As I
remember it. The Christmas of 1962 Santa brought me a red Schwinn 2 speed
bicycle. It was a remarkable present as I had not asked for the bike and
was not expecting anything as spectacular as this gift. On Christmas day
I was out front of our house trying desperately to learn how to ride such a
wonderful bike. I was falling into the hedge and the roses and my father
would alternately yell at me for falling into the bushes and wrecking his
plants and pulling me out of the thickets and putting me back on the bike and
pushing me for another start. After an hour or so of scratches and
bruises and pain I was able to get around the neighborhood and visit my friends
close by. This two-speed bike was a marvel for a kid in Omak.
Everyone else had a one-speed bike and they had to huff and puff up hills with
the same gear. I, on the other hand, had a second gear I could shift into
by touching my pedals backwards and engaging the second gear. It was like
getting the wind blowing behind your back. I felt like a prince.
By the
summer of 1963 I was allowed to be gone on my bike for long stretches of the
day. I should qualify being allowed to be gone. I think it was more
like my parents weren’t watching me anymore. My little brother was still
a second grader and had to be watched and my sister was the most perfect person
in the world and was driving and dating and my parents were paying close
attention to that behavior. I was the middle child who was the
adventuring slacker who always skirted with trouble but managed to get home for
dinner at 5:30 and no one asked where I had been. As I was saying I was
on my bike a lot that summer traveling about the little town I grew up
in.
This day
was different though. I was riding around my neighborhood and decided to
look out over the river to
It was a
time of gatherings and cowboys and Indians and horses and grownups drinking and
strangers in town and lots of cars and pretty girls in cowboy shirts and tight
jeans and dirty old men drinking heavily and smoking cigarettes on the
sidewalks thinking about the pretty girls in the tight jeans and cowboy shirts
with the top buttons open and country music blaring out of Chevy convertibles
as they cruised down main street and the regular citizens were starting to
loosen up and get into the spirit of the carnival atmosphere and grownups were
drinking and strangers were in town and lots and lots of beer trucks were
unloading lots and lots of beer.
So there I
was leaning over the bicycle handles and staring over to the Stampede grounds
viewing the cars and trucks that were pulling into town. The whole town
was transforming itself for the one weekend a year where you were allowed to do
whatever you wanted as long as you didn’t get caught doing something very
bad. What caught my eye that morning were the big trucks for the carnival
pulling into the Stampede grounds. There were trailers with rides on
them, trailers with booths, big trucks full of prizes and most of all big
trucks full of carnival vendors or as we kids called them carnies. On
this morning in 1963 I was excited the carnival was finally back in town.
It was thrilling to go to the carnival and ride those clunky old rides that we
thought were spectacular and scary. There was the Rocket 88 that was
basically two nose cones on either end of a singular piece of steel that
rotated and gyrated and made you sick to your stomach. My friends and I
lived for that ride. There was the Ferris wheel and of course some
falling apart roller coaster ride that was a accident waiting to happen and
dozens of other dangerous rides that would be shut down in a minute today but
in 1963 we kids eagerly paid our 25 cents and rode these rides until the money
ran out.
Did I say
it was hot in Omak in August. It was hot when you woke up and it was so hot by
10 am that you had to have the lawn mowed or your other jobs done or your sweat
would roll off your head and the lawn clippings would stick to your legs
because you were dripping wet or the weeds you were pulling would dissolve in
your hands and get you incredibly sticky or the paint on your paint brush would
dry stiff while you were painting and your father would ask what the hell you
were thinking off when he came home and the side of the house you painted in
the sun looked like it had been hit with a blunt stick with chalk on the end.
Yes it was
hot. You would have to search out the shade sometimes when you were
riding your bike and you had better have some coins to buy a cold drink or you
were going to be incredibly uncomfortable crying all the way home because you
lived too far away and the neighbor kid you’d been with was already home and
you were climbing the hill to your parents house and it was hot and the nosy
neighbor you hated was out in their yard puttering around and they yelled at
you that you’d better get home soon because it was time for dinner and your
mother was looking for you. That’s all I needed now. The parents!
I didn’t need the parents at a time like this when my twelve year old body was
wreathing with pain and exhaustion and I was desperate for some cold water I
was so thirsty I was even imagining a cold drink of water with ice cubes in a
wonderful plastic tumbler that my mother set out on the picnic table for us
when we ate outside and I really hated this neighbor for busting me on my way
home and now I was worrying about my mother yelling at me and I would have to
wait for the drink of water while she gave me the business but when I got home
she wasn’t thinking about me any more. I was checked off her list even
though I was panting and exhausted and needing a drink so bad I think my tongue
was white no I was not the problem anymore. It was now almost 5:30 and any
moment my dad would be roaring into the driveway and dinner would have to be on
the table and everyone sitting down in just a few minutes. My mother was
making a mad scramble to get the food out on the picnic table which was set
with a bright red table cloth and those wonderful green tumblers filled with
lemonade and then the dishes were carried out and just a 5:30 there was my
father arriving in a cloud of dust in his 1956 2 door Ford Coupe and we all
made it to the table and another dinner was somehow managed and somehow we
managed to be a family for another night and my father was incredibly proud of
himself and my mother was incredibly exhausted and my sister was having a
perfect evening and my brother was being 10 and probably doing a math puzzle
and I was just happy I was home and not so thirsty and tired but happy I had
been out adventuring and glad it wasn’t so hot when the sun went down but I
knew we would be doing this again tomorrow.
But
Stampede weekend was different. Even at 12 I understood there were
different morals at play during this weekend.
So I decided to ride my bike over to the carnival grounds and watch the
carnies set up shop. I rode as fast as I
could down the hill to town and pedaled and pedaled so the wind was hitting
hard against the hair on my head. My
crew cut hair was even finding ways of being wind blown. I rounded down through some alleys behind the
greyhound bus station and then onto the bridge across the river riding on the
pedestrian sidewalk. The river was low
that year and you could almost see the mud at the bottom of the river if you
stared at the river long enough. I had
no time for that now. I rode over the
bridge and started to weave my bike in between all of the big trucks unloading
the carnival. The public swimming pool
was adjacent to these makeshift carnival grounds and I could see some of my
friends there taking lessons that morning but I was more intent on watching the
carnies than connecting with my friends.
What was it
about these scraggly looking men and women who wore leather vests and dirty
jeans and rolled up cigarettes in their white t shirt sleeves. The girls wore rose colored sunglasses and
had long hair without hair spray and they wore hip hugger jeans and they didn’t
look like they had to ask any one’s permission to do anything. These carnies were all from California and
maybe they had come from San Francisco and maybe they were thinking that it was
time for the culture of America to change and maybe working in the carnival was
easier if you thought that way because no one running a carnival cared if you
wanted to be liberated because if you were working in a carnival you were
already out of the norm and since you were out of the norm it would be
perfectly wonderful to smoke dope and not shave and not wash your clothes and
pick up on all of the girls you wanted to and move onto another town where you
were re-inventing yourself again every week.
In Omak you
were the same person day to day. You
couldn’t change because you wanted to because people knew you from when you
were a little kid and they had their finger on you. “Oh yeah, your Charlie’s kid. I know about you.” So, at twelve, you are just starting to
understand that you were already pre-determined and you were thinking that
maybe this wasn’t exactly how you wanted to your life to be molded you might
think that carnies were pretty fun and interesting.
That summer
the carnival brought us saint Christopher medals and incense and you could
sense that a cultural wave was coming along with the carnival. The girl carnies were smoking and swearing
and acting like they didn’t need a boyfriend to run their lives. These girls were not much older than girls in
my high school and they were out on the road taking care of their
business. And they didn’t need hair
spray. How did they look so beautiful
without hairspray.
There were
peace symbols that summer too at the carnival.
I remember
riding my bike all around the carnival grounds that day watching the carnies
set up the big rides and the interplay of the workers putting up tents and
setting up booths and laying out the trinkets that we kids would be hovering
around and trying to win by the next day.
We’d be back after dinner that night and pay our money and take our
chances with the rides and the games of chance in the booths and ask a thousand
times what was a saint Christopher medal and what does it mean and why would we
want to wear it around our necks and then when we did wear the Saint
Christopher medal the young teen age girls thought we were so cool and we liked
that so we bought a medal for the girl as well and hoped they would let us kiss
them under the shade of the trees near the swimming pool or better yet they would
go on the Rocket 88 with us and then we would be able to hold their hand while
they screamed their lungs out and we screamed with them and then afterward we’d
pretend that we didn’t know the girls when our buddies showed up but then some
girls were better than others and they didn’t want to be seen with you when
other friends showed up.
Anyway the
carnival was different this year. I
could sense that in my little 12 year old brain. The carnival was not bringing us culture it
was bringing us counter culture and that was a spin for a twelve year old. I only knew this instinctively. I could feel the change in the air like
incense swirling around. Leather vests,
girls living on their own, girls without hairspray, rose colored sunglasses,
guys with goatees and leather hats and carnies living outside the box not just
as drunks and ex-convicts but as young kids checking out the adventures in
life. I wondered what happened to all of
those young hip carnies. Who knows. All I know is that even as a twelve year old
I could tell that there was a change in the air.
When the
carnival was over and we had all had enough of the rides and enough of the
cotton candy and bad hot dogs and rode the rides until our necks and stomachs
were raw with pain and we had met all of our friends and watched them do
ridiculous things and our parents yelled at us that it was only a carnival and
we had seen lots of grownups doing silly things and old men chasing those
beautiful women in the cowboy shirts and the tight jeans and the beer cans
strewn around and old cars that wouldn’t start anymore and the sound of the
Indians playing stick games that kept you awake for 3 days because it was hot
and your windows were open and the sound of the stick games permeated the air
all around town and you were excited because the town was so alive and
different and you were hoping it would go on forever like some magical
transformation of your little world.
And then
you awoke on Monday morning and got out on your bike and the Carnival was gone and
there was hardly a trace that the carnival had been in town except for the
trash and the beer cans and you wondered did this really happen. I rode my bike over to where the Carnival had
been and did figure eights in the dust and stopped for a while and stared at
the river and then I could feel the wind blowing. It was different that day. Cooler than just yesterday. A different wind
was blowing and you could feel autumn was coming. Change was inevitable and school would start
and I would be in middle school for the first time. But I knew life had changed after that
weekend at the carnival. My culture had
been countered.