Usually wherever we go shenanigans are sure to follow so hopefully we will have some excitement on this trip and I will have something to write home about.
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Back in the early days of our married life The Big Guy and I lived in a Sheep Wagon.
 What’s a sheep wagon, you ask? (See picture above—shake head in 
disbelief then GASP!) Well, it’s kind of like an old time camper, only 
smaller…with fewer amenities…and less square footage.
Inside this little house on the prairie was a bed (slightly larger than twin size), a table that slid out from underneath the bed, a small cast iron stove that had been retrofitted with propane, one small cabinet and one shelf. We also had a tea kettle, a dish pan and a bowl. Water was hauled in and stored in cream cans and rationed as if it was gasoline and WW2 was still going on.
Inside this little house on the prairie was a bed (slightly larger than twin size), a table that slid out from underneath the bed, a small cast iron stove that had been retrofitted with propane, one small cabinet and one shelf. We also had a tea kettle, a dish pan and a bowl. Water was hauled in and stored in cream cans and rationed as if it was gasoline and WW2 was still going on.
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| This photo is of the actual sheep wagon that we lived in. | 
    
 We spent one winter in the sheep wagon too, which was not so 
serendipitous. Baths were taken in a dishpan and we literally froze our 
butts off when having to go outside to use the “facilities”. I was stuck
 inside the 7' x 12' box, 24-7 and my days were spent painting ceramic 
mice, which would become Christmas ornaments once I stuck a metal hook 
through their heads. (This was after my lobotomy, by the way) The up 
side was that the sheep wagon was so small that it could be heated with 
the strike of one farmers match. Two matches and we didn’t need sock 
hats in bed. The propane stove was only used for heating water because 
when we fired it up the sheep wagon was turned into a sweat box in about
 thirty seconds. 
    
 I know what you’re thinking…we don’t seem like the type of people who 
would live like that. Well, all I can say is that we were young and dumb
 and broke and actually liked being together in small spaces. Also, it 
was the furnished housing that came with the job. The Big Guy was 
operating a dozer and scraper and working for a guy who was paying him 
THE BIG BUCKS! We were practically rolling in dough! So much that we 
likely could have afforded an actual pot to piss in. Think of it like a 
year long camping trip—with fringe benefits.
    
 The job ended a year or so later but the repercussions have been life 
long. To this day I hate camping, I’m terrified of mice, I have an 
aversion to arts and crafts and, not surprisingly, I refuse to pee 
outside. However, this whole experience was a lesson in reliance and 
commitment. Most young couples develop a trust—meaning that the one in 
the bathtub isn’t worried that the one with the blow dryer is going to 
toss it in the tub with them. Ours was different. When one is picking 
leeches off of the other one’s backside and takes the extra time to 
double check, it brings a whole new meaning to knowing that your mate 
“has your back”. We have known that about each other for over thirty 
years now.
    
 Those days are now long behind us and no way in hell do I want to spend
 another night in a Sheep Wagon. Not even for old time sake. There are 
some things you just don’t have to do twice in your life to be sure that
 you don’t want to do them again, like poking a hibernating grizzly, 
juggling chainsaws or bathing with leeches. 
    
 Big and I spent the next 25 years without pitching a tent or unrolling a
 sleeping bag. We kept the girls a safe distance from s’mores, hotdogs, 
campfires and any movie that glamorized camping, like The Parent Trap. 
     The thought of sleeping anywhere other than my own bed (or a hotel room) hadn't crossed my mind in years when The Big Guy got a wild hair and decided that we should buy an RV.  I reminded him that I'M NOT CAMPY!  "It won't really be camping," he said, sounding somewhat convincing.  "We'd have a bed and AC and a TV," he continued to sell me the idea.  
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| Our "camper" today....yeah, it's just a wee bit nicer than the sheep wagon of yesteryear. | 
Ok, so I may have softened a little when I saw the push-button flush 
toilet and the computer desk. For a moment I thought I heard the chorus 
of Kumbabya playing in my head, Kumbaya my Lord, kumbaya. The heated marble floors were a nice touch, someone’s singing Lord, kumbaya, but I still had my guard up. The two burner gas stove and convection oven made me think, "Yeah, maybe I COULD be campy!" Someone’s laughing Lord, kumbaya. Then I saw the dishwasher! Someone’s smiling Lord, kumbaya. Yeeesssss! THIS is my idea of roughing it! 
     “Honey”, I said, “I’ll get the s’mores going while you go turn on that outside flat screen TV.” Kumbaya my Lord, kumbaya.
     I love NOT camping!  
Sitting around the TV, which I gotta admit, kind of resembles a campfire. Is it just me or do you see the resemblance too? Kumbaya, my Lord....
Sitting around the TV, which I gotta admit, kind of resembles a campfire. Is it just me or do you see the resemblance too? Kumbaya, my Lord....
Here is a link for some gourmet S'more recipes. Break out your old sheep wagon, light up a camp fire and indulge in the goodness of camping!


There's no link to this little bit of heaven
ReplyDeleteNitpicker!
DeleteI love this story even reading it for the second time. And the S'mores look lovely.
ReplyDeleteHey June, because of our upcoming-sure-to-be-misadventures, I just had to re-visit it. Thanks for reading the Sauce!
Delete