Friday, October 22, 2004
Highlights from the Archive #2
While the good folks at WVPE are using the Chronicles broadcast time again this week to build up the station’s membership list, we’d like to offer a sampler of highlights from the archive. Don’t forget to support the station—thanks.
Joe Chaney
The Call of the Sandhill Cranes—The fun of sandhill crane watching is seeing them land. They fly over the viewing platform stretched out stiffly at first, until they get about a hundred feet from their landing spot, and then they relax in the air and drift downward. Each landing party seems to be a subgroup of a congregation on the ground and flies obliquely for a little ways as though searching, listening for familiar calls from below. The landing itself is like a parachute jump. At thirty feet up, they lower their legs, raise their heads but hold their wings above like an umbrella from which their upright bodies dangle, and they float to earth and land with a hop or two.
Louise Collins
Holiday Lights—Each year in the short, dark days of late December, I indulge in a secular pilgrimage to Winding Brook. The residents of this Mishawaka subdivision compete annually to out-do their neighbours with holiday decorations, spelling out festive cheer in twinkling lights. On my first trip, I resisted the allure of the seasonal glitz and glitter. It jarred my energy-wise sensibility to see so many watts frittered away for the sake of making a plastic reindeer glow. But the illuminations have become a popular holiday treat for many local families, who drive through the subdivision with parking lights only, and the organisers collect donations for worthy charities. I’ve come to admire the event as a postmodern American folk art.
Jonathan Nashel
How Paris Turned Into South Bend—I guess I was expecting beret-sporting French intellectuals, dangerous black-clad sylphs on mopeds, and Gene Kelly dancing in the rain. The non-Hollywood reality of Paris led me to think that if I’m going to shell out lots of hard cash to go abroad I want to see some damn foreigners and I want to see them acting all foreign. Not angry foreigners or especially snooty foreigners mind you, but just different than your typical Hoosier. But the foreignness in France is being sifted away through the gentle wash of the American Empire.
April Lidinsky
Painting on Windows—These days, when I look up from the New York Times to gaze out our big front window, everything I see is framed by images my two daughters painted on the glass. In washable tempera paints, they rendered lovely, drippy versions of candy canes, holly leaves, and other emblems of the recent holiday. This crazy activity of painting on windows has been handed down from my mother, who, in the early 1970s, was so cool that she made her own yogurt, granola, and culottes. One year, rather than hanging a Halloween decoration on our door, my mom painted a gigantic and truly scary witch face on our front window. My friends were impressed. And that left an impression on me.
Ken Smith
Taking the Family Camping—On any summery Friday afternoon, the highways in this part of the country are filled with vacationing people who are, essentially, just trading places with each other. Each weekend when Chicago sends a cohort of its good citizens camping and fishing at, say, northern Indiana’s Potato Creek State Park, then, in return, South Bend sends a team of its taxpayers to pitch a tent and drown a few worms at Illinois’ Lake Shelbyville. If you’re being traded like this sometime, I hope you’ll finish the long drive and pull into a shady campsite without any of the kids belting out what you yourself might be thinking: “Hey, this is just like the campground near our house!”
Or browse through the author and topic archives yourself. Thanks for listening and for reading Michiana Chronicles.
A random selection from more than 300 Michiana Chronicles -- refresh the browser to see another set:
Joe Chaney -- More essays by Joe
Louise Collins -- More essays by Louise
April Lidinsky -- More essays by April
Jonathan Nashel -- More essays by Jonathan
Jeff Nixa -- More essays by Jeff
Ken Smith -- More essays by Ken
Jeanette Saddler Taylor -- More essays by Jeanette
