TexasEscapes.comHistoric Texas: The Past As It Is Today
Columns: Historical, Humor and Opinion
Over 1000 Texas Towns & Ghost Towns
NEW : : RESERVATIONS : : TEXAS TOWNS A-Z : : FEATURES : : COLUMNS : : ARCHITECTURE : : IMAGES : : SITE MAP
HOME
SEARCH SITE
FORUM
RESERVATIONS
Hotels
Cars
Air
USA
World
Cruises
TEXAS TRAVEL
TOWNS A to Z
Towns by Region
GHOST TOWNS
TRIPS :
State Parks
Rivers
Lakes
Drives
Maps
LODGING
TEXAS
COLUMNS
FEATURES :
Ghosts
People
Historic Trees
Cemeteries
ARCHITECTURE :
Courthouses
Jails
Bridges
Theaters
Churches
Gas Stations
Water Towers
Monuments
Statues

Schoolhouses
Post Offices
Depots
IMAGES :
Old Neon
Murals
Signs
BOOKS
Links
TE
Site Information
Recommend Us
Newsletter
About Us
Contact TE
 
 Texas : Features : Columns : Spunky Flat and Beyond :
HOW SWEET IT WAS
by George Lester
George Lester
I may have this wrong, but the best I can remember it, my father had a unique way of deciding where to have our vegetable garden each year. Our farm consisted of almost four hundred acres and we could have had it any place that was convenient. The way I recall it is that he would take notice of which spot grew the healthiest looking specimens of cotton, corn, high gear, and so forth. The next season he started a garden there. Regardless of how he arrived at his decision, it worked. Every year we would have some of the most robust vegetables you ever saw. People would marvel at our tomatoes, onions, carrots, squash and sweet potatoes.

Speaking of sweet potatoes, one morning Dad came in the house all out of breath with excitement. He was holding the largest yam we had ever seen. We celebrated like he had found a gold nugget. On our next trip to town he took his prize to the Marlin Chamber of Commerce. It weighed in at just over eight pounds. The manager immediately removed a smaller one from the display window and placed ours there for everyone to see. We were all very proud of our exhibition but Dad was ecstatic. He never missed a chance to take friends by and show them what a great sweet potato he had grown.

A short time later kinfolk from out of town come to visit and as soon as he had the chance to work it into the conversation Dad told them about his championship potato. They all seemed to be as thrilled as he was and they couldn’t wait to see it for themselves. It was only a ten-mile drive into town so they all piled into the car to go take a look. They could hardly contain their excitement until the car finally pulled up to the Chamber of Commerce. Everyone leaped out and ran to the display window, then froze in their tracks. Dad’s pride and joy was nowhere in sight. It had been replaced by a twelve-pound sweet potato.

The trip back home was a somber one. For a long time no one spoke. I may be wrong about this too, but I believe that is the first time I heard the phrase.

“Records are made to be broken.”
© George Lester
Spunky Flat and Beyond - A Memoir
- August 15, 2005 column
HOME
Privacy Statement | Disclaimer
Website Content Copyright ©1998-2005. Texas Escapes - Blueprints For Travel, LLC. All Rights Reserved
This page last modified: August 15, 2005