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Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Red Oak House garden notes no. 27 and lunch with Bob


"Do everything with a mind that lets go. Do not expect any praise or reward." Ajahn Chah


My father is spending the day with us and while I dead-headed the daylilies he contentedly read the morning paper on the back patio.  Can you tell I come from a line of readers?

My delight this morning was in finding a new blossom on "Love in the Library" daylily. I'm a librarian so, naturally, I was willing to pay a wee bit of a stiff price for this at the annual auction a few years ago.  I didn't care what it looked like, although I must say it is a lovely blush pink, isn't it?

Love in the Library daylily
A few more lovelies for good measure:

Dakota Sunshine daylily, another that I just had to have for THE NAME

Little Light of Mine daylily

Fun Fling daylily

Bama Bound daylily

Strawberry Cream Cupcake daylily

Gordon Biggs daylily

More of the tomato harvest in a beautiful bowl I bought from my friend Tama Smith of Prairie Fire Pottery

Earlier in the spring, I dropped some zinnia seeds in here and there to fill gaps.


The first ruby-throated hummingbird showed up last night on the hanging fuschia.  They also like to feed on my red bee balm.


We had lunch today with our friend Bob Martinson, and a special lunch it was.  Bob wanted to meet my Daddy.  Big-hearted Bob and his wife Jodi had spent Memorial Day in Normandy, France, and they brought home some incredibly thoughtful mementos for my father, who was on Omaha Beach on D-Day.  Daddy told him some of his World War II stories and signed the framed photograph that Bob had purchased (one for his wall and one for Daddy's), the iconic Robert Capra image of D-Day.  I confess that some of us were a little choked up when Bob presented Daddy with a vase filled with sand that he had collected at Omaha Beach.  How he got this home in his luggage is beyond me.  Bob and Daddy and Jim belong to the fellowship of service members and it is good to pause and remember the incredible sacrifices they have made so we can all be free.



What friends we are blessed with.  From the bottom of my heart, Bob and Jodi, I thank you. Now let's eat some tomatoes!




Monday, July 24, 2017

"Well I'll be Damned, Here Comes Your Ghost Again": Remembering David Ohm

"Well I'll be damned, here comes your ghost again........"  Joan Baez "Diamonds and Rust"

I am now going to write about one of the most painful chapters of my long life.

I am going to remember David.  David Ohm.  Dead these forty years now. I can hardly believe that when I write it.  And write this story I shall, as I cannot keep it buried within any longer.  The pain goes on, as does the healing. Together, we who knew and loved him mourned and, together, we share very vivid memories of him and, thank goodness, enduring friendships.




I grew up with David.  We, the children of Slope and Bowman counties.

He first flickered into my consciousness when I was at the neighbor's branding, Johnny & Corinne Getz's, there on Deep Creek in Slope County, North Dakota.  He was a close friend of my (later) brother-in-law, Craig McLaughlin.  I was at the branding, doing whatever it was assigned to me, no doubt, helping with the cooking and the myriad chores of the day, and getting in on the branding fun outdoors as soon as I could manage it.

After that, the next we crossed paths that I recall clearly was when I was at his sister's dance party, at their home in Bowman, ND, just next door to my Grandpa Andy's house.  Rod Stewart's "Maggie May" was coming out of the record player.  He was tres cool, doing his older brother stuff with his buddies.  Over the years, we saw each other on a regular basis, as it was, after all, rural North Dakota, and he was Craig's best friend.  Craig and David had many hijinks together over the years, and they kept their parents hopping.

In the winter I was seventeen, my sister and his aforementioned pal, Craig McLaughlin, were married, and we all celebrated the marriage at the McLaughlin home in Bowman after the wedding at the Rhame Lutheran Church.  David and I were in the wedding party.  He was a student at Jamestown College.

He went to class in his bathrobe that day
David on the far right
That's me in the green, the Maid of Honor

One night, the following summer, when I was eighteen, at the Ludlow, SD bar with my pals, our paths crossed again, and there was a strong spark between us. We went home from that bar together, and were, from that point onward, nearly inseparable.  We were young.  We worked our respective summer jobs, me at Malcolm Stewart's dental practice and he at the Bowman Golf Course, and then we were otherwise together, talking books and music and life. We knew each other well, and we shared a love of many things, including the Bad Lands. Another connection between us was that his parents had lived in Okinawa, as had my family, although not at the same time.

Later that summer we drove to Jamestown (where he'd been a college student the previous two years) in his parents' station wagon to pick up the stuff from his apartment.  While he loaded his stuff, I sat in a wicker chair and read his issues of Rolling Stone magazine.

Then, one night in late July, after we'd been to a wedding party south of Rhame, he took me home to my family farm, and I never saw him again.  Driving home to Bowman from our farm, on the Farm to Market road, he fell asleep, rolled his car, and was killed instantly.  At the moment he died, he was listening to the Ozark Mountain Daredevils on his Porsche car stereo.

With overpowering sorrow, we buried him.  He was so very much loved, by his parents, by his siblings, by his friends. We were all expected to go on with life, but none of us were the same thereafter.  His friends came from far and wide.  His family's hearts were broken.  His family was much loved in the southwest ND region and many came to show their support.

We all picked up and went on with our lives. What choice did we have?

His younger brother is, to this day, one of my best friends and an exceptional man is he, one of whom I'm very proud.

When David died, he was reading the book Simple Justice by Richard Kluger.  His mother has that book. On his turntable was the album by Jimmy Buffett "Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes".  Nearby was Jackson Browne's "The Pretender".


These record albums were what his family and I listened to over and over in the months as we grieved, struggling to grapple with what had happened.

Me, in Ohms kitchen, winter 1978
We all soldiered on.  A powerful bond was forged between us, and we were forevermore changed.  This is a photo of me taken by Paul in that time period, in the Ohm kitchen in Bowman.

We miss you still, so very much, all these forty years later.  I remember exactly the last thing he said to me, and his family knows what he said, but I'm not writing it here.

These days I shift through emails with confirmation of hotel reservations, and other such banal topics.  What kind of world is this?  

It is the world of the living.

What would he have done with his life we all wonder? What would his children have been like?  What would he be doing with gadgets like Facebook and Twitter?  We all have our thoughts.  Personally, I think there is a strong possibility he would have become a lawyer and, perhaps, even become governor. I'm certain he would have rocked his world.  

Jackson Browne "For a Dancer"

Keep a fire burning in your eye
Pay attention to the open sky
You never know what will be coming down

I don't remember losing track of you
You were always dancing in and out of view
I must have thought you'd always be around
Always keeping things real by playing the clown
Now you're nowhere to be found

I don't know what happens when people die
Can't seem to grasp it as hard as I try
It's like a song I can hear playing right in my ear
That I can't sing
I can't help listening
And I can't help feeling stupid standing 'round
Crying as they ease you down
'Cause I know that you'd rather we were dancing
Dancing our sorrow away
(Right on dancing)
No matter what fate chooses to play
(There's nothing you can do about it anyway)

Just do the steps that you've been shown
By everyone you've ever known
Until the dance becomes your very own
No matter how close to yours
Another's steps have grown
In the end there is one dance you'll do alone

Keep a fire for the human race
Let your prayers go drifting into space
You never know what will be coming down
Perhaps a better world is drawing near
And just as easily it could all disappear
Along with whatever meaning you might have found
Don't let the uncertainty turn you around
(The world keeps turning around and around)
Go on and make a joyful sound

Into a dancer you have grown 
From a seed somebody else has thrown
Go on ahead and throw some seeds of your own
And somewhere between the time you arrive
And the time you go
May lie a reason you were alive
But you'll never know

The following photos and mementos are courtesy of Paul Ohm.
David and his father Durwood

David and his father Durwood



"When He Walked" A poem written about David by the Rhame Lutheran Church pastor Rick Watson
Here is a song written and performed by Rick Watson that includes David.




David's parents owned the Ohm Funeral Home in Bowman so Walby Funeral Chapel handled the services.  Durwood and Marilyn and Durwood's father, Al, had buried thousands of area residents by this time, and, because of this, the community turned out to support them in their time of grief. 


In the days and weeks following his death, we shifted through all of the cards and letters people sent and selected these words for his headstone.

"Death removes but the touch
And not the awareness of all good.
And he who has lived one spring or more possesses the spiritual life
of one who has lived a score of springs." Kahlil Gibran







The Boehmers of Edmore

Sunday was another North Dakota road trip for us, the destination being Edmore, and the occasion being the visit of Jim's California cousin to her mother and hometown.

After a breakfast of sausage and pancakes with the last of the summer raspberries, we packed up a cooler and the Sunday Bismarck Tribune, for road reading, and headed northeast on blue highways.

I enjoy the hilly country north of Steele on Highway 14, and in this area, on previous days, we've gathered granite boulders in the ditches for our landscaping, crazy hard work, but worth it for the beauty in our yard.  This Sunday was calm and sunny, a perfect 68 degrees.

The village of Wing was tranquil, with most everyone, by the evidence of the automobiles in the parking lot, attending church services.  We didn't have much time for stopping as we needed to be in Devils Lake for noon mass, but I persuaded Jim to make just this one for photos.




Jim explained to me that these days many of the houses in Wing are owned by absentee waterfowl hunters.  As we drove on, the water tower prompted each of us to share childhood memories of the water towers in our hometowns of Hettinger and Rhame.

One more stop to photograph the "Little Red Schoolhouse" (Florence Lake School no. 3 Restoration Project) and onward we drove.



This route takes us through the prairie pothole region and in the water we identify avocets, grebes, and cormorants.   Some of the potholes are drying up in this drought.  The fragrance of the newly mowed ditch hay fills the air near Anamoose.  Every stalk is being cut this year to bolster the supplies.


I read aloud today's Writer's Almanac to Jim and the report of the anniversary of the Detroit Riots triggers a story from Jim about a Navy buddy of his on the aircraft carrier USS Oriskany, a man grew up in Detroit at that time of the riots.

At Anamoose it is my turn to drive, and Jim's to read the paper.  We listen to Prairie Public Radio, to The Thomas Jefferson Hour (our friends David Swenson and Clay Jenkinson), and Jim takes the occasional note for me in my writer's spiral bound notebook.

Buffalo Lake is low and thus a little swampy.  Now and then a flickertail (Richardson's ground squirrel) darts across the highway.  As we drive through the Devils Lake basin, the cattails are everywhere as are people driving pickups pulling boats.   Highway 19 and a ten-mile causeway across the huge lake lead us to our first destination.

Again, on the radio, I particularly enjoy the day's offering from Dr. Tom Isern of Plains Folk.  He talks of roads and trails and appreciating the heritage of the prairie.   You can listen to this installment here.

We park in front of St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Devils Lake in the nick of time and linger for a moment to listen to the bells hearkening the beginning of mass.

We listen to the lessons of the day, the Book of Wisdom 12:13, 16-19, and also sing the Psalm response "Lord, you are good and forgiving."  Father Chad Wilhelm delivers a wonderful Homily, talking about St. Matthew's gospel and the "Kingdom of God." He says "in your hearts and souls" if you are faithful, you will share the kingdom.  He tells us that Jesus' parable is a "beautiful gift we are given."  Since I was a little girl, I've loved the parables, and I simply love the world parable, with all its layers of meaning.  I'm sure the word brings forth many good memories, and lessons I draw upon for forging forward with life.  Father Chad tells us that we are "strengthened by the grace of God to do good" and he talks of the weeds & the wheat, telling us that, because we live in the world, there will be struggles, but that struggle is good for us as it builds fortitude.   He ends with "the Kingdom of God begins in you."

In the communion rite, we acknowledge the "mystery of faith".

St. Joseph's was beautifully restored eighteen years ago and it is truly an inspirational architectural space.  Jim remembers coming the church as a boy, attending with his Fuglie grandparents.

A perfect choice to accompany the Homily


Jim and Father Chad


















Now it is time to find a place to dine.  I highly recommend the food and the decor at the Old Main Street Cafe (and so does, at it happens, Marilyn Hagerty of the Grand Forks Herald).


The walls are lined with historic photographs

Loaded baked potato

Lemon pie





Next door is a photography shop that once belonged to Jim's uncle. It is especially fun for me to go to Devils Lake with Jim as his father was from there and Jim was born there.

Jim became a US Navy photographer

After lunch, we take a quick drive around Devils Lake.

Jim's mother Phyllis went to nursing school here, at Mercy Hospital. We presume this was the dormitory.  It appears now to be apartments

The old nursing school (we think)

Mercy Hospital, where Jim was born

Jim's mother took the train from Chicago to have her first born son in North Dakota.  She would have disembarked here, at the old depot.

Jim has lots of "tavern tales" including those of Gravy McPhail, long time a worker here

It was time to scoot to Edmore, for the gathering of the Boehmers (Jim's mother was a Boehmer) at Deloris Boehmers' home.  Jim is very fond of his last living aunt.  They fed us well and sent us on our way with a cooler filled with leftovers.  It was a good Dakota gathering.

Jim and Aunt Deloris




The drive back to Bismarck, up and over the Coteau, was made in the twilight hours, going via Cando and Rugby, with plenty of bugs on the windshield to remind us of our time in a watery region.



Jim made his first pickles of the year this morning.  Life here on the prairie is good.