat on the coon, on
my knees. I held the ringed tail tightly in both hands, while
the masked face peered
out from behind me. The coon was strangely quiet, giving me a moment to
consider my situation. I asked myself, “How do I get off?” when no reasonable
solution came to mind, I called, “Do something, Mike!” I don't remember exactly
what he did, so I asked him when I visited him this past
summer. He said he hit
the coon on the head with a knife, and it just got mean. So I acted. I jumped
up, planning to hold the tail by the right hand, slide my hunting knife out of
its scabbard, and hit it over the head. But by the time I had began my draw, my
fingers had just touched the handle when the coon went crazy. It was wrapped
tightly around my right arm, biting and squalling, and my
arm was turning into
sausage. I shook it loose,only to have it latch onto my right leg, slightly
above the knee. I was struck with a momentary flash of good sense, and I shook
him loose. Tooter joined the chase then, for, still being a young dog, he liked
it better when the coon was running from him. Myself, I was in the heat of
battle now, and I stayed close behind. Again the coon turned to
fight, raking Tooter
with his claws. When I entered the fray this time, the knife was in my hand,
and it was quickly over.
> We proudly
carried the big coon back to the house, and I basked in the attention and glory
as everyone examined my wounds. We did not think much about things such as
rabies in those days. Mike later confided, “I would sure like to have some
scars like that to take back to California.”
A few days later, Mike went down to run the traps we sat out at the corn
patch, got too close to a squirrel or coon or some such animal, and got his own
battle wounds. For days, he pulled the scabs from the wounds, and he proudly
wore his scars back to
California.
> As the corn
matured the crows moved in. Life on our farm was a constant battle with
assorted animals for our crops. Hundreds of crows. Our
focus turned to them.
One who has never experienced the crow as an enemy cannot possibly appreciate
the cunning and intellect of a wild crow. Without a gun, we could get close,
like the tame golf course variety of today. But with a gun in our hand, they
knew what that meant, and we could get almost in range before they abandoned
the ear of corn and flew, laughing and calling to the others, or
maybe at us, as they
flew.
> Mike and I built
a blind in the patch. As we entered, one guard crow watched from the tree line.
Even if we sat for hours in the blind, not a crow
showed. When we
finally gave up in disgust, heading for the house, the crows would always flog
in and cover the patch when we got out of range.
> One day we
finally discovered a chink in their armor. A crow does not count well. We both
entered the blind, one of us would leave, and the crows
would flog in on top
of the remaining shooter, discovering their error in math too late.
> These crows also
provided a source of spending money. The county had a fifty cent bounty on crow
heads, simply show them to the county clerk and
collect the reward.
However, the first time we proudly sat a fruit jar full of aging crow heads on
his desk, he suddenly decided he could trust us, as he fled the desk, holding
his nose. From now on, we would only have to come in and tell him how many we
had.
> Ticks and
chiggers were also new to Mike. Me, I had gotten used to them over the years,
just scratch it off when you got one. They also served as a good source of
entertainment each night before I went to sleep, scratching all my bites good.
For Mike, it was different. The first time he saw hundreds of seed ticks
crawling up his leg, I thought he was going to throw a runaway.
> The summer was
drawing to a close. Mike was ready to ride the train three days back to Los
Angeles. When he arrived, he got a dog, named him Tooter. He
bought traps, and sat
out a trap line in the concrete jungle of Los Angeles.
All he could catch
were cats and ground squirrels, though. He told me this year that the summer in
Arkansas influenced the course of his life. He later made many trips into the
wilds of the west.
> I did not see
Mike again until he returned from Viet Nam as a demolitions expert, sporting
a Teflon orbit around one eye. We
visited Wing a couple of days and talked about the old times. When he got back
to California, he had a rude awakening. People there did not appreciate him and
the other returning veterans. By the time he had completed college, he had had
enough. He went to Australia, taught school a couple of years. Then he played
Basketball on a touring team of displaced American veterans awhile. When he
returned to California, pushing thirty, he applied for a teaching job. Remembering
his earlier treatment, he did not mention to the Superintendent interviewing
him about his war
experience. But when the man asked him why, at near thirty, he was just now
applying for a job, he came clean. The man, a veteran himself it turns out, stood
up, shook his hand, and hired him on the spot. It turned out to be a 30 year job.
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