You can’t stop progress: Ozarkian Rearview
By K. H. Ackroyd
Lake of the Ozarks in Midwest Missouri is changed. One way roads
of Highways 54 East and 54 West dizzies me. Backtracks and left turns brakes
the 65 mph speed limit. Exits and merge redefine the trek with names of;
“Passover,” “Parkway” and “New.”
“Passover,” “Parkway” and “New.”
The old stillrunner’s directions preambles and prompts some not so distant Ozarkian
memories.
“Just go down the road a piece, past the widder’s (widow’s) place and hang a right at the “T.” The big ol’ elm will point the way.”
Directed down meandering gravel roads, no map nor GPS, the
destination; a given.
Now, the “big ol’ elm” has fallen. The “widder’s place,” a
paint-peeling, tin-roofed, wood-slat home, has in its stead, a modular prefab
of cookie cutter ilk. Lost is the craftsmanship enabled by pride in gentle non
clear-cutting harvest. Select wood, once home and shelter to generations of an
Ozarkian family, becomes crumbled kindle.
The blackberry patch, with supportive weathered, lean-to
fencing; dual sacrifices to a perfectly
manicured, invisible fenced lawn. Small saplings punctuate a groomed landscape.
Evidence magnificent is this homage to a commercialized channel of Gardening
Nouveau.
The Barn Owl calls tree his new home; he is a reluctant hunter.
No field, hence, no field mice. And the rat eating black snake is banished and
garners no eco-understanding.
The bend of tree still points to water. Her purpose expires. She
sloughs her bark in obsolescent surrender.
Honeysuckle, fresh mown hay and rain before the rumble, blows
trace faint. Wafting Whisper newly
names usurped abundance. Fading is the odoriferous reminder.
Faster now. Highway 54 tracks faster. All is small in rear
viewed Ozarkian memory.
Image Credits:
Lake of the Ozarks - Missouri's Premier Lake Destination
Flickr Creative Commons - Jo Naylor
Flickr Creative Commons - derekGavey
Image Credits:
Lake of the Ozarks - Missouri's Premier Lake Destination
Flickr Creative Commons - Jo Naylor
Flickr Creative Commons - derekGavey
6 comments:
This is so true - and beautifully written! progress has made most of the country look identical; you can't tell if you're in iowa, Missouri or Virginia anymore. It's all the same prefab, factory produced, look-a-like.
Thank you Joleene for your wonderful comment! Thank you also for your gorgeous photo I used in this writing: "Gravel Road" Looking at it evokes many fond and much treasured memories.
I see you're holding 'Shades of Gray' in your profile pic, you racy devil you. ; D
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