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Resources for media specialists and other educators
- click here. Can't wait for Melinda's next book? Maybe a story will tide you over! Here's one just for you - check back often for freshly-spun tales! Bumblebee Stew by Melinda Long Who, in their right mind, would eat anything made from a bumblebee? Well, I did, or at least thats what I thought I was eating. When I was about five or six years old, my family lived in Spartanburg, S.C. We were only a few miles away from my maternal grandparents big, old, white farmhouse, so we visited there frequently. We often spent weekends there and during the summer, we sometimes stayed all week long. I have year-round memories of that glorious place, but my most vivid memories seem to come from the springs and summers. Springtime was when I first tasted bumblebee stew. Visiting Grandma and Grandpa Huskey was like taking a little vacation, every time we went. Of course there were my grandparents: Grandma, sweet, frail and quiet as a whisper, and Grandpa, tall, strong, and teasing, always teasing. I cant find anywhere to sit! I would whine. My grandfathers reply would be, Then sit down on your fist and rear back on your thumb. He had an answer for everything. I loved them both, fiercely, but I could never get used to some of their habits. They were farmers. They went to bed at 7:00PM and got up before five in the morning every day. Springtime meant planting time. Early in the spring, they would work the soil until it was fine, rich, and crumbly. Then, they would plant potatoes, then peas, dropping them into the ground, one green orb at a time. Other vegetables, like okra, green beans and my favorite, squash, would follow. I was too young to help, but I would sit on the bank, which was covered with huge, pale, purple violets and watch. My Aunt Alice, Uncle Clyde, and my four cousins, all older than me, lived in the house with Grandma and Grandpa. There was no bathroom there until I was much older. We used the outhouse when we needed to go, and baths were taken in a big galvanized washtub. Water was pumped in from the well and heated. My cousins, my brother, and I slept in the upstairs bedrooms, which were actually in the attic. Once, my brother went to put on his pajamas, which had been lying on the bed, and suddenly flew down the stairs screaming and slapping at his legs. Several wasps had started building a nest in his pants and they didnt like the intrusion. I had never seen my brother move so fast. In the spring, the yard was flooded with bumblebees. I was afraid of them and ran screaming whenever one was near. One day while we played kick-the-can and went hiding all over the yard and in the barn loft, one of the little black and yellow rascals buzzed right in my face. I screeched and went crying to my cousins, Jessie and Judy. They comforted me but my boy cousins, Kenneth and David, saw an opportunity. Dont worry, they told me, were gettin rid of those bumblebees anyway. I was intrigued. How? Mamas in there right now cookin up a pot of bumblebee stew. Kenneth told me. Kenneth, stop teasin her right now. Jessie told him. She was always the one to come to my defense. Thats right, David added, ignoring his older sister. Were havin it for supper tonight. Doubtfully, I looked at Judy. She cut her eyes at the boys but said nothing. I ran inside to find my aunt stirring a pot of milky-looking stuff filled with chunky, black things. Bumblebees! It was true. I ran out of the house without noticing the small, empty oyster can on the counter. Later that evening, we sat down to a bowl of bumblebee stew and crackers. My aunt didnt understand why I picked so at my food, and my cousins just wouldnt stop giggling. Finally, Judy couldnt take anymore and confessed to the prank. My aunt tried to fuss, but just laughed instead. I never lived down that bumblebee stew episode. Since then, my aunt, my uncle and my grandparents have all passed away. There are no more spring and summer delights in that old, white, house for my own children to enjoy. But to this very day, whenever I see my cousins, the subject of bumblebee stew usually pops up. Maybe thats why I never cared for bumblebees or oyster stew. |
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