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TRANSCRIPT
Robert Coker Johnson 1206 N StreetLewiston, ID 83501(208) 305-2868
Musselshell
I learned early to wear only wool and cotton, because wool keeps you warm when
it's wet and cotton won’t melt to your skin when it burns.
I learned this from Bill Heckman, my boss on the brush crew when I started for
the Forest Service in 1979, who hated polyester almost as much as he hated hippies. Our
job was to cut and pile logging slash to make a fuel break around old timber sales, most
of us new, absorbing what we could from the locals who had worked the crew before. We
were part-timers, seasonals, working the months weather and budgets allowed, and in the
11 seasons I worked, I learned the names for trillium, fireweed, elephant heads. The
locals gave us names for kellyhumps (mounds of earth pushed up with a bulldozer to
block a road) and jillpokes (the top of a blowdown that sticks out into a road and named
for what a lumberjack pokes his Jill with). A tree with more than one top is called a
schoolmarm. A tree with a dead, spike top is a widowmaker. The crew haul we rode in
was a crummy. We learned the best way to pile slash: small end downhill, flashy fuels in
the center so they'd stay dry until we came back to burn in the fall, and we learned the
rudiments of running and maintaining the cantankerous, feeble Homelite chainsaws the
government insisted on buying.
Except for pulling up ribes plants on a blister rust crew a generation ago, piling
slash is regarded as the worst job in the Forest Service. It is not especially physically
demanding, and it is certainly not mentally challenging. It amounts to standing in an area
that has been recently logged, picking up branches and limbs – slash – and arranging it in
a pile about 4 X 4 X 6 feet. The job is boring. Even the river of wind in the trees, the
chipmunks, a jet throwing its shadow into the clouds ahead of it, the gray jays that fly in
and watch from a few feet away, cannot change that fact. But we did it, no more than two
of us working on a single pile, day after day, all summer. Some people sawed the slash
into manageable lengths, but the majority of the crew, sometimes as many as 10 or 15,
piled. Maybe we told ourselves we'd have a drink of water after every pile, or we'd ask
Virgil how many seconds until lunch, but there was always more slash, and we moved
from shady spot to shady spot as we worked. The shadows told when a pile had been
made. Sometimes there were distractions. We'd find a patch of huckleberries or wild
strawberries and gorge ourselves in a pre-break break. Or we'd uncover a yellow jacket
nest and clear out until they settled down so Bill or a sawyer could sneak over and pour
gas on the nest. Sometimes as we pulled the slash from the ground we dragged it through
a patch of wild ginger and suddenly the air smelled of lemon; we marveled at the
pathfinder plants that turned their white undersides up when we walked on them. And
when we finished, we left a fuel-free strip of land between the road and the unit, or
between the unit and the neighboring, uncut land.
We got our revenge in the fall when we came back to burn the piles. Like children
at Christmas, we scrambled too quickly from pile to pile, lighting them with propane
torches or with a mixture of nitrogen fertilizer and diesel, a gelatinous mass the color of
raw honey called blivit. Within a week we had burned what had taken months to build.
We remembered each area by its story: Virgil found a hidden fawn; Peggy spotted a den
of weasels; Vicki got stung; the Ranger caught us on a long lunch. Our last job of the
season was piling and burning. We built a fire and then tossed on all the slash around it
for as far as we cared to walk. When we had cleaned up an area, we moved on and started
over. By this time it was bitter cold in the mornings; the water that had condensed at the
top of a jug of bar oil froze, making it impossible to pour. We had to start a fire just to
warm it. We brought coffee and a pot and potatoes, and placed them in the ashes of the
first pile and started on the coffee as soon as it was ready; at lunch we ate the baked
spuds and cooked hot dogs and smores.
lll
No one remembers when Bill Heckman arrived on the Pierce District. He was on
his way to Alaska, he said, when he stopped and applied for a job. He came from the Tule
Lake area of southern Oregon, where he had worked for a timber protective association
that eventually became the State Department of Lands. The closer he got to retirement,
the more he groused about the Forest Service and the more fondly he remembered the
association. I was 20 and wanted nothing more than a green shirt, a Lassie patch, a life in
the woods doing good work, but I vowed early not to go out bitter like him. He called
Virgil the “warwhoop” and told us gleefully of his collection of Penthouse and Oui,
pronouncing the latter owee. He believed like many woodsmen of his day that snags
attracted lightning strikes and should be burned as soon as the weather made it safe. (In
point of fact, green trees – with their high water content – attract most strikes.) Once the
fall rains began in earnest, he spent his days coaxing pitch to flame, burning stobs and
snags. He passed this practice on to many of us, myself included, but I eventually
understood that the birds I loved to watch depended on the insects that lived in the snags
Bill Heckman burned down.
His climbs out of the work site took longer as the years went by. He started
drinking as soon as he left work, and some mornings he stayed in the truck until noon. By
afternoon, though, he re-tuned and re-filed the saws we used or walked around the job
site checking on us. If he liked you, he’d invite you to sit down and have a cigarette. “Let
the saw rest,” he’d say, and talk. If he didn’t like you, you got nothing more than the
required breaks and the worst places to work, nothing but dry sticks and south-facing
slopes. But he knew his stuff, and it was during these breaks that I learned the most from
him. He told us if we had to dig fireline along the top of a ridge, we should dig the line
just on the other side of the ridge and in that way stay out of the smoke. Simple. Logical.
But how long until we thought of it ourselves? He told us to always keep an extra pair of
socks or two in our packs, and maybe a couple of cans of food. That way, if we were to
go on a fire without first stopping at camp, we would be in a little better shape. Don’t
believe everything these “educated idiots” – meaning foresters – tell you, he said.
Contrary to how Smokey Bear is drawn, never wear pant cuffs on a fire; it's too easy to
get a cuff full of embers and spread them around outside the fireline. Obviously, Smokey
was created by some fool in the Washington office who didn't know a thing about fire.
Bill taught us the correct way to sharpen axes and pulaskis, filing in from the cutting edge
toward the cheek so the edge didn't become too thin and dull too quickly. We learned
from him to carry handtools like firefighters, not farmers; we carried them at our sides,
close up by the head, and always on the downhill side of the terrain. Bill told us of a crew
walking in on a fire who let their line spacing get sloppy and got bunched up as they
climbed the slopes. One guy insisted on using his pulaski to help him – he'd stick the ax
head in a stump and pull himself along. But then the firefighter in front of him stumbled
and stuck his hand out on a stump to steady himself – just as the pulaski came down.
Yet these same breaks with Bill made me uncomfortable. I was learning to saw
well enough, although I never gained the mastery of it that Steve Munson or Dave
Johnson developed. My hands were so stiff from the saw's vibration I could barely open
them in the morning, and I almost screamed when I rolled over on them, clenched like
claws, in my bunk. Eventually I could keep a saw reasonably well-tuned and filed but
nothing more than that. When Bill stopped to watch me work, I got nervous and made
mistakes, cutting through a branch and into the ground, or pinching the bar of the saw
when the cut closed around it – an almost sure way to cause the saw to kick back. And
something about his appearance bothered me – his green eyes gone to rheum and the way
he held my gaze until I had to look away, his black jeans and black hair faded to ash. He
looked like death walking those woods.
lll
We were free to do as we pleased once we got off work. Musselshell Work Center
is 15 miles from either Pierce or Weippe, and some of the newcomers couldn’t adjust.
(What would these people do at a remote duty station?) They had to go into the bars
every night; they complained about how poorly they were paid or treated; they
complained the locals weren’t smart enough to talk to. They seldom lasted a season.
Some of us thrived, though. After we cleaned up and ate dinner, there was time for walks
– down to the gravel pit to look for fossils, around the meadow, up to Duckbutter Knob.
Or if someone had a reliable rig, a drive up to Hemlock or Austin Ridge lookout where
we could see beyond the North Fork of the Clearwater River or to the Selway Crags.
Several people played instruments. Loco Foco played electric lead guitar but had to make
do with an acoustic model in camp. Dave Porter and Tom Weunschel played banjo and
guitar. One evening as I lay on my bunk, I heard what sounded like bagpipes. I stuck my
head out the back door and sure enough – out there in the forest somewhere, someone
was piping. I followed the sound through camp, past the women’s bunkhouse and up the
road to the boneyard. There on a culvert sat a bearded, balding man playing the pudding
bags. I had never seen him before. I listened for a few minutes and then went back to my
room and thought about the green world I lived in.
lll
My friend Gary Haynes lived on the upper Salmon River with Sylvan Hart, a
noted hermit and mechanical engineer. What was frustrating, Gary said, was how long it
took him to learn the landscape. Sylvan would point out bighorns and Gary wouldn’t see
them. It was two years before he saw anything.
Knowing this, knowing I must apprentice myself to the land, did not make it any
easier. Even after someone showed me the difference between grand and Douglas fir, I
couldn't make the distinction on my own. The slopes and ridges looked the same, a folded
curtain of green broken by roads and clearcuts. And the other plants were nameless brush
along the creeks, the undergrowth beneath the trees only a shintangle. Oh, I could spot
deer beside the road easily enough, and the young cow moose that trotted long-legged
through camp was hard to miss. But for several seasons I saw everything as through the
narrow margins of a camera’s viewfinder. I saw nothing of the periphery. I only saw what
was before my eyes.
And then one season it all became clear. The trees looked different because they
were; grand fir needles are flat and white underneath; Douglas fir needles are round and
uniformly dark green. The reason for the stillness at night is because there are no crickets
or other insects to make noise. Deer feeding on a hillside stand out because they don't
belong. Their shape and color are all wrong for the vegetation. Once, as I drove to town, I
noticed two small dark brown triangles sticking up above the tan knee-high grass about
50 feet from the road. I stopped and watched, and in a few seconds a coyote popped his
head up above the grass, glared at me, turned and trotted off. I saw the forest as it is: the
old-growth cedars elephant-colored and mixed with ferns along the creeks, low-growing
willows, the carpet of leaves beneath the narrowleaf cottonwoods, whose smell of
sandalwood and water return to me every spring. From a distance the forest's mixed
stands of trees separate by color; the dusty green cedar boughs, the light green larch,
taller and older than the surrounding trees because they alone survived the last big fire;
the blue-green of the few pines; the shiny green of the grand fir, and the deep green of the
Douglas fir. Beneath this canopy lay downed and rotting logs, the dark cool home of
snails and salamanders; or bear grass and huckleberry; or the cut, open areas where we
worked, where the sun tries to convert wood to dust, the air hot with resin and needles,
where it seems only the breathed word fire would ignite the world. Dig down a few
inches anywhere, and you will find the charcoal of old fires.
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In spring, we had the Idaho drizzle for days on end, the sound of it constant on the
tin roofs of the bunkhouses, and inside, the warm, moist mix of electric heat and drying
clothes, the smell of boot grease and leather. A debate raged about which brand of boot
was best, and even what brand of boot grease worked best. Several of us would gather to
argue in one of the bunkhouses painted a cheery institutional green. Some guys bought
the top quality boots, Whites or Buffaloes, figuring the durability and comfort made up
for the $180 to $250 price. Others, especially those on the fire crew, figured since they
would burn up a pair of boots in the course of a season, might as well buy cheap ones.
They had a point too because nothing destroys a boot faster than getting it wet and then
drying it by standing in flames. And the ash mixed with water made lye, which didn’t
help a boot either. It was a tricky business, because some mid-priced boots were actually
poorer quality than the least-expensive brands. I went through a couple of seasons on
cheap boots, learned my lesson on a supposedly good brand, and then settled on
Buffaloes. You could tell the people who were serious about their comfort. They turned
the eyelets so they wore evenly and not develop a sharp edge that would cut a bootlace,
and every Friday afternoon before they left for the weekend, they used a stiff brush to
clean the dirt from their boots and stuffed them with newspaper to draw out the moisture.
We passed around the camp copy of The Buckers’ and Fallers’ Handbook and
learned about plunge cuts, fan cuts, and the dangerous barber chair, which occurs during
the back cut when the wood holding up the tree splits vertically, causing the tree to fall
forward and kick back at the same time. (In the film Never Give an Inch, Henry Fonda’s
character is killed by a barber chair.) We studied the illustrations, flinched at the number
of deaths that had been caused by stupidity or carelessness, sure we wouldn’t be so
foolish. We learned that if we were bucking up a tree that had blown over and was still
attached to the root ball, we should make the first cut at the butt to safely release the
tension; if the first cut were made at the top, the tree could almost explode upward into
us. Of course, we should always cut from the uphill side of the log – if it rolled it
wouldn’t crush us. We learned the importance of hinge wood to control a tree’s fall, and
to cut a hinge wider on one end than the other so the tree can be made to pull toward the
wide end and avoid hanging up in another tree or landing on boulders or uneven ground
that would shatter a valuable lumber tree and leave it worthless. But if that hinge wood is
rotten, that wide hinge might pull the tree right off the stump and into our laps.
We learned that the snags we cut for firewood – and did our practicing on – were
actually more dangerous than green trees because their tops might be rotten and the hinge
wood more brittle. If you misjudged the tension in a log, the cut, the kerf, might close and
pinch the saw bar, causing it to kick back into the sawyer.
I read all this, but I had to scare myself before I learned it. While cutting firewood
alone, I fell a grand fire snag about 14 inches in diameter. The top stuck out in the road,
so I began cutting there. I didn’t notice that the log lay a foot off the ground, suspended in
a patch of grand fir regeneration. As I neared the butt, the kerf began to close on the bar.
I didn’t think the log was pinching the bar all that much, and I was determined to finish
the cut. Sven, patron saint of dumb Swedes, must have been watching over me, because
as I finished the cut, the springy saplings on which the log lay launched a chunk of
firewood chest high away from me. It was pure luck I was standing on one side of the log
and not the other, or the wood and saw would have collided with my body and, certainly
since I was alone, killed me. I was too young to appreciate what had happened; I didn’t
soil myself or fall praying to the ground. I shuddered, smoked a cigarette, loaded my
truck and went on cutting firewood alone.
A sawyer on the road crew didn’t get off as luckily. He was cutting through a log
but having a tough time of it. His partner climbed up on one end of the log and began
jumping up and down, hoping to force the kerf open. It had just the opposite effect. The
cut closed around the saw before either man knew what happened and the saw kicked
back into the sawyer’s face, catching him just to the right of his nose, cutting his lips and
gums and driving a tooth up into the nasal cavity below his eye. He was called Bullshit
Jensen for the line of crap he perpetually spewed, but after his accident we called him
Zipperlip.
lll
In spring, the land shone with wildflowers – the white star of queen's cup, purple
and yellow and red of shooting stars, the fragile yellow of glacier lilies, the pale pink of
mountain heather, white cupped ladyslipper, the V of twinflower. The moose were in the
pond constantly; we could hear them splashing from the camp, 150 yards away. Snipe
courted above the meadow, making a sound with their wings called winnowing, a
descending hoo hoo hoo hoo hoo hoo as they dove for the season and their lives.
But other flowers grew there too. Musselshell had once been a community of
sorts. A small sawmill and pond were built to convert the logs to lumber from the
surrounding 3,000-acre clearcut. Loggers moved in, school bus routes commenced. A
woman who became a dear friend lived there as a child while her father logged. Most
signs of this village had vanished by the time I arrived. The red line shacks used for
houses had been trucked off to another site or sold, and the dirt lanes had grown over. Yet
if you walked around, you could see the change in vegetation that showed where a house
once stood, the grasses stunted in the poor dirt, a few shards of a broken dish, and here
and there in struggling clumps, paperwhite narcissus, planted by the wives. After I met
my friend and her family, I had a face for the flowers; I imagined her mother setting the
bulbs, hauling water by the bucket from Deer or Musselshell creek in the withering
August heat, pausing to shade her eyes as she watched her children, tanned now to the
color of the meadow, running barefoot through the tall grass. Once I knew of the flowers,
I began to see more of them. Scattered alongside the roadside out from town, wherever
families had stopped and worked, grew humble patches of flowers – tulips, daffodils,
narcissus. Planting them here was a gamble, but nothing like the gamble of logging.
Forest Service crews began opening roads as soon as the snow left. We drove the
district in the rain, the heater running high, resetting signs, cutting blowdowns out of the
way, rolling them with cant hooks across the road and down over the side. The sap of the
trees smelled like perfume, and even the saws I sharpened threw the green wood in chips.
We also picked up as much trash as we could – cans, bottles, car parts, diapers – and over
the years I noticed a pattern forming: of the beer cans, the overwhelming majority were
Coors Light. I always wanted to write the company and inform them of this fact so they
could include it in their demographics. We told ourselves we had to start following a
better class of slob. As we worked the roads higher and higher in elevation, we found
north-facing areas that still held snow, a little dip in the road where the sun had yet to
reach, a whole curve still in winter, willow and alder thickets not budded out. Whether
we bulled through in the truck or shoveled our way through, it did not matter; we
delighted in the snow, because by this time it might be mid-June, and our friends were a
couple of thousand feet below and another season away, sweating in the sun. The ridges
seemed to me magic places. The vegetation was not as thick; the trees were lodgepole
pine, hemlock, subalpine fir. Up there out of the creek bottoms, I had a vista, a horizon. I
could see into the neighboring districts, and our little hand-held radio picked up their
traffic, their voices, which we wouldn’t otherwise hear. One fall night, driving home
from a controlled burn, I thought the stars hung between the ridges. Alone in the truck, I
drove toward Orion, toward camp, toward home. I fiddled with the AM radio and found a
station in Las Vegas that played nothing but old radio shows. So I drove back to camp,
my headlights reflecting off the white bark of the trees as I rounded the curves, out of
sight of my friends ahead and behind me, and I listened to “Fibber McGee and Molly”
and “Dragnet” until the road left the ridge and I lost the station.
In late summer, the meadow around Musselshell smells of tarweed, like a mix of a
woman’s sweat and earth. Columbian ground squirrels dig their colonies around the
buildings, swallows nest under the eaves, and at night the great horned owls sit on the
flagpole or in the trees around camp and call for their prey. Dust billows up from beneath
our feet, trails endlessly behind our trucks, coating everything for 30 feet on either side of
the road, and the bunkhouses don’t cool down until almost 3 in the morning. A few stray
clouds might come over in the evening, but nothing of consequence. Nothing disturbs the
red curve of the sunsets, the alpenglow hitting the far ridge, the tops of the cumulus
catching the last rays of light as the ground darkens, and in the morning as we walked to
the cookhouse, the grass was as dry as it had been the afternoon before.
Autumn came slowly. By mid-August the ground squirrels had gone into
hibernation, and a few weeks later the swallows began lining up mornings on the power
lines beside the road. They’d hold until our trucks got too close and then lift off one by
one as we passed, hundreds of birds wheeling out blue and purple in the sun before
settling again on the wires. The temperature was still in the 80s and 90s, but by 4 p.m. the
sun had lost its punch, and the nights were cool enough for good sleeping. By September
we woke to chilling frosts, but the days turned off nearly hot. This cycle of drawing
moisture from the fuels in the form of frost and evaporating it in the sun left the forest as
dry as it had been all summer. The Clearwater is not on a main flyway, yet we often saw
skeins of Canada and snow geese, gray and black against the sky, white-black against the
blue-green of the forest below us, and always their voices – the deep, resonant honk of
the Canadas, and the high, almost whistle of the snows. We yelled and whooped them on,
heading south out of the mountains as we would soon do. The moose that had been
absent all summer came back to the pond, and we knew it would not be long until the
otters that had also spent the summer in cooler water would return. Crews who worked
late into November often told of seeing otters pop out of a hole in the ice, slide 30 feet on
their bellies, and plop head-first down another hole. October, the larch finally golden, the
huckleberry brush red, the thimbleberry and willow yellow as a winter sunset, the osier
dogwood along the creeks silver red as salmon, we had our fall; it is a quiet change,
sublime, as subtle as anything else in the West. On the last day of the month in 1981,
Steve Munson and I drove over Beaver Dam Saddle to Lean-To Ridge to cut firewood. I
had just been laid off, but Steve would work a few more weeks. We were headed for
gravy, a stand of larch thinned to produce better seed trees, and the downed trees cut and
hauled to the road for whoever found it. Which was us. The morning was cool, the sky
unbelievably blue, the larch everywhere filling the air and covering the road with gold.
Steve pulled out a cassette deck and put in a tape of Strauss’ “Radetzky March.” We
bowed deeply to each other, bowed to the wood, and began loading our trucks to the
music. We looked like figures on an elaborate German cuckoo clock, turning, pirouetting
piece after piece until our trucks were full, until we could not work for laughing.
|||
Clyde Berdine and his wife Erline lived across the road from the pond in the few
buildings left from the village and salvaged cedar logs from timber sales and split them
by hand into fence rails and posts with the help of a half-wit whose name I never learned.
They were from Arkansas, and Clyde’s advice to a seasonal he met once was, “Never
marry a woman who dances.” Clyde was known to be smarter than he was, but the Forest
Service never actually caught him stealing cedar trees; Clyde just said he couldn’t tell the
difference between a sound sawlog and salvage log with heart rot. He and Erline lived
there for 20 years until she divorced him and moved to Weippe, leaving him with the
hired man, their 10 dogs, and a long-suffering cat named Tom. Clyde died a few years
later of a heart attack, and after his relatives had hauled off his trucks and equipment,
most of the population of Weippe and Pierce came out and destroyed his home, tearing
out walls with a backhoe and digging up the yard looking for the money everyone knew
he had hidden somewhere on the place. No one ever found anything, and after a few
years you couldn’t tell there’d ever been a house there, except for the tea roses that still
grew and the humped, grown-over graves of his dogs.
|||
Once Clyde Berdine died and his dogs were gone, the pond became a haven for
birds. We had always seen Eastern kingbirds, yellow finches, belted kingfishers, brewer’s
blackbirds, bronze-headed cowbirds, cedar waxwings, and the occasional heron, but now
came mallards, redheads, mergansers, wood ducks and the like that moved in and thrived.
The pond became a refuge for migrating birds caught in storms; one morning as we left
camp, we saw 15 or 20 American avocets – tall, thin shorebirds with long, upturned black
bills, their ruddy pink plumage faded now for winter, feeding in the pond, gathering
strength for the push on.
The pond was a refuge for many of us. After work, singly or in pairs, we leaned
against the split cedar fence and watched the lives before us. Early in the season, I
watched the moose or otters. Or I watched a small gang of elk come out of the trees and
feed cautiously on the far side of the meadow. I closed my eyes and heard the wind rush
through the feathers of the birds as they passed.
The spring morning Mt. Saint Helens erupted, May 18, 1980, I was cutting
firewood. I heard a sound, a sonic boom or an explosion rumbling off in the distance, and
wondered if it were the volcano. I decided such a thing couldn't happen and went back to
work, but later as I drove to camp, I saw a dark line on the horizon and smelled rain.
Then, as I unloaded my wood, the world went strange: chipmunks vanished, birds quit
singing, and a gray snow fell. Someone yelled from the bunkhouse that it was ash, but I
already knew. We danced and rejoiced in what the news would later say was a danger to
touch, and gathered around the radio for the news.
Dave Johnson and I walked to the pond in the silence. We heard nothing, no cars
or trucks, just the sizzle of gray falling to the ground. We could see well enough, yet the
sky lacked a horizon. It was as though the world had ended, World War III begun, and
the fallout reached us even here. We sat at the pond’s spillway talking low; an otter came
up the creek hunting trout; he saw us and vanished. We started back to camp, the ash still
falling. By pure chance, I walked on the hard-packed berm of gravel at the side of the
road where my weight didn't matter. We stopped and looked back, and Dave noticed only
he was leaving tracks. He turned and eyed me suspiciously. "Now you know my secret," I
said. He shook his head. "Loess in the ozone again." The ash stopped after a few hours;
we got barely an inch on the district. It coated the trees and brush, blew up again and
again at the slightest touch. After a few seasons it washed from the leaves and grass,
leaving another line of history in the soil.
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Winter comes, according to the locals, on Halloween. Frost is possible any time of
year, and the snows often begin in September, but the first snow that sticks is usually near
Halloween. The rain had been steady for weeks, our coats and boots always wet, and with
the end of Daylight Savings, the darkness came shortly after we got off work. Bill
Heckman weather, when he’d put on his green rain gear and disappear with his pitch all
day. Only the plumes of smoke marked his passage. He’d retired years ago, the district
threw a party for him only a few people attended, and we heard that with emphysema, his
health failing, he’d moved back to Oregon, quit drinking and found religion.
I'd been feeling dissatisfied with my life, my work, the last few seasons but I
could not admit it to myself. Besides, I could not imagine doing anything else. I needed
the job, and I needed the woods, two things I’d finally come to see as separate. But it
would be many more seasons before I could contemplate leaving for good.
There was little to do now but eat and sleep. We were seasonals and we knew it,
and we were restless for change. Maybe some of the men would drive into town and
watch football at the Headquarters Bar, and some of us would sit in Virgil’s room and
listen to his stories. The loggers, too, would be quitting soon, to wait for the ground to
freeze so they could move their equipment without tearing up the roads. Once the snow
made work impossible, or made the roads impassable, we would be laid off for the
season. The few married men were eager to go home to the families they saw only
occasionally through the summer. Most of us were single though, and we would move on
to other jobs until we could return. The students who worked the fall had a couple of
months before the next semester began. Dave Johnson and Tom Weunschel would hole
up for the winter in Missoula or Orofino, living alone, surviving on unemployment and
what they had managed to save. I’d move back to Lewiston and look for work. My
brother had recently moved to Seattle, a city I had never seen, and I thought about
visiting him. Mostly I would stay in Lewiston and watch the weather.
I often stopped at the pond on my way out. The meadow lay blanketed with snow.
Only ravens called, the trees blue against the ridge, and to the south the space between
horizon and cloud nearly black. Steve Munson or Don Logsdon and I came back
occasionally to cross-country ski, but the mountains in winter are not something I know
well. But I know few things look as cold as Musselshell closed up tight for the winter.
Musselshell Creek was little more than a channel between ice, with snow built up along
the banks. We heard chickadees, a pileated woodpecker, and saw the tracks of deer and
snowshoe hares. We skied the clearcut, the old roads, smelled the clean scent of firs
against the snow and held our breath in the quiet. And I knew if I came back in late
winter, I would smell the ground beginning to thaw. The forest was not in that deep sleep
I have heard described, only dozing, waiting, just waiting.