(This post was last modified: 12-17-2021, 02:37 PM by Lipripper660.)
I lost my Dad two years ago just after Christmas. John R. Darrington was a hard man from the old school who didn’t spend a lot of time hugging people and maybe less time verbalizing affection. He grew up in the mountain town of Elba Idaho, the 7th of 9 children born to Lorenzo and Ruby. In fact, I was raised ranching in that same small community. As you might guess, cash money was never plentiful and Christmas gifts never took up too much room in our old three bedroom home but our tree was always pretty. I still recall the smell of fresh-cut fir as I set up my plastic tree these days. I harken back to Christmas Tree cutting day when Dad would declare “today’s the day” and we would grab a bow saw and some bailing twine, jump in the pick-up, and head up Merlins Canyon to hike over the drag trail onto Stump Flat and start our search for a pleasing tree and brother we’d eyeball a lot of trees before we would deem one our Christmas tree of that year. It had to be the right height to fit floor to ceiling. It had to be evenly full on all sides. The top had to stand straight and proud. It had to have that perfect pyramid Christmas tree shape. It had to be a tree that mom would love. And we’d hike until we found IT. But as we searched, we found other trees that were almost, but not quite, perfect and we never came off the mountain without at least two trees because we would also cut a tree for my dads much older brother Uncle Keith and Aunt Vivian. Their home was three miles from ours and on our way home and In fact often that “perfect” tree would end up in Vivians house because Dad would always line up the trees we had cut and let her choose the pick of the litter.
When the perfect tree was found, and when other worthy candidates had been located and sawn, we would throw a loop of hay twine around the trunk of the trees and drag them over the snow, down the mountain, and back to the truck. If snow wasn’t sufficiently deep to cushion the needles from the sagebrush and rocks, we’d hoist them onto a shoulder and with head buried inside the fragrant bows, wend our way back to the vehicle. After the trees were loaded we’d take a long drink out of the canteen, pile into the truck, and drive down out of the canyon. We didn’t sing Christmas carols or visit about what cool stuff was in the Sears catalog. In fact if words were exchanged it would be about some fence that needed fixing or perhaps some banter about a new colt Orville Sears was working on. By then we’d be passing Maimes place and then rolling by the Barkers ranch and up the hill to Keith’s house where Vivian would choose her tree, then onto our house. When we’d drive down the lane, the dogs would run out to meet us and sound the alarm that the tree was here. Kids would start emerging from the house and by the time we got there we’d have a proper welcoming committee! Mom would always comment “I think this tree is even prettier than last years” and Dad would cut the trunk square so it’d stand straight, nail the old wooden base we’d made years ago to the tree, and we’d squeeze it through the door and set it in its place of honor in the front window. By then the day was growing late and it was time to do the chores so we’d jump back in the truck to go load it with alfalfa bales to feed the cows. I remember always being excited to get the chores done because when we got home mom and sis would have the tree all trimmed and the lights would be on and gleaming through the window to greet us as we pulled up in the dark. Ah, Christmas Tree day. The house would be warm, there would be hot supper, and the smells of the fresh fir mixed with the tar smell of the lump coal stove will always mean Christmas to me.
jesseix,
mrdoug,
ewk and
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