Had I known I would be able to use super glue on anything I wanted (including my own skin) and buy potato chips and Reese's Peanut Butter Cups at will, I might have adulted a little earlier.
—Mitchell
Hegman
Had I known I would be able to use super glue on anything I wanted (including my own skin) and buy potato chips and Reese's Peanut Butter Cups at will, I might have adulted a little earlier.
—Mitchell
Hegman
"We've escaped gravity,” I told my woman.
“I
don't follow,” she said.
I'd
meant to tell her I loved her,
but
couldn't lift all the words at once.
And
when I said we were almost out of milk,
I'd
meant to tell her I wanted to adopt a pet.
A
small bird or a goldfish would do.
Now
that we've lapsed into silence,
I'm
considering saying this:
“Honey,
we just need one more marigold.”
—Mitchell
Hegman
Though we never explicitly discuss this, Desiree and I consider ourselves every bit as classy as the next mixed-culture couple with a cabin at the base of the Great Divide in the Rocky Mountains.
Welp,
it’s time to reconsider.
Over
the weekend, we discovered that our campfire plasticware is mismatched. Our
forks are white, while our spoons and knives are clear.
That’s
a clear failure (pun intended).
—Mitchell
Hegman
—Mitchell
Hegman
The inside of my house grew notably dark in the mid-afternoon. Obviously, something big was wrestling with the sun and winning. When I stepped out the door to investigate, I found a purple sky out there.
Not
Barney purple. Zinc and rotten plum purple.
To
the west, I saw a big, churning storm spilling over the Continental Divide and
pouring darkness into the valley.
Opposite
the storm, to the east, puffy white thunderheads had stacked up into an
impressive wall of their own. A brewing wind rather urgently ushered me to the
east end of the house, where I discovered the grim thing still there in the
grass.
Early
in the morning, Desiree discovered what can only be classified as bunny rabbit
parts. In the dark hours of the previous night, something killed and ate most
of a bunny there, punctuating another day of country living.
To be
honest, Barney always annoyed me.
—Mitchell
Hegman
Sports never interested me as a kid, and I have never followed any professional sports. About all I understand is that when the Packers are playing the Whomevers, it’s a bitter rivalry and somebody is going to drink too much beer while watching and get a little snotty.
Oddly
enough, I am entertaining something similar to what I just described right here
in my garage. Not the drinking beer and getting snotty part. The rivalry. In my
competition, the Stackers are pitted against the Pilers.
I’m
talking, of course, about lengths of firewood I have been chopping for the
upcoming winter, which can begin on any day of any month here in Montana.
Some
lengths I manage to axe into sleek, uniform pieces, making them easy to fit
into a cordwood stack. Hence, the Stackers.
Other
chunks split into gnarly and misshapen things, with bulbous knots on one end,
weird twists of grain, and so forth. These, the Pilers, I heap into a jumbled
and entirely disordered pile, something that looks like a Gaudà (drunken)
version of a trash mound.
Obviously,
I am rooting for the Stackers here. I appreciate a tidy stack. But the knotted
chunks readily fit in my woodstove and accept flame just as well as the
Stackers.
I’m
sharing photographs of the rivals.
—Mitchell
Hegman
Surely, I am flawed. At a minimum, I lack proper resolve. Every spring I tell myself I am not going to take any photographs of the bitterroot in bloom since I already have dozens of them. But every year, the sight of them draws me in like a conspiracy theorist to crop circles.
And there
I go with my smartphone on camera mode.
To
be fair, bitterroot earned their place as our state flower for good reason.
First, they are workhorse tough. They will happily live on the open prairie,
but will also climb a mountain and thrive at elevation. These pretty flowers
shake off both extended drought and sub-zero temperatures. Secondly, they would
likely win any beauty contest they enter, at least if I am the judge.
The
other day, my resolve melted, per usual, when I found bitterroot on display
along our county road.
—Mitchell
Hegman