Tales of the Fire Pit: How a Colorado Man of Average Intelligence Attempted to Conquer Fire

Maine Fact: Mainers are, as whole, all about the outdoors. But, in order to fight off the many large and horrid bugs, fires must be built. But, due to the size of these bugs, no simple fire will do–only a bonfire.

The purpose of the following articles will serve as a testament, a sort of placard on how I dared to make a fire pit in the backyard.  Doesn’t so hard, does it?  Well…in the immortal words of Eliza Doolittle from My Fair Lady, “Just you wait, ‘enry ‘iggins, just you wait!”

In the least, the following articles may prove a warning, or at least a snapshot when everything went wrong.

At best, the following articles will show how I triumphed and, perhaps, will inspire you to dig around the dirt as well.

Before we get started, let’s get acquainted, so you have an idea of what type of DIY-er you’re dealing with: 

Tulips: A Path of Pain Paved in Petals

 

Back in Colorado, we had just moved into our new house: a lovely bi-level in a cul-de-sac that had a beautifully landscaped yard—beautiful except for a huge sea of pea gravel that they had dumped around a shed.  Then, one day, we received a catalog for bulbs—tulips, daffodils, etc.  And these bulbs were cheap, like I could cover my lawn in tulips if I really wanted to.  So, I bought 50 tulips for $26.00.  

The Great Wall of 2009: Proof that I can sometimes get things right. This, this is where I shall put my $26 worth of tulips!

However, I really wasn’t sure where to put them. 

But, in my mind, I thought…wouldn’t it be cool to do something with that sea of pea gravel.  Thus began the $3,500 project—a project that s

tarted with $26 worth of tulips—that involved a retaining wall for a raised garden bed, flagstone, and an expansion of the sprinkler system.  Why did I bring this up?

Fire Pit

Well, we moved into our new house in Maine.  Fire pits, apparently, are a thing out here.  In Colorado, where everything likes to catch on fire every summer, you could have a fire pit as long as you kept it secret.  But, you wouldn’t dare have one in the mountains, unless you had your fire hose at the ready. 

Here in Maine, though, people just burn wood.  They burn it in structured piles at the end of their land (out in the country, or the “woods”), and just leave it unattended.  I hear that when the occasional drought happens, Mainers can no longer leave their fires unattended, but whine that they have to watch them.  But, that just shows you how much water is here—it’s why everything is so bloody green, and not that Colorado sun-baked brown of the plains. 

A glimpse of what I started with. That is a $40 fire pit from Amazon. That, right there, is my $50 metaphorical tulip. I could have stopped there. But, glory is for the bold! You cannot quite see it, but this is on a hillside, with a slight downward slant towards a brook. My next step…digging.

Anyway, on our property, there was a great little section where nothing was growing.  The previous owners had also piled up a giant mound of dead wood nearby (I guess they were hoping that it would just suddenly become compost).  I thought, What am I going to do with all that dead wood?  Wait, nearby clearing…boom!…fire pit.  A $40 fire pit, just a basic 36” diameter galvanized ring, was on its way from Amazon.

Then my wife said some very fateful words, words that would guide me to the labyrinthine aisles of Lowe’s every other day, words that would send me crawling to the chiropractors, words that sounded like this: “You know, if you’re going to do it, do it right.”

Thus began the epic, back-breaking quest to create an in-ground fire built, built on the Dakota Fire Pit method, complete with a field stone ring, and surrounded be a fully pavered seating area.

Maine Oddities: Beans


“You mean you’ve never been to a bean suppah?  We have two kinds of beans, hot dogs, two types of gelatin salad…”

When we rolled into Maine via New Hampshire, I remember seeing a beautiful New England church, complete with its majestic white, wooden spire. The church, nestled in some very thick woods, vividly displayed the small town, New England charm that we fell in love with. 

But, on the sign out front, where you’d usually see a thought-provoking or inspirational message like “Forgive your enemies, it messes with their heads”, there was a very simple message, “Bean Supper 5:30 PM.” 

 I remember driving on towards Portland, bewildered, wondering just what in the world is a bean supper.  The church looked old, possibly out of commission, so maybe it was an old sign from the 1970s?  The 1930s?  We went along and never heard of bean suppers again, until today.

New Englanders Take Beans Seriously

“You mean you’ve never been to a bean suppah?” asked the white-haired church lady.  Darci looked to me, desperation in her eyes, but I was talking with someone else about jobs in the Scarborough area.  Her plea for help went unanswered.  The church lady took the please-someone-help-me look as an invitation to continue with new vigor as she launched into a breathless litany.

“We have two kinds of beans, hot dogs, two kinds of gelatin salad, and chop suey.  You better come to the bean suppah, and keep coming to chuhch.”   

We drove away, completely forgetting about what the message was during the sermon (something about being precious), but focused on the really big question–what in the blue blazes is a bean supper (suppah)? 

This question then diffused into other questions: why two kinds of beans? what if another kind of bean is suddenly introduced? what’s a New England gelatin salad?  does that also have beans jammed into it? and who in their right mind thought it was a good idea to toss in chop suey? 

I mean, we’ve used beans for burritos, tacos, and bean dip.  What are they doing out here?

 

Bean Suppah: The Real Deal

 

Apparently, unknown to us Coloradans, bean suppers (suppahs) are a big deal out here.  Where I would stroll into store and snag a can of beans and…do something with them…a New Englander might stab me in the eye with a lobster fork if I dared bring a can of beans to a bean suppah.

Preparation begins the day before by digging a pit into the ground and lining it with bricks.  No kidding.  Bean hole beans (that’s such a thing) are soaked over night and then parboiled.  Next, they’re loaded up with a special secret sauce that you get after you receive your Tom Brady tattoo and can survive at least two winters.  Your beans, with New England special sauce, are loaded into stainless steel pots, covered in foil and a lid, and then placed into that brick-lined hole you dug.  Oh yeah, in that hole you’ve placed glowing hot coals.  You seal the hole up with an insulated lid and leave your buried concoction to simmer for an entire evening.  Boom!  For breakfast, lunch and dinner on Saturday you’ll be having bean suppah–something completely foreign to these two Coloradans, who would probably add green chilies to it and get tossed out of the state. 

Don’t believe me?  Well, cram it in your bean hole, and watch this video:

 

Gray Skies are Going to Clear Up!

A grey, rainy day in Dayton, OH, was made sunnier by our friends, the Grunow Family!  After surviving the patch of I-70 that stretches between Indianapolis and Dayton, now known as “Crater Alley”, our time spent in Dayton was some much needed relaxation and a nice little respite from driving.  
Our first stop was brunch at a place called Another Cracked Egg, which had fantastic food and one of the best omelettes  I’ve ever had (a great blend of crayfish, some sort of sausage and other goodies).
Next stop: Carillon Park. 

Carillon Park: Why Haven’t You Invented Something, You Slacker?

Dayton, it turns out, is a city of innovation.  What has Dayton given you, you might ask?  How about the starter for your car (no more hand cranks!), the pop top for your soda can, the cash register, the basis of IBM, the Wright Brothers, and a bunch of other crazy things that I took for granted.  This is a museum that waves the banner for Dayton: the town where, for some reason, inventors seems to flock and just come up with ideas.  I left feeling dazzled about what Dayton has done for the world and a little less of a man–why in the world haven’t invented anything recently?

 

The Carillon Bells that give the park its name: Carillon Park.

Axe Throwing


Next, our tour guides, Susan and Jason, cleverly took us someplace where we could destroy some of the pent up stress from the trip: Wild Axe Throwing. For an hour, Goldy, our profession axe-throwing professor, taught us how to send an axe hurtling through the air and sink it about 12 feet away in a target of wood planks.

Susan, shown here, shows us the incorrect way to throw an axe.
A demonstration on what a victory pose might look like.

Darci

Darci, with a shot like Larry Bird, manages to sink an axe into the target.

Jason

Left-handed Jason (poor guy) sticks the axe…and pops his balloon!

 

Scott

…misses the balloon.  But eventually sinks it, killing the balloon to become the lane-champion axe chucker.

 

Ritter’s Frozen Custard

Ohio, you are known for a lot of things: festivals to popcorn, strawberries, anything you can have a festival about; buckeyes; ice cream; and custard.  

I know ice cream.  I know custard.  These frozen treats are my jam.  Sorry Colorado Custards, you have lost the custard war.  Those Coloradoans really don’t know what its like to have a place like Ritter’s Frozen Custard, where the custard is a velvety, rich smoothness that caresses the taste buds.  Ritter’s: You are the King of Custard.

Thank you, Grunows, for a wonderful day!

Tomorrow: Cleveland and the Rock ‘N Roll Hall of Fame

 

Hallo! It is I, Foppa the Cat, AKA, Boss Fuzz. U seez, I iz habbing a ruf couple of dayz. Mom and Papa took alls my fings away at my house and put dem in some big boxes on the driveway. I watched the whole fing. Then, when nuffing was left, they put me and my brudder and sister in mom’s heap and we drove away. We drove for a real long time. When we stopped, mom said we were at a ho-tel. When we got there, papa was there too, but he didn’t ride in mom’s heap. He is driving his car and pulling anudder big box with some of our fings in it. The hotel room was kinda fun, there were some flies I chased, but I was kinda missin’ my house and cat tree. In the morning, I had a tummy ache. Mom and papa went to eat breakfast and when they came back, I had had a potty accident. It was not so good, you seez, I have long hairz and things can get messy back there. They had to give me a B A T H ! It ruined my whole day! Then they put us back in mom’s car and we drove a real long time again. We are now in our third ho-tel. They aren’t so bad. They are like a real small house. I have my bathroom, food, my brudder and sister and mom and papa. Know what I don’t have? My cat tree! My baby brudder, Earp is real scared. I tried to tell him it iz okay, but he keeps hidin’ under thingz in the room. Today, he even found a secret spot in moms car where he wuzn’t sposed to go. Mom was real scared. After that, it looked like fun, so I escaped to the front of the car too. Mom was real mad at me. My sister Zoe gets scared sometimes too, but she haz still been sleeping on papa’s feet at night. We drove a lot today and mom and papa took some pictures of fings we see out the windowz.

Kearney NE archway

Kearney NE archway

She’s not that scared if she’s sleeping on papa’s feet

Wind turbines in Iowa

Illinois state line

Giant bridge just after crossing the mighty Mississippi

Cool building in Galesburg, IL

Someone looks sleepy

Not a Sterling Start

What do you mean you don’t know how to transfer money?  You’re a freakin’ bank!  Shouldn’t you know about all that stuff?  Why do I need to call up Bank of America to tell you how to transfer money? ? These are the words that were blaring in my head as we closed down our Wells Fargo account and tried to transfer our money to Bank of America.  Instead of doing something seamless like a wire transfer or an ACH, we eventually capitulated to use a cashier’s check in order to escape the Wells Fargo branch office.  How quaint.  And how strange that this forty minute delay at Wells Fargo, where we baffled two very overly-friendly employees, and screamed at them behind our smiles, would end up actually saving us from being stranded on the highway.  Strange!

“I don’t want to alarm you,” Darci said as I was going into the Bank of America branch to deposit the check, “but the battery light is on in the Jeep.”  An hour later, here we were in a Bank of America parking lot, the Xterra saddled with a U-Haul trailer, basically homeless, and we are supposed to be driving to Kearny, Nebraska, and the Jeep is on the fritz…again.  

“The fritz” was an understatement for what happened next. All the lights were on as if the car were possessed.  Then the Jeep was dead.  Dead in the parking lot.  A big metal brick with four balding tires, three cats, and our tears of panic and frustration.  Our epic move to Maine was torpedoed by superior Chrysler engineering: we only made it 30 minutes down the road.  

The next moments were a blur of sweaty panic, frustration and actually a godsend.  After replacing the Jeep’s battery, and limping it along to an O’Reiley’s, they tested the alternator and found that it was a goner.   Our trip was probably going to be delayed by a day and we’ll be scrambling to catch up.  But…then we spied a mechanic right behind the auto parts store, and at 10 minutes before it closed we needed a miracle.

Town Center Auto, 10 minutes before closing, agreed to replace the alternator and did so in just 40 minutes.  Not only that, they diagnosed and fixed the short that was causing the U-Haul trailer to stop working.  At 6:00 pm, four hours late, we were on the road.  We wouldn’t make it to Kearney, but found our way to Sterling, Colorado.  The plus: without that dumb Wells Fargo mishap, we probably would have been stranded somewhere on I-70.  Talk about a godsend!

Now, it’s 11:48 PM.  We’re hunkered down in our hotel room.  Our cats now chasing after the flies that have snuck in and stalking what might be a cockroach…

Our hotel has a splendid view of the Sterling Correctional facility (shown from above)

It’s very late. This is our last night in our house. The day was an utter blur of packing, packing and more packing. I wondered more than a thousand times in the last few weeks, how on earth we have accumulated so much stuff. Lots of stuff that filled our house. The house we bought 10.5 years ago, as a newly married couple. A house is just a house in the end, an empty shell really. It’s the stuff and the people and the memories that truly make it a home. The last two weeks have been particularly trying saying our goodbyes to all the wonderful people in our life (yes we’re talking to you). Each time, I’ve thought, surely, I have no tears left to cry, but I am wrong. The decision to move and to move so far away, was not an easy one. However, nothing worth doing is supposed to be easy. Scott and I are embarking on a literal leap of faith. Tomorrow we celebrate our 11th wedding anniversary. Tomorrow afternoon we start an epic journey towards our next step…whatever that may be. We are excited, scared, saddened to leave our loved ones all rolled into one ball of emotions. But, right now, one last sleep.

“We’ll see you there in that Pine Tree State…”

Maine-ward, Ho!

Mowing the lawn is a delightful time to let the mind wander.  The sun beats down on you, because I never seem to mow when it’s cool, and you just pick a mowing pattern, find a pace and…go.  While weaving around sprinkler heads, garter snakes, and keeping an eye out for bind weeds and other gardening pests, it’s a great time to just…percolate.  I came up with this little ditty as I gave my lawn a last little mow–a farewell from the guy who vainly tried to thicken it up, patch up the dead spots, and vainly battle a soil that would rather be turned into a clay pot than grow anything besides dust, dandelions and thistle.

This little verse popped into my head. Unfortunately, while I was mowing, I should have pulled over and written it down because at the time it was really popping.  Hours later, I can only remember snippets.  Sigh.  

 

 

“Maine-ward, Ho!”

We’ll see you  there in that Pine Tree State, 

Where the sun kissed the sea and did create,

Cobble-stone streets where lobsters shake your hand

With a firm grip because they’re  in a rubber band.

We’re headed for the land of mountains dense and forests of moose,

Where whoopie pies come tumbling down beneath every spruce.

Come with us where there’s but one toll road,

But it’s never used, traffic is never slowed,

We’ll see you there–the two from Colorado,

Amid the people hearty and full of bravado,

Where California is only a shadow,

We’re Maine-ward, ho!