Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Blue Ridge Mountain Home

Well it’s been a quiet week at Appalachian, my chosen home. Long ago and far away, I left Dixie, traipsed out of the hot sunshine and declared my homestead in the high country. Here in the car this evening, traveling with my lifetime mountain home companion, mother of our three young’uns. They’re all grown, up now, having left the nest, flew off to Duke and Carolina. . . flown the coop. We’re driving home from Charlotte, after visiting kin folk in the Queen City where American independence was first declared, back in the day. . . 1775, I think it was. A car dealer on our route displays a super flagpole. Old Glory ripples largely in the evening breeze, assuring us that our flag is still there. We need not ask “Oh say, does that star spangled yet wave in the land of the free and the home of the brave?” In other old news, our North Carolina forests thrive, now in their bare golden winter glory, along these miles between our towns. Cruising Booneward on the highway, we’re slightly enlightened as red sails on the sunset, while gold enlightens the skyline of them there hills, up ahead, glowing brilliantly in the distance as we approach our home in dusky glory. We roll into our little town, where Daniel Boone had stopped for a spell, back in the frontier days, where visitors will visit Mast’s old general store, and they’ll stock up with vittles from Lowe’s pretty good grocery, maybe chomp a donut at the Local Lion, or sip vino at. Venture, on King Street downtown. . . maybe buy a book there too, maybe one of my novels (just sayin’). . . they might even set a spell on ole Mrs. Jones’ front porch and watch the visitors down on King Street. Maybe sit on a bench with local music legend, Doc Watson.
Just a block or two south of King Street, some pioneer, Yosef, started a university back in the day, to enlighten folks in them there Appalachian hills. Nowadays young whipper-snappers come from all over the state, and even from places far away, to learn readin’, writin’ and ‘rithmetic, and maybe a little coding along the way, since now in our 21st-century glory, we’re living in cyberspace. When America was new, and frontier land was free, or so we thought. Eventually, we honkies made peace with the native Cherokee folks and the Chippewas, the Mohicans, Hurons. . . and the rest is history. And so I pause to peck these purloined phrases from old memories of old friends sitting on the porch like bookends. Newspaper blown through the grass, disappears in the web, into cyber space, and falls on the old glows of the high peaks of this old friend’s memories. King of Soul

No comments:

Post a Comment