grow
april 2013 AtUrbanMagazine.com
lifestyle
featuring
entertainment
18
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Catherine Frederick
7
Stray
8
Up Close & Personal
12
Everybody Needs an Herb Garden
16
Fresh Herb Radish Spread
18
Ignite: Joy in India
22
Shop Local
24
Hanging Around
26 28 29
Urban 8 Benediction Somewhere Near the River
29
MANAGING EDITOR Marla Cantrell CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Amber Arnold Marla Cantrell Marcus Coker Kody Ford Catherine Frederick Stacey Little Tonya McCoy Anita Paddock Jeromy Price CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Marcus Coker Catherine Frederick Jeromy Price
people
DESIGNER Jeromy Price
Coming Home to Nene’s
52 56
Love at First Bite
Run, Kids, Run! Who Knew? Lisa and Amy and Art The Queen of Oklahoma
WEB GURU David Jamell PUBLISHER Read Chair Publishing, LLC
Southern Food by Osmosis
taste
46
30 34 38 42 46 50
Margarita de Flaco
52
EDITORIAL INFORMATION Marla Cantrell 479 / 831 / 9116 Marla@AtUrbanMagazine.com
travel
58 62
Through the Eye of the Needle Back Story: The Unburdening of Lida Stark
58
ADVERTISING INFORMATION Catherine Frederick 479 / 782 / 1500 Catherine@AtUrbanMagazine.com
©2013 Read Chair Publishing, LLC. All rights reserved. The opinions contained in @Urban are exclusively those of the writers and do not represent those of Read Chair Publishing, LLC. as a whole or its affiliates. Any correspondence to @Urban or Read Chair Publishing, LLC., including photography becomes the property of Read Chair Publishing, LLC. @Urban reserves the right to edit content and images.
FOLLOW US Subscribe to @Urban and receive 12 issues per year for only $20. Log on to AtUrbanMagazine.com today.
letter from Catherine | 5
photo by Kat Hardin
Speaking of local, we’ve visited Farmers Coop in Fort Smith for the herbs we needed to create a vertical herb bed that you can tuck into a small space. Once you have yours planted, make sure to check out our kicking herb spread recipe you’ll want to make again and again. Speaking of recipes, do we have a dessert for you! Our food writer and newest member of the @Urban family, Stacey Little, is whipping up pecan chewies, one of the best desserts we’ve eaten in a long time. You’re going to love Stacey, who learned to cook by watching his Southern mama, grandmamma and great grandmamma. We’re also sharing the story of a woman who turned her life upside down to come back to Fort Smith and open a local restaurant. Here’s the kick: already in her fifties, she’d never been in the food business, but she felt certain it was what she was supposed to do. Need a story that will get you out of the kitchen to burn a few calories? We’re taking you to the Eye of the Needle, one of the most beautiful and challenging hikes in Arkansas.
L
ocal. It’s a word that gets tossed around a lot these days, and a word, it seems, everyone is trying to own. To me, local isn’t something you have to strive to become or take
ownership of, local just is and when it comes to our economy, it’s something we all need to support. From the farmer at our local farmers markets, to the small business owners who just took the risk of a lifetime in opening their doors. Stop for a minute and think about the local small businesses you wouldn’t want to be without. I’ll bet you’ll find many of them in our pages. We need to support them to let them know how much they matter to us. Live local. Support one another. It’s
Not far enough? How about traveling 8,000 miles away to visit a couple who met in Arkansas, but felt a calling to do good work in India? When you’re finished there, we’ll introduce you to the Queen. (Read the story!) Another short trip to meet Little Chief in Fayetteville, and then we’ll take you running with some of Fort Smith’s finest young athletes. All this, plus thirty little known ways to use vinegar, beer, and lemons. Whew! That’s a lot, but it’s still not everything we have to offer you this month. So dig in, have some fun with us, and if you feel like it, drop us a line to let us know what you think. Our address? Editors@AtUrbanMagazine.com.
about community. And it’s just what we Southerners do.
To reserve this free space for your charitable non-profit organization, email: Editors@AtUrbanMagazine.com
lifestyle | 7
stray @lines Amber Arnold
gallop; a two-syllable symphony. bones compounding earth such a heavy load in the mist of the low-hanging clouds fog-wet, smothering you see the outlines their long necks sweltering through the cold morning after the stray cattle
8 | UPCLOSE&PERSONAL
Ryan Gehrig
Mercy Fort Smith
Words to Live By
Pursue relentlessly with conviction, prayerfulness and joy! And, STP! (This stands for Super Trojan Power – from the Subiaco Trojans, where Ryan graduated high school)
What’s the one thing you want us to know about Mercy? Mercy is transforming the delivery of health care in this region by building world class facilities, leveraging technology and recruiting top notch medical professionals. For the services we provide, we intend to be among the best anywhere you could find in the country. We are building a healthier Fort Smith, a healthier region.
Q&A with Ryan Last movie you saw: The Hobbit with my daughter Alyssa. What’s the best thing about your job? I enjoy and value the humility derived from working with a lot of really smart and dedicated people. What do you love about the South? Friendly people and no horn honking. Favorite vacation city: Savannah, Georgia. My wife, Kristen, and I loved the charm, history and food. Where were you born? Muenster, Texas. Favorite guilty pleasure food: Bacon. Last book you read: Point of Impact by Stephen Hunter. Last road trip: Pheasant hunt in Kansas with Cole Goodman and Kurt “the nailer” Mehl (best aim I’ve seen in awhile.) Three favorite singers or groups: Led Zeppelin, Merle Haggard and the Greasy Valley Boys from Subiaco. Cornbread – sugar or no sugar? Sugar (this survey is helping me realize that I’m not leading by example). What would you be doing if you weren’t a business owner/manager? Anything (legal) that would provide for my family. Whose autograph would you most like to have? Lou Gehrig. Do you have a pet? What’s your pet’s name? Havanese puppy my daughter named Scooter. Perfect meal: Anything when I’m around the table with my family. I’m blessed to be married to a very talented cook!
UPCLOSE&PERSONAL | 9
Kim Cox and Lindsey Wilkinson
Katiebug’s What do you love most about Katiebug’s? It’s meeting beautiful women (and a few nice guys)
on a daily basis, seeing all of the beautiful children and watching them grow, sharing “mom” stories of frustrations and triumphs, helping our customers find the perfect gift and wrapping it up so special, seeing smiles on faces when we’ve found the perfect outfit, being associated with such wonderful companies, many of which give back in so many ways, having the opportunity to brighten someone’s day every day, and showing love and kindness to everyone who walks through our door. That’s really what I hope Katiebug’s is. A fun place to hang out while you shop for that perfect outfit or gift.
Q&A with Kim Last movie you saw: Argo. The best thing about your job: The babies! Why you love the South: The warmth of the people. Favorite vacation city: San Francisco. I love the weather, outside eating, the water. Where were you born? Fort Smith. Favorite guilty pleasure food: Powdered donuts. It was terrible when Hostess went out of business! The last book you read: 12 Hours by 12 Weeks. Last road trip: Trip to Oklahoma City with friends to see John Mayer in concert. Three favorite singers or groups: John Mayer, Mumford and Sons, Mercy Me. Cornbread – sugar or no sugar? Is that a serious question? Sugar of course! What would you be doing if you didn’t own Katiebug’s? Advertising. Whose autograph would you most like to have? Jesus. Strangest place you’ve called the Hogs: My bathroom with my girls. What’s your pet’s name? Lacy Caroline, she’s a Golden Doodle. Perfect meal: Roast, mashed potatoes, corn, rolls with lots of butter and chocolate cake.
Q&A with Lindsey Last movie you saw: Mary Poppins. The best thing about your job: The customers, for sure. Why you love the South: Flip flop season lasts so much longer in the South. Favorite vacation city: New York City. So much shopping and Broadway – two of my favorite things ever! Where were you born? Little Rock. Favorite guilty pleasure food: a REAL Coke. Last book you read: Unglued by Lysa TerKeurst. Last road trip: To Dallas for market. No idea how we keep getting lost trying to get to Dallas! Cornbread – sugar or no sugar? No sugar for me. What would you be doing if you weren’t a business owner/manager? Before I became a partner at Katiebug’s my only job was “mom” to my girls. I love doing both and can’t imagine doing anything else. Strangest place you’ve called the Hogs? Rupp Arena, home of the Kentucky Wildcats, ha! Perfect meal: Lasagna, salad, bread, and strawberry ice cream.
10 | lifestyle
will you take me home? Kitties and Kanines is an affordable spay/neuter clinic. The clinic has two professionally licensed veterinarians and utilizes state of the art surgical equipment. Please help control the pet population,have your pets spayed or neutered.
Dax Male – Pit Bull / Lab Mix
Chloe Female – Tabby
Mamasita Female – Tortoise Shell
Mystery Female – Black Tabby
Sonshine Female – Long Hair
Toulouse Male – Orange Tabby
Kitties and Kanines Veterinarian Clinic 4900 Rogers Avenue Suite 100H Fort Smith, AR 72903 Mon-Thur 7am-5pm Fri 8am-5pm for scheduling appointments
479.434.4740 info@kittiesandkanines.org kittiesandkanines.org
12 | lifestyle
everybody needs an herb garden
@DIY and Images Catherine Frederick
I
’ve been eyeing several upcycled DIY herb garden projects
tubs, wooden crates, even a fabric over-the-door shoe rack nailed
on Pinterest® for months. I finally settled on a vertical herb
to a board. The possibilities are as endless as your imagination.
garden, using a recycled pallet as the base. This version
is easy to build, easy to maintain, and it’s mobile so it can be
Plant herbs you think you’ll actually use in cooking or in
moved if the weather turns ugly or the sun shines too brightly.
beverages. Love cilantro, basil, mint? Plant more than one! You’ll be amazed how often you will walk out your door to snip
Even if this particular version is not for you, keep looking! There
herbs, fresh from your garden.
are so many options available. I urge everyone, no matter how much, or how little space you have to plant an herb garden. Find
NOTE: Make sure you get your pallet ready by removing any
something that fits your style! Use pots, mason jars, galvanized
nails or screws and sand down any rough edges.
lifestyle | 13
what you’ll need • Wooden Pallet • Herbs of choice • Containers of choice (I got mine at Lowe’s) • Hardware to secure containers • Soil • Screwdriver • Drill (optional)
Attach brackets to pallet with screws.
Align containers on brackets. Using a different style container? Try securing them with pipe clamps.
Remove herbs from original container, loosen roots slightly, and carefully place herbs in new containers. Hang container from bracket. Water thoroughly.
14 | lifestyle
Fresh from Your Garden Take Your Pick
CHIVES
ROSEMARY
BASIL
PARSLEY
MINT
OREGANO
THYME
CILANTRO
This wispy herb has been called the gentle onion. It has a slight onion flavor with hints of garlic and looks much like the tops of tiny green onions. To use chives, snip them into small pieces with kitchen or herb shears. They’ll lose their flavor when cooked, so add them later in the recipe or use as garnish over the top of a finished dish. Chives are especially delicious in dips and spreads.
You’ll be surprised at the many types of mint. Spearmint, peppermint, chocolate and lemon mint – the list goes on and on. Mint can be used in both savory and sweet dishes, and makes a wonderful addition to an ice cold glass of tea or muddled in a variety of cocktails.
Rosemary leaves are very thin, almost needlelike in shape, and very aromatic. Don’t use the stem, only the leaves, as the stem is quite tough. The flavor is a combination of lemon and pine. Rosemary is excellent when used as a rub on pork. Try tossing rosemary with chopped vegetables and a little olive oil before roasting.
For many of us, oregano is interchangeable with Southern Italian cooling, but it’s also found in many Mediterranean dishes. It’s a strong herb, slightly bitter with grassy undertones. Like rosemary, use only the leaves, not the stems. Try oregano in your Italian dishes, sprinkled on fish, or with a strong cheese such as blue cheese or feta.
You’ll never go wrong when you pair basil with garlic, tomatoes, or olives. Basil has a pungent flavor often described as a blend of licorice and cloves. Basil is delicious in many appetizer dishes, such as bruschetta, as well as in pizzas, dips, spreads, or simply a leaf atop fresh mozzarella.
Thyme is another fragrant, small leafed herb with a woody stem. Thyme is used in Mediterranean, Italian and French cooking. Snip only the leaves unless using whole springs for roasting meats, chicken, or vegetables.
Parsley comes in many varieties. Two of the most popular are Flat Leaf Italian and Curly. Parsley is a popular ingredient in many dishes and can also be used as a garnish. Parsley has a fresh, grassy flavor. Use it in salads, dressings, soups, and stews.
Cilantro has lacy green leaves with a pungent odor and flavor. The dried seeds of cilantro are also known as coriander. To some, this herb is an acquired taste, while others, like me, can’t get enough. Cilantro matches up well with avocado, chicken, fish, salsas, and tomatoes.
NOTE: Dried herbs have a more intense, concentrated flavor. Fresh herbs can be substituted for dried at a ratio of 3 to 1. While dried herbs are convenient and a good choice for longer cooking times, they don’t have the same purity of flavor as fresh herbs. Remember, fresh is best!
16 | lifestyle
Recipe adapted from food52.com @recipe and image Catherine Frederick
lifestyle | 17
Fresh Herb Radish Spread Makes 2 cups
8–10 radishes (small to medium sized)
1 8 oz. cream cheese, softened
Zest of one small lemon
6-8 Tbsp. Crème Fraiche (I made my own)
2 Tbsp. flat leaf parsley, roughly chopped
¾ tsp. ground white pepper
2 Tbsp. basil, roughly chopped
Sea salt for garnish
1 Tbsp. fresh chives, chopped
Baguette, sliced and toasted
2 Cloves garlic, minced
(would also be delicious with fresh pita chips)
1 Tbsp. fresh dill for garnish (optional)
Wash radishes, trim and slice thin. In a bowl, add radishes, parsley, basil, chives, and garlic. In a separate bowl, combine the lemon zest, white pepper, Crème Fraiche, and cream cheese. Blend well. Combine the herb and cream mixtures and gently fold together. Spread onto toasted baguette slices and garnish with chopped dill and a sprinkle of sea salt. Tip: Prepare your own Crème Fraiche by combining 2 Tbsp. buttermilk with 1 cup of heavy cream. Cover with a clean cloth in a warm, draft free location until thick, about 12 – 16 hours. The mixture will not spoil while on the counter; the acid in the mixture prevents spoilage. Stir and refrigerate until ready to use. Can be refrigerated for up to 1 week.
joy in India
@story Marla Cantrell @images Courtesy Melody Murray
Work is redemptive, it restores so many things. – Melody Murray
lifestyle | 19
Each month in our Ignite series we bring you stories we hope will inspire you, give you new ideas, and bring you inside the lives of ordinary people doing extraordinary things.
T
he world is a big place, filled with adventure, brimming with possibility. It is also a place of great need, desperate poverty, and crippling hunger. Melody and David Murray witnessed
it, just days after their honeymoon, when the volunteered at an orphanage in Uganda in 1998. It had been a dream of theirs, to help those who had no way to help themselves, ever since they met and fell in love at John Brown University in Siloam Springs. “The main thing we took from our time in the orphanage was that even though this orphanage loved on the kids, fed them and clothed them, they had little to no education or vocational training, so David and I felt that it was quite a hopeless environment,” Melody says. “There were orphan kids there that were older than I was at the time – I was twenty-one - who had no hope, no future. David and I felt inadequate and young - it was during that time that God solidified our vision to go back to the States, grow up a bit, get experience under our belt, so that when we headed back overseas, we’d be prepared and able to provide people with a hope and a future.” And so they came home and for years they planned. Where were they most needed? The plight of India came to mind, 8,000 miles away, where the population topped 1-billion, and the average weekly income was only $23 dollars a week. Melody and David had heard about a community of Tibetan refugees in north India who were desperate for work. They spoke with one of the group’s leaders and realized they needed to go. Soon after, they started packing, selling what they no longer needed, and saying goodbye to family and friends. They also brainstormed. They would start businesses when they reached India, and they needed to decide what those would be. The first decision was easy enough. David, who grew up in a log cabin filled with music in Tennessee, had been playing guitar since he was twelve and thought building handcrafted guitars would be a perfect fit. Melody wanted to make handcrafted, block printed textiles, including scarves, purses, and jewelry. In January 2010 they boarded a plane with their two children, who were four and five. Their final stop was Rajpur, a small town just outside of the city of Dehradun, at the base of the Himalayas. Since that time, they’ve opened JOYN India and Dehradun Guitars. Their companies now employ seventy people.
20 | lifestyle
Each morning, Melody gets the kids off to school and then
streets. Today, he is our best youth block printer, has become
leaves her apartment, where the view of the Himalayas rises
the leader of the group, and he recently saved enough money
outside her windows. She can see monkeys climb from tree to
to buy his own bicycle.”
tree, and hear hundreds of birds sing. She walks the ten minutes it takes her to get to her office, passing the grocery store, her
Melody counts these triumphs daily. In a world where poverty
chicken guy, her egg guy, and a woman selling vegetables on
reigns, it’s an important thing to do. “When you help someone
the corner. She sees Tibetans outside spinning their prayer
else, you help yourself. When your focus is turned to others,
wheels, hogs feeding their babies, even people brushing their
your life becomes so very full. You get more than you give. We’ve
teeth under the bright morning sun.
gained new perspective on life, living amongst the “majority world” of those who have very little and few opportunities in
Her employees smile as she enters JOYN India headquarters.
life, yet have such joy. We’ve gained confidence in our God.
There is so much going on. Each piece of fabric is hand-woven
We’ve gained a happy family life where everything in our life
and hand sewn. The patterns are added using rosewood blocks
is integrated. We understand more clearly what really matters.
dipped in dyes.
We have joy. We have purpose.”
At night, Melody dreams of block prints, the designs coming to her swiftly, bright colors, Chevron designs, beautiful table
To view Melody’s products, and find Arkansas stores
runners. When she wakes, she thinks about what the men and
that carry the JOYN line, visit www.JOYNindia.
women working with her have brought into her life. “Prahalad,
com. You can see David’s guitars by visiting
our block printer, has taught me about provision and love,” she
dehradunguitars.com.
says. “He has a glow that lights up his face and he works so hard to be the sole provider for his family of six. Rajkumar, one of
To support their non-profit mission,
the street youth, has taught me about transformation. Just six
visit www.firstasiadevelopment.org.
months ago he was heavily addicted to drugs and lived on the
22 | SHOPLOCAL
Creative Kitchen 2
1
1
The Original Go Jump in the Lake Sign $68 This wooden, handmade sign brings back memories of childhood around our favorite watering hole.”Last One In’s A Rotten Egg” is perfect for the lake house or the pool in your backyard.
2
Signature Line “Lake Ouachita” Cup $12 This striped insulated mug is perfect for the lake. Hefty, happy, and made in the USA, this cup is perfect for your morning coffee or your favorite ice cold beverage. Creative Kitchen | 309 Garrison Avenue, Fort Smith | 479.646.3233 | creativekitchenstore.com
Farmer’s Coop 1
3 2
1
Bergan Elevated Feeder $18.99 This feeding system promotes healthy feeding posture, is easy to clean, and comes with two metal 1.5 quart bowls. Make your dogs happy. Two sizes available. Made in USA.
2
Charming Pet Products “Grampa Gimpy Hip” $8.39 Grandpa will bring a smile to your face and provide hours of fun for your furry friend. He’s decked out in flip flops and a snazzy swimsuit. Painted by hand with lead free paint, he squawks when squeezed.
3
Bergan Automatic Waterer $15.99 It’s not too early to think about the dog days of summer, and how you’re going to keep your own pets supplied with fresh water. This automatic waterer connects to a water hose, refills automatically, and will not overflow. Farmer’s Coop | Fort Smith | Van Buren | Fayetteville | Rogers | 14 Locations | Visit farmercoop.com
SHOPLOCAL | 23
Unique Boutique 1
2
1
John Callanan Straw Hat $29.95 John Callanan strives to make hats inspired by what’s seen on European runways. Another plus? They’re affordable and adorable. This hat features a striped headband accented with straw twine.
2
Bella I Love Arkansas T-Shirt $38 Show your Arkansas pride with a super soft shirt that’s made in the USA. Other colors available. Woo Pig! Unique Boutique | 4500 Rogers Avenue, Ste B2 | 479.785.1185 | tanunique.net
Inscriptions 3
1 2 1
Vera Bradley Convertible Baby Bag in Tutti Frutti $109 Check out the newest edition to Vera Bradley! This baby bag can be handheld, worn crossbody, carried over the shoulder or even worn as a backpack. The zip top opens to a roomy interior with plenty of pockets and a wipeable lining.
2
Vera Bradley Ruffle Bodysuit $28 With delicate details like scalloped picot trim, puff sleeves and adorable tiered ruffles on the back, this soft interlock cotton bodysuit is truly special. It’s packaged in a so-very-sweet dresser-shaped box that’s ideal for gifting.
3
Vera Bradley “Bunny and Bear” Book $8 A glimpse into the everyday joys of friendship, this board book features two cuddly buddies, Bunny and Bear. Illustrated by Joanie Hall, granddaughter of Vera Bradley, this picture book makes a sweet gift, closing with the heartwarming message, “May your little one always know the true meaning of friendship.” Inscriptions | 4803 Rogers Avenue, Fort Smith | 479.484.5559 | inscriptionsfs.com
24 | lifestyle
@images Christine Howard and Nancy Nolan
lifestyle | 25 Christine Howard Creative Director, I.O. Metro
W
hen grouping multiples, you can instantly make a simple item become very interesting. One of our favorite ways to accessorize is with patterns on the wall. Repetition is an important design tool, and a smart and stylish way to liven things up.
If you’ve been into an I.O. METRO store, you’ve seen the many ways repetition can work. I bet you’ve also wondered how in the world someone could hang so many different items so perfectly? Whether you’re hanging framed art, mirrors, metal art, or sculptures, we have a foolproof way to get things straight. It’s called paper templates! They’re light and super easy to play with until you get things perfect. Once you’ve selected a wall, following our simple hanging tips, and you’re sure to get stunning style (without re-hanging for hours and a zillion holes in the wall).
1
Collect your supplies. You’ll need paper, scissors, blue painter’s tape, a Sharpie, and a
tape measure.
2
3
out the template. (Here we used legal
center outward, so you don’t get off.
Create your pattern by laying out your items on the floor. Draw a template. Trace your
piece, make a mark where the hanger is located on the item, and then cut
Hang your paper templates on the wall with the painter’s tape. This tape is super gentle and
won’t hurt your walls. And by the way, it’s best to measure and work from the
size paper, but for larger pieces, use brown butcher paper or newspaper.) Stand back and tweak as needed. Once everything is perfect, mark your nail holes in the wall. Take the papers down as you hang.
26 | entertainment
Submit your events to editors@aturbanmagazine.com
1 2 3 4
Popovich Comedy Pet Theater Saturday, April 6 // 10AM // See Website for Details Fayetteville, AR // 479.443.5600 // WaltonArtsCenter.org The World Famous Popovich Comedy Pet Theater is making its way to Northwest Arkansas. Cats, dogs, doves and geese perform incredible feats! Each of the show’s 15 cats and 10 dogs were once strays, rescued from animal shelters. Come see the astonishing acts of Popovich and his amazing pets in the Baum Walker Hall at Walton Arts Center.
Fort Smith Heritage Festival Saturday, April 6 // 10AM – 4PM // Admission is Free Fort Smith, AR // 479.782.5074 // CSClearinghouse.org Come celebrate Fort Smith’s history at the 2013 Heritage Festival. This event is free and includes free trolley rides of the Heritage Trail, Old West action, wagon rides, a petting zoo, the Choctaw Youth Dancers, live music, and food! The Heritage Festival benefits the Meals for Kids program to help feed local children through the summer. The festival will headquarter at the Frisco Station at the end of Garrison Avenue.
Miles for Mutts: A Purrfect Race Saturday April 13 // 8AM // Entry fee $25 Fort Smith, AR // 479.783.4395 // SebastianCountyHumaneSociety.org Run or walk to the benefit of animals in need. This 5K sponsored by The Sebastian County Humane Society is being held at the Riverfront Park, site of the future U.S. Marshals Museum. All pre-registered participants will receive a free t-shirt. Come out and be a part of this great cause.
10th Annual Arkansas Literary Festival April 18 - 21 // See website for details Little Rock, AR // 870.269.8068 // ArkansasLiteraryFestival.org Readers and writers of all ages will gather at the Arkansas Literary Festival, which will include more than 80 presenters and Pulitzer Prize winning writers. The Central Arkansas Library System’s Main Library and multiple venues in the River Market will be hosts to this event that offers special events, performances, workshops, and even special children’s events on the lawn of the Governor’s Mansion. Ticket prices for individual events vary.
entertainment | 27
5 6 7 8
Earth Day 5K and Family Fun Run Saturday, April 20 // 5K starts at 8AM // 1K starts at 9AM Fort Smith, AR // 479.646.7225 // GrowGreatMinds.com The Montessori School of Fort Smith and the Janet Huckabee River Valley Nature Center are partnering up to sponsor a community-wide 5K race and 1K family fun run to celebrate Earth Day 2013. There will be prizes and activities for the whole family. The event will be held at Wells Lake next to the Janet Huckabee River Valley Nature Center.
Hillbilly Porkchop Roundup: Family Mud Run Saturday, April 27 // 9AM – 3PM // See website for details Mulberry, AR // 479.783.4395 // Hillbilly5K.com What better way to welcome spring than by wallowing in the mud and running miles over crazy obstacles in hillbilly country?! This extreme obstacle and fun-filled running event is open to the entire family. Hillbilly costumes are welcome! Prizes awarded after the day’s events. The event will be held at Mulberry Creek come rain or shine.
Night Hike on the Seven Hollows Trail Saturday, April 27 // Starts at 8PM // Admission is Free Petit Jean State Park at Morrilton // 501.727.5441 // petitjeanstatepark.com Outdoors at night, the world opens up. The stars blaze across the sky, and the sounds of nature intensifies. This is your chance to experience it. Just show up the Seven Hollows Trail Parking Area at Petit Jean State Park and meet Park Interpreter Mystina. You’ll be led on a short hike, where you’ll learn more about the park and enjoy the beauty of nature.
Rock of Ages Tuesday, April 30 // 7:30PM // See website for details Fort Smith, AR // 479.788.7300 // TicketSage.com/uafs This 2009 Tony® nominated musical is an arena rock love story set to a mix of classic 80s hits including “Don’t Stop Believin’”, “We Built This City”, “The Final Countdown” and many more. Come see this classic tale of a small town girl with big dreams in the big city. May not be appropriate for those under 14. This event will be held in the ABC Performing Arts Center at the Fort Smith Convention Center.
28 | entertainment Dad has terminal lung cancer, which gives him a mandate to examine his life, while his community of family and friends prepare for his death. There is an elderly neighbor lady, Berta May, who has recently taken in Alice, her eight-year-old granddaughter, to raise because her mother died of breast cancer. Dad’s daughter, Lorraine, whose own daughter was killed in an accident, comes home to help take care of him. Dad’s son, Frank, left right out of high school and never came back. No one knows where he is. Good friend, Willa Johnson, whose husband has been dead for thirty years, leases her land to a man who raises cattle. The money is just enough, if she’s careful. Her daughter, Alene, an old-maid school teacher, has come home for a visit after retirement, and laments the loss of love she shared with a married principal. Rob Lyle, a handsome new minister arrives in town, along with his unhappy wife and son. His liberal view of loving your enemies and turning the other cheek to their non-Christian beliefs causes him to lose his job. His wife leaves, leaving their son behind, although the son begs his mother to take him with her. Dad Lewis spends his last days either on his front porch with
Benediction by Kent Haruf Knopf 257 pages: $2595
his family or looking out his bedroom window. By his side is his dutiful wife and his caring daughter, each bearing the burden of having lost a child. And by their sides, are the friends who have coped with loss but still are full of compassion for others.
@review Anita Paddock
I
Kent Haruf weaves a beautiful story of love and loss. His earlier books, Plain Song and Eventide, each take place in the
want to shout it from the rooftops: Read this book! It will
fictional town of Holt, with characters as full of human suffering,
restore your faith in your family, your neighbors, and
forgiveness, and acceptance as those found in this book, which,
your community. It will make you wish you lived in Holt,
like its title, bestows a blessing upon all who read it.
Colorado, a place where you could know these people. This beautifully written novel is about ordinary people who live in a small town in eastern Colorado. Dad Lewis, the seventyseven-year-old owner of a hardware store, has been to a specialist in Denver, and he and his wife, Mary, could tell “by the look on his face where matters stood.”
entertainment | 29 acts, other sounds peek through in their music. Cooper’s gentle, raspy voice has hints of John Mayer. Little Chief recorded their debut EP Somewhere Near the River at East Hall Recording Studio in Fayetteville. The quality and diversity of the bands that have been recording at East Hall is phenomenal and has been a huge boom for the Fayetteville music scene. The band made a good choice to showcase the cello rather than a violin given the dramatic effect it adds to the tunes. This is most evident on the title track. Only two songs are really up-tempo. They are also some of the standouts. “Fields of Wheat” builds upon a quickening tempo accompanied by banjo and cello. “Hiding and Seeking” has great harmonies and a throbbing beat. If any song stands out as a hit it’s “North Carolina.” Cooper’s vocals and the accompanying harmonies display a genuine sense of longing. Somewhere Near the River is good rainy day music. It has a mellow
Somewhere Near the River by Little Chief Independent Release — 2012: $5 little-chief.bandcamp.com
vibe that never drifts into somber territory. Their performance is tight and the tunes are well structured. The songs are promising but the band holds back at times. They seem afraid of letting go and getting lost in the music like Mumford & Sons. If “Hiding and Seeking” erupted like Mumford’s “Lover of the Light,” it would be goose bump worthy.
@review Kody Ford
M
A debut EP typically serves as a preview for what’s to come
att Cooper needed a change. Having cut his teeth
from a band. That being the case, Somewhere Near the River is a
as a singer/songwriter, he wanted to create music
promising start for Little Chief. Soon, they’ll learn to cut loose
that sounded organic and get people stomping and
and the local music scene will be theirs for the taking.
clapping. A folk band seemed like the way to go. Cooper pieced together the line-up for Little Chief in 2012.
I Rate It
He recruited cellist Matthew Heckmann, Fort Smith native/ drummer Andrew Myers and Ellie Turner, of the Dallas folk duo The Benjamins.
Give it a listen: Hear “North Carolina” by Little Chief on AtUrbanMagazione.com. Click on @Urban Sounds
The band cites influences such as Mumford & Sons and The Lumineers. While they certainly fit well on a playlist with these
located on our homepage.
30 | people
coming home to Nene’s @story Marla Cantrell @images Jeromy Price
V
onita Hoffer sits at a long table inside NeNe’s Restaurant in Fort Smith. The lunch crowd has dwindled, and she has some breathing room before the dinner crowd starts ambling in. It’s been a little
over a year since the doors first opened. That was a grand day, Vonita says, remembering the feeling of waiting for those first customers to arrive. She was fifty-seven then, a fine time for a dream to come true.
people | 31
It didn’t take long for the line to form. The menu is a walk down
minutes later. Vonita likes the way cooking makes her feel, and
memory lane for them: fried cabbage, catfish, cornbread, peach
how people are always happy at the end of a good meal.
cobbler, chicken fried steak. Many of the recipes Vonita learned in her own mother’s kitchen in Indianapolis. She remembers
But it wasn’t until she’d moved back home to Fort Smith – the
the squeaky clean kitchen, the dining room where the family
family left when Vonita was six – that the idea of owning a
lingered long after supper was over. She remembers the year
restaurant came into play.
she turned nine. In her family, that was the age when you started taking your turn cleaning up after the meal.
“I was living in St. Paul, Minnesota in June of ‘09, and I was driving, and something said, ‘It’s time to go home.’ I hadn’t even
Vonita wanted no part of dirty dishes. She was the baby of the
been thinking about Fort Smith, but I was thinking about my
family. She realized that this dishwashing business would likely
sister, who’d had open heart surgery. None of us are spring
end with her, since there would not be another brother or sister
chickens. And I said, ‘OK, Lord, if that’s you talking to me, you
coming along. “For a while I thought maybe we’d get rich and
need to make that so clear that I have no questions.’”
Mama would get a maid, and I wouldn’t be the dishwasher, but I got over that real quick,” Vonita says. “After that, I decided it
The thought of leaving her steady job, and her husband Chris
would be better if I just cooked.”
leaving his, was a lot to consider. But the voice kept coming to her, and she felt the pull of home grow stronger. “I said to my
She remembers being ten, standing at the stove, cooking supper.
husband, ‘Something told me it’s time to go home,’ and he said,
Even then, she was a good cook, taught by her mother who
‘That wouldn’t be my first choice.’ And I said, ‘Just you pray over
was an excellent one. “I’d come home from school, pick up my
it.’ It was something getting a man from Minnesota to come to a
two nephews from the babysitter. I was the first one home. I’d
place where it gets up to 115 in the summer.”
start dinner for me and Mama and Daddy and my sister and my brother. This is the kind of food we ate, the same as I cook here.”
Chris came around soon enough. They arrived in Fort Smith in October. It wasn’t an easy go. Vonita landed a job at Whirlpool.
Her love of cooking grew as the years went by. She had a lot of
“I worked there five days,” she says, “and then I spent six days at
practice, raising boys who went to football practice and then ate
Sparks. My legs swelled up so big, my nephew said they looked
three or four pot pies to hold them until dinner, just forty-five
like a Johnsonville brat.”
32 | people “There’s a guy who comes in every other Wednesday and Saturday from Bentonville and orders pinto beans, greens (collard, turnip and mustard), and cornbread. I can set my clock by him. People come in and say, ‘We heard you had the best chicken in town.’ There’s folk that love the pork chops and chicken fried steak and the brownies. One lady, when the Arkansas peaches were out last summer and I was making fried pies, was brought to tears. She said, ‘It tastes just like my grandmother’s.’ And then I started to cry right along with her. She said, ‘I didn’t think I’d ever get another fried pie like this as long as I lived.’ It was not the homecoming Vonita imagined. But she knew she
“We’re – Cloressa, Chris and I – are accomplishing our goal. When
was here for a reason. “In 2011, another voice said open up
you start talking about your grandparents’ food, the true, old
a restaurant with old fashioned, home cooked food. I’d never
fashioned home cooking, you’re doing what you set out to do.”
owned a restaurant before. Somebody asked me why I’d open a restaurant during a recession and I said, ‘The Lord’s blessing
These days, folks are likely to call Vonita ‘NeNe’ instead of
is on this place.’
her given name. NeNe is what her nieces nicknamed her, and they weren’t too pleased when they showed up and heard
“I’ve met people I’d never have met and they’ve become friends.
customers addressing their aunt that way. “I probably should
As long as I remember that it’s not me and give the praise where
have mentioned it to the girls before I named the restaurant,
it belongs, we’ll be okay.”
but I just love the name, and it meant a lot to me,” Vonita says and then laughs. “My nieces are full grown, so I think they can
Right now, the staff includes Vonita, her co-owner husband,
live with it. I think it’s a little too late to stop folks from calling
Chris, who helps in the kitchen, and Cloressa Williams, who
me that now.”
waits tables, and helps keep the place going. NeNe’s is set up to serve around forty people, but that number can easily grow with the addition of several tables. Nene’s Restaurant is located next to Staples at One of Vonita’s specialties she learned from Bobby Flay. “You
5709 Rogers Avenue, Ste. 36, in Fort Smith.
take a nice sized burger, seasoned up really good, Swiss cheese,
479.494.7870
pickles, ham, special sauce, bun, wrap it up in foil, put it between
Sunday: 12:00 – 3:00
two cast iron skillets, and let the cheese melt down.
Tuesday: 4:30 – 9:00 Wednesday, Thursday: 11:00 – 9:00
“The cornbread, that’s Mama’s. Her nickname was Babe. Most
Friday, Saturday: 11:00 –10:00
of the rest of the recipes are mine. Beans, greens, smothered
Catering also available by request.
potatoes, fried cabbage. The peach cobbler came from a cookbook, before I tweaked it – putting at little NeNe in there. Chris bakes, because he’s not a scratch cook; he follows recipes. I don’t mess with stuff where you have to put a tablespoon of this or that. I don’t measure; I eyeball it.
34 | people
run, kids, run! Mercy in Motion
@story Tonya McCoy @images Jeromy Price
people | 35
T
here’s something inherently uplifting about running. Putting one foot in front of the other, moving forward in long strides toward an absolute goal. A group of
Fort Smith students is finding this out, through a kids running club called Mercy in Motion. The idea for the club started last fall when Karen Hollenbeck, principal of St. Boniface Catholic School, was trying to find a way to get her students ready for an annual citywide track meet. She mentioned the plan to some of her friends at Mercy, a local faith-based Health Care System, telling them that each spring her students would get organized to compete in the yearly meet, but would still show up a bit unprepared physically for the competition. So Mercy stepped up. Patrick Pendleton, Educational and Organizational Specialist, met with some of his colleagues. One thing they agreed on, no matter what the age, running can be a challenge. They began tossing around ideas that could get kids motivated to run. They knew they had to find a way to make it fun and meaningful for the kids. Patrick says, “There were several of us at Mercy who enjoyed running and had sponsored a few runs and we thought, Well hey, let’s do something to get these kids ready and we came up with the idea of an afterschool running club. One of our thoughts was to promote it as a club, as opposed to a training activity, so that they would really think of the exercise as something that was fun, as opposed to work.” With that, flyers advertising the club were sent home at not only St. Boniface but also two other schools in town – Christ the King
and hang out, but we’re also getting exercise at the same time.
and Immaculate Conception. Now about sixty fifth and sixth
That’s my favorite part,” Gracie says.
graders from the three schools meet every Wednesday at Trinity Junior High. Some prefer the solid evenness of the track. Others
Matthew adds, “When I run, I run with my friends, so it’s not
favor the hills and valleys of the mile and a half cross-country
complete silence. We talk when we run, and it’s very fun.”
trek. Some walk, some walk and run, and some run the entire time. The group is completely voluntary and kids participate at
They’re also making new friends from the other schools that
their own pace.
participate. But the club is about more than just getting in shape and running. And it’s about more than just making new friends.
Principal Karen Hollenbeck has her fifth grade twins in the
Mercy added something more substantial to this running club.
program. Matthew and Gracie explain why they like the program
Each week before the club sets off, they gather for a short
so much. “I like it a lot because, all my friends, we get to go out
devotional and read scriptures like:
36 | people
Patrick says the theme of perseverance is especially important to the club because of different challenges kids will face as they grow up. “There are going to be times when you come to some hills in life as well that make it challenging and difficult, but you’re in it for the long haul.” The spiritual aspect of the group is also encouraging kids to help out in our community. Matthew, who attends each week, says, “We read a reading from the Bible, and that goes along with the good deeds we do, and some kids say, ‘I helped my little brother with his homework,’ or ‘I was running my little sister around the block to help her get her exercise,’ and I think it’s cool that the kids can actually say what they do and inspire all the other kids to try and do it. “I pull in my older neighbors’ trash, I help my mom with the dishes, I help my grandpa around his house, and I do lots of other things around my neighborhood.” Karen weighs in again, “I love the education of the whole child. Philippians 4:13 — I can do all things through Him who strengthens me. and Isaiah 40: 29-31 — He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak. Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall, but those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength.
It’s not just about reading and writing and math. It’s about getting their bodies athletically prepared, getting them to a better state of fitness. And then the tie-in with the good deeds, it’s like we’re hitting every important aspect of their being.” Because of the club, friendships form, endurance is built, perseverance is taught, and community service is encouraged. So what once started as a club to help kids ready for track, is getting kids ready for life.
They will soar on wings like eagles, they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint. “The spiritual aspect, it was a really neat fit, because that was part of our Mercy connection as a faith-based organization. We find that there’s just an awful lot of scripture that relates to perseverance or endurance,” says Patrick.
For more information about the Mercy in Motion Kids Running Club contact Patrick Pendleton at 479.314.2078.
38
UNCOMMON USES FOR BEER @words and images Catherine Frederick
1
SO LONG SLUGS
2
BEES BEWARE
3 4 5
In the evening, bury a wide mouth container (tuna cans work great) next to your plants so that the lip of the container is level with the soil surface. Fill the container a third of the way with beer. Slugs will slither in, but won’t slither out.
Bees love a backyard party. Banish them using beer and an old jar. Punch several 3/8" holes in the lid, then fill the jar with beer. Place the jar (or jars) around the yard where you’ve noticed the bees. Bees be gone.
STAINS BE GONE
Accidentally spill coffee, tea or worse, red wine, on your carpet? Follow the spill up with a bit of light beer to help pull out the stain. After the spill, blot the area then pour beer onto the stain. Blot lightly, repeat if needed. Once the stain has been removed, follow with regular carpet cleaner to remove any lingering scent.
GREAT GARDEN SOIL
Garden plants love yeast. No one likes to throw out beer. Here’s a win – win. Don’t toss out flat beer. Put it to good use by pouring a few tablespoons onto your garden to amend the soil. The added yeast in beer will bring about healthier plants and your garden will flourish.
MAGNIFICIENT MARINADE
The acid in beer makes for a top notch meat tenderizer without altering the flavor like other marinades can. Pierce the meat with a fork several times and place in a re-sealable bag or airtight container. Add beer (English ale is a good choice) and refrigerate for several hours or overnight. DO NOT reuse marinade or use it for basting.
6
JAZZ UP JEWELRY
7
BANISH BROWN SPOTS
8
BREAK DOWN RUST
9
CAST IRON CLEAN-UP
10
Beer contains natural acids that can help bring back shine to gold jewelry. Use a light beer and a clean towel to remove grime and dirt. Try using a soft toothbrush or eyebrow brush to get into hard to reach crevices. You can also try this on tarnished copper.
Pesky brown spots on your lawn? It’s believed that fermented sugars in beer stimulate plant growth and kill fungus. Try spraying your lawn with a chemical free brew such as Rolling Rock to restore the lush green landscape.
Rusty screw that won't turn? Pour a little beer on the hardware and wait a few seconds. Repeat. The carbonation in the beer will help break down the rust. Still didn’t budge? Pour more beer and try again until loosened.
I love cooking in my cast iron skillets, but cleaning up can be difficult at times. Try adding a little beer into the pan while it’s still warm. The bubbling brew should keep the remaining food from sticking, and it can even help season the pan.
CALM THE DOGS
I’m talking about your feet, not Fido. Beer’s enzymes have been shown to soften calluses. Concoct a mixture of room temperature beer and warm peppermint tea. DO NOT drink the mixture. Let your feet soak in the mixture for fifteen to twenty minutes.
39
UNCOMMON USES FOR LEMON
1
FLUFFY CAKES
6
CLEAR GLASS
2
MAGIC IN THE MICROWAVE
7
INVISIBLE INK
8
VEGGIE WASH
Who doesn’t love a moist, fluffy cake? The secret to keeping cakes light is lemon juice. Add a dash or two to the butter and sugar mixture and your cake will be as light as a feather.
Don’t reach for harsh chemicals when cleaning the gunk from your microwave. Instead, place a bowl containing ½ cup lemon juice and 1 ½ cups water in the microwave and heat on high for about 6 -8 minutes. The water will boil, and steam will condense inside the microwave. Dried on food will easily wipe away with a paper towel or cleaning cloth.
3
VEGGIE POWER
4
RICE IS NICE
5
Cauliflower and potatoes can both brown after boiling. Prevent it by adding a teaspoon of lemon juice to the water before you turn on the heat.
Have an ink stain on your carpet? Try a paste of cream of tartar and lemon juice. Gently dab on the stain. Let stand for five minutes, then clean the area with a damp cloth. Test an area of your carpet beforehand to check for color fastness.
Food-borne illnesses affect 1 in 6 Americans each year. Wash your vegetables naturally. In a spray bottle, combine 2 cups of cold water, 4 tablespoons of vinegar, and 2 tablespoons of lemon juice. Shake well and apply to fruits and vegetables, then rinse under tap water.
No one likes sticky rice. When cooking, add one teaspoon of lemon juice for each quart of water to fluff it up and keep it bright white.
CUTTING BOARD CLEAN UP
Water and soap alone won’t cut it when it comes to wooden cutting boards. Lemon juice is a natural sanitizer. Sprinkle a bit of coarse salt onto the board, then scrub with the flesh side of half a lemon to get into all of the cracks and crevices.
FABULOUS FINGERNAILS
Brighten your nails with lemon juice and water. Create a soak with ½ cup of lemon juice and 1 cup water, or rub lemon rind directly on your nails to whiten the enamel.
Lemon juice is a great glass cleaner and even provides some shine. Pour or spray directly onto glass and wipe off with a cleaning cloth. Use newspaper on the glass to remove any streaks.
10
AIR FRESHNER
Whether the stench is coming from your son’s room or the pet area, avoid chemical air fresheners and give lemons a try. Place lemon slices or halves in a dish for a natural air freshener or simmer on a stovetop to eliminate kitchen odors.
40
UNCOMMON USES FOR VINEGAR
1
FLOWER POWER
2
SPICE, SPICE BABY
3 4 5
Flowers make us happy, but we’re sad when the die. Keep your bouquet of cut flowers bright and perky a bit longer by adding two tablespoons of white vinegar per quart of water.
Cooking a delicious dish but got a little heavy handed with the cayenne? Vinegar is your friend. You can add apple or white vinegar, one teaspoon at a time, to simmer down the heat from the spice.
6
ERASE UNDERARM STAINS
7
GET THE STING OUT
8
CLOBBER CLOUDY GLASS
9
PRESERVE SOUR CREAM
SOOTHE MUSCLES
Lactic acid builds up in the muscles after exercise, causing soreness. Draw it out by applying apple cider vinegar. Add a few tablespoons of apple cider vinegar to a cup of warm water. Dip a cloth into the mixture then apply to sore areas for fifteen to twenty minutes.
AWAY ANTS
Ants are annoying, and they invite hundreds of their tiny friends along for the ride. Good thing we know they dislike vinegar. Spray the army’s trail with a 50/50 mix of water and white vinegar. The vinegar also eradicates the scent-trails they use to notify their brood of a food source.
FABRIC 101
Adding vinegar to your wash is like throwing a one-two punch. Just a 1/2 cup of white vinegar in your wash cycle will prevent lint and keep colors bright. It will also remove soap scum from the washing machine and your clothes. Want softer fabrics? Use vinegar in place of dryer sheets. Add 3/4 cup to your washer during the final rinse cycle.
10
When the aluminum in your deodorant reacts with the salts in sweat, you’re left with embarrassing yellow sweat stains. Soak the stain in pure white vinegar for ten minutes before washing, and it should disappear. If this doesn’t work, try making a paste of baking soda and vinegar, scrub lightly and rewash. If you’re leery, apply to a small spot to test.
The insects are already swarming. Keep apple cider vinegar on hand for stings. Applying apple cider vinegar with a cotton ball will help the stinging subside.
If your glasses have become cloudy from one too many trips in the dishwasher, soak them in warm vinegar for an hour. They will emerge sparkling clean. Dirty dishwasher? Clean it up by running an empty wash cycle using vinegar instead of detergent. Your dishwasher will sparkle and your next load of dishes will too.
Adding white vinegar to sour cream right after you open it will make it last longer. Add one teaspoon to a small container, two tablespoons to a large. The taste won’t be affected.
WEED OUT
Eliminate pesky weeds from the cracks in your sidewalk, driveway, or patio with a hefty dose of white vinegar. After a few days, the weeds should die and won’t come back for several months.
@Urban Magazine does not warrant or assume any liability or responsibility for the completeness, or usefulness of any information, product, or process disclosed.
36 | people 42
lisa and amy and art
Amy Scoggins
@story Marla Cantrell @images Courtesy Jolly Good Art Shop
Lisa Miller
people | 43
H
ow does your life change? Sometimes it’s as easy
are used in the place of canvases. In one, a ring-tailed pheasant
as finding a new friend. That’s what happened to
peers down from its textile perch, asking the question: ‘Aren’t I
Lisa Miller and Amy Scoggins. They met at Central
Pleasant?’ It’s this kind of whimsy that draws people in. Art, Lisa
Christian Church in Fort Smith, drawn to each other by a shared
and Amy believe, doesn’t have to be so serious.
interest in art. Both were moms. Both were shimmering with talent. When they were first introduced, Lisa, whose children
While Amy paints, Lisa, who majored in art at the University
are nine and six, was pursuing her life as an artist, taking
of Arkansas, heads outdoors with her camera. She likes nature
photographs and crafting jewelry, note cards and magnets that
photos. She’ll visit her mother’s garden, scout out an impressive
she sold at craft fairs and the Fayetteville farmers market.
tomato plant, or pick a basket of okra, then chop it up and put it in a bowl before she takes the photo. “I like to get close and take
But Amy, now she was a different story. She’d spent ten years
macro photos and I like textures and patterns you won’t see if
studying and then teaching art in Springfield, Missouri, before
you’re just walking around,” Lisa says. “The shapes, the geometry,
returning home to Fort Smith. She’d also freelanced there,
I like all of that. I like to make natural things look graphic.”
painting a little bit of everything. She laughs, remembering the bathroom ceiling mural she created for a couple who asked her
One of her best sellers are the magnets she creates by cropping
to paint a mural that would couple their beloved grandchildren
her photos and having them printed on metallic paper. Lisa
swimming with killer whales. It was an odd request, but the couple assured Amy they loved whales and they loved
sets them in glass, and boxes them in collections of four. One customer bought the magnets for a relative in
their grandchildren, so they thought putting the two
Germany. Lisa likes thinking about her work, made in
together made perfect sense. And so she painted,
Arkansas, in a German kitchen, holding up photos
giving the couple the ceiling they’d dreamed of.
or kids’ artwork. Amy is getting a lot of attention for her screen print
Amy gave up teaching when she came home to Fort
of a thumb, which can be turned up if you’re feeling
Smith. Her days were full. She was the mother of a baby and a toddler, she gardened, she volunteered at church.
happy, and down if you’re feeling blue. “I have to tell you,
The art projects she focused on in those days were in her own
I have a lot of respect for screen printers. It’s not an easy thing
home. She felt like her life as an artist had gone into hibernation.
to learn.”
That changed, rather quickly, in July, 2012. Lisa and Amy saw the yet-
And while the thumb is gaining popularity, it’s her personalized
to-be-opened BrickCity Emporium ad in @Urban, and something
nesting dolls that she’s most known for. That idea came from
made Amy say this: “‘Let’s go into business together.’” It was a
her father. Well, not from her father, rather from the need to
spur of the moment decision, nothing more than a whim, but it
surprise him one Christmas. “He’s the art teacher here in Fort
sparked something in the two, and they began to consider it. They
Smith at Northside High,” Amy says, “and a very difficult man
brainstormed, coming up with the name Jolly Good Art, because
to buy gifts for. I try to top myself each year. A few years ago,
they liked the lighthearted feel of it, and when the doors of BrickCity
I made him a set of nesting dolls. As he pulls them out, he
opened, their shop was already set up and ready for customers.
sees himself on the biggest doll and he starts to chuckle. As he opens it, he saw my mother, and each level caused him to
What they offer is original photographs and acrylic paintings,
laugh uncontrollably until he was hardly able to breathe. At the
screen prints, jewelry, note cards, custom pieces, and even
end, he was sobbing, as he opens the doll that was painted to
throw pillows. They bounce ideas off each other, and the ideas
look like my tiny baby daughter. He was sitting in the chair just
keep coming. Recently, Amy’s been painting on fabrics, which
weeping from all the laughter.”
44 | people
That was a great day for Amy. From that one gift, she created an
Both women are amazed at how much has happened since they
entire line. Customers send her photos, and she starts asking
decided to take a chance on art. They now have an Etsy shop, a
questions about hobbies and pets that she can incorporate
Facebook page, a blog, and loyal customers who visit the Jolly
into her design. Right now, she’s working on a set with ten
Good Art Shop at BrickCity.
family members. Their success comes from doing what they love. Art has been As both Amy and Lisa talk, the subject of family comes up again
good to them both, and Amy believes God delights in seeing His
and again. They are so proud of their families, the support they
children creating beauty in the world around them. Lisa credits
get from them, their patience as the two artists pursue their
her artistic eye as the reason she sees life so clearly. “It changes
dreams. Amy mentions her father again; he makes frames for
a walk in the woods. It changes a walk down the street,” Lisa
many of the pieces sold at Jolly Good.
says. “You see a fallen leaf and notice the concrete beneath it. It keeps you engaged in the world, and very alive.”
When they started the shop, they decided it was time to give back to the community they love. So each month they pick a charity and donate ten percent of their profits from that month’s sales. They’ve been humbled by the benevolence in this area,
Jolly Good Art Shop is located inside BrickCity
and by the kindness of their neighbors. “Our first charity was
Emporium, 3215 South 74th Street, Fort Smith. The
the Ronald McDonald Room at Mercy, and we had one customer
Etsy shop is at etsy.com/shop/JollyGoodArtShop.
who took home the literature we put out in the shop, and now she takes meals to the families there once a month,” Lisa says.
46 | people
The Queen of Oklahoma @story and images by Marcus Coker
people | 47
C
arter Sampson, also known as the Queen of Oklahoma,
In college, Carter lasted three semesters. “I just wanted so badly
wears red cowboy boots, black vintage glasses, and
to get away, to go explore things.” So at the age of twenty-one,
is rarely seen without her acoustic guitar. Around her
Carter quit college and moved to Boston. To earn money, she
neck is a golden guitar pick that reads, “Okla.” The “O” is a heart.
played a mix of covers and originals in the subways. “I think
“I’m a fifth generation Okie, so it’s in there,” says Carter, who’s
I would average eighty bucks for a couple of hours. I could
thirty-two and makes her living writing and singing music. It’s
perform the same three songs over and over again because your
the kind of music that makes you forget your problems, the kind
audience changed with every train that would come through.”
that makes you want to go home again. After a year in Boston, Carter moved back to Oklahoma City. She Home for Carter is currently Fayetteville, but she was born
got a job waiting tables at “an old dudes club,” which had an
in Oklahoma City. Her mom sang in the church choir, and her
open mic night. She sang every chance she got, saved her tips,
Dad played guitar. They still do. “I knew music was something
and used her savings to produce her first album, Fly Over the
I wanted to do since I was old enough to open my mouth. You
Moon, in 2004. She was twenty-four years old.
know that spot where you sit on the edge of the fireplace? Well, that wasn’t a fireplace to me. It was
In 2009, Carter released her second
a stage. And I would put on these
album, Good for the Meantime.
big performances.”
“I was still in my twenties, still goofing off. Up until five years ago,
When she was a child, Carter sang
I wouldn’t write anything that was
in church, but never took voice
real. It was all just stories I made
lessons. In seventh grade, she
up.” But by 2011, all that changed.
auditioned for eighth grade choir,
As Carter matured, so did her
but didn’t make the cut. Still, she
songwriting. She began to tackle
kept singing. When she was fifteen,
personal experiences like desire
she started playing guitar. “Dad taught me a little. He showed
and heartache that are tough to write about. The result was her
me the basic chords. I took a few lessons in high school from a
most recent album, Mockingbird Sing.
big, greasy dude who wanted me to play Metallica. I hated it. So I’m mostly self-taught.”
“I wanted to do something that sounded good and looked good too. I took a lot of things like graphic design for granted on the
As soon as she knew two chords, Carter started writing her own
first two albums, since I just had my tips (and my parents) to pay
music. “I still go to workshops to learn. There are a lot of people
for them. But I wanted to find a way to pay a photographer and
out there who can sing, and a lot of people who can sing and
have a great sounding band.”
play guitar. But to write something that’s your own, that tells a story that you can relate to, that’s really important to me.”
The solution was a website called kickstarter.com, which allows people to make donations to creative projects. In just thirty
Carter describes her music as rootsy. “I have problems with the
days, Carter received pledges from ninety people who wanted
word folk because a lot of people think seventies. But it’s like
to see her third album become a reality. In exchange, Carter gave
red dirt, this whole genre of Oklahoma music.” It’s the type of
her supporters buttons, tote bags, and even beer koozies. “I did
music you’d listen to on a summer’s night on your grandpa’s
several house concerts for those who made larger donations.
porch—comforting, like an old sweater.
Nothing compares to that setting—a private show in someone’s living room.”
48 | people a microphone. So they all pick an instrument, join a band, write a song, and perform it at the end of the week. Women run the sound, lift the speakers, you name it. So it’s about empowerment and showing them what’s possible. And I tell the girls, ‘You really can be anything you want to be. Just write a song about it and put it on a koozie, and it’s official.’” If anyone should know about what’s possible, it’s Carter. She’s worked for more than a decade to see her dream of being a fulltime musician come true, and last April, it did. “I was working at a restaurant in Fayetteville, and they called and said, ‘You haven’t been here in two months. Can we take you off the schedule?’ That’s when I knew. I always wanted music to be my fulltime job, and it just sort of happened.” Last year, Carter performed 215 shows, everything from roadhouses to wine bars. She slept on a lot of couches but still says, “It’s the perfect job for me. I can’t imagine working in an office, the same thing every day. Sometimes I leave a show and think, Is this a joke? This place set up the sound system, fed me dinner, and gave me a check.” Carter’s life isn’t for everyone. As Queen of Oklahoma, she doesn’t have health insurance, and the heater in her car Mockingbird Sing, which was released on 11.11.11, was recorded
(sometimes known as her tour bus) just went out. “My mom
on analog tape. “Everyone uses digital now and auto-tune, but
calls it ‘fly by the seat of your pants.’ But I just have to be okay
we did this on old reel-to-reel. It took a bit longer, but it was
with that. I have to believe that it keeps getting a little bit better
worth it to get that authentic sound.”
every week or every month. And it does.”
Carter’s favorite song on the album is called “Queen of Oklahoma,” which has become her nickname. “I was thinking about the things I missed about Oklahoma, so it started out
For upcoming shows, Queen of Oklahoma koozies,
just being about the state. Then it hit me that it’d be better if
and more, visit cartersampson.net.
I were the queen of it. And it just came out over the next thirty minutes—like it was meant to be.” She laughs and says, “I didn’t
Give it a listen: Hear “Sancuary” by Carter on
think people would start calling me that.”
AtUrbanMagazione.com. Click on @Urban Sounds located on our homepage.
But the title has worked out well, and Carter’s been able to use it as a way to encourage other aspiring artists. “I volunteer at a rock and roll camp for girls. Kids come in for a week, and some of them have never touched an instrument or talked into
50 | people
Southern Food by osmosis
@story Marla Cantrell @image Courtesy Stacey Little
We’re so pleased to announce the newest addition to our @Urban family. Stacey Little is joining us to share his Southern recipes, views on family life, and wisdom about how to get great meals on the table, without stressing out the cook.
people | 51
S
tacey Little lives and cooks in Prattville, Alabama, just
It’s become so popular in fact, that a cookbook editor from
north of Montgomery, where his family moved when he
Thomas Nelson sought Stacey out last year. She wanted to
was only five. He was raised by a mother who cooked
know if he would write a cookbook. Well, of course he would.
three meals a day, every day. His most vivid memories are of
Right now, he’s almost finished with the manuscript. One of the
sitting in the kitchen, on days when not only his mother, but also
things he’s most proud of is the chapter devoted to his readers’
his grandmother and great grandmother, showed up to cook
recipes. There will be twenty-five of those, gleaned from a
and laugh and share stories. The food was Southern, nothing
contest he conducted on his site.
fancy, but so good he still thinks about it today. Stacey is awed by how his life turned out. When he set off for What he learned from those sessions was how much food
college, writing about food wasn’t part of his plan. But it makes
matters. Not just the making of a meal, but what happens
sense to him that he is. Cooking and eating are the underpinning
when a family sits down together and starts to talk. Secrets
of Southern life. “In the South, every event is connected to
get shared, family stories get passed around as easily as the
food: weddings, birthdays, anniversaries, even funerals. We
mashed potatoes. And if you had a bad day, there’s someone
show love by cooking, and I’m so proud to be part of that. I grew
there to make you feel better about it.
up in a family where we sat down at the kitchen table every day and it was an opportunity to talk about what’s going on in
“I’m an only child,” Stacey says. “My parents did everything
each other’s live. Most families now don’t do that, and if they
they could so that my mom could stay home with me. We were
do, their kids are on their cell phones, they’re playing games,
pretty poor, but they made that sacrifice for me, so I’d have my
they’re texting. My goal with food is to provide people with easy
mother with me when I needed her. Our food was nothing fancy
recipes that don’t cause stress, using things they already have in
and sometimes included things like boxed mac and cheese, but
their cabinets. Food is so much more than nourishment.”
my mother was and is the greatest inspiration in my life, and I learned to cook from her and my grandmother and my great
One of his biggest fans is his mother, who continues to tell him he
grandmother. I joke that I learned to cook through Southern
can do whatever he sets out to do. And she’s exceedingly happy
osmosis. Just being around them was enough.
he’s doing it in the town where she raised him, spending hours in a kitchen, surrounded by good food and a whole lot of love.
“When I was only six or seven, too young probably to be in the kitchen alone, I made my parents breakfast. I made scrambled eggs that I’m sure were pure rubber by the time I finished. Bless their hearts, they ate it.” He missed home and home cooking when he left for college. He majored in communications and has a certificate in non-profit management. After graduation he wrote restaurant reviews for a Montgomery paper. But in 2008, when the recession was in full swing and newspaper readership faltered, the reviews were cut. They had been popular, so Stacey started a blog, Southern Bite, and kept on writing them. Not long after, readers started asking for recipes, and Stacey obliged. From there, the evolution of SouthernBite began. Today, the blog is all recipes and has more than 12,000 followers.
Follow Stacey at SouthernBite.com
52 | taste
@recipe and images Stacey Little
taste | 53
I
n the South, we’re big on introductions. They range from the
more than spending the day in the kitchen preparing a meal for
elaborate to a simple gesture of friendship. New neighbors
my family and friends. My heart just swells with pride to have
usually don’t even have the boxes all unpacked before we’re
everyone gathered around my table.
heading over with a cake or a pie. Rarely do you pass a man in a pick-up truck on a back-country road when you aren’t offered a
This recipe is also one of the first recipes that I posted on
smile and friendly wave. Heck, we even plan elaborate coming-
SouthernBite.com, so it holds a special meaning because of
out parties to introduce our young folks to the world. While all of
that, too. Southern Bite began as a blog to share local restaurant
that is just fine, I prefer a more subtle introduction.
reviews after the newspaper I was working for eliminated them. Folks had asked me to continue doing them, so I found the
Hi, my name is Stacey Little. I’m a food blogger and a marketing
venue to do that in a blog. When a friend requested a recipe, I
guy, but most importantly I’m a husband and a daddy. And while
just decided to post it rather than emailing it, so I could share
I certainly enjoy those first two titles, those last two are really
the link with a few others that had asked about it. The rest, as
what matter to me. My food is the food I grew up on and the
they say, is history. People quickly gravitated to my recipes, so
food my little boy will grow up on, too. It’s easy to prepare and
I shared more. Today, the site is a full-fledged food blog, which
I bet you probably have most of the ingredients in the pantry
is weird because I never really considered myself a writer.
already. That’s just the way I like it. I’ve found that when a recipe
That is until I found my love of writing about food. There’s just
is simple and includes everyday ingredients, people are more
always something to say about it. People can relate to food and
likely to give it a try. My philosophy has always been that a
through it as well.
home-cooked meal is the best meal, so whenever I can equip folks to provide their families with one, I do it.
This is my go-to recipe when sending in snacks for school functions or as a “thank you” to our veterinarian’s office for
This particular recipe holds a very special place in my heart.
taking such good care of our pups. It’s a super-easy recipe that
It’s one of the very first things my wife made for me. We were
turns out perfect every time.
still dating and I honestly can’t remember if there was a special reason for her making them, but I’ll never forget the taste of that
So, thanks for what has already been a warm welcome. Y’all
very first Pecan Chewy. It was gooey, crunchy, sweet, and filled
scoot on down a bit and pour me a glass of tea. Feeding people
with love. You know, I believe that we Southerners express love
makes me happy and sharing my food with all you folks is just
in just that way – we cook for one another. Nothing delights me
like adding another place at this big old table.
54 | taste
: Pecan Chewies Ingredients
2 sticks butter, melted
1 1 2 2 1 2
cup granulated sugar cup light brown sugar, firmly packed eggs, well beaten cups self-rising flour cup pecans teaspoon vanilla
Preheat the oven to 300 degrees. In a large bowl, combine the butter and sugars by hand. Stir in the eggs. Add the flour gradually and stir until all the lumps are gone. Add the pecans and vanilla and stir until just combined.
Instructions
Spread the mixture into a greased and floured 13 x 9-inch baking dish. Bake 40 to 50 minutes, being cautious not to overcook. Cool completely before cutting into squares. No self-rising flour? Make your own from all-purpose flour. For every cup of self-rising flour you need, simply combine 1 cup of all-purpose flour with 1 1/2 teaspoons of baking powder and 1/2 teaspoon of salt.
Stacey Little
is the author and publisher of SouthernBite.com, an award-winning Southern food blog dedicated to sharing his family’s Southern recipes.
56 | taste
@image Jeromy Price @recipe Jeff Price, Bar Manager Movie Lounge
1 ½ oz. orange tequila ¼ oz. agave nectar 1 lime wedge 1 orange wheel ¼ oz. lime juice soda water Muddle lime wedge, orange wheel, tequila and agave nectar. Add ice, shake and strain into glass filled with ice. Top with soda water and garnish with lime.
Less than 150 calories Sponsored by Movie Lounge
7601 Rogers Ave, Fort Smith 479.226.3595 | MovieLoungeFSM.com
Enjoy this and other premium cocktails at MovieLounge. Please drink responsibly.
58 | travel
through the eye of the needle @story and images Jeromy Price
travel | 59
I
magine rushing waters carving through a lush, green forest. Towering bluffs on either side. Narrow cliff-side trails, waterfalls waiting around every bend, all of which culminate
at the Eye of the Needle. What sounds like a landscape that can only be found in a Peter Jackson movie is one of the Buffalo National River’s many hidden gems, the Indian Creek Trail. The trailhead is located along the Buffalo River Trail about one mile west of Kyle’s Landing, a campground between Ponca and Jasper on Highway 74. The drive is about two and a half hours from Fort Smith, and it offers some of the most beautiful scenery Arkansas has to offer. My wife Teresa and I are avid, albeit amateur, outdoor enthusiasts. So when a friend told us about this trail, it piqued our interest. We’re always looking for a good challenge, strenuous, scenic, with just a hint of risk. There would be miles of winding through trees, crossing creek beds, and scaling bluffs. Sounded like fun. After careful planning and over-packing, we made our way to Kyle’s
old, well preserved and served as landmarks—a very important
Landing to set up camp for the weekend. The Indian Creek Trail is
feature for this ever-changing trail.
an offshoot of the Buffalo River Trail, so this was the best access point. We set up, ate too much junk food, and slept as restless as a
Upon our first crossing of Indian Creek, we realized our trip
kid the night before Christmas. Early the next morning, we set out
would be trickier than anticipated. The trail now traveled along
with much anticipation to add another trail to our list of conquests.
both sides of the creek. Still, we decided to cross. We knew regardless of which side we were on, we needed only to follow
We started on the Buffalo River Trail and headed west following
the creek as far as we could.
the old trail signs. This part of the journey was heavily trekked and easy to follow. Once we found our trailhead, however, things
We encountered waterfall after waterfall, each more beautiful
quickly changed. We soon learned this was not a maintained
than the one before. Clear, rushing water cascaded between and
trail, nor was it mapped. Every path along the way sprouted
around boulders shaped by time and the relentless current, and
numerous switchbacks. It was clear that most of the trail had
each coming to rest in a tranquil pool that would make anyone
been established by trial and error and traveled like a “choose
feel like a Zen monk. It was peaceful. It was serene. Every time
your own way” novel.
we stopped to soak it all in, I found myself saying “I wish I could take it with me.” All the stresses and complications of everyday
We were giddy.
life seemed to wash away with the current.
The first mile of the trail traveled along the Indian Creek, which
About three miles in, the trail converged along the side of a short
rages during the rainy season. None of the overgrowth or fallen
bluff overlooking a deep pool. It narrowed to little over one foot
trees was cleared. We made our way, around, under, and over
of walking space, which required us to cling to the overhang
several large trees that had fallen across the path. They were
for support. My inner ten-year-old wanted to swing across like
60 | travel Tarzan. Luckily, my better judgment feared the fifteen-foot drop into icy waters even more. Shortly after making it across, the trail took a steep incline to the top of the bluff. Along the way, we noticed many portions of the trail had been washed out by rain. Fortunately, we ran across a fellow explorer who had experienced this trail several times. We received the best advice anyone can have for this switchback-riddled trail: “When in doubt, go up.” And up we went. When the trail carried us back to the creek bed, it was only a short distance farther to the boxed-in canyon. Awaiting us were two magnificent waterfalls. The first came pouring out of a cave in the side of the bluff; the second wound its way down the ravine. We felt as though we had just discovered some lost paradise. We didn’t want to leave, but the Eye of the Needle beckoned, and our trail was about to become even more adventurous. With little more than an old nylon rope tied to a small tree growing from the side of the bluff, we climbed up to the ledge beside the waterfall. We scaled our way up the steep hillside to what appeared to be a dead end. Only when we’d reached the top did we see the hidden cave looping to the other side. Once through, we were above the waterfalls and on the upper creek bed. This length of the trail was littered with large boulders— sentinels whose purpose, it seemed, was to prevent us from going any farther. There it was, the Eye of the Needle—a window carved high in the cliff that framed the sun. Its beauty was almost holy. For a moment we felt compelled to pay homage; say a prayer, make a wish, something to show our gratitude for what had become a journey of self-discovery. By this point, we had come to appreciate the virtues of simplicity, perseverance and courage. However, our journey wasn’t over yet. We had to scale to the top, up and over a steep hillside nicknamed “The Saddle”. For at least fifty feet, we hugged rock and tree alike. After climbing down ten feet or so, there were no more handholds. No rocks, no trees, nothing to hold on to but hope. So one at a time, we
travel | 61
slid down a steep twenty-foot embankment that landed us at the top of the Eye of the Needle. The view to the bottom was
The Indian Creek Trail connects to the Buffalo River
breathtaking. We took a moment to dust off, empty our rock-
Trail 1 mile West of Kyle’s Landing campgrounds.
filled shoes, and view the trail we’d just conquered from 200 feet up.
CAUTION: This is NOT a child-friendly trail. It is strenuous and, in some areas, dangerous. It is also
For another mile, the trail finished much the way it had started,
prone to washout and runoffs during rainy seasons.
with switchbacks, waterfalls and a few steep hills. Shortly after,
Please plan ahead, wear appropriate attire and shoes,
the trail connected to the Old River Trail. We turned southeast
and NEVER hike it alone. Be sure to take energy-
back toward Kyle’s Landing. This portion of the hike was a nice
boosting snacks and plenty of water. Also, this is not
change of pace from all the climbing and it gave us time to
a mapped or maintained trail, so remember to always
reflect on everything we’d seen and done. We realized we were
follow the creek.
now burdened with higher expectations for future experiences. The Indian Creek Trail had become our new standard.
For more information, visit the Buffalo Outdoor Center on Hwy 43 in Ponca, or visit them at BuffaloRiver.com.
62 | back story
The Unburdening of Lida Stark
@back story Marla Cantrell
L
ida Stark spent the winter getting rid of things. The
holding out her hand, showing Lida the dust on her fingertip, a
trampoline her daughter Della had long since outgrown,
gray hill on a tiny flesh island. “Lord, Mama,” Della said, “for a
the Singer sewing machine her grandmother had given
woman who made me scrub the bathroom every Saturday, you
her, seven mismatched chairs her uncle had stolen, piece by
sure have let up on the housework.”
piece, when he’d worked at Callahan’s furniture factory. “The trick is,” he’d told her once, “to stick the chair piece in the back of your
When Della left, Lida took the trinkets down. She washed them
pants and weave it up under your shirt. The guards will check
in Dawn soap and rinsed them in vinegar water. On a dishtowel
your lunch bucket. But no real man wants to pat you down.”
by the sink, the menagerie shone in little clutches, elephants and tigers on one end, deer and rabbits on the other. When she
Lida walked around her old dining room table, a rare find in
looked at her window she had a clear view of the pasture for the
pecan she’d bought on a trip to Savannah fifteen years ago.
first time in years. A black and white cow was eating daffodils,
She turned thirty-three on that trip, had greeted the day with
just beyond the fencerow. She took the glass shelves down.
a mimosa and a slice of cherry pie. She smiled thinking of it. Her husband Calvin said he worried about women who drank
The next week she tackled her cupboards, tossing out rusty
before the farm report aired on the radio, and then he’d kissed
canning supplies, and then the jelly glasses she kept in case
her hand, a gallant move that made them both laugh. Back then
of what? In case thirty-six thirsty people showed up all at the
she tried to fill every inch of the house; she’d even put glass
same time. When was the last time she’d had more than three
shelves across her wide living room windows and filled the
people in the house, she wondered. It must have been when
space with knickknacks: blue elephants, red hens, spotted deer,
Calvin died, two years before. The people poured in, church
yellow wishing wells.
folks and Calvin’s co-workers from down at the foundry, friends from childhood. A woman Lida didn’t know, who couldn’t have
The unburdening had begun easily enough. Della came over
been more than twenty-five, picked up a photo from the curio
one day in late November. She ran her finger across the shelves,
cabinet. In it Calvin was shaking Dale Earnhart’s hand on the
back story | 63 day he’d come to the local Chevy dealer to sign autographs. The
“The two events may have overlapped,” Lida said.
girl moved her fingers around the edge of the frame, and wept great tears that spotted her purple blouse. It unnerved Lida to
The wind was picking up, whistling across the metal air stack.
no end. She left the group and hid in the barn, where she spent
Lida heard something hit the cellar door, the ping like a baseball
the afternoon hidden in the hayloft.
hitting a metal bat. Calvin started to get up but Lida put down her fork and touched his arm.
The preacher cried too, at the funeral, talking about the day he’d watched Calvin shoo a flock of geese across the road. Calvin had
The weather radio was beside him, though he’d not turned it on yet.
stopped traffic that rainy day, when he raised his six foot five
He eyed it but stopped short of switching it on. “You’re a mighty
self up to its full potential and stood on the jotted yellow line on
fine cook now, Miss Lida,” he said, his voice full of remembering.
Mayback Canyon Road and dared one person to hit the gas pedal before the mama goose and her eight goslings waddled by.
“I thank you,” Lida said, and felt an inkling of what she had when she first met Calvin, a boy from Tennessee, who showed up at
Lida knew the same kindness. In storms, Calvin took her hand
her school just as the leaves fell, the year she turned fourteen.
and ran with her across the yard, past the clothesline and the
He towered above her, standing next to her at her locker, taking
cheery chicken coop so ornate they’d named it Coop DeVille, and
her hand when she climbed the bleachers. His height made her
helped her down the steep steps to the storm cellar. Once she
feel sheltered. He was like the oak in her yard that surrounded
was settled, he stood on the same steps, the door to the cellar
the nest of robins that chirped like tiny madmen as soon as the
agape, and monitored the storm’s progress, a tactic that seemed
sun came up.
unnatural for a man who feared Mother Nature as much as he did. “Remember when we took the float trip on the Buffalo two The week before Calvin’s heart stopped, the sky had turned
summers ago?” Calvin said. “We spent the night so close to
smoky gray, still as midnight, and Lida felt the pressure inside
shore the water lapped at the tent all through the night? I
her head change. “A bad sign,” she told Calvin, when he came
wanted to tell you something then.” He stopped for a second,
into the kitchen. “No warnings out yet,” he said. “Still,” she
a cloud passing across his eyes. “I wasn’t very happy ,” he said,
said, and touched her temple, where a dull headache was just
and then looked away.
beginning. They didn’t run to the cellar that day. Calvin waited for her to finish cooking supper. She fixed two plates: fried pork
“No, no, you weren’t.”
chops, cheese grits, fried apples, and biscuits. The yellow cake she slipped into a carrier. Calvin held the pitcher of sweet tea,
Calvin rubbed his neck. “I kept thinking about when Mama
silverware, a flashlight, and the portable radio. They were so
wanted to leave Daddy, back when you and me first got married.
burdened they all but crept to the cellar.
Forty-two, never held a job, and my mama wanted to become a divorcee. I asked her why. She said, ‘Your daddy has a hard time
Inside, they sat side by side, the plates resting on their laps.
finding his way home.’”
“Remember when you couldn’t cook a lick?” he asked. “But your mama and daddy never divorced,” Lida said, and her “I just needed Grandma Baker’s cast iron skillet,” Lida said.
heart jumped. She’d never heard this story before.
“Soon as I got it, I started cooking real good.” “No, they did not. I went to see Daddy. I laid down the law, which Calvin smiled at her. “Seems to me you got the skillet right before
near about wrecked whatever goodwill was left between us. I
you took that cooking class from the Home Extension ladies.”
said I’d come after him if Mama filed papers. He puffed up. But
64 | back story after a while he started to talk a little. He loved Mama, he said.
kicked off. On Wednesday, they skipped church and walked the
More than air, he said. But before I left, he got mad all over
field to the pond where they threw in a line and waited for the
again. He said, ‘You’re cut from the same cloth, buddy boy. You
yellow perch to bite.
just don’t know it yet.’ On Friday, Calvin brought her white carnations, her favorite, and The air in the cellar smelled of bug spray and mold. Lida rubbed
she cried as she put them in the Milk Glass vase. They went to
her temples.
bed early, she in her new nightgown, and when she woke the next morning Calvin was already gray.
“But you’d never…” she started. The paramedics knocked over the ceramic umbrella holder by the Calvin looked at her, his dark eyes two lonely pools. He blew
front door. One of the shards hit Lida’s ankle, the blood spilling
out a stream of air, laid down the plastic plate and hung his
across her bare foot. It was a heavy holder, over three feet tall,
head.
and it shattered against the tile floor. The men stopped to take care of her, setting Calvin’s gurney down by his leather recliner.
“Calvin?” Lida reached down and touched the spider-shaped scar on her Thunder ricocheted above them. They both jumped.
ankle. It had healed poorly, and now, two years later, it rose uneven above her skin. She pulled her cotton sock over it and
Not once had Lida doubted Calvin. You could set your watch
opened the china hutch where her collection of untended
by him. Twenty minutes. That’s how long it took to get from the
crystal stood dull in the morning light. She began wrapping
foundry to their house. He hadn’t been late more than a dozen
each piece in yards of newspaper.
times in the last twenty-three years. Lida reached inside the hutch and picked up the crystal swan “I never wanted to be like that sorry cuss,” Calvin finally said,
she’d won at a church bingo game when she was fifteen. Calvin
his fists clenched on his lap. “I surely did not.” She thought he
was there with her, his long legs sprawled beneath the low table.
might say more and it made her throat close. She reached up
When she yelled Bingo, he stood up and whooped, as if it took
and kissed him. What she felt then was a breaking inside, as if
some special talent to put a blue plastic disc across O62. She held
the earth beneath her was rising and falling, the way her own
the swan to the light. A small crack ran along the swan’s neck,
chest rose and fell with every breath.
something she’d not noticed before. She tucked the bird into the pocket of her apron. Some things needed to be saved, she
Calvin kissed her back. When he pulled her closer, the plates
thought, running her fingers across the break, again and again,
fell to the floor, the silverware ringing against the concrete.
until she could feel the difference between it and the imprint of
He touched her hair, and traced her jaw with his rough thumb.
its feathers, so carefully drawn, such a long, long time ago.
Outside, the storm raged, but they were no longer partners with this storm. The next week, he rushed home each night. His timing got better with every trip. Twenty minutes, then eighteen. Seventeen on the day he died. She started putting on makeup in the afternoon, putting on music: The Oakridge Boys, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Hank Williams. They danced on Tuesday, their shoes
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