ALASKAN WONDER BREAD
The Harold Richards Mini-Story
The first time I ate Wonder Bread I was 14. I didn’t see TV until I was 14. I didn’t drink pop until I was 14. My mother had a bottle of 7-Up in our freezer, which was not a freezer, just a hole — a slat — below the floor in our “living room.”
[This space is snow.]
I grew up in Holy Cross, Alaska. The Jesuits had a mission there, and they sent me to Glenallen, Alaska, for high school — 460 miles away. I was out there nine months a year.
I joined the Navy at 17, went to Nam, and launched jets from aircraft carriers for three years. I liked the Navy; I had grown up on two things: moose and salmon. The Navy’s macaroni and cheese was something different.
My dad was a beaver trapper. There were 12 of us in one room. I’m not telling you this to impress you, I’m telling you because you seem interested (seeing as you’ve read this far).
I worked the pipeline as a surveyor and was really good at 40-degrees-below zero. I’m retired now and live in Anchorage. I miss some of the “attaboys” — compliments — from management and fellow tradesmen. My team could put up 100 vertical posts in a day and do it right.
I go fishing every morning during the season, particularly when the kings are running. I have plenty salmon and halibut in my freezer. You need any?
And I should mention my favorite klezmer band is Yiddishe Cup.
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Yiddishe Cup plays for Purim 7:30 Sat. (March 11) at Park Synagogue, Pepper Pike, Ohio.
4 comments
This ghosted bio was approved by Harold, I presume? He is the king of salmon and halibut grilling for sure.
I can hardly believe that’s not your background. It would explain a lot of things. As far as liking Yiddishe Cup, that’s probably from your fishy background.
Bert. You must visit Alaska. Its the last frontier.
The guy way up there probably likes Yiddishe Cup because they’re hot.
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