Grampa died in 2001. I haven't been back to Wellsville since his funeral. I'm afraid to go. I've heard that Uncle Wes has changed it quite a bit. Mom and Aunt Terry went a couple months after Grampa died and they said that it just felt different and they don't ever care to go back. I'm afraid to go because about eighty percent of my memorable childhood memories took place at his house in that Mayberry-ish town outside Logan, Utah.For twenty years of my life Wellsville hardly changed. The town cut down a tree here or there that was overhanging the road. About a block away from Grampa’s house the city put a sidewalk down. The majority of the town still doesn’t have them. The kind of news in this town has to do with the middle school principle’s prize-winning pumpkin being stolen from his garden. He turned it into a lesson and had the students write about it. The Associated Press covered that big story. This is the Wellsville news in 2007. Currently, there are only 3-registered sex offenders living in that town with a population of roughly 5,000. Nearly 89% of households are families, only 5% of them are below the poverty level, with the average house having 7.5 rooms. In the late 1980’s and early 1990’s the news was a little more mild, mainly obituaries, wedding announcements and travel warnings for Sardine Canyon, a dangerous drive in the winter snow. For years the construction on Sardine Canyon was the big news, with the finish dates constantly being pushed pack and businessmen commuting to Ogden having a 2-hour drive instead of the usual 45 minutes.
For me the only things that seemed to change were the changes Grampa made to his house. The electric fence that kept the horses in the feeding pasture was turned into a wrought iron fence that Grampa and Uncle Rick welded together and painted forest green. When the fence was electric we grandkids would hold hands and then the kid on the end would touch the fence sending a shock through all of us. When the fence turned into iron we would always swing on the gate that let the horses out of the huge pasture and into that one.
The gate was bout ten feet long and we could cram about ten cousins on it. More often than not while we were swinging on it, the horses would get into the feeding pasture and Grampa would always get frustrated with us. The feeding pasture was next to the road and full of the greenest grass. Grampa would grow that lawn and only let the horses into it on certain days. The horses served as a lawn mower I guess.Grampa and Gramma lived on a corner and neighbors lived in both directions; two house were on each street were his immediate neighbors. Typically the 10-acre blocks in Wellsville were separated in to 1¼ acre lots, that’s how the settlers set it up in 1856. However, Grampa owned most of the land in the middle, so his lot was bigger than most. All four of the neighbor’s back yards ended where one of Grampa's pastures started, basically, he had all that land in the middle of the block for his horses. Grampa's horse pastures were huge. The main one, the one the horses spent most of their time in, could have easily fit two family-size houses with decent yards. We would often see the horses running around the pasture, and even they seemed to get winded before they made it around the circumference. Often it would seem that they would race against each other. There was plenty of room for them to pick up and maintain speed. They were beautiful horses, and I'm sure the neighbors were appreciative of the view. There were neighbors on the other side of the block that also shared the view, but for some reason those houses were so far off and are now vague in my memory.

Sometimes I would see the horses tied up in the feeding pasture. Grampa would be feeding the horses or combing them and getting them ready for this grandboys to saddle. Four horses, each with their own personality. Riley was the lead horse. He was the most even-tempered and no one was ever afraid to ride Riley. We all fought over him. Rocky was the old, ugly brown and white one who didn't fit in with the other red haired horses. He was mellow, but stubborn and a pain to ride. My mom and I fell off of him when I was seven. We turned him toward home and he got excited and started to run, even though Mom told him not to; Mom had a hard time staying on him and off the back we slid. Then there was Rebel. He was a bucking horse. Grampa made me ride him once and I remember crying the whole time because I was afraid but Grampa said I had to learn to ride all of them. Robbie was the young Paint that Grampa bought for Gramma. She rarely rode Robbie, but it she was very possessive of him, and proud that he was the most beautiful of the bunch.
There was a ditch that went along the north side of the feeding pasture. It was only about a foot deep. Sometimes there was a steam going through it and other times it was dried up. When we were young we would find things to float down the stream and try to keep up with them all they way down the street. That ditch went on for what seemed like forever, under roads, under sidewalks. Along the part of the ditch that ran along Grampa’s house were six poplar trees that were about forty feet tall. Wes, my older brother, and his favorite cousin, Joey, had climbed to the top of all of them. One winter they somehow climbed to the top of the highest tree fully loaded with snowballs. I remember they got in trouble when someone knocked on our Grampa’s front door. The gentlemen told the adults that snowballs were coming from the top of Grampa's trees and hitting his car. Wes and Joey were in big trouble.
Grampa's yard was full of fun. There was the apple tree in the back yard that we were actually allowed to climb. After Heidi fell 35 feet from one of the poplars and landed in the ditch we weren't allowed to climb those anymore. The apple tree was still fair game as long as the apples weren't little and green and you didn't bother Gramma's bird feeder. It was a beautifully shaped tree, almost perfect. The kind kids draw in elementary school, nearly symmetrical and full of bright green leaves. In the winter, when it snowed, the beauty of their apple tree was one of Grampa and Gramma’s favorite thing to point out to anyone who would listen. It was especially beautiful with the mountains in the background.
Next to the apple tree was the swing set where we made up countless games. It was one of those swing sets that were made from metal and painted red at the top. The swings hung from a sort of "T" made out of metal tubing at one end and at the other, were the slide was, was another "T" where the "Tweety bird" bar and metal rings hung. We would play Tweety bird and Sylvester for hours. One kid would sit and swing on the little bar and the other would swing on the regular swing playing Sylvester and try to touch Tweety with their feet, then you got to switch positions. Grampa had also welded metal bars going from the ends of the opposing T's. Wes and Joey thought it would be cool to swing high and jump off the swings to those bars and then drop back onto the swinging swing. It wasn't long until all of the cousins, young and old could do that. Grampa welded on those bars to make the swing set safer and sturdier. No one was ever seriously injured from those bars, but there definitely were injuries. Far more than had he not tried to make it safer. He did make it more fun, however.
The green painted tetherball-pole was cemented into the patch of concrete behind the swing set. There would be tournaments that went on for years around that pole, aunts, uncles, in laws, cousins. Everyone loved tetherball. Grampa actually put a tetherball pole in the backyard of every one of his married children's homes.
My heart would always get excited when my family would pull into the Grampa's drive way. Most exciting, would the Mazzarelli cousins be there? Aunt Terry's suburban in the driveway meant that California cousins were in fact in town and good times were sure to be had for all. What mischief could we find? Would we sneak down to the forbidden tree houses made out of rope down the street? Ride the bikes that Grampa kept stored under the garage stairs down to the “secret sidewalk” on the other side of town that we were sure only we knew about? Earn a quarter or two by washing the huge sliding glass doors that looked out over the back yard and into the pastures and then use that money for penny candies at Wellsville Market? It only took seconds to unbuckle my seatbelt, run up the curvy sidewalk that was lined with rose bushes planted in black dirt that always looked freshly watered and into the house, but those seconds seemed so wasteful when I could be doing any number of things with my cousins Heidi and Kristy.
Grampa’s house was a split-level. The front door was solid oak with a little window at eye level. On either side of the door was that orange textured glass from the seventies that you weren’t able to see through.
Once in the house our biggest decision was always, “Do I go down stairs to the pool/ping pong table or upstairs first to sneak candy out of the glass dish on the China hutch?” The basement usually won out. There was so much to do and see down there. Two guest bedrooms were filled with old knick-knacks, like the possessed looking monkey that had symbols on his hands and sat on top of the dresser next to the clock that wasn’t digital but didn’t have hands either. The numbers slowly turned on some sort of a dial and it never kept time correctly. The orange backlight from that clock would glow on the monkey during the night giving a scare to whoever happened to be sleeping in that room. However, that room was the coveted room. It had the most comfortable bed. The parent’s always stayed in that room. We cousins ended up in the pool table room on the pullout sofas. This room had a stuffed moose head, a stuffed bear head with its stuffed paws holding a rifle, and about four stuffed dear heads hanging on the walls. These were the heads of the animals Grampa was most proud of shooting. Although those were horribly uncomfortable sofa beds, and the animal heads scared us in the dark, many memories were made in that room. Wes and Joey always were on one pullout and then Heidi, Kristy, and I were on the other. We were always tired in the morning because we stayed up until all hours talking, or playing cards under the pool table, or telling stories, or sneaking up to the kitchen and stealing cookies.Upstairs the family always congregated in the living room. Aunts, uncles, cousins, in-laws, and sometimes friends always crowded the couches and covered the floor.
There was coffee table that was always at one point the topic of conversation, all the parents wanted Grampa to get rid of it because it was such a hazard and quite a few grandchildren had gotten stitches or a butterfly bandage
(Grampa’s favorite method of closing a gaping wound) somewhere on their head because of it. It was made of tree trunk and the edges of it were jagged. There was no safe part of that table. Grampa loved it for some reason that no one could ever figure out.Then there was the garage. This garage what every garage aspired to be. One wall was lined with tools: gardening tools, welding tools, hammers, drills, axes, picks, air compressor attachments, etc. Grampa had painted the outline of each tool where it was supposed to hang on the wall. The purpose of this was two fold. One, it kept the tools organized and in good shape. Two, it was very obvious which tools were missing. He had a sign out sheet, where neighbors could “check out” tools, and this sheet, along with the painted outlines, ensured he never lost a tool.
Another wall had well over 50 pairs of deer antlers mounted and hung. This was the wall that had stairs going up into the kitchen as well. This was another one of Grampa’s unsafe loves of art. Grampa had shot all those deer and this was his bragging wall. One had to be very careful headed up those stairs into the kitchen. At the top of the stairs was also the hidden food storage room. This was sort of like an attic catwalk that lined the top of the garage. It was filled with Gramma’s canned goods, buckets of flour, all the booster seats and high chairs, and the majority of Grampa’s camping gear. Grampa had built this room himself and it always smelled so strongly of wood, for years that smell never lessened.
Hanging in the middle of the garage was a camper. This made it difficult to get into but not impossible. It was the kind that sits right on top of the bed of a pickup truck. It was off limits, but we had sneaked in there many times. It was always dark inside and the tiny cupboards were filled with miniature matches, plates, salt and peppershakers, etc. It also had fun games in the overhead compartments that we liked better than the games in the house. There was Rummy and decks of cards. We cousins would sneak in there and play, BS, Spit, and any other game we could think of.
Nothing ever really drastically changed at Grampa’s house. If a house and a piece of land can be immortal, Grampa’s house surely was. The fence went from electric to iron, and Grampa put a swing set up where there previously had been none, but that was it. The house stayed the same color, the furniture never switched places, except the trees getting bigger, the landscape never changed. At least this is how it remains in my mind. I don’t have any desire to see what it looks like now, and I don’t want the pictures and memories I have to be replaced. The memories made there seem fairy tale and dream like to me, and those mental pictures and memories are priceless.




12 comments:
Two things.... Rocky was GREY and WHITE.... not brown and white. Second, you need to jot your memory to see what happened with the apple tree, because by the time Brad, George, Emily, and I started goofing around in the yard, we weren't able to climb the apple tree. So you four did SOMETHING. We couldn't even climb it in the off season. I'm not done reading, but I have to go.... I'll finish later.
ROCKY WAS BROWN AND WHITE. NOT GREY. Unless horses go grey like humans... he was old.
And about the tree... it was probably Uncle Ricks kids that made ya'll lose tree priveleges. Haha.
I remember Rocky being grey also. But I have to say, I think it was Bradley that got you kicked out of that tree Britt, because I remember him in it all the time. So maybe he scared Grandmas birds away and every one from him on were banned.
Do either of you remember playing that game with the colored wrist bands? we all had a different color and you throw up the square "ball" and then freeze and they try and throw it at someone. If it hit you then you had to give up a band? Am I crazy? lol.
Good memories... although more then anything I remember being too young for the big kids and too big for the little kids, urgh, story of my life. Curse of the middle child.
I'll say it again..... HE WAS GREY and white.
I'm gonna have to say he was gray also.
I think some of those stories have gotten better over time. They are probably more interesting that way anyway.
After that snowball incident (which were actually water balloons) I remember sitting downstairs with Wes. We were being punished, but the "adults" didn't know that their voices were coming right through the vents, and we could hear everything they were saying. We could hear them laughing about doing the same things when they were kids. That made us mad.
Well, I guess I oughta change the color of rocky... dang. I think I have a picture to prove that he was BROWN though.
And BTW Brie - I have no recollection of that game whatsoever. Maybe you played that with some of the neighbor kids who were your age...
I like it, it's good!
there was another horse, big red, he got his foot stuck in the ditch or something and died. and I would have said grey too if you asked me. :) I think I remember someone telling me once he was just sick and that's how he died, but for some reason I always remembered something about the ditch..
Heid I remember it exactly the same as you do too. The ditch, the greyness. But two things: A, that horse died before we were old enough to remember it I think... and 2 - I found a picture of Rocky with Grampa on it. he was in fact brown. It just seemed grey compared to the other pretty horses.
Dear Fressia,
Rocky was grey, black and white. NO brown. Your picture to prove it developed with the wrong color tones. You're the only one of an entire extended family that thinks he was brown - time to let it go Leroy.
I thoroughly enjoyed the nostalgic walk back in time. Thank you for taking the time to do this. It's awesome !!
Mom Whitehead
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