The Old Coot wants out!
By Merlin Lessler
“Outside!” Was my favorite
place when I was a kid. My generation wanted “out” – rain or shine, hot or
cold. My favorite sound was that of the screen door slamming shut behind me as
I ran out the back door. I usually headed to a swing, made from clothesline and
scrap lumber that hung from a tree at the edge of our yard. Beyond it was a woodlot
next to an abandoned, overgrown farm field. The rusted hulk of an old farm
truck was in a thicket, a few feet beyond, the swing. It had a bench seat and a
steering wheel, a perfect venue for a young kid to play in. I put a lot of
mileage on that baby, “driving” all around town (in my mind). A small pond sat
a few yards into the field. It was where kids in the neighborhood scooped out
clumps of frog eggs and watch them turn into tadpoles in jars on their dressers.
When the legs began to appear, they returned the tadpoles to the “watering
hole,” as we called it, when playing Cowboys & Indians in the field.
My friend Woody lived one
block from me. We started trekking back and forth through neighbor’s yards to
each other’s houses when we were four years old. Our mothers were not concerned
for our safety; we traveled around the neighborhood with my dog Topper and Meg,
a beautiful Irish Setter that lived up the street from Woody.
The urge to be outside
grew stronger as we grew older. It was an endless playland out there, providing
a place for ball games, hut building, hot rod riding, biking, cowboy wars with
cap guns and BB guns, sword fights to defend the castle, tree climbing, roller
skating and exploring the mountain that rose above our neighborhood. We hiked
up the mountain with peanut butter & jelly sandwiches packed in army
surplus knapsacks, with metallic tinged milk carried in war surplus, metal canteens.
As soon as supper was over all the kids in the neighborhood started
campaigning to get back outside. We all had the same curfew, “Come home when the
street lights come on.” Sometimes we gathered on “Junk Street” for a game of bat-ball.
It was called Junk Street because it was full of junk – piles of left-over
materials from houses going up in our neighborhood during those postwar days
when housing was in short supply. We played in those houses as they went up,
and “borrowed” some of the material laying around to build our tree huts with.
But, only from the scrap piles, (for the most part). Playing ball or playing
Tarzan, swinging from the rafters in newly framed houses, it didn’t matter. All
that mattered, was that we were outside.
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