He was outdoorsy. More outdoorsy than me. Don’t get me wrong. I love the outdoors just as much as the next guy. Sometimes, I spend all day watching movies that were filmed entirely outdoors. But he was different.
He smelled like the outdoors. That’s what I remember most about him. It was a leathery smell. Like soot, and foliage, and dirt.
He smelled like this because he worshipped his lawn. The man could waste entire weeks obsessing about one little brown spot in his yard. And he would work in the flower beds more than most peoples’ grandmothers ever did.
He was a blue collar man. It’s impossible for me to tell you much about him without highlighting that. His uniform was denim. He wore it every single day. Except Sundays. He was an ironworker. A union man. I never saw him sit in anything but a Ford.
On weekends, however, he was a certified nutcase.
Once, he had the bright idea to conduct a controlled burn on our land. Thirteen acres of
tall, dry grass. His friends told him it was a bad idea, but like I said, he was a nut.
On Saturday morning, he drove the truck around the property; his buddy rode on the tailgate, dumping gasoline onto the grass. They spent half the day saturating the land. Then he parked near the house and lit a match. One match.
Boom.
Thirteen acres exploded. The fire department was called. The police were called. I think he even made the paper.
It took a full day to put the fire out. And when it was all said and done, my father was covered in black soot, head to toe. He said, “Well, that was a bad idea.”
I remember those words exactly.
Another story I remember. He was driving and he saw this man on the highway whose car broke down on the side of the road.…