Wooden johnboats from another era |
These
guys were old-timers who amazed me at what they could do, and I always wanted
to see them again. I found out
that they are going to have another get-together on the weekend of October 7th
and 8th at a little place called Chapel Grove 15 miles east of Ava
Missouri. It will be billed as
“The Pioneer Heritage Festival of the Ozarks”. The whole thing is free, for visitors or vendors. If you
make or use things from that era like tools, knives or rifles, baskets,
buckskin clothes, or blankets, etc. that were used in the settling of the
Ozarks from 1800 to 1900, they’d like to have you join them.
Building
a johnboat in 1975 for the National Park Service at Buffalo River.
|
417-496-2711, or Nina Carter at: 417-543-3401. Or you can email heritage417@gmail.com for more information.
I
think it was 2001 or 2002 when my Dad, my Uncle Norten and I spent the whole of
October at the annual Fall Festival at Silver Dollar City building a wooden
johnboat and making boat paddles… talking to visitors about another day and
time decades ago. Norten made the sassafras paddles, and Dad built the
johnboat, with my help.
People
flocked around us to watch and ask questions. At the time, I had published only 3 or 4 books and we were
set up in front of the bookstore. Folks
would buy my books in the bookstore and they would bring them out to me to
sign. If back then I had all ten
of my books available there, they would have sold well more than a thousand. On
some days they would actually sell more of my books than all the others they
had combined.
As
it was, they sold more than 200 of my books and paid me a little more than half
of what the bookstore collected. For some reason, that didn’t set well at all with the two old ladies who
were in charge of the October event. Another thing they didn’t like was the fact that uncle Norten sold a
bunch of paddles to people. He had
to make about 25 or 30 that winter, and only got 30 or 40 dollars for each. But
those ladies did not like that at all. They wanted him to set there and attract a crowd and make paddles for
nothing. Seems like Silver Dollar
City bought Dad’s johnboat and when it was over, the three of us had made way
too much money for the satisfaction of those two old ladies.
Besides
that, the whole operation attracted crowds that sometimes jammed up that narrow
walkway and it detracted from the candle-makers and butter churners and other
craft people. At any rate, the two
women told us they didn’t want us back the next year. Dad was the last of the serious johnboat makers. I still make a few, but my dad and
grandfather likely made several hundred over a period of 60 or 70 years. Dad made one at a time but Grandpa
sometimes was working on 3 or 4 at a time, at different stages, sitting on saw
horses outside his cabin.
You
know why I intend to have another wooden johnboat built somewhere, before November? Because this winter I
want to use it… when no one else is on the river, to fish or hunt ducks or deer
or trap an otter or two.
I’m not the only one who likes to paddle them. Last spring I stopped at a truck stop
and there were three johnboats on trailers just like the ones we made for years
on the Big Piney. They were owned
by some young men who were master craftsmen, apparent by the way those boats
were trimmed and finished. I found
out they had built them after they bought my book, Rivers to Run, and used the
johnboat building plan I had added toward the back of my book, in one entire
chapter, with all measurements, blueprints and photos of Dad building one that
he used for years.
My
Dad and Uncle are gone now, as are most men and women who lived in the early
decades of our last century, the days before technology put aside that way of
life, and those kinds of people forever. Today, as young generations curiously like to learn about
their roots and a slower, more peaceful time, you will see demonstrations on
all old-time ways, crafts and works at festivals and events around the Ozarks
each fall, but there is no one ever building johnboats. But it was on display once about 15
years ago at Silver Dollar City. There may be a few of you who remember.
To contact me, email lightninridge@windstream.net or write
to box 22, Bolivar, Mo 65613 our
office number is 417-777-5227.
No comments:
Post a Comment