sell Teaberry gum or Lifesavers at the feed mill. But if we went to the restaurant for pie while we waited for our feed, or if Mom had asked Dad to pick up a couple of things at the grocery store, I would try to talk him into buying some gum or candy.
Going to the feed mill with Dad was a summertime activity, however, and there were long stretches during the school year when I never even saw a package of Teaberry gum or a roll of Lifesavers, much less had any in my possession.
So what was Dad talking about when he had stopped the truck and said, "wintergreen?"
I stared at the embankment and then at the hill beyond but I couldn't see anything out of the ordinary. I shut the truck door behind me just as Dad scrambled nimbly up the bank into the woods.
"It's growing all over here," he said, pointing to the ground. "They've got berries, too."
I struggled up the bank behind him to get a closer look. Underfoot were small plants with shiny green leaves.
"That green stuff is wintergreen?" I said.
My father nodded.
"Like what they use to make gum?"
"Yup. Here. Taste."
He reached down and picked a couple of small, pinkish-red berries, popping one into his mouth and handing one to me.
I sniffed the berry. It smelled like wintergreen, all right, but I wasn’t one bit sure about eating the thing.
"Taste it," Dad urged. "You'll be surprised."
So, I ate the berry. It had a strange consistency -- sort of dry and mushy, all at the same time. . .and then my mouth was filled with the marvelous taste of wintergreen. The same as my favorite gum, but different, too. More delicate.
"It's good!" I exclaimed, grinning. Then I frowned. "How come we haven't seen it before?"
"Usually too much snow by this time," Dad said.
"What about in the summer, though?"
"Too much underbrush and other green things."
"And this is really the stuff they use in gum?" I asked.
Dad took his cap off, slapped it against his leg to rid it of snow and then put it back on his head.
"Well. . .they probably don't go into the woods and pick wild wintergreen. People probably raise it and sell it, and I think they might use the leaves rather than the berries, but yes, this is the stuff."
By now the snow was falling so hard it made a hissing noise as it struck the copper-colored oak leaves above us. Unlike other trees, some of the oaks, I had noticed, keep their leaves until spring.
"How do you know so much about wintergreen?" I asked.
"Oh," Dad said, "when we were kids, we used to pick it so we could make ice cream."
I turned to look at him. "Ice cream?"
"Our kind of ice cream, anyway. A little dish of snow with winter-green berries mixed in."
Suddenly I struck upon a wonderful idea.
"I know! I can try some right now."
I took off my mitten, picked a few wintergreen berries and scooped a small handful of fluffy, fresh snow. I put the berries in the snow, and -- well -- I have to admit it was pretty tasty.
I put my mitten back on. "Didn't you have real ice cream when you were growing up, Dad?"
My father smiled. "Sure -- sometimes. Not store bought, though. We made our own with a hand-cranked ice cream freezer. But that was mostly in the summertime. We thought wintergreen ice cream was an awful lot of fun."
Dad had been the middle child among several older brothers, an older sister, and three younger sisters. My grandparents had worked as cooks in a lumber camp in northern Wisconsin in the early 1900s. Many years ago, long before I was born, Dad had made his living cutting pulp wood.
"Daddy? How did you see the wintergreen from the road?" I asked.
My father hesitated before answering. "I didn't see it. Not today, at least."
I stopped trying to adjust my mitten so the thumb lined up like it was supposed to and turned my full attention toward Dad.
"Remember last fall, when the county forester came out here?" he asked.
"Yeah, I remember."
Just on the other side of the small wooded hill was a two-acre stand of tall red pine with a couple of rows of white pine next to the road. Dad said the trees were among the oldest of the plantations in the county that had been planted just after the Great Depression to keep the sandy soil from eroding. Nearly every year, the forester would come out to check on them. One year he used Dad's pine trees to demonstrate a brand new trimming device to foresters from other counties.
Well," Dad continued, "while we were out here, I decided to take a little walk. I don't get much of a chance just to walk around back here."
"And that's when you saw the wintergreen?"
Dad nodded. "I was waiting for the right opportunity to show it to you."
He turned back toward the truck. "It'll be dark soon. We'd better get home. The cows are waiting to be milked."
As we slid down the embankment, I glanced over my shoulder.
Wintergreen.
Growing in the woods not far from my house.
And in that instant, I knew gum and candy would never again taste quite the same.
************
LeAnn R. Ralph is a freelance writer for two newspapers in west central Wisconsin, is the editor of the Wisconsin Regional Writer (the quarterly publication of the Wisconsin Regional Writers' Assoc.) and is the author of the book, Christmas In Dairyland (True Stories From a Wisconsin Farm) (Aug. 2003); trade paperback. For more information about Christmas In Dairyland, visit http://ruralroute2.com
bigpines@ruralroute2.com