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Featured
In This Issue of
the Winterline Journal :
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Stories:
Memoir
Mementos:
Steve Van Rooy tells us of "Things that Go BOOM!"
Our
Reader's Write:
New
section featuring our readers' comments,
vignettes & articles.
2003
Issues:
March - May
Recipes:
Frank
Cornelius' "Mamma's Hot Dish"...and
a delicious Kulfi (Indian Nutty Ice Cream)
Cultural
Connections:
Stan
and an Indian friend discuss Pakistan and India.
We review the movie, "Bend it Like Beckham".
And Sylvia Staub's poem, "Afternoon in Bengal".
Food
Adventures:
Margaret Deefholts' humorous tribute to two temperamental, but accomplished,
cooks from her childhood.
Reader
Reviews of Farewell the Winterline:
More
from our readers around the globe..
Tidbits & Snippets
Teeny tales, flashbacks & vignettes....worthy of a chuckle, a tear
or a sigh
Newsletter
Staff:
Editor: Cynthia
Brush
Graphics: Bill
Grey
© Copyright 2003 Chipkali
Creations
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MEMOIR MEMENTOS
An unexpected and delightful benefit of publishing my father Stanley Brush's memoir "Farewell The Winterline, Memories of a Boyhood In India" last year are the new friendships we're making with readers from around the world!
Some of these wonderful folks are storytellers, raconteurs,
and authors as well, though not all have published
works. Bill & I have asked several friends if they
would be willing to share their stories with our readers.
Story excerpts will be featured here in The Winterline
Journal and on the upcoming Autobiography & Memoir
section for FarewellTheWinterline.com
Fireworks intensify summer's heat in the States
during the week of our Fourth of July celebrations. I
gardened most of that afternoon surrounded by the occasional
pop, whine, crack, or boom of firecrackers
in the neighborhood. They reached full crescendo in the
night until the wee hours 'round midnight, unnerving
our cat who crept around our ankles (sweet furry boy)
tail
down looking for a quiet place to hide.
I had been mulling over "themes" for this
month's newsletter...and thought since summer is such
a kids' time of year using stories about summertime & kids
would be fun. Naturally I thought of Steve Van Rooy's
terrific tale, "Things That Go BOOM" Enjoy!
Things That Go BOOM!
By Steve Van Rooy
Guns, firecrackers and dynamite. Also home built muzzleloaders.
Anything that went "boom".
It is a wonder we did not blow ourselves up.
I suppose our fascination with things that go boom
started with fireworks. These were available frequently
due to various Indian festivals and they were cheap.
Our purveyor of provisions, the Prakash brothers
at Sisters Bazaar, figured out real quickly that
the Americans would buy all sorts of things that
go boom on (and often well before) the 4th of July
and he was well stocked. Besides the anemic sparklers,
and bottle rockets there were packages of small
firecrackers with fuses all linked so you could light
one and
all of them would go off in sequence. These also
came in a bigger size. Then there were single large
ones, about 4 inches long and about a half inch
in diameter. These really went boom.
The inherent problem with all of these firecrackers
in those days was two fold. One was the powder. The
other the fuse. Sometimes the thing would not go off
at all. It seemed. But it was the wise kid who did
not pick it up for several minutes. The fuses were
often faulty, either burning too quickly or too slowly
and seldom at the rate they were intended. Again, it
was the wise kid who lit and got rid of the thing as
quickly as possible. Even quick was not quick enough
on occasion as the fuse literally went from lit to
boom in an instant. On one memorable occasion, I was
on the chukkar above Bothwell Bank [in Landour, Mussoorie],
lit that sucker, reared back to heave it and zip, BOOM.
The thing went off in my hand. My hand was right by
my ear. It is still ringing. My thumb tingled for weeks.
It was also discovered that with a cigarette you could
have a timed fuse. You light the cigarette. Stick the
fuse in the butt end of an unfiltered cigarette). Set
it below a window somewhere and you could be in your
bed half a mile away before it went off. The boys at
[Woodstock School's] hostel used this to good effect
and pulled a couple great pranks at Midlands. When
the firecrackers started to go off, the staff there
immediately phoned Hostel. The staff at the boys dorm
then checked each room, kept an eye on the hallways
for anyone trying to sneak back....and nothing. The
perpetrators were already in bed giggling themselves
to sleep.

Mason was pretty bold. I was in the Po [restroom]
one day and he had a string of TP [toilet paper] across
the top of the booths and had a fairly large cracker
tied on the end. He lit one end of the TP and suggested
I get back to class real quick. I did. A minute or
so later, kawumpf, the thing went off, muffled but
distinctive.
And of course we had to try to roll our own, always
looking for a bigger bang. This involved taking apart
several large patakas (the Hindi term for fire-crackers,
quaintly onomatopoeic), and amalgamating all the powder
into one much larger firecracker. The trick was not
in a huge amount of powder, we discovered, it was to
make sure the powder you had was wrapped tightly. It
was Mason who finally came up with the ultimate bang...dynamite.
This was procured from Smiley the Sikh on Mullingar
Hill. Mason would stick a small piece, an inch or so,
down the open end of the pipe railings that used to
line the chukkars as a fence. This was stout pipe.
It looked like a pretzel when Mason got done with it.
One day Conrad came to school with flecks of gunpowder
(actually, firecracker powder) burned into the inside
of his right forearm going back all the way to his
armpit. What had happened is that he (and several others)
had a pipe gun made for them in the bazaar. Strictly
illegal, of course. In total violation of school rules
and common sense, of course. It was just a two foot
piece of one inch pipe with a plug welded in the back,
a small hole drilled in the side, and two short pieces
welded onto the pipe, one at the end, one half way
down to grip the thing. You put a firecracker fuse
in the hole. Put in powder. A wad. And shot (gravel
or whatever. You'd light the fuse, point the thing,
and hold on for dear life. Worked great...for a while.
Then the back blew off and Conrad was lucky all he
got was burned. And that was about the last of that.
I got the itch to make muzzle loader when I was a
senior. This was a partially insane idea. Gun control
in India was strict and restrictive. And you darn sure
aren't supposed to make a gun. But I went to Dehra,
finagled a lock and hammer mechanism from Himalayan
Arms, the gun place about a quarter mile from the clock
tower. Then I had one machine shop make me a barrel.
It was about 14" long, and tapered. The owner
looked at me quizzically and asked me just what this
was for. He had a pretty good idea. My explanation
sadly lacked creativity, but he bought it. I took the
barrel to a second machine shop to have a hole put
in on the end. This fellow also deduced what this thing
was for. The nipple fit perfectly into this hole and
was welded in by Kishan, our mechanic.
I then took these components to Sharma, the mistri
[mechanic] at the top of Mullingar. He made anything
of metal, like Khaliq a bit further down the hill.
I showed him what I had--the pieces. Squatting, he
picked up the pieces out of my knapsack. Got up, and
shut the door. What did he want me to have him do?
Well, I needed a stock and I needed the parts assembled.
Looking at me over his round glasses with a sly smile
he said he would do it. He would make the handle for
this little pistol and put the hammer mechanism in
it, figure out the trigger and put it all together.
And he did. And did it well. He knew a little about
guns. Although not a gunsmith, he had helped dudhwalahs
[milk sellers] fix their old muzzleloaders.
The thing worked like a charm. The powder I used was
gun powder we made. One winter dad took us to Tanakpur
(on the western border of Nepal) to visit some old
friends, the Strongs, missionaries who ran an agricultural
mission. They had a farm. And they had a son, Jay.
Jay was a hunter extraordinaire. He had 4-5 guns of
various sorts and vintages and took us pig hunting
one night. We never saw a pig, but we buzzed through
considerable territory on foot without benefit of flashlight
or moon. Jay was so familiar with this area he knew
every track. We could hardly see a thing and here he
was leading us through the pitch black jungle. We got
back late late. But boy, were we impressed!
Jay did not go to Woodstock. He was home schooled
there at the farm. In some respects the freedom he
had, we wished we had. One of the things he did was
teach us how to make gunpowder with ingredients you
can get at your local pharmacy right off the shelf.
And how to reload our shotgun shells (right down to
taking caps apart, and using them to reload our primers.
We even learned how to reload .22 shells. From Tanakpur
we were going to go back via Corbett Park. And even
though they had lived very close (less than 75 miles)
from the park, Jay had never been there. So we took
him with us on the way home. He had never seen so many
cheetal (mid-sized spotted deer) in one place. His
trigger finger itched something fierce. A week later
we put him on a bus back to Tanakpur from Ramnager.
It was Jay's gunpowder concoction that I used in
the little muzzle loading pistol. After the thrill
of the conspiracy of getting it made and assembling
the parts, and shooting it some, the thought of getting
caught and getting into serious "doo doo" [trouble]
overcame any notions to use it much. Not even my
folks knew of it until much later. Because the pistol
was not licensed, I could not sell it for much and
ended up practically giving the gun away before I
left India.
Not long ago I was with my family at a local fireworks
display on the 4th. Big bangs, way up in the sky. Sophisticated
patterns. Lots of color. But awfully sterile I thought.
No smelling the powder. No ringing ears. No lighting
a large firecracker with a stick of incense and heaving
it as quickly as possible. No fun at all.
You can email Steve at steve_vanrooy@sil.org
© Copyright
2003, Steve Van Rooy
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