THE BOMB SHELTER

Celebrating Father’s Day with a story for my dad about our 1950’s bomb shelter.   MUSICA?  But of course.

This is my dad. Lots of you know him because he reads this blog all the time and leaves wonderfully helpful and instructional comments we all enjoy reading.  My dad, as I’ve often told him, is the smartest person I’ve ever known (but don’t tell Joe).  He has the perfect common-sense advice for every problem.  He was my daily “fix” the whole time I was writing our book this last winter; he kept me going with the most positive encouraging words.   His interests range far and wide, from the garden to the kitchen.  He has the happy gene and life holds unending interest for him.  In this photo above he’s in the kitchen of my first little house on the island, demonstrating how to keep from crying while cutting up onions.

I thought I would tell a family story to celebrate Father’s Day.  It’s kind of long, and no one was taking pictures during it, but I dipped into my mom’s photo albums to give you a general idea of the times.  Other members of my family might remember this story differently ~ it comes from my ten-year-old point of view, but I did my best to tell it like it was. 

So here we go . . . step into the way-way back machine with me while I set the scene: the year is 1957, I’m ten, the oldest of six children (two more are still to come).  My mom is twenty-seven and my dad is thirty-two.  At this time in our history, in case you are too blissfully young to remember, there was an arms race going on between the United States and Russia. There was much anxiety around the country concerning the threat of nuclear war. Little baby boomers were getting under their desks at school to practice for the emergency.  In 1957, President Eisenhower’s administration had begun promoting the building of home bomb shelters. My dad along with millions of others, took up the challenge.

My dad was always making something for our geranium-colored house in the San Fernando Valley in Southern California. As more children arrived, he would add on bedrooms, enlarge the kitchen, plant fruit trees, put in brick flowerbeds, pour cement for walkways and patios.  He built a brick barbecue with a fireplace in it where we could toast marshmallows and grill hamburgers.  He made me a dressing table for my room.  Extremely self-sufficient, he could make or fix anything and because of him, my four brothers can too.

Like everything he did, the bomb shelter he designed was truly a masterpiece of planning and organization.  We gathered around the table one night in our jammies while he spread out his drawings to show us how our cots would fold out from the walls, who would sleep where, including Nipper our dog; how we would cook, where we would keep the peanut butter, the drawer for our games, Candy Land, and Parcheesi; a place for the yo-yos, jacks, slinkies, and coloring books.  We could keep our jammies under our pillows.  It was very exciting, the Coleman lantern we used for camping would be there, we thought it looked fun, that it would be like camping.

Every day my dad came home from his job at the telephone company and while his children watched the Mickey Mouse Club and our Mom made red Jell-O and tuna casserole with crushed potato-chip topping while feeding strained peaches to the baby, my dad went out back, behind the barbecue, and in the fading evening light, under the plum tree he began to dig the hole for the bomb shelter.

The dirt pile on our driveway grew and grew and was getting to be a problem.  Dad spread as much dirt around to the flowerbeds as he could, but the pile had grown so high on the driveway, he had to get a run at it with the wheelbarrow in order to dump the dirt over the top.  As you can see, my dad would go to any lengths to protect his family, but as he stood in the hole shoveling deeper and deeper he had begun to question this solution to the nuclear threat. All this digging was giving him plenty of time for contemplation.  Sometimes we would hear him singing out there, On the Wings of a Snow White Dove or The Tennessee Waltz.

I think this is my dad’s 30th birthday.

There was no way to hide this project from the neighbors, not that we tried, because of the pile of dirt.  Most of the houses on our street had as many children in them as ours did.  It was a neighborhood full of big families which made our summer night games of hide-and-go-seek pure bliss.  Our childhood circuses and plays had many actors with many talents; our sleep-overs took place in the backyard in flannel-lined sleeping bags, seven or eight kids on the back lawn looking up at the stars.  We had someone in our house the age of every kid on the street. Their parents had all been by to look at the hole, staring down into it thoughtfully.  The popular, oft-repeated joke was that Dad would be reaching China soon.

“Dad?” I said, one night at the dinner table, “If the bomb drops (so nonchalant and matter of fact), I told Karen she can come into the shelter with us, OK?”  I was sure that of course my best friend, who lived only two doors over and spent half her life at our house, would be welcomed with open arms.  I was just running it by him.

“Yeah,” chimed my nine-year-old brother Jim, “I told Kevin he could come too.”

“I don’t think so,” my dad said, buttering a piece of cornbread, “there’s not going to be room.”

We looked up at him in surprise.

“Have you two seen the hole?  We all have to fit in there.  There won’t be room for anyone besides our family.”

This was the first time it occurred to me how small that hole actually was.  Six feet by ten, and twelve feet deep.  At that time we were a family with six children, one dog and two adults.

“But, Jack,” my mother said thoughtfully from the other end of the table, “what if Karen or Kevin are here when it happens, won’t we just take them with us?”

I’m nodding, that makes sense.  I turn my eyes back to the other end of the table.

“I’ve been thinking about that,” my dad said, “what about Karen’s sisters?”  Karen had four sisters.  “What if they want to come in? What about the Burrough’s and the Pfennings?  Are we supposed to let them in too?  Shall we build a guest-room hole to go with it?  What do we do if the whole neighborhood comes down here and tries to get in with us?  It could be a riot,” he went on, “we might have to shoot them.”

WHAT?  The people at the table old enough to get the meaning of this gasped in alarm and beginning recognition of some sort of weird truth.  Jim stopped feeding Nipper under the table, Stephen quit gnawing on his spare rib; almost on cue, Paula started crying in her high chair, took her fat arm and shoved her bowl off onto the linoleum; we all looked at Dad.

Our dad went deer hunting every year; we saw him clean the gun; we knew he had a gun.  Was he kidding?  He was always kidding.

SHOOT  Karen and the Burroughs?  My head whipped to the other end of the table to my mother who was scooping scalloped potatoes onto Brad’s yellow Melmac plate.  She glanced up and her gaze landed on my dad with an audible thunk.  Shaking her head, she said what she always said, “Jaaa-aaack!”  When she was making a point, my mom would draw out his name meaningfully like smoke from a skywriting airplane.

In Arf and Arfy, the language she’d learned from the Little Orphan Annie comics when she was a kid and taught my dad so they could talk in front of us, she said, “Darfont tarfalk arfabarfout tharfis arfin fraffont arfov tharfa karfids.” (Trans: “Don’t talk about this in front of the kids.”)

I spoke arf and arfy, and this didn’t help.

My dad shook his head in an It’s not my fault way and used the salad servers to get some roughage for his plate.  “Pat,” he said, “it’s reality.  Do you think we are putting the entire neighborhood in there?  Has anyone here looked at that hole?”

Chastising him with a glance that bounced off the corner of his head like a frisbee, my mom looked around the table at the questioning children who were experiencing a slow intense dawning as we realized, that even though our mom was now fake-laughing at what she was assuring us was our dad’s “joke,” there was a possibility that we would be shooting the neighbors to protect the hole in which we would be living because the air outside was supposedly poison and the house was going to be gone.  This wasn’t at all like camping.

My face must have been reflecting the worry I was feeling.  Up until that time, my biggest fear was that I might accidentally take the powdery stuff off butterfly wings, or step on a bee, or that a dragon fly would zip my mouth closed as I believed they could do.

“Are there going to be dead people all over the ground when we come out?” I asked, having experienced the ultimate appetite suppressant.

“No, of course not.  Don’t think about it,” my mother said firmly, “This isn’t dinnertime conversation.” Her eyes bopped my dad again.  “No one is shooting anyone around here.  Your father is just joking.” She turned to me, “Eat your dinner honey, use your napkin, you haven’t had your starch.”

Like a balloon whizzing around the room, loosing air with that motor-boat noise it makes until it falls flat on the floor with a thwap, that’s the way our family enthusiasm went out of the bomb shelter project.  No words were needed, no family meeting was required, we were suddenly all on the same page.   It was fun while it lasted, but the project was over.  We were throwing our fate to the wind.

My dad would no longer dig the hole for the bomb shelter.  He  seemed good with it.  Now he was free to go dig the hole for the swimming pool, another story and a much more positive project for the whole neighborhood as it turned out.   He went into the living room to eat his ice cream on the floor in front of the TV, watching the Red Skelton Show; rolling with laughter at Clem Kadiddlehopper until tears streamed from his eyes.  This made us all feel much better.  When our dad laughed like that, which he did all the time; everything was right with the world.

Me and my daddio.

Happy Father’s Day Dearest Dad (Arfy Larfov Yarfou ) . . . and to all you Daddies out there and to all you children who have loved them.  xoxo

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Waiting for a Rainstorm . . .

Hi girls, here’s a bit o’ Musica for you.  We are here waiting for our next rainstorm, the sky has been getting darker all day.  It’s been raining something like every four days and it’s so green here that when the sun comes through the trees it reflects light from the moving leaves and dapples the living room walls with bright greenish splotches that ripple and sparkle like a swimming pool.  June in all its glory.  I’ve been in my studio, happy as a clam, painting and making new art . . . putting pen and brush to paper.

Painting a few new little things.  It’s been so long since I sent out a WILLARD I wanted to paint bits of new art to decorate my next one.  That’s my project very soon, to write us a new newsletter!  (If by any chance you are not signed up to get my newsletter, which is free from me to you, or would like to know why we call it WILLARD, or would like to sign up a friend ~ you can click on that link and all questions will be answered on our sign-up page.)

I’m keeping busy, waiting for the first copies of A Fine Romance to arrive from the printer so we can make our final arrangements for book signings. Back in February we had a drawing for one of the pre-publication copies — remember?  Gail Matheson out in California was our winner?  Well, her book should be here any day now!  She could not possibly be more excited about it than me!  In only a few more months they’ll all come in.  In the meantime, I wait patiently, I work and garden, hang clothes out to dry on the sunny days, try to eat healthy, read, cuddle under a blanket in the rain, paint, and take long walks with Joe.

It’s summer and for the most part the sun is shining, the bees are buzzing, flutter-bys are skimming the tops of everything . . .

. . .  hydrangeas are beginning to bloom under the bird feeders outside our kitchen window.

In fact there are lots of things in bloom — all my little vases are filled . . .

. . . and spotted here and there around the house.  That’s my first “Just Joey” rose this year mixed with purple catmint (nepeta).  I had to give Jack and Girl a tray full of nepeta so they would leave this alone.  It’s working.  They’re getting enough of it and aren’t going after my vases.  (Yet.)  We’re doing all the summer things as if they were firsts . . . it seems so long and it really is — at this time last year we weren’t even here — we were in England.  We missed our Martha’s Vineyard May and June completely.  I put a big glass pitcher of water in the sun yesterday — for sun tea, which I’m drinking now, mixed with a little lemonade for sweetness . . .

Because cold weather takes up a good portion of our year ~ from late September to late May, hot chocolate and cups of tea rule the day.  The very idea of doing this again is exciting — a gift!  Our refrigerator is kind of a dream-come-true right now.  Not only does it have sun tea in it, but . . .

It’s got ice cold Gazpacho!  In fact I made an extra batch for a girlfriend who broke the wrist of her dominant hand and now has one of the biggest old-fashioned, heavy, plaster casts in the history of broken wrists on her arm (above her elbow, covering most of her fingers).  She can’t cut food, can’t open wine (just when she needs it most), or twist off jar lids, can’t do dishes, can’t drive, can’t write, can only peck on the key board.  Poor Baby.  So we took her a pitcher full of Gazpacho and had a nice visit sitting on the big ole square screened-in porch of her farmhouse, with the sky-blue painted ceiling, on the wrought iron furniture with the curlicues and the comfy cushions that had belonged to her parents, drinking wine, listening to insects skimming the grass and glinting in the sun, watching red-winged blackbirds and cardinals at her feeders while smelling the salt air and the corn growing in the sun-dappled field at the back of her property.  We did this until the stars came out.  She thinks we did her a favor, we think she did us one.

In case I didn’t convince everyone the other day of how amazingly delicious this soup is, I thought I’d show you how easy it is to make.  You start by putting a cup and a quarter of chilled tomato juice into a blender.

To that you add one tomato and half of a peeled cucumber, both roughly chopped . . .

Then add vinegar, oil, a little sugar (unless you have tomatoes from your garden, then you really don’t need sugar) and cayenne . . . (I’ll put the recipe at the end).  This soup makes you feel like you’ve been zinged with good healthy things . . .

Blend well until smooth . . .  pour blended ingredients into a large container or pitcher…

. . .  then add another 2 1/2 c. tomato juice to the mixture . . .

Chop fresh vegetables into bite-sized pieces, cucumber, celery, red onion, zucchini, tomato and green pepper . . . pieces small enough so that when you’re eating it, several can fit on a spoon  at the same time.

And add them to the tomato mixture . . .

Put in some green onion tops (scallions) — or chives from your garden if you have them.  Stir it all up good . . .  then, a bit more of your own special brand of spice . . .

Add salt and freshly ground pepper to taste, and chill it all well . . .

I added chunks of cooked shrimp … and garnished it with a little sour cream and a fresh chive flower . . . but it’s good just plain.  More than good.

The 1/4 tsp. of cayenne I mentioned earlier is my new addition to this recipe.  It’s optional, but it gives the nicest little kick, just a little, not too much.  Stir it in at any time, or when you’re about to start the blender.  I also mix the red wine vinegar, half and half, with good balsamic vinegar.  But it’s good no matter what.

It’s that wonderful time of year when it’s easy to fill our fridges with the best produce — crisp and crunchy vegetables fresh from the farmer’s market and brimming with vitamins. And it’s almost time for my favorite of all . . .

Watermelon!  Can’t wait!  I love it cut up on top of plain yogurt with a little bit of our homemade granola.  Right now, besides the tea and the Gazpacho, our fridge is heaven —  chock full of pop-in-your-mouth seasonal goodness — we have organic red grapes, a big bowlful of ice-cold pink grapefruit and orange segments drowning in their own citrusy juice, and a bowl of crunchy homemade coleslaw.  YUM!  And these . . .

Is this not a pure miracle?  That compost and water and sun produces these in our very own garden?  And they are nothing like the ones we get in our local markets, which are expensive, sadly juiceless, and yet, every year, we are lured by the rosy redness of them believing them to be the food of the gods.  No more, we cannot be lured, it is no longer necessary.  We have our own strawberry patch.

Which is a miracle because we didn’t plant one . . .

See the rim of the terra cotta pot there?  That’s a strawberry pot. Two years ago I planted a few plants in it.  And remember how I suggested that you grow things that like living in your area?  Well, apparently strawberries love this island!  Who knew? They jumped the rim of the pot last year, and this year they’ve spread over half my picket fence garden!  Don’t you just love nature? Isn’t she amazing?  It’s so nice to be able to give away organic juicy fresh-picked strawberries to our friends!  Strawberry Fields Forever!

 

A couple more things before I go . . . first off, on the SUMMER Banners:  We did sell out of them, but for you that have been asking, I made a special request and a few more will be coming to our web store in the next couple of weeks.

If you wanted one and weren’t able to get it in time, this will be your chance.

 Also, remember the Cupcake Banner Janie sent me for my birthday?  In that  photo?  The perfect little birthday present is what I thought when I opened it — just adorable.  I asked her to make some more for us.  They come with their own little envelope just like the Summer Banners did — and with a card that you can sign to your sister, mom, daughter, best friend or grammie.  You will see the Cupcake Birthday Banners in our web store today.  I also asked Kellee if she could make us some Do-it-Yourself Patriotic Banners . . . and she said, “SURE, I can!”  (She is a big believer in that fantastic word “Yes” — another reason I love her so much!)

She sent me one of the kits so I could put the banners together myself . . . it was easy and fast ~ my two favorite things in kit production.  Each kit comes with enough red and white string to make two sizes of banner (both included) . . . the smaller one, the one on the calendar with the Cupcakes above (which you could also string between two-chopsticks as a cake-topper if you wanted) . . . and this larger one on my stove . . . 

It’s the little things in life!  Thank you Kellee and Janie!  Bye girls, I have to bring the clothes in before the rain starts ~ have a wonderful day!  XOXO

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