Not
many of you know this, but Ft. Vancouver hosts the biggest display of fireworks
west of the Mississippi. Yep, that’s our claim to fame. I’m surprised it’s not on
the Welcome to Vancouver signs when you cross the Columbia River and enter
Washington. We’re that proud of it.
Growing
up, I didn’t know we held such an esteemed celebration. We celebrated like most
families, buying an assorted budgeted box of fireworks. Usually a Whistling
Pete was in there, some cone thing, a handful of snakes, and box of sparklers.
We’d
usually get around the first of July and it would sit on the dryer waiting
three long days to be opened. My sisters and I tried to coerce my parents to
let us light them early. And they never—not even a sparkler—went for it.
When
the Fourth finally arrived, we’d have a picnic up at Aunt Marge’s—the matriarch
of our family. She and her husband were the first ones to migrate from
Pennsylvania in the twenties to Washington. Her sister, Clara—my great
grandmother—and her husband followed soon after with their four children,
including my grandmother.
Anyway,
we’d have a family picnic in Aunt Marge’s day room—you never knew if it was
going to be rainy or sunny—even on the Fourth. We’d play games in her yard and
then as dusk began to fall, we’d move on down to our house for the family
fireworks. We were sandwiched between Aunt Marge and our grandparents.
After
Dad blew through our meager supply of fireworks, Grandpa would usually surprise
us with a few—usually a bigger cone-style one was included and another Whistling
Pete or two . And then we’d move down to Grandma and Grandpa’s and climb a
ladder to sit on their roof where we could see over the tops of the acres of
filbert trees and watch the firework show that blasted the air from Fort
Vancouver.
Apparently
in the 1970’s, sitting on the roof wasn’t considered dangerous. Go figure. And
it wasn’t even like my grandparents had a great house—it was a cement block home
hut. But we’d sit, stretched out along the long side of the house and swatting
at the feasting mosquitoes. And then as dark fell, the sky lit up with the
biggest and brightest fireworks we’d ever seen.
We didn’t have always have the best selection
in our own backyard, but what we had made rich memories.
Wonderful! I grew up in Ouray, Colorado, and they have an amazing display every year. The mountains rock!
ReplyDeleteI bet that is beautiful!
DeleteGreat memories, and I loved how you set up the post, too.
ReplyDeleteI thought the color variety would be a nice touch :) Glad you enjoyed it.
Deletesounds like you had such a great time! I love fireworks - the bigger the displays the better!
ReplyDeleteLoved taking a peek at your 4th memories. And those pictures are fantastic!
ReplyDelete