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  • Texas | Columns | "True Confessions and Mild Obsessions"

    Straighten Up and Fly Right

    by Frances Giles
    A number of childhood games back in the day, to use the contemporary phrase, seemed to have their own season, marbles, yo-yo's, certain sports, building Christmas tree forts and playing with water pistols, to name some. It was the same with kite season, one of my favorites. Around the end of February we began gearing up for it, collecting pennies, nickels and dimes, hoping to save enough to buy a really expensive and decorative plastic one and “trash talking” one another re: skill, what superior kites we intended to buy, the usual kid's competitive exchanges.
    Kite Flying - Ricky Walker & his dad
    "My dad and I flying a kite, right out in the front yard at good 'ole 1838 Washington Blvd." - Ricky Walker

    Kites were sold at the five-and-dimes, Sommer's Rexall Drug on Washington Boulevard and at Ricky Walker's Dad's toy store on Highland Avenue, among other Beaumont businesses. There were 2 basic materials used in those kites, a heavy, sort of waxy paper and the more costly vinyl. Colors and designs on the paper kites were limited to green, red, blue and orange, maybe yellow but I can't quite recall, and they were usually stamped with planes and rocket designs. I don't remember there being a big selection. The paper kites came in an elongated diamond shape utilizing two crossed sticks and another which resembled a flat roofed house which used 3 sticks. These sold for a dime, at least during my elementary school days. The vinyl kites had various, more elaborate designs and were diamond shaped and sold for between 19 cents and a quarter. Almost no one ever bought a box kite, but we saw them flying way up high once in awhile. Fifty cents was far beyond the reach of most of us kids on and around Emile Street. Kite string, or twine, sold for about a nickel, and if you were smart you saved it to use the following year, and kite tails were made from strips of dust rags.

    Tree branches, roofs and power lines could be the kiss of death to kites, one way or another. A strong gusty wind could bring a kite down in no time, slamming it into the hard earth and snapping the orange crate sticks in an instant. Just as heartbreaking was the sight of someone's kite flying away into the blue after the string had snapped in a high wind, or because the string was old and dry rotted, maybe.

    I'm happy to report I never lost a kite to this particular peril, which was definitely not due to my skill as a kite flier, but because I never, ever managed to launch one more than probably 20 feet aloft. I made many a running pass back and forth, back and forth but to no avail. The other kids critiqued me year after year, the tail was too long and/or heavy, the bridle was too long, I was running away from the wind, but the real truth lay somewhere in the vicinity of anxiety that I was going to lose my beloved kite. I just couldn't seem to make myself pay out the string as the kite flew higher and finally rode atop a nice steady wind current. Maybe I just enjoyed the process far more than the end result. Who knows?

    One year I read a library book about children in China engaged in a kite fighting competition, and I became mildly obsessed with the idea that I could do this, wanted to do this and finally, MUST do this. The point of the competition was to sever the string on competitor's kites using ground glass glued to a certain length of string, leaving just one winner. The sharp shards acted as a saw when the string was maneuvered skillfully. I could clearly see this in my mind's eye and set about making my own Destroyer of the Skies.

    It might just have worked, too, since I planned to keep it a secret until I wowed the other kids with my superior skill, never mind that I hadn't ever actually flown a kite high enough to test this prior to that point. That was in the past...this was now. I'm sure I never stopped to consider how the others kids might feel, or react, when I had sent their kites to the heavens. Genius often falls short of reality.

    I sort of borrowed my brother's tube of model airplane glue, collected a drinking glass from the kitchen cabinet, actually a tall Bama jelly jar, and the hammer from the tool kit on the screened in back porch, and was headed back through the kitchen into the dining room when my mother stopped me in my tracks. Just where did I think I was going with this assortment of stuff? I can't for the life of me understand what triggered her suspicion that I was “up to no good.” All I know is she put the kibosh on my elaborate plans for that kite season with “Have you lost your ever loving mind, Sissy? Put all of that back where it belongs right this minute!”

    Sorry NASA, I tried.


    © Frances Giles
    "True Confessions and Mild Obsessions"
    March 5, 2013 Column
    Related Topics: People | Columns | Texas Town List | Texas

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