September/October 1988
By the Mother Earth News editors
WELL SIR, IT'S BEEN SO LONG SINCE the traveling rail riders of the Plumtree Crossing General Assembly have been home (21 issues, to be exact!) that a good many of you readers probably don't even know where Plumtree Crossing is. Let me correct that right now.
RELATED CONTENT
ENJOY OLD-TIME TENNESSEE CREASY GREENS! March/April 1984 This forageable is so popular in the South...
Fourth in a series on the best sections in North America in which to pursue a rural lifestyle, incl...
Cooking and preparing with persimmons, including recipes for persimmon fruit salad, bread, pudding,...
How to harvest and prepare another bountiful "free for the eating" crop: Persimmons. Croley shares ...
Last Laugh November/December 1986 Progress might have been all right once but it has gone on too lo...
Plumtree Crossing is related by name to Plum Nelly, Tennessee (a little burg" plum" out of Georgia and "nelly" out of Tennessee), but of P.C. is actually plum out of near and nelly out of far away. Its center (actually, its only it) is Sylvester T. Pennywhistle's General Store at the crossing itself. That junction joins two seldom-clogged rural arteries, the first of which heads toward Erosion junction, the capital of Barren County, while the other is the kind of twisty mountain back road that never gets where it's headed 'cause every time it goes around a curve it meets itself coming back.
At that crossing, on the front porch of that general store, on a recent hot July day (the kind that's so dry the trees follow the dogs around), our friends perched and parched on their benches and rocking chairs and engaged in their most charming (and highly developed) native folk art.
That's right, the boys decided to have a lying contest. According to the official rules, the losers would have to spring for a round of Nehi sodas and Moon Pies. Just to make things interesting, Ott Bartlett (the oldest and biggest liar of the bunch) was appointed judge. Anyone who told a tale Ott admitted he didn't believe would be declared the winner.
"Heck, I'll end this contest right now," Lafe Higgins began. "I used to have a coonhunting dog so good I could show her a board and she'd go racin' off in the woods to find a hide to fit it. Once, though, she spotted my missus's ironing board and went hunting for a raccoon big enough to fit that. I like to never got her back.
"It took me a year to find her," Lafe went on. "When I finally did, sure enough, she'd treed a coon so big it'd must had a bear for a grandpa. Not only that, that dog'd had pups during that time, and all three youngsters were cryin' `treed' like their ma!"
Lafe figured he'd be walking off with the persimmons after that whopper, but Ott didn't even look up. He just pulled his pocketknife out of his pants, opened the blade and said, "I remember that dog. She drowned in my well, and I made gloves out of her hide. The next time I saw a raccoon, those gloves jumped off my fingers, grabbed that coon and choked it to death."
Lafe had to fold his hand at that, so Clarence Smithers went to work. "Speaking of hunting, I used to be pretty good at making my own duck calls. I made one so good once that it called in three wooden decoys. We had to shoot 'em through the chest to keep 'em from landing on us!"