Slim Randles' Home Country
Down at the swimming hole
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[July 31, 2010]
There is in the splashing of the creek
a great spray of diamonds. As each youngster sails like an astronaut
out on the tire swing, then releases their hold on the earth to
flail, suspended in time and space for that brief second or two,
there is a timelessness, a postponement of all things evil and
destructive, an affirmation of joy. |
The swimming hole in Lewis Creek has been there
since Indian times, of course, and the tire swing was probably
preceded by simply a rope with knots in it. It is one of the
summer lodestones of our existence. Each summer we have to make our
pilgrimage in the hot sun to the hole below the little waterfall, to
the place were Lewis Creek widens and deepens for the benefit of
hot, dry people before becoming just a creek again. And in this
widening of the creek, this sacred place in our summer lives, we
also play witness to the passage of years.
Across the creek from the tree with the tire swing, the gravelly
bottom extends gently with almost no current for 10 feet or so. This
is the baby beach, where squealing tots are allowed to cool off
without benefit (or hindrance) of any more covering than the smiles
of their parents. As the children grow, they venture farther out
into the current of the creek and test their strength against the
forces of nature.
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By the time a youngster is 8 or 10, the seduction of the tire
swing becomes overwhelming and the flailing of the arms and legs
against the blue of the sky begins. Later still, when gangly becomes
fluidity and sleekness, and we want to make catlike moves to attract
the opposite sex, the tire is used as a swinging platform for
exquisite dives into the deep part of the creek where the big trout
lie in cold holes.
And as we age, and we watch our children come to love the hole in
Lewis Creek, and as we sip lemonade in the shade as our
grandchildren work their ways up the swimming hole chain of life, we
can look at the splashing of the creek and see, with each sleek
dive, with each laughing belly-flop, the diamonds of the creek sent
skyward, and the laughter stays with us and keeps us strong and
makes us feel rich, and fortunate.
It is unnecessary to say Lewis Creek is an important part of our
lives, because it, along with so many other treasures of the years,
really is our lives.
[Text from file received from Slim Randles]
Sponsored by:
www.pearsonranch.com.
Farm-direct, delicious California navel and Valencia oranges.
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