Singing As We Go

'Slithery-Dee'With grandchildrenOur family was camping.With our good friends, the Boyd family.Something we had done every year.For Over 30 years.Rain or shine.Usually rain.It involved work.Setting up trailers and tents for nearly thirty people inevitably included some sort of exertion. 1.  There were the usual ‘tarp wars’.Won by whichever family could set up the best, tightest, most wrinkle-free campsite covering. 2.  The leveling of the tents/trailers.Highly important if some members of the tribe were susceptible to the headache inevitably brought on by sleeping with one’s head tilted below one’s feet. 3.  And the choosing of the ‘Boydolley’ camp song.This was very important. It had to be the most aggravating, annoying, ‘stick in your head’ song imaginable.We’d had such treasures as: ‘Oh, How I Love to Stand’.And: ‘Hi! My Name is Joe!’Plus the ever-popular: ‘Ninety-Nine Bottles of Non-Alcoholic Beverage on the Wall’.And who can forget: ‘Jon Jonson’?Seriously, who can forget it . . .?And then there was the year that the Grandkids were finally old enough to get involved.And vote.What did they choose?What classic would take its rightful place in history?Was it something momentous?Heart-warming?No.It was ‘Slithery Dee’.The classic song featuring a monster that comes out of the sea and eats everyone.Perfect camp fare.For a family camped beside a lake.Moving on . . .There were various versions.Depending largely on the age and capability of the singer.Megan, the eldest could sing it quite well, “Oh, Slithery-Dee!”Right behind her was Kyra, “Oh, Swivery-Dee!”And then there was the youngest talker, Odin, “Oh, Dee-Dee-Dee-Dee!”They sang it by the hour.And I do mean By. The. Hour.Until . . . THE EVENT.It was early afternoon.Lunch had just finished.Grandma (me) was lying on the bed in our tent trailer, telling stories to as many of the grandkids as would lie there and listen.At nearest count – several.Then they asked to sing ‘Slithery-Dee’.Sigh.I complied.We were just getting through the first verse, wherein (good word) Megan had been eaten, when we were interrupted.I should tell you, here, that our little tent trailer consisted of a central square block.With three wings/beds.Each wing was covered by the main canvas, which folded around and hooked under said wing.Canvas that could be . . . un-hooked.Without the person, or persons, on the wing knowing anything about it.Back to my story . . .Where were we?Oh, yes.End of the first verse.Unbeknownst (another good word!) to us, my Husby had unhooked the canvas immediately below us.Just as we started to sing, “Oh, Slithery-Dee!”, a hand and arm reached up through the wall of the trailer and grabbed the nearest grandchild.Who promptly screamed.Inciting an immediate riot.Grandma and grandchildren boiled out of the trailer like angry bees.Realizing what had happened, we started to laugh.Then we fed Grandpa.
To Slithery Dee.
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Published on November 12, 2020 04:00
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On the Border

Diane Stringam Tolley
Stories from the Stringam Family ranches from the 1800's through to today. ...more
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