Springlines
Anarchistic musings from a SE Alaska harbor
By Ed Sasser boldeagle@boatbuilding.com
Multiple Hats
Eddy's Chuck, Alaska*
I walked into
the Dock Lunch last Thursday and my heart skipped as I saw them sitting
around the table. All five of them were there ready for the meeting.
Am I supposed to have the minutes ready for today?
Which meeting is this anyway:
Sons of Norway? Village Council? Trollers' Association? Sailing
Club? The Messabout Society of Eddy's Chuck? Noodlers Anonymous? The
American Legion? No, wait; that last one went out of business since it had
all the same members as the others. That's how it is in this maritime village at the end of the
shortest fjord between Ketchikan and Skagway.
"Sorry
I'm late for the meetin'..." I began to apologize.
"What
meetin'," Leon offered. "We're
just havin' coffee."
I sighed in
visible relief as Bev brought me a black coffee. Leon being there had kinda thrown me. He's either a current
or past officer in every group that ever formed here in Eddy's Chuck.
Before the American Legion went bust he wore so many hats over
there that he was a quorum. He had been
voted Secretary, Treasurer and Chaplin all for the same year. One day I
was at the old Legion Hall when a bill came in marked
"treasurer". He put
on his secretary hat and opened it and logged it in, then
put on his treasurer hat and told himself: "This bill is past
due." He changed to his
Chaplin hat, grabbed the overdue bill and cried to the sky: "Oh God,
how we gonna pay this?"
The old joke
about small towns is "we're too small to have a town drunk so we all
take turns." When it was
our village public safety officer's turn to be the town drunk somebody
reminded him about his inebriated condition and he voluntarily did the
honorable thing. He changed
hats and arrested himself. As
we have no jail, he handcuffed himself to the radiator down at the
"Harbor Lights" and told me to call the troopers.
I never did, of course, and when he woke up the following morning
he accused me of cuffing him to the radiator.
Here, we are
so far from the infrastructure that we take turns at many more things than
town drunk: preacher, barber,
bartender, boat builder, village idiot, and political leader among them.
Some in town would say those last two are the same.
We've got two
full-time bars and one part-time church.
The preacher flies in for two hours on Sunday from Port Alexander.
One day he told me at the dock:
"I'm an OK preacher but I'm not ordained."
I thought it was confession time so I took him aside and confided: "I'm an OK boat builder; I ain't ordained either."
He just looked confused.
The point I
was making was that we all wear a lot of hats.
We all do things the best we can and end up doing lots of things,
certified or not. For
instance, Ellie, the postmaster, is a day-trading, beautician,
gerontologist with a degree in Botany who works part time at the radio
station. The high-liner (top fisherman) here last year carries an
eighth-grade graduation certificate in his wallet that indicates he's
qualified to enroll in any high school in the state of Minnesota.
He made $440,000 last year and just added another 56-foot limit
seiner to his fleet. He goes
to Juneau every January as a lobbyist. I helped him write a letter to his sister last week.
Well, that's
how it is here: we have multiple roles. We all do a lot of things and most
of us aren't too good at at least some of them.
Why, I think most of Eddy's Chuck was built by somebody who'd just
seen it done once or got stuck filling in for somebody else who said they
had.
Like when
Ellie works at the radio station. She
does "The Music You Remember" for her peers:
the WWII set. Well, last week Leon's kid Rufus didn't show up for his 9PM
watch to do "The Rap Up", a show that causes your ears to bleed
if you are over 25. Anyway,
Ellie, trooper that she is, stayed at the station and introduced Rufus'
play list.
Listen to her
crackling church-lady voice yawning into the mike an hour after her
bedtime: "Since Rufus
isn't here, I'll tell you it's time for his rap music show to start and
I'll introduce them for you. This
first tune is a classic by MC Hammer, 'U Can't Touch This' followed by
some new tunes by Pimp Daddy, Cheeky Blakk, MC Spud, Da Sha Ra, Ruthless
Juveniles, Partners-N-Crime and others.
Please stay tuned."
I think we
are all pretty accepting of each other's need to wear multiple hats here
in this little corner of SE Alaska. Just
show up and pick a hat...any hat.
(*Eddys Chuck Alaska
is a fictitious harbor populated by real Alaskan Noodlers.)
Copyright © 1999-2000 by Ed Sasser. All rights reserved. |