This Yer Dog …?

Jessie, Hoosker and Bill

Conversations overheard at the rendezvous.

This yer dog.

Never saw him before. He yorn?

Nope but he sure as hell is yourn. I knows that fer a fact.

If’fen he’s mine why’d you ask me then.

I ask’d you cuz you been tryin to pawn him off on me specially at suppertime.

Never did. You can go to hell for lyin as well as stealin.

I knows he yorn, you even named him. Everybody knows he’s yorn.

Iffen you knows so much whut’d I name him.

Hoosker. You named him Hoosker.

Listen to your ownself. You’d lie if the truth would set you free. Hoosker, who’d name a dog Hoosker.

You did. You named him after your Sister-in-law’s Mother-in-law. Said he resembled her some.

Hah! Now I got your sorry ass. I don’t even got a Sister-in-law let alone her mother-in-law.

Do too, you old fool. Remember when we was back in St Louie a year or so ago and you got to minglin with that little gal down in Polishtown. She fed you all that keilbasa and sauerkraut and Vodka. Remember the vodka? You drank so much vodka you didn’t know iffen you’d walked to work or wound yer watch. You said it looked like water, who could get drunk on water. You got a sister-in-law, and her mother-in-law too.

I seem to remember a little somethin about St Louie. Hey ain’t this your dog? You better go an get him fed he looks a little scrawny.

11:00 o’clock And All’s Sort Of OK

We had gray skies and Camelot rains here the last couple of days and this morning as I was making my rounds inventorying the trees here at the top of the world I was suddenly struck with the realization that one of my oldest friends was not doing so well.

We’ve known each other for over 25 years and have weathered many a storm together. Although old and past its prime it always appeared to be strong and vital and nowhere near ready to give up and lie down as so many of its peers have done. It has withstood one hundred and one mile per hour winds. Incredible snow loads. During the storm of the century the snow was half way up its trunk. Every bird that could peck holes in its slowly softening trunk have done so. Flickers, woodpeckers of several varieties, anything that could make a hole in it has. It has been the home of legions of Canyon wrens, black-capped chickadees, even a family of bluebirds. It has participated in life to its fullest.

Through it all it has stood steady and resolute, Nature’s own version of the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Defiantly strong in the face of all adversity while its lesser brethren gave up, tottered and fell to the ground to begin their long journey back into the earth that had nourished them for so many years. Not so my friend. It was as if it seemed to say “Is that all you have? Come on throw it at me. I can take it.”

As the years passed we both have been through our storms together. As each wave of turmoil swept over me I would look out and there my friend would be leaning into life with a strength I envied and tried to emulate, not always doing the best job of it, but buoyed up by seeing my old friend still standing firm. There were the successes too, some monumental, at least in my life. Great huge highs that were caused by family, or business, or simply being in a place that I loved as much as life itself. Always I shared it with my friend just outside the window.

Sometime ago I went and stood next to it feeling the texture of its rough and weathered surface. Pieces flaked off beneath my fingers yet it still seemed vital and present. Not fragile, not at the end of its road. I even pushed at it, testing whether it was as firm in its stance as I thought it was. It didn’t budge. I thought, well there’s a lesson there bucko. Keep grounded, keep a firm grip and you can make it too.

Of course at that time I wasn’t taking in the fact that time marches on and all things change. Now I see that the slow passage of our journey together has finally caught up with my old friend and it is calling its name. It is a tired old tree now. I fancy that if I look real close I can see it shiver in the wind, slightly swaying. Then I don’t. I really don’t want to see that. I’ve always thought that my friend and its sons next to it have represented the hands of a clock. The hands pointing to eleven o’clock, measuring our friendship in its own slow way. I, unable to see the slight movement of its hands but knowing they were moving even if I can’t see them do so. Now it seems the hands have stopped moving for my friend, even reversing themselves a little. If their position is eleven o’clock now, it is inevitable that as it must do, they will move to nine o’clock some time. When that happens my friend will have completed its journey.

Soon my old friend and I will part company. I to a new place where hopefully there will be new old friends. It to its final journey and rest on the earth that has sustained it all its life. I hope that it waits to complete its mission until I’m gone. I need it there to be strong and resolute in its constancy so I can be too.