Back
before the earth cooled completely, I was a reporter for the
newspaper in
Victorville, California. Victorville is a high desert town
between L.A. and Las
Vegas and is celebrated in folklore as “where the car broke
down as I was
trying to get to Barstow.”
And every
spring about this time, that ol’
desert country tries to outdo itself in setting new records in
how hard the
wind blows. It’s not always the same, of course. Sometimes
there’s a bunch of
sand and dust in the wind and sometimes it’s clear skies and
there’s just a
mountain or two in the wind. But it blows.
If there was
anything or anyone out in that
desert that was unusual or off the beaten path, I covered it.
You know, Iron
Water Alice who soaked in iron water (of course) to increase
her psychic
potency, “Guv” Reeve who lived with a harem of well-wishing
church ladies and
ran for governor every four years, the beat goes on. Polite
people who answered
the phone at the paper referred unusual phone calls to “the
color story
reporter named Slim.” Sounded better than weirdo writer,
didn’t it?
And one March,
two young boys called in from
Apple Valley, about five miles to the east, and reported that
someone had
stolen their tent. They had set the tent up in the back yard
because they
wanted to be tough outdoorsmen, of course, and this was a good
way to start. The
tent had a floor and walls and a roof, of course, was pegged
solidly to the
desert, but when they went out the next morning, some s.o.b.
had stolen it!
The sheriff’s
office wouldn’t even take a
report on it, but the Victor Valley Daily Press would, by
golly. So the word
went out to every windblown acre of the high desert, and the
crime was solved.
Yes, it seemed an 80-year-old man who had a little
cement-block shack in
Lucerne Valley, about 20 miles east of the launch pad back
yard, found a
full-grown tent in one of his elm trees about 10 feet off the
ground.
One little
rip, but some tape took care of
that. Thank the Lord for freedom of the press. And spring
zephyrs that make a
reporter’s job fun.
--------
Brought
to you by Hug-a-Horse Thrift Store in Edgewood, NM. Good
folks work
there. https://www.thriftstores.net/store/7383/hug-a-horse-thrift-store/