A Rock Pile and an Old Schrade Walden Trapper

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Note: If this is inappropriate for this forum, feel free to make it go away. I have been away from Bladeforums for a while and it seems like there is a little more structure here than before, so I am not sure if I am out of bounds or not.

Anyway...

I was going through a box of old knives yesterday and pulled out an old Yellow Schrade Walden Trapper. It looks horrible. The scales have shrunk and split and discolored disgracefully. The clip blade has been broken and ground off.

And yet, as I held the old knife, it took me back to a hot July evening thirty odd years ago.

For the first six years of my life, my childhood was idyllic. We lived on the backside of my Grandpa's ranch in Oklahoma. To get to our house, you had to go to the end of the road, cross a cattle guard, and drive down through a cow pasture.

I had a little cow pony named Crackerjacks and a dog named Sonny, and the run of the ranch. My granddad was an old time cowboy with leathery skin, calloused hands, and a tender heart for kids and colts and puppy dogs. He and I were inseperable.

One hot, sultry July evening my dad came home from work, and spoke quietly to my mother, whereupon they disappeared into their bedroom and closed the door. Some time later, they came out. She was crying, and he was looking very somber.

He took my little sister and me on his lap and told us that he would be leaving, and that he wouldn't be living with us anymore.

I bolted and ran outside, crying, trying to make sense of his words. And then I saw the rock pile.

We had picked up lots of rocks out of the corner of cow pasture we had fenced off for a yard, and piled them just outside past the gate. My mother had told me to stay away from the rock pile, because it was the kind of place Copperheads and Timber rattlers liked to hide, but today I didn't care. I was desperate to keep my dad from leaving.

Many of the rocks were big, some so big it was all I could do to carry them, but through my tears I worked frantically, piling them in front of the gate, hoping to keep him from getting out.

I had quite a wall built by the time he came out of the house carrying a suitcase.

I held my breath as I watched him walk up to the gate and stare at my handiwork. A shadow passed over his countenance as he deliberately grasped the gate and shoved it open, sending my rocks and my hopes tumbling down into shambles.

He walked over to where I was standing, and with one hand resting on my shoulder, he fumbled in his front pocket with his other hand and brought out the old Schrade. He handed it to me, and with a husky "Goodbye, Partner," he got in his pickup and drove away.

As he drove out of sight, I clutched that old knife that in happier times had cut chicken livers in pieces on fishing trips and cut switches for me use on my sometimes unruly cowpony.

I think maybe my love affair with pocketknives was born that day.

To this day I have a thing for old yellow Trappers. I found a vintage Schrade in mint condition just like it a few years ago and paid a big price for it so i would have one to carry. It was in my pocket today.

The old Trapper has seen better days, and my dad crossed the great divide a few years ago...

And now I have two boys that are the apple of my eye. Lots of things have changed over the years and a lot of water has rolled under the bridge, but the old knife still has the ability to take me back in time.

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John, that's a wonderful, heartfelt (if bittersweet) tale. Thanks for taking the time to share it with us. :thumbup:

That knife is a treasure.
 
I have considered having the old knife rescaled before it gets any worse.

The opposite side is split and looks twice as bad.
 
I think you could make a good argument to keep it as is (as well as to fix it up).

Not sure what I'd do but somehow I don't doubt you'll make the right decision for that particular trapper.
 
What a tale of heartbreak for a child, not understanding why mommy and daddy are not living together anymore. The children never understand, but sometimes are the ones hurt most by it.

No, I would not do anything to fix up the knife, but stabilize it as a memory piece. It's part of your lifes history, keep it as it is. It's almost symbolic of something once grand, but now in ruins. A ghost of a past.
 
What a tale of heartbreak for a child, not understanding why mommy and daddy are not living together anymore. The children never understand, but sometimes are the ones hurt most by it.

No, I would not do anything to fix up the knife, but stabilize it as a memory piece. It's part of your lifes history, keep it as it is. It's almost symbolic of something once grand, but now in ruins. A ghost of a past.

That has been my feeling as well.

I carry the other one, which is meticulously cared for, as a symbol also.

I have been blessed with a second chance at a father/son relationship--this time as the dad.

I want to do a better job than the old man did.

He actually bought into all that 60's rhetoric and couldn't stay away from the drugs and the nomadic lifestyle any longer. He and my mother didn't fight; he just checked out.

I only saw him infrequently after he left. Sometimes he would go as much as four years between calls or visits.
 
The problem with fixing that old boy up is, would you be able to carry it? I couldn't. An heirloom like that, I would be afraid I was going to lose it. Besides, new scales, new blades, whatever is fixed would kind've take away from what makes it what it is. It's your call, but I also vote for leaving it as is.
Great story, if a bit sad. Rings a bell in this heart, I reckon. I can relate.
 
The problem with fixing that old boy up is, would you be able to carry it? I couldn't. An heirloom like that, I would be afraid I was going to lose it. Besides, new scales, new blades, whatever is fixed would kind've take away from what makes it what it is. It's your call, but I also vote for leaving it as is.
Great story, if a bit sad. Rings a bell in this heart, I reckon. I can relate.


I couldn't carry it, and the fixing it up was just an idle thought.
 
Thanks for sharing a story from your life. To be honest I don't have much patience to read everything on here , most of the time but your story , grabbed my eye.

I agree , keep the knife as it is , my two cents.

Tostig
 
While the story is very touching I am more impressed by your desire to be something that your dad wasn't. All to often a divorce can make an adult a bitter person destined to walk the same path. Keep the Trapper as is not only as part of your life history but also so when you give your kids these two trappers there will be some semblance to them. Your fathers trapper (abused and beat up) being the broken relationship between you and your father. And your trapper (better cared for) being the well worn one just as your relationship to your kids.
 
While the story is very touching I am more impressed by your desire to be something that your dad wasn't. All to often a divorce can make an adult a bitter person destined to walk the same path. Keep the Trapper as is not only as part of your life history but also so when you give your kids these two trappers there will be some semblance to them. Your fathers trapper (abused and beat up) being the broken relationship between you and your father. And your trapper (better cared for) being the well worn one just as your relationship to your kids.


That is exactly what I have in mind.
 
Great story, take great care of your family we need people to break the past mold and restore the life with a whole family.
 
That choked me up a little. It's sad to see what we adults are capable of doing to our children.

I think I'd keep the knife the way it is.
 
ms3902 couldn't have said it any better. I never understood just driving off, but now that I have two of my own, I can't imagine. I think that knife is best left as is, but you'll know whats right...
 
ms3902 couldn't have said it any better. I never understood just driving off, but now that I have two of my own, I can't imagine. I think that knife is best left as is, but you'll know whats right...


Thanks for the kind words.

I was raised in northeast Oklahoma.

The story took place about three miles from the little community of Oaks, Oklahoma.
 
:eek:Dang I am near bawlin after reading that post Coonskinner "I can relate" and not too far from ya, born and raised in Wagoner!!;) Keep her the way she is and remember your DAD:o That is one of the few things I have from mine and we had NO relationship( he has also crossed the divide) BUT sometimes that is life I have tried to do better by my children but my relationship w/ my own 19 yo son is strained AT best so I keep tryin:(
 
Marry the one you love, but remember to love the one you marry.

It is said "to love your enemies". If you can love your enemies, it can't be that hard to love your spouse.

God Bless
 
all good
i am saving your post to my documents. you story rates with me




the old knives bring back cool memories.
the idyllic life is gone as we knew it .... then to be.
but it is possible to find a new idyll.
enjoy what is now.
buzz
 
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