The winter coldness brings back warm memories

Published 6:00 am Sunday, January 11, 2015

Column: Woods & Water, by Dick Herfindahl

I know the cold weather and bone-chilling wind have a lot of folks hunkered down in their easy chairs — and rightfully so. As an outdoors enthusiast and a youth hockey coach, my easy chair nights don’t come as often as I’d sometimes like. On the other hand, I find that coaching and staying active usually makes me feel like I am actually younger than my years. There was a posting on Facebook that kind of sums it up. It said, “Inside every older person is a younger person wondering what the H#@* happened.”

In a way I don’t mind the cold because you don’t have to shovel it, but cold combined with snow and wind are a whole different story. As I was shoveling the driveway in the morning with a bone-chilling wind attacking my body, I realized that my chopper mittens were not doing the job, and my fingers began to get that old feeling I’d get as a kid when I had over-stayed my visit while playing in the outdoors. My fingers began to tingle and hurt, which means that when I get inside to warm up things would only get worse.

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As a kid, I had chopper mittens with wool liners to keep my hands from freezing. Back then, wool was our good-old-days version of Thinsulate. We also wore wool stocking caps, scarves, mittens, shirts, union suits, etc. You get the idea. Those days are long gone only to be replaced by the days of Thinsulate and Gor-Tex where everything is lighter, warmer and drier.

Getting back to the winter thing, when the temperatures get as cold as they have been lately even the snow makes noise when you walk on it. When walking on snow in sub-zero temperatures, it seems to crackle, squeak and moan whenever you take a step. Yes, this does bring back that memory of winters past when I’d be bundled up in all that wool with a scarf draped across my face to keep from breathing in the cold air while I played outdoors in the frigid cold. Breathing through that scarf was not without its own set of issues because your warm moist breath would eventually cause the scarf to ice up.

Back then, there wasn’t much that could keep us kids from being outside. Let’s face it, the alternative was staying inside and listening to the radio, re-reading old comic books and playing with the same toys you had played with a thousand times. I can still remember how excited I was on the day that my dad bought our 19-inch Zenith TV. We were probably the last ones in the neighborhood to have a TV. We were the ones who could least afford it, but Dad decided to throw caution to the wind and buy it. I believe the place he purchased it was called Gordon Electric at the time, and he could afford it because they let him make payments. Those were the days before credit cards and credit checks. It was a time when store owners trusted a man’s word which was as good as his signature.

Yes, that TV was the start of an era for me, not because it made me give up the outdoors, but because when I was not playing outdoors I could watch old movies: “The Little Rascals,” “Laurel and Hardy” and so many good shows of that time. Old cowboy movies were probably my favorite along with “Sergeant Preston of the Yukon.” Before we had TV, I would hurry home from school and run next door to my Aunt Ruby’s to watch “Johnny Weissmuller,” as Jungle Jim, who wrestled alligators and saved folks from man-eating lions. TV reception in those days wasn’t exactly great, and I can still see my dad adjusting the picture by moving the ball of tin foil that we had wrapped around the antenna wire. We usually got three channels and on a good day, which was Saturday in my world. If I could bring in WCCO, I could watch Axle and his dog, “Roundhouse Rodney” or “Soupy Sales.”

TV was only a pacifier to get me through until us neighborhood kids got together to do what we loved best, and that was play outdoors and explore the vast wilderness of the slough. Winter was our favorite time because we could trek through the snow on top of the ice and spend countless hours exploring and playing without getting too wet. Wet would happen if you spent too much time rolling around in the snow or if you stepped next to the slough grass and your foot went through the hollow ice. Wool socks and long johns were no help when you had an overshoe full of water and a long walk home. This would always mean the end of a fun day for the unlucky explorer who filled his boot with slough water. Believe me, it was a long walk back home when you have a cold, wet foot and the temperatures are well below freezing. In case you haven’t figured it out, it happened to me on more than one occasion, but I still kept coming back for more.

Until next time, stay warm and remember that it’s always time well spent when you spend it in our great Minnesota outdoors.

Please keep our troops in your thoughts and prayers during the upcoming year. They are the reason that we are able to enjoy all the freedoms that we enjoy today.

Dick Herfindahl’s column appears in the Tribune each Sunday.