THE BEST FOURTH OF JULY I EVER HAD

For ten wonderful summers long ago. I was the director of Cragged Mountain Farm, a beloved coed summer boarding camp for middle school and younger kids in Freedom, N.H. Every Fourth of July we’d have a picnic supper on an open field, where, just as the sun went down, we’d all lie down on our backs to watch the fireworks that the Freedom Fire Department several miles away shot up blosoming against the dark.

That was fine, very fine. But what’s the Fourth of July without our own firecrackers that we light ourselves? No way was I going to permit that. Somebody ultimately would get hurt. So every Fourth of July, I was just a tad unsatisfied. How to make the Fourth July something really to remember?

Hmm. Maybe make a complete ass of myself in front of everybody? That always works. Plus I didn’t have to change my behaviour a whole lot. So I pondered and lo and behold an idea arrived to my wearied brain: Put pillows betwwen butt and trousers. Then four or five packages of small firecrackers connected to each other between pillows and the cloth of jeans. Make sure the fuse protrudes so that an accomplice can light off.

My accomplice was the brilliant, fun loving Ernie Richardson, who at only age 19 was responsible for the maintainance of the whole campus. After the picnic supper but before it got fully dark, he and I went in to a building where no one could see him loading the pillows and firecrackers into the rear end the pair of oversized jeans I was wearing that I’d bought the day before. While performing this exceedingly important task, he informed me, as if I didn’t know, that I was going to have a very sore butt, but not to worry, my lovely wife, Joanna, would be the one who would apply the salve. What’s a few bliusters compared to that much fun?

Thus encumbered, I waddled back into the full view of the campers and walked up to where a visitor to the camp, a relative of a staffer, was standing. One look at him and I knew he didn’t get Cragged Mountain Farm. He was was wearing Bermuda shorts and those ridiculous long black socks hanging from a garter around his calves, like laundy hanging from a line, that men who didn’t know any better wore back then. He looked like a corporate executive who had forgotten to put on his suit.

I approached him, keeping my front, not my back visible to the campers, said “hello and welcome,” while Ernie, lit me off out of sight of the campers. Then while the fuse was burning down, Ernie casually walked away and I turned so my the back of me was visible to the campers. Then as I shook the visitor’s hand and started a conversation about the weather, the firecrackers went off, one by one, BANG BANG BANG while I just kept on talking. I could hear the laughter behind me over the noise.

Finally, after forever, the last firecracker went off and suddenly the only sound was the laughter and screams of delight. The visitor wasn’t laughing, though. The look on his face was a combination of derision, surprise, maybe even fear. “You’re nothing but a professional child!” he said.

“Thank you,” I blurted. “That’s the nicest compliment I’ve had in a long while.”

He just shook his head and walked away.

The next day one of the younger campers wrote a one-sentence postcard to her parents: “Yesterday Steve exploded.”

One thought on “THE BEST FOURTH OF JULY I EVER HAD

  1. OUTSTANDING Steve, what year was that ?? was I even a living creature ??
    TONS of LOVE !!!
    Ben Utter
    PS – how’s the CMF book coming along

    1. Hi Ben, If my memory is correct, Jo and I came to CMF in1959, bringing Wendy who would be 2 in October. I was the tripping director -which was super fun. Then Gordon became a school head, so he had to resign. I became the director in 1960 until 1970-, and thewn Jo and started the “post graduate{ Allegash trips. I think we did that until1974 when I had to stop for ther same reason Gordon did; I was appointed head of the country school and didn’t have free summers. My memory says you were a camper for some of the years I was head. On another subject, I have finished the CMF novel. I am simultaneously looking for an agent for it and working with a book professional to plan a self publishing campaign. If I don’t land an agent by end of summer, I’ll self publish because at age 95, I don’t have the time for the long drawn out trsd publishing proceess, up to a year for the agent to sell it to a publisher and then seldom less that 2 years to land in bookstores. If I do find an agent and she can’t speed up the process, I will go with self publishing. The novel is about a family’s struggle to continue farming afte all the local farms have given in. I hope it is not a spoiler to reveal that the farm becomes even more beloved and worth saving for the family when they bring kids to Cragged Mountain School on a Far, a combination of two institutions I revere. CMF and The Farm School, where kids thrive. The reason the farm grows even more beloved to the family is that 60 kids love being there too – just like the kids at CMF and The farm Schhool. Dr Henryand Mildre Utter did a great thing and then your parents and then you and all your siblings and their spouses carried it as long as possible. I hoped all of you are very proud of that.

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