Sunday, November 23, 2014

Just An Old Boker Knife               


Why, you could buy just about anything you wanted at  Wilbur Powers's store there on the banks of the Licking River in Magoffin County. He had gears for the mules, flour for baking, and for fifteen cents the kids at the one roomed school could buy bologna, oyster crackers and a coke a cola for lunch. That's where my grandfather bought his long barrel .38 special he carried in a shoulder holster under his coat. And, that’s where he purchased his Boker knife.

“I don’t know when he purchased the knife. I know he had it when he bought his gun in 1950. I figure he bought the knife sometime in the ‘30’s” my father said when I asked “How old is the knife”.

My grandfather loved his pocket knife. He carried it everywhere he went. He used it to work on practically everything and when he wasn't working he would pull  it out along with a cedar whittling stick he carried and he would whittle. Oh, he never created any wonderful work of art, never carved a fine family heirloom. He just made tiny shavings that twisted as he carved them from the larger stick. He called them whirly Q’s. Granny put the piles of whirly Q’s in tiny bags made from cheese cloth and  put them in her dresser drawers to keep the clothes  smelling fresh.

One day while Paw was disking a bottom with his mules, Barney and Tobe, getting ready to set out tobacco, he lost his knife. He knew he had it when he started work because he used it to work Ole Tobe’s collar. He looked for his knife every day, even had us looking for it when we worked the tobacco. After looking for a few hours one winter day, Paw said “Guess it’s just gone. Don’t matter much. It ain't worth nothin’. Probably couldn't sell it for $5.00 if I tried”.

The next spring as Dad was disking the bottom with Barney and Tobe, getting ready to set out the tobacco, something shiny caught his eye. He thought it was one of those pretty rocks with the flecks in it so he went on about the task at hand. On his next round it seemed the sun caught that shiny thing and cast a beam straight to his eye. He just had to check it out. He followed that beam out into the middle of the field but it seemed to be coming from nothing. He bent down to to look closer and sure enough he pulled Paw’s knife from the ground.

Dad couldn’t wait to give the knife to his father. He cleaned it up the best he could there in the field. At dinner, Dad, with the knife held tight, held his hand out toward Paw.

“Humph, what is it”, Paw asked, “I’m eatin' my dinner”.

 “Well, just hold out your hand and you’ll see”, Dad said.

When Paw held his hand out flat and Dad dropped the knife in his hand, there were no words to say. Paw, shook the knife in his hand, he rubbed the handles with his thumb, and looked from the knife to Dad and back to the knife. He shook his head up and down and from side to side, put the knife in his pocket and continued to eat his dinner.

A few months before my grandfather died in 1983, he and Dad were sitting in the glider on the front porch whittlin’. When Paw was through, he shut the old Boker closed his hand around it and held his hand out toward Dad.

“What!” Dad said.

“Well, it should be yours. You found it. ain’t worth much, probably couldn't get $5.00 out of it if you tried.

There were no words for Dad to say. He took the knife, rubbed the handles with his thumb, tossed it up and down a bit, and put it in his pocket. He carried that knife over 30 years. He used it for almost everything, even to work on Ole Tobe’s gears. Sometimes he would pull it out just to whittle. Oh, he never created any great works of art, no family heirlooms, just made whirly Q’s from a stick of cedar he carried in his pocket. Mom kept some in the dresser drawers to freshen the clothes.

About three weeks ago, I saw Dad with his little knife collection out. He picked up each knife, rubbed the handles, and held them in his hand as if to whittle.

“What are you doing”, I asked my father.

“Well, I’m looking for a good pocket knife. This old one of Paw Huff’s, well, the handles are loose and some of the blades are loose and I’m afraid I might lose it so I’m gonna put it up to keep. I don’t know  why, it ain’t worth nothing. Probably couldn't sell it for $5.00 if I tried. But  I still wanna keep it.”

Dad reached me the knife to look at. “Do you think it could be fixed”, he asked

I held the knife in my hand, it seemed to fit. It felt good. I rubbed the handles with my thumb and tossed it up and down in my hand and thought “if only you could talk oh what stories you could tell’ “Dad I know a knife maker, let me take it and see if he can work on it”. Dad agreed.

The knife maker thought it might be beyond his skills to work on such an heirloom. To no avail, I questioned everyone about getting the knife worked on. No one seemed to know. I had almost given up hope when Gene came in and handed me a neon yellow card with “Danny Ball” and a phone number on it. Underneath he had circled the word knife.

“I hear he can work on your dad’s knife. You should call him” he said

I called Danny. Told him the story of the knife. Told  him it probably wasn't worth anything, probably couldn’t get $5.00 from it I tried to sell it but it’s worth is immeasurable to my father”.

“Yes, I work on knives, bring it over. I’ll take a look at it”. My heart was filled with hope.

“Oh, My! Danny Ball said when he saw the near 100 year old knife, “That’s an old Boker. Look at those handles, why they’re wore paper thin. This knife has really been used. It’s been cared for too”. Danny opened the knife “This is one of the best knives you could ever buy. Them old fellers, they didn’t buy knifes to put in a collection, to look at, they bought knives to use. And this was one of the best”.

Danny looked at me and continued to talk “I can fix the knife but I won’t promise anything about the handles. These handles are made of bone and they get brittle with age. I’m afraid they might shatter when I start working with them. But”, he said, “if they do, I have some authentic Boker handles I can replace them with”.

A few days later Gene picked up the knife. It had new handles. It must have looked exactly like it did when Paw Huff bought it from Wilbur Powers, all shiny and new. Danny had cleaned the blades and sharpened them to a fine edge.

“He said he was afraid to mess with the old handles but he sent them back to you”, Gene said.

 I picked up those old handles and rubbed them with my thumbs. All those years of work and whittling had worn them slick. I could barely see a shadow where the Boker emblem had once told the brand. I put them in a jewelry box to bring to dad. It was almost like they were sacred. So much family history, an heirloom I would never have expected to hold in my hands. Just old knife handles….without a knife…with no value.

 I couldn’t wait to give Dad the knife. He was eating supper when I got there. I went straight to the table with the knife clasped tight in my hands. I held them close to my  father’s plate.

 “What is it? I’m eating supper”, my father said.

 “Hold out your hands. I've got something for you”.

 As I dropped the knife in my dad’s gnarled and twisted fingers, I said “It’s Paw Huff’s knife. I got it fixed for you. He couldn't put the original handles on it but those are authentic Boker handles and he gave me the old ones.”

 Dad looked at the knife. He bounced it in his hands. He rubbed the handles with his thumbs He looked at me, then the knife. He shook his head from side to side, then up and down, then he put the knife in his pocket and went on eating supper.

 The next day Dad asked “Honey, if I whittle and make a mess in the floor, will you clean it up for me?”

 “Dad, if you will make me some of them cedar whirly Q’s for my dresser drawers, I’ll clean up anything”.

 After he got through whittling he put the little black jewelry box on the coffee table.  He said “Honey, I have no reason to keep these handles, if you want ‘em, you can have ‘em”.



 Those bone handles have almost a hundred years of use by my grandfather and father. I intend to have a necklace made from them, maybe two. Neither of them will be worth much, probably can’t get $5.00 from them, even if I try.. But for me, they will be an everlasting hug from two of the most important men in my life. Just the worn out handles off an old Boker knife….not worth anything at all….

Tuesday, April 29, 2014



                  Love and Family and the Hills of Kentucky
They were teenagers in love. They stood before the preacher and vowed to love and honor each other “until death do us part”. Joined as one in the eyes of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, they were ready to change the world.
The young couple felt as if they needed to fly, to spread their wings beyond the ancient hills where their family planted roots many generations ago. The young married couple wanted away from the small community where everyone knew everything about everybody and family was far too close….and in their opinion, too nosey. Their dream included a new start where they would create their own place, their own future, where they could make new friends and be away from the same old things they had known all their young lives.  
He soon graduated from college with a degree in journalism. She wanted a career in education. They decided to chase their dream so they packed everything they had in garbage bags threw it in the back of their old jalopy and headed south leaving behind family and loved ones and the landscape that had shaped them.
The old car made it to the land of sunshine and white beaches. Their journey took them to Miami Florida. Night life, the endless ocean, career opportunities, new friends to be made, a whole new life awaited them.
A tiny apartment not far from the beach and in walking distance to all the major event venues seemed just perfect. They were ecstatic with life and each other.
He soon found his dream job as sports journalist with the largest newspaper in Florida, the Miami Sun. She took some time away from college and got a part time job at the public library. He attended all the major sports events, met the biggest names in the industry…she filled her spare time making their apartment uniquely theirs. Happiness radiated all around them.
Together they spent evenings at the beach, going to concerts and just being together. They saw all the big name bands, not the little local groups like back home. Weekends were spent at the beach or sports events. There was never a dull moment in their lives. They were truly living the dream.
The hills were far behind them. Conversations with family back home were few and far between.
            As time flew by it seemed the concerts were all the same and the large crowds were hard to handle. The beach didn’t create the same thrill as it did at first. They sat in the sand and looked across the endless ocean but the excitement wasn’t there anymore. It was always the same.
            He knew something was weighing on her mind because her giggle wasn’t perky and she recently had become very quiet, almost withdrawn. 
            “Something doesn’t seem right”, she said one evening. “I feel something is missing”.  Days went by then she came to him and said quietly, “I want to have a baby”.
            He felt the same. Perhaps a little one would be exactly what they needed to renew their enthusiasm toward life. Yes, a baby would make their family whole.
            A few weeks later the EPT showed positive. The same thrill they felt the day they were wed filled the tiny apartment. They couldn’t wait. Happiness radiated from their faces. They began looking for a larger apartment and buying baby clothes.
            “I don’t want to tell Mom on the phone about the baby. Let’s go for a visit” she said.
            It had been three years since they left the family and hills behind. Maybe a visit would do wonders. Maybe it would remind them of  why they left their childhood home far behind.
            They threw a few things in the back of the car and took off.
            The conversation was lively for a while.
            “What will we name her” she asked
            He called off names of great sports figures.
            She shrugged them off.
            She talked about pink paint and ballerina shoes
            He spoke highly of baseball and college sports
The car became very quiet with each watching in awe as the hills of Central Appalachia popped into the horizon.
            She spoke first “Who will watch our baby?”
            “We will find a day care place” he answered
            “But how will we know if they really watch her”?
            Both were remembering their childhood and the days spent with family, on the farm, and growing up with cousins all around.
            “Let’s not worry about it right now”, he said, “we will find someone to come to the apartment if that’s what you want”.
            She remained quiet.
            “Look there’s where we saw our first movie together”, her voice trembled
            “And there’s the Mountain Arts Center where we went to our first concert” he was excited too.
            As the car followed the twists and turns of the mountain terrain, both knew what they had been missing. It was early spring. Red buds and dogwoods lined the roadways. They were filled with awe at the beauty they once took for granted. “This is what’s missing”, he said. “The hills are never the same”.
            They pulled into the drive way of “home” and family was waiting in the yard, by the road and poured from all doors to meet them.
            Hugs and kisses and “where you been so long”, and “welcome Home” and “we’ve missed you” and more hugs and more kisses welcomed them. She glanced at him from the corner of her eye but turned away when she saw the tear on his cheek.
            A country supper with all the trimmings was a part of the gathering. With the announcement of a new baby, the house broke into cheers.
            That night they sat on the front porch, gazed at the stars in the night sky and listened to the sounds of their childhood. Crickets and whippoorwills filled the air with song while song and lightening bugs danced to the tune.
            “I don’t want a stranger to keep our baby” she said.
            He put his arm around her shoulders. He knew she was holding back tears.
            “Who do you want to be the babysitter”, he asked as gently as possible.
            “I want to come home. I want our baby to grow up with family and know where he came from and who he is. Can we come home”. Now her tears were more than she could hold back.
            “I think that’s the greatest idea yet”, he said
            He gave two weeks’ notice, she packed up the apartment. They moved back to the hills that wrapped them in love and bought a mobile home. He got a job with the Salyersville Independent as sports editor. He covered every high school game in the region. She got a job at McDonalds. They went to concerts of local bands and danced to traditional music. Happiness radiated from them.
            That little boy, named after two great sports stars, grew up with family and is now a sophomore in college.
            And they truly lived happily ever after.