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Up To My Chin…
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Journal—March 9--Thursday
The last couple of days have been really nice, with
temperatures up to the low thirties and sunshine—how about
that for a change. There has been three feet of snow this
last week, and homes, outbuildings, and camps have
overburdened roofs. Two hardy souls left the warm, comfort
of their homes, “Proc” and me, and spent some quality time
workin’ at Willis Mills… |
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I happened to meet an old friend, Lewis “Proc” Proctor, at
the Co-op store on Monday. I was over to West Paris to get
some feed grain for my heifers, when Proc tapped me on the
shoulder. He was off work from the railroad for three weeks,
and needed some excitement. He is a conductor on the Grand
Trunk Line and spends most of his time living in a shaking,
rattling caboose at the backend of a freight train. We
talked of the deep snows, and he mentioned that he should
check his hunting camp at Willis Mills, in Greenwood. We
decided to go up on Wednesday and spend the night, shovel
the roof, play cards, and tell some stories.
After I finished my chores Wednesday morning, Brinker and I
headed for West Paris in my old truck “Molly”. Molly started
a little hard, but a puff of blue smoke and a clattering
roar sounded life within—she was off! The old Oshkosh plow
had poked a hole through the drifts and piles of winter
white. We bumped along, stopping only by the Hakala Farm to
watch two disheveled does standing in an open, wind blown
patch of field. They were apparently trying to paw up some
old apples that had fallen from a nearby gray armed,
Cortland, and slid along an earlier crust to the open space.
We eventually rounded the last bend into the Little
Androscoggin Valley, and had a spectacular view of the
countryside. The unfolding vista was like a Currier & Ives
painting. The Ellingwood Farm was nearly hidden by the snow
drifts, and the stack and plume of black smoke from Penley’s
Clothespin Factory laid contrast to the view. I took note
that the smoke was drifting up the valley toward me,
indicting fair weather to come--better than any barometer in
town.
The west side of the valley is covered with majestic white
pines. Each bough wilting under the heavy load of snow, and
an occasional cascading veil of falling flakes added motion
to the rather peaceful and still scene. The east side of the
valley, with its spreading red oak and interspersed ledges,
appeared as a white canvas with dark branches penciling dark
lines across it.
I might have driven off the road in my reverie, had Brinker
not barked at the Ellingwood’s dog. The large white dog
stood atop a snowdrift, even in height with the top pane of
glass in the living room windows. I now paid more attention
to the steering wheel and keeping Molly out of the drifts.
I met Proc at his brother, Leon’s house. Lewis often stayed
here on his breaks from the railroad. The sweet aroma of
Rita’s apple pie glided me into a chair at the kitchen
table. A large slice of pie and tea had been set for me
already—apparently Molly was not a silent arrival in this
neighborhood and had signaled the hostess to be ready. We
discussed the weather, as all good Mainers must upon first
greeting a new arrival. Leon described how the horses he had
in the woods were having a hard time breaking trail. He was
off work for a couple of days, as the roads were not yet
plowed. Andy Benson was staying with the horses, since he
tended them over the weekend and just stayed on at the woods
camp.
We finished our morning treat, and packed another pie with
our provisions for the overnight. Brinker kind of liked
Leon, because he got to taste a little bit of pie dropped
accidentally on the floor in front of his nose. I had to
grab Brinker’s collar to get him started out the door. Leon
had quite a chuckle and puffed out a long plume of Prince
Albert from his cherry wood pipe
Proc and I went downtown West Paris to the Co-op store to
get a few groceries. We picked out some plump chicken,
onions, potatoes, bacon, eggs, bread, cans of string beans
and peas. A quick stop at the Gammon & Martin store,
procured our wedge of sharp cheese—sliced off the big wheel,
a quart of milk and a pound of butter fresh this morning
from Erlon Whitman’s farm on High Street.
We set the groceries in our “on the go” cooler--the snow in
the body of the truck worked quite nicely for this purpose.
We piled in the cab, with Brinker half standing in Proc’s
lap and a juicy nose sliding around on the windshield. I
drove back along some of the way I had traveled earlier, but
now most of the snow had fallen from the oaks and pines. A
deep blue sky contrasted the sparkling white flakes.
The logging road into Willis Mills was very narrow. It was
really one lane with six foot high snow banks on each side,
and an occasional turn out to get by other vehicles. Willis
Mills was once the center of activity in all of Township
Number Four. Here stands a large elm tree, whose strong
branches once shaded the meeting of the area inhabitants as
they voted to incorporate the Town of Greenwood in 1815. The
Massachusetts legislature voted in January 1816 to
incorporate three grants, Phillips Academy, Raymond’s, and
Mosher’s into the Township of Greenwood.
I stopped on each of the two bridges over Sanborn River, so
Brinker could push his nose out the window and sniff the
smells drifting down along the cool, dark waters of the
river. At both stops we could see the whimsical paths and
tracks of a couple of frolicking otters. They had one very
long, steep slide with a jump in the middle. You could see
the untouched space of snow under the jump, and by the
evidence they tried this thrill ride numerous times.
The truck rattled by the couple of old buildings at Willis
Mills now used as hunting camps, and traveled along a couple
of hundred feet of the Patch Mountain Road before turning
west toward Long Mountain. We arrived at Proc’s camp in just
a short minute, and parked in the nicely plowed turnout that
barely missed the front step of the camp. The gable porch
poked out of the snow bank, and was well framed with plowed
snow. Well at least we wouldn’t have to shovel out much to
get into the place.
Proc opened the front door and stepped into the small
structure, and let out a deep breath that could be seen
rolling from his lips through still frigid air. He made
quick work of the fire preparations, and soon had a
billowing plume of smoke coming from the old stove pipe on
the back end of the camp. I had set in a new smoke of Half &
Half in my corn cob, and set about changing the musty air
with the fragrance of the Virginian leaves. I made several
trips to the truck to bring in food, bedding, and fresh lamp
oil for the lanterns. Each trip I had to wait for Brinker to
go in, then out, and try not to stumble over his excited,
twisting body.
The first order of business for me was to shovel out a path
to the outhouse. It is a small familiar outbuilding in the
Maine Woods not just for doing one’s business, but to store
some small tools or other equipment. I had to get the bear
paw snowshoes from a peg on the outhouse wall. I then
trekked out a path a hundred yards or so to the spring. I
lugged two pails I had brought from the camp and lead
Brinker along, with him sharing the back six inches of the
snowshoes with me.
The spring consisted of inch and a half iron pipe stuck into
a steep bank on a hill. The water flowed from the pipe and
out of the ground just down hill of the pipe. The water from
the pipe had made an elaborate ice sculpture from the open
end. I swished away some snow, and chopped off part of the
artwork beneath the woodland faucet large enough to allow me
to get a pail of water. I filled both pails and followed
Brinker back to the outhouse and hung up the bear paws. The
trail back was now along a smoothly packed trail.
One pail of water went directly onto the now rattling stove
top. Once the stove was set, we went outside to shovel the
mound of snow from off the roof. I started on one end and
Proc the other. You had to shovel the eves first to get a
foothold, then work toward the peak. I would shovel and
slide the snow off the icicle festooned eves, and hear the
soft thump of the weighty snow hit bottom, and the tinkle of
the occasional broken icicles. As the roof was cleared, the
pile below climbed higher and higher. I met Proc about in
the middle and worked another row higher up the roof back
toward the porch and road. The sun shone in brightly, and
was warm on my neck. I had to shed one layer of wool, and
roll up my sleeves. The one drawback was that the footing
began to get icy from the sun’s glare and packing from my
felt lined boots.
I was about to the end of the camp when Proc went down to
stoke the stove, and get things ready for lunch. I would
reach up under a pile of snow and jack the shovel up and
down a couple of times to loosen a big chunk of the weighty
white stuff. I would slide my shovel down the roof, with the
chunk atop, all the way off the edge. I was working my way
back along the ridge pole toward the middle of the camp,
when I lost my footing and slide down to the edge of the
roof and stopped. My shovel and a large slab of snow were
right behind me and bowled me right off into a drift beside
the camp.
I landed flat-footed on the harder packed snow facing the
camp, and the momentum pushed me backward on a fulcrum of
boot heels down into the softer pile of snow. My butt hit
first with my feet and head quite uncomfortably too close
together. I was pinned! I tried to laugh, but a yell was
what really came out. Proc and Brinker came out to the fromt
of the camp, and yelled and barked back, but couldn’t see me
at first. Proc had to climb up into the bed of the pickup to
see my predicament. I had one hand pushed deep into the
snow, and couldn’t wallow very well on my own to get out. I
was up to my chin in snow, and it took Proc with a shovel
and Brinker with a few sloppy, wet licks to get me loose.
After much wallowing and cussing I was freed—time for
lunch!!
Our lunch was of toasted cheese sandwiches, pickles, some of
Margie’s pickled eggs, tea, and of course a slice of Rita’s
pie. The camp was nice and warm now with the old cook stove
showing a red glow on the rear covers from the dry hardwood
fuel. Between the full bellies and warmth, a short nap was
definitely in order. Even Brinker didn’t balk at a little
rest. The dish detail was finished in short order, and we
each selected a low bunk near the stove to close our eyes on
the world and dream away an hour.
I was up first and let Brinker out to do his business. We
dressed in our woolies and headed out to finish up the roof
work before darkness set in. No more mishaps like mine this
morning. We finished before dark, and decided to drive up
the logging road to see the woods operation near the base of
Long Mountain. We banked the stove and loaded old Brinker
into “Molly” and rattled up the road. We had seen the woods
foreman pass by the camp a half hour ago, and he was always
the last to leave.
The truck navigated the narrow path of a road until we
reached the wide turn around in the road. Here the wheeled,
trailer dinner shack sat off to the side, and still had a
hint of smoke coming from the stove pipe. On the left, and
set just up from a small brook was the horse hovel, where a
half dozen mixed breed horses spent the winter. There was a
large, canvas covered pile of hay beside the slanted shed
hovel, and a pile of old bedding and manure in a small
sledge below the only window. The snow had been shoveled off
the hovel a week or two ago, so with the new snow it looked
snug, but not over loaded with weight. Directly ahead on the
landing there were a couple of log cribs built of hemlock
logs. Each stack had alternating logs to raise the end of
the crib to the height of the truck bed. The other end set
just up hill of the truck side and was where the horses
skidded the logs. The 8 to 12 foot logs were held in place
with a vertical stake until the truck sidled up. Loggers
then used their peavies to roll and stack the logs on the
bunk of the truck.
The beech logs were stacked on another crib after the bark
was peeled off, and these were then taken to Penley’s Mill
to make the “Worlds Best Clothes Pins”. While Proc and I
checked out the logs and landing, Brinker made use of the
skid trails to get away from us and find a fresh rabbit
track. It wasn’t long until we heard the long drawn out
baying of the old hound. There was nothing he liked doing
more than chasing a rabbit for shear pleasure. He would
often just chase until dark, which he did again today. He
didn’t return after much calling and whistling, so I took
the old saddle blanket out of the truck and lay it next to
the wheel of the dinner shed.
I drove back up to the dinner shack before super and
retrieved the old hound. As usual, he came back in his own
good time and fell asleep on the blanket. He was glad to see
me and gave me a couple of licks on the ear, after he
barreled into the truck. He was glad to be heading back to
camp, and the warmth of the big cook stove.
Supper turned out to be a veritable feast. Proc made boiled
chicken, sautéed onions, mashed potatoes, green beans, and
peas. It may seem like a rather bland fare, but a few spices
and lots of butter made it taste great after a long day of
shoveling. Dessert was another round of Rita’s pie with
after supper tea. We sat for awhile before doing dishes, and
Proc filled me in on the goings on at the Grand Trunk.
The wind came up a little, and made our little warm space
seem that much more snug. The tree limbs snapped as they
slid by each other. The door on the porch would pound
lightly on a loose hinge, and a low moaning sigh would often
be heard from the front eves. Proc and I played a few hands
of cribbage, before turning out the kerosene lamp and
crawling into bed. Of course Brinker became my foot warmer
when he climbed up onto the foot of my bed.
We were up early as usual, because Brinker had to water the
snow bank. The camp was still dark, even thought the sun was
peaking over the eastern hills. The pile of snow beside the
camp was above the top of the windows. Proc stoked up the
stove, and I got the leftover potato ready with more onions
for breakfast. Soon the smell of bacon and eggs spread
throughout the camp. I think Brinker was kind of jealous,
because he had only the crunchies with warm water for his
breakfast. Later he did get some delectable titbits left
over from our breakfast—mainly to lick out the big cast iron
fry pan.
It didn’t take to long to pack up old Molly, and bid
farewell to the camp until spring fishing season. Our ride
to West Paris was uneventful, except for the occasional
drift left from last nights blow. Proc bid us farewell until
his next break from the railroad, and Brinker and I headed
home for Albany.
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