Stories like this one, are hard to believe, but you have my word  that the things in this blog are entirely true.  It does beg the  question though, why do I have so many of these things and stories  happen to me?  I believe the answer is that God wanted my blog to be  more interesting, so he continues to surround me with interesting people  and events, and I haven't even told 10% of the good ones yet. Have I  ever told you about the time I danced on Broadway?...... 
I  lost a Christmas tree one year.  Go ahead, shake your head and scold  me, I can already hear you.." Yarger, I can understand losing the  remote, but seriously a Christmas tree?"  It wasn't like that though.   In my defense, that tree never even saw the inside of our house....  
      Isn't life hard enough without starting harder traditions than your  family passed on? Yes, but that's our nature in this family.  As far as I  can recall my mom and dad never rounded the kids up and went off in the  woods to cut down our own Christmas tree.  Now, that's not to say my  siblings might not have done this with them, but by the time I started  remembering things, I don't recall a single foray into the woods with my  folks.  I have some vague recollections of picking one up at St. Mary's  or from the Boy Scouts, but you can't prove it by me, that I was ever  involved in an actual tree hunt.  Why then did Char and I start the  tradition of bundling toddlers and all up and hiking through the tree  farms to find the perfect tree that we
 all like and can 
agree upon?  Because we are stupid, that's why. 
|  | 
| You can't see us, we are way, way, in the back | 
My family is at least consistent in this task.  We  will hike the entire tree farm, no matter whose it is, or where it is,  and always find our "perfect" tree at the furthest possible spot from  where we started and will require the absolute most amount of dragging  of the tree.  I think the kids do it on purpose because I make them do  chores, it's payback.  One year we dropped our tree into a few feet of  snow, tied a rope around it and tugged, and I didn't even shift it.   That was a fun next hour moving inch by inch to get way back to the  farmhouse.  For the last few years we have gone to Darlings Tree Farm in  Seneca Castle.  They have hot cider, they have the shaky thing that  gets the dead needles off, the netty thing that wraps them up and they  ship dozens of trees off to US soldiers abroad with the Trees for Troops  program.  I highly recommend them.  This story, however, goes back  about 20 years and the tree farm involved was on Rte 64 in Bristol N.Y.
 It  was a few weeks before Christmas, and Char and I had heard about a good  tree farm in Bristol NY.  We bundled up Molly, who was a toddler then,  and my brother Ace rode over with us to pick out a tree too.
|  | 
| Dan, one year guarding his choice. | 
It turns out the tree farm was vastly  overrated, and it took the better part of an hour before all of us found  2 trees that would pass muster.  We could only fit one inside the van,  so we tied the other to the top with whatever we could find inside and  headed for home.  We got about 1/4 mile away before the wind got  underneath it and flipped it off the van and into the road.  After a mad  scramble to re-secure it, we gave it a second attempt with the same  result, we were 28 miles away from home and were destined to lose the  tree every quarter mile. It dawned on me that my dad's recently built  house was only a few miles from there and he had a pickup, so we decided  to leave the tree on the roadside and go ask dad to borrow his truck.   This was not an easy decision, as my dad raised us all to be  independent, and he likely taught Ben Franklin "Neither a borrower nor a  lender be", but we had no choice, so off we went.  He really didn't  give us much of a hard time and in less than 10 minutes we were back  standing in front of where we thought we had left the tree.  I say  "thought" because the area looked identical to where we had  been....except there was no tree.
|  | 
| Ace and I examining the scene, I'm the pretty one. | 
Now CSI was 10 years from being thought up  but even Grissom would have been proud of our canvassing of the area  and our identification of the pine needles that were strewn about. I  think Ace even rubbed some deer dung between his fingers to test his  working theory of the woodland animals needing a tree, but it was 2 days  old so Bambi and pals were cleared.  What was left were 2 perplexed,  cold, brothers standing on the roadside missing one out of two trees,  and of course when we checked, it was my tree that was missing.  One of  the only things worse than spending close to an hour combing a thin tree  farm for a good Christmas tree, is to do it twice in one day.  Those  were the hardest 25 dollars that ever left my hands, but after we went  home and after it was up and decorated, it became like every other tree  we had brought home, beautiful and ours.  I really didn't give it much  more thought, that was, until 7 years later eating lunch at the end of  that same road.....
    
 It's a good story so far, isn't it?  I agree, it lacks something, how about a surprise ending?  
      So that year I was on that road a lot.  I sold food to the local  restaurants and my mom's house was there, so a couple days a week I  would find myself on Rte 64 in Bristol NY.  A lot of weeks I would pick  up food from Rumor's restaurant at Toomey's Corners and bring a  cheeseburger to my mom and have lunch with her while I placed my morning  orders.
|  | 
| Old gas station at Toomey's Corners (Rumors is back left) | 
It was during one of those times that I learned the  ultimate fate of my misplaced Christmas tree.  As I was waiting at the  bar, on one of these days,  just before Christmas again, I happened to  start a conversation with a construction worker who was sitting next to  me at the bar.  We introduced ourselves and got talking about the  upcoming Holiday and whether we were prepared or not.  I, of course,  told him of my trudging off into the woods the week before to get a  tree, but I added "At least it wasn't as bad as the year I had to do it  twice."  He curiously inquired how that happened, and I quickly told him  my story of losing the tree 7 years earlier, totally convinced that I  had the best Christmas story.   I was just as quickly proven wrong.  He  set down his drink and asked me 4 rapid fire questions, "7 years ago?",  "This Road?", "about 2 miles down?", and "on the right side of the  road?"  I answered Yes to all the questions, and he laughed and said  "Buddy, I think I found your tree that year".  He continued on to tell  me the most fascinating story from the year that I lost my tree.  He was  out of work, due to an ankle injury and times were tough.  He could  still drive, but not climb ladders or do his job.  The night before his  wife and him had discussed the looming holiday and decided to forgo the  tree and to spend what little money they had on presents for their 3  kids.  The next morning, on the way to town in his pickup truck, he had  come upon a Christmas tree laying on the side of the road.  He had  assumed it had come off from a bigger truck carrying them, so he loaded  it in his truck and brought it home to his family.
|  | 
| Nolan in front of his handiwork one year | 
He said that particular Christmas, to his  kids, was indistinguishable from the others that they had, because of  that tree.  He recovered from his injury and hadn't had a lean year  since that one.  He insisted on buying both my mom's and my lunches and  we shook hands, and I departed with a new found friend and a great story  to tell. You see, my Christmas had been indistinguishable from my  others too, I had the extra 25 dollars, and the time, so it hadn't  impacted me at all, until he told me his story.  Then it impacted me,  where it counts, in the heart, and not my wallet.  So I did lose a  Christmas tree one year, but I got back a little of my humanity.  It was  a good deal.
 
2 comments:
Awesome story, Bill! Too often in life we don't get to see how something we view as a loss or annoyance turns out to be a huge blessing to someone else!
What a great story. Finding out that a misstep on your part helped another dad maintain his status with his kids must have done your heart good!
Post a Comment