Real ponies dont go oink, p.1
Real Ponies Don't Go Oink!, page 1

Table of Contents
Title Page
Controlling My Life
Strange Meets Matilda Jean
Tough Guys Don’t Bird
A Good Deed Goes Wrong
The Fishing Box
Social Skills
The Clown
A Good Night’s Sleep
A Brief History of Giving (1942-89)
Pouring My Own
Teenagers From Hell
Secret Places
Puttering
Search and—Uh—Rescue
The Bust
Real Ponies Don’t Go Oink!
Blood Sausage
Crash Dive!
My Abduction by Creatures From Space, for What It’s Worth
Phantom of the Woods
The Piano Lesson
Zumbo and the Misty Mountain Ghosts
The Road Hunter
Why Is It?
The Late Great Fourth
Camping In
BOOKS BY PATRICK F. MCMANUS
Copyright Page
Controlling My Life
I just read a book on how to get control of my time and therefore of my life. My time has always had a tendency to slip away from me and do as it pleases. My life follows it, like a puppy after an untrained bird dog. Come night, my life shows up, usually covered with mud and full of stickers, exhausted but grinning happily. My time never returns. That is why I read this book on how to get control of my time and my life.
The book claimed that the key to controlling your time and life is to make a list of all the things you want to accomplish during the day, the week, and the year. Things you wish to accomplish are listed according to their level of importance in categories labeled A, B, and C. Under A, you place the things that have top priority for the day, under B, the things you really should take care of that day or in the immediate future, and under C, the things that you might do sometime next century.
The system sounded wonderful. Finally, I had a way to actually control those two rascals, my time and my life. Time would no longer merely slip away. I’d grab it by the neck, squeeze every second out of it, and toss the empty skin over my shoulder. My life would become a thing of discipline, methodically achieving great accomplishment after great accomplishment. I sat down to start my list.
Right off I was stumped. I needed to think of a great accomplishment to list first under A. Writing the Great American Novel would be a good one, I thought. But it would probably take too long. It took me two months to read Moby-Dick. How long would it take me to write it? Scratch that idea.
My wife, Bun, walked in. “Why are you sitting there staring out the window?”
“I’m trying to control my life,” I said.
“Oh good,” she said.
“Can you think of something great for me to accomplish?”
“How about putting up the shelf in the pantry like I asked you?”
“No good. Too trivial. It’s low C at best, if it even makes the list. Speaking of lists, where’s a pencil?”
“Go look in the junk drawer.”
I looked in the junk drawer, but all I could find was the stub of a pencil, with the eraser worn down flat. Not only do you need a good pencil to get your life under control, you need a good eraser.
“I’m going down to the store and buy a new pencil,” I told Bun.
“I hope getting your life under control isn’t going to run into a lot of expense,” she said.
On the way to the store, I bumped into my friend Retch Sweeney. “Where you going?” he asked.
“Down to the store to buy a pencil,” I said. “I’m getting my life under control.”
“What’s it been doing?” he asked.
“Just the usual,” I said. “As a result, I never get anything accomplished.”
“I never accomplish anything either,” he said. “Why don’t we stop by Kelly’s for a beer, and you can tell me how to get my life under control, too.”
“Okay.”
We went into Kelly’s Bar & Grill. Kelly himself was working the bar. Tiffany, the waitress, was arm wrestling Milt Logan for double her tip or nothing. Two candles were situated so that the loser got his hand forced down onto one of them. Tiffany was winning. “Stop! Stop!” screamed Milt. “I give up!”
Kelly chuckled. “Good thing I don’t let Tiffany light the candles,” he said. “Otherwise, every one of you bums would have the hair burnt off the back of your hands.”
“Oh, yeah?” Retch said to Kelly. “Well, me and Pat can beat the socks off you and Tiffany at pool.”
“You think so, do you?” Kelly said, vaulting over the bar. “Rack ’em up, Tiff. How much per game?”
By the end of a few games of pool, getting my life under control had already cost me twelve dollars. Then Old Crabby Walters came over and asked if Retch and I wanted to see his new boat. “Sure,” I said. “I love to look at boats. But we better hurry. It’s starting to get dark.”
We went down to the marina to look at Crabby’s boat. I would have guessed its vintage at early seventeenth century, except it was made out of aluminum. The motor looked prehistoric.
“You fix this up, Crabby, it’ll be a pretty fair boat,” Retch said.
“Jumpin’ Jehoshaphat!” cried Crabby. “It’s already fixed up!”
“Oh,” Retch said. “And a mighty nice job of it, too.”
“Thanks,” Crabby said. “You boys hop in and I’ll take you for a little spin.”
“Gee, it’s pretty darn cold out and it’s almost dark,” I said. “And the wind is coming up.”
“Jumpin’ Jehoshaphat!” cried Crabby. “What kind of wimps are you two? Hop in!”
Retch and I hopped in, trying to avoid the rusty gas tanks. The whole boat smelled of gas. Crabby jerked on the starter cord no more than fifty times before the motor roared to life somewhere beneath a cloud of smoke. I wasn’t sure whether the motor was running or on fire, but Crabby soon emerged from the cloud, a big grin on his face. “Purrs like a kitten, don’t it?”
We bolted out onto the lake, the motor coughing and spitting and occasionally screaming in agony. A couple hundred yards from shore it died. “Just have to adjust the throttle a little,” Crabby said calmly, removing the motor cover and tossing it with a clatter into the bottom of the boat.
The wind had picked up. Icy waves began to toss the boat this way and that, mostly that, which was away from land. Darkness had clamped a lid on the lake.
“One of you boys got a flashlight on you?” Crabby asked. “I can’t see a dad-blamed thing.”
“Not me,” Retch said, staring at the waves.
“Me neither,” I said. “I just went out to buy a pencil.” The situation was getting on my nerves.
“Well, no matter,” Crabby said. “I got an old gas lantern in here somewheres. Ah, there it is. I’ll get us some light in here in a sec.”
“Wait!” I said. “Do you think it’s such a good idea to light a lantern with all this gas in here?” Retch inched his way toward the bow of the boat. I inched after him.
“No problem,” Crabby said. He touched a match to the lantern. Flames shot up six feet. Retch and I stared in horror at the rusty gas tanks, now brightly illuminated so we could study in detail the full extent of their deterioration.
“JUMP—!” cried Crabby.
Retch and I jumped for our lives, leaving poor Crabby to fend for himself. He never even heard the splashes or the muffled shrieks so closely associated with plunges into ice water. I surfaced right next to the boat, expecting to see Crabby doing an imitation of a Roman candle. But he was just standing there with the lantern turned down to a modest glow.
“—pin’ Jehoshaphat!” he muttered, completing his favorite oath. “One of these days I’m going to buy me a new lantern. Now if one of you boys would … where’d you go?”
Crabby eventually got the motor going, and towed Retch and me back to the dock. Then he drove us to Kelly’s to thaw out. Naturally, the boys wanted to hear about our adventure. Crabby told a long, involved story about how he had saved our lives, starting with when he was five years old. Then Retch had to arm wrestle Tiffany for double the tip or nothing, but, with Kelly gone, this time with the candles lighted. Finally, he drove me home.
“How long do you suppose before the hair grows in again?” he asked, blowing on the back of his hand.
“Probably a couple of months,” I said. “Who cares? I lost five bucks betting you could take Tiffany.” Getting my life under control had already cost me seventeen dollars, and I was barely started.
When I got home, Bun was already in bed. Where does the time go?
Next morning I got up bright and early and sat down to do some serious work on controlling my life.
“Where’s a pencil?” I asked Bun.
Strange Meets Matilda Jean
I had always wanted to have a dog I could be proud of, but instead I had Strange. All my friends were proud of their dogs. They bragged constantly about how Sport or Biff or Rags or Pal had run off a burglar, saved a little girl from drowning, brought in their father’s newspaper, warned the family just in time that the house was on fire, rounded up cows, pointed pheasants, retrieved ducks, and performed such amazing and entertaining tricks that I had a hard time believing the dog didn’t have a movie contract.
Strange, on the other hand, would have welcomed burglars with open paws, and stood watch while they looted the house. He never saved anybody from anything. He enjoyed chasing cows, but merely for the sport. He considered pointing impolite. If he retrieved a duck, it was for his own use. Any tricks he knew he kept to himself.
He was a connoisseur of the disgusting. He turned up his nose at my grandmother’s cooking, then dined happily on cow chips, year-old roadkill, and the awful offal of neighborhood butcherings. Occasionally, he scrawled his territorial signature on the leg of a complete stranger, as though it were a mobile fireplug. (“Bad dog! Sorry about your pant leg, mister. Now, as I was saying, would it be all right if I fish the crick behind your place? I’ll close the gates.”) Strange was also an enthusiastic crotch-sniffer, causing visitors to gyrate like belly dancers in their efforts to escape his probing nose, all the while trying to carry on a normal conversation, as if nothing embarrassing were happening down below.
Concern for the sensibilities of the reader prevents me from mentioning some of my dog’s more disgusting hobbies, except to say they involved highly noxious fumes, chickens, human legs, embarrassing itch, and various slurpy aspects of what passes for dog hygiene. Strange apparently held the view that his hobbies were vastly entertaining to the public at large. Whenever we had dinner guests he would run through his repertoire of the disgusting in front of the dining-room window.
“How did you like that one?” he would ask, smiling in at us, as though expecting a standing ovation.
“No dessert for me, thanks,” our guests would respond. Strange was a major social liability.
“There’s nothing worse,” my grandmother once commented, “than an egg-sucking dog.”
“Strange don’t suck eggs,” I said proudly, desperate to find something favorable about my dog.
“I stand corrected,” Gram said. “There is something worse.” She and Strange didn’t relate well.
We never thought of Strange as our dog. He was his own dog. What I disliked most about him was his arrogance. If I threw a stick and told him “Fetch,” he would give me this insolent stare, which said, “Fetch it yourself, dumbo. You threw it.” Then he would flip a cigarette butt at me, blow out a stream of smoke, and slouch back into his doghouse. (Well no, of course, he didn’t really smoke cigarettes, but that was the essence of his attitude, as though he had watched too many movies about hard-boiled detectives.) Strange clearly thought of himself as a big tough canine, even though he was probably the smallest dog in our neighborhood. He was rather sickly looking, too, with chronically bloodshot eyes and a loose, leering mouth. Eating year-old roadkill probably does that to you. I can’t imagine what a vet would have recommended for a dog like Strange. Probably a parole officer.
Strange swaggered about our place as though he owned it. You could almost see him thinking, “I won this house in a crap game, and there ain’t nobody telling me what to do on my own property.” After one of his particularly obnoxious offenses, often involving deadly toxic fumes, my grandmother would grab him by two handfuls of hide and send him flying outside, whereupon Strange would turn and snarl at her, “Try that again, old woman, and you’ll hear from my lawyer.” Then he would take out his vengeance on a chicken or squirrel or anything he could find that was smaller than himself. He reigned supreme in the confines of our yard.
Then one day my sister, Troll, brought home a huge yellow tomcat. The cat was half as big as she was. It was the cat version of an offensive all-pro tackle, and looked as if it ate scrap iron for breakfast. Its purr rattled dishes in the cupboard. Sex education not yet having been introduced in our schools, my sister named the burly yellow beast Matilda Jean! I was so disgusted with the name I almost gagged, but she said it was her cat, she’d name it anything she pleased.
“How do you know it’s a tomcat, anyway?” she sniffed at me.
Troll had me there. We went to the same school. It just looked like a tom.
Although Matilda Jean was thoroughly gentle and affectionate with members of the family, he obviously was a fighter. One ear had been gnawed half off, patches of fur were missing, and numerous scars recorded the history of a violent, brawling past. Matilda Jean lounged around the house all the first day at his new home, but that evening he got up, stretched, rippled his shoulder and neck muscles like yellow waves on a pond, strode to the door, and asked to be let out.
Later that night, as we were preparing for bed, a terrible cat fight broke out on the roof of our house. It raged back and forth over the roof, up one side and down the other. We rushed out to save poor Matilda Jean and chase off the intruder. We needn’t have bothered. Suddenly, a tangled, writhing, screeching knot of cats toppled off the roof and thumped to the ground. Matilda Jean landed on his back at the bottom and for a moment was stunned. The intruder, a big black-and-white model owned by our neighbors, saw its chance. It pulled itself together, a fairly complicated task, matching up the various parts, and streaked off into the night. Matilda Jean got up, rippled his muscles, and climbed back to the roof, apparently taking upon himself the responsibility of protecting us from any shifty-eyed scoundrels who might happen by.
Strange had been away from home for two days. We thought nothing of it, since he regularly went off carousing with his cronies. When he didn’t show up the day after the cat fight, however, I began to worry. He wasn’t much of a dog, but he was all the dog I had. “Maybe something happened to him,” I said to Gram.
“There you go again,” she said, “getting my hopes up.”
I went out to see if Strange had slipped in unnoticed and was sacked out in his doghouse sleeping off a hangover. The doghouse was empty. Then I saw him, sauntering down the road, occasionally glancing over his shoulder to check whether he was being tailed, possibly by the vice squad. He stopped at the gate and scanned the yard in search of a chicken or squirrel available for assault and battery. The yard was empty.
Matilda Jean peered intently down from the roof, on the lookout for shifty-eyed scoundrels. Strange, of course, fit the description. The cat dropped to the ground a few feet from the startled dog.
It is difficult to know what goes through a dog’s mind, but I suspect the few cognitive processes available to Strange were assessing the situation something like this: A cat! What’s a fool cat doing on my property? Dogs chase cats. I’m a dog. Therefore, I will chase this cat and teach it a good lesson. The cat will start running any second. Get ready!
Matilda Jean didn’t start running. His back arched, his hair bristled, his tail lashed back and forth like a ragged yellow whip.
Strange eyed the cat calmly. So, it’s a fight the pussycat wants. Well, he’s come to the right place! He clamped a cigar in his teeth, struck a match on the seat of his pants, lit the cigar, and flicked the match away. Eyes squinted, he smiled grimly around the cigar as he loosened the guns in his holsters. Draw, cat!
“Woof!” he said.
“KILLLLLLLLLLLLL!” Matilda Jean screamed.
Finally, my dog did something I could brag about. The next day at school I casually mentioned that my dog was really something. “You won’t believe what he did last night.”
My friends stared at me in astonishment. “You don’t mean Strange, do you?” one of them said. “You got another dog?”
“Nope!” I said. “It was Strange. What happened, Troll brought home this big old tomcat, and Strange and it got in a heck of a fight. And you won’t believe this, but right in the middle of the fight, the cat and Strange went right up that tamarack tree in our yard. Strange raced up it just like a squirrel. Man, it was something to see! That ol’ cat was so surprised it almost fell out of the tree!”
“Wow!” somebody said. “No kidding, you mean Strange actually chased a cat up a tree and climbed up after it?”
People always get so distracted by petty details. What did it matter, who chased whom? The important thing was, my dog climbed a tree!
Tough Guys Don’t Bird
You’ve heard the expression “Tough guys don’t bird.” You haven’t? Well, forget I mentioned it. The point is I’m a pretty tough guy, and I bird. I’m a birder, a bird watcher. I watch birds. So there. I said it and I’m glad.
All my life I’ve been interested in birds. A person can learn a lot from watching birds, especially if you’re into sitting on power-line wires or snatching insects out of the air with your beak. Only kidding about that. The truth is I’ve never watched a bird do anything that I’ve personally found useful. I really don’t know why I watch birds. It’s kind of stupid, if you think about it.








