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Tuesday, 19 July 2011 21:55
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Tamarack Tea

  • Written by  Bill Anderson
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Tamarack Tea

I remember, as a kid, an old Tamarack tree that guarded our well at the hunt camp. By day, I would hunt grouse in and around its lower branches. At night, it became a dark and spooky place that little boys liked to stay away from

 

It was the perfect place for an overactive imagination. I found that out the hard way on a dark, cold deer season night. I was starting to enjoy the warmth of the camp stove when dad announced that we were out of water. Normally, I would not worry about such a comment but this time his voice sounded different. Or perhaps it was his ‘I am looking at, YOU, kid stare’ as he reached for my coat and flashlight. A feeling of impending doom surged through my entire body. Outside, a slight breeze began to awaken the ‘fang-like’ needles of an old tamarack.

 

Sensing my fear and hesitation, dad pulled me out of my over-worked imagination by saying something like, “You don’t need to be afraid of the dark. It’s time you got used to walking alone…at night.”

 

I felt like reminding him that it was not the dark that scared me. It was that old tamarack tree.

 

Slowly, dad ushered me to the cabin door and handed me a light and the water pot. The door creaked closed behind me as I headed down the foreboding trail to the well. Everything was fine until the trees around me moved closer together and blocked the light coming from the cabin windows. The beacons of hope were quickly overcome by the awakening darkness.

 

I was theirs now. Their branches, like giant fingers, crept out towards me. I did what any kid would do.

 

I started whistling. This was a mistake.

 

My barely audible tune woke up the ‘beast of beasts’ lurking under the branches of the pine and spruce tendrils. The beaked monster circled around me. It was attempting to block my approach to the well. I ran faster and it kept pace. I dove behind an old tree stump, held my breath and waited. The giant grouse missed my diving maneuver and noisily crashed with a thunderous flap into the surrounding night. I peered around the stump and my shaking light caught illuminated a small section of the well. I ran from my hiding place and made a final, timid approach to the well.

 

Wham! I tripped on the tamarack’s gnarly roots and landed looking up into the tree’s needled gaze. If trees snickered – I just heard one. My flashlight fell a few yards from me, but through the moonlight  I could see the water pail resting against the side of the well. I crawled over to the well, slid the lid over and dipped the pot into the dark waters. Wanting to make sure I had more water than ‘floaties’, I crept to my flashlight and revealed the inside of the pot.

 

It was full of tamarack needles. Again, the well’s rooted sentry seemed to snicker.

 

I poured the water back into the sandy well and re-dipped the pot. Just then, a branched cracked out in the darkness. I slid the lid back onto the well and and my legs hit ‘warp-speed’ in a matter of seconds. Drops of water flew out with every step. I did not slow until I was safely within the glow of the camp stove’s fire. When the door flew open, from my hasty arrival, I handed my prize to dad.

 

His reaction was mixed and definitely not what I expected. He brought the pot closer to the light and, together, we saw water that the water was clouded with sand and yellowing tamarack needles.

 

It looked like a kind of tamarack tea.

 

“You poured the water back into the well didn’t you?”, he sternly asked, “We can’t drink this and it will take a day or two for the sand to settle again”. I thought about telling him about the scary grouse, moving branches and the snickering tamarack.

 

Across the room, Grandpa laughed quietly; as if to remind my dad of a time long ago when his son did the same thing. Two days later dad took me back to the well (at night) and showed me how to get a better portion of clear water.

 

There were no gnarly branched tendrils.

 

No stalking grouses.

 

No tamarack sneers.

 

Figures.

 

Bringing this story back to the present. I am looking across the room at my daughter and wondering when it will be her turn to go for some tamarack tea.

 

Should I warn her about the old Tamarack?

 

*This post is another import from my old blog location

Last modified on Tuesday, 19 July 2011 22:17
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Bill Anderson

Bill Anderson

Bill Anderson is a Canadian Outdoor Blogger at his own blog, Muskoka Outdoors. He also is a blog contributor to the World Fishing Network website.

Many of his adventures can also be read on other media website outlets like the Chicago Sun Times websites and The Examiner.

Bill has a biology degree and is equally comfortable with a spinning, fly rod and hunting rifle.

Website: muskokaoutdoors.ca

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