Christmas
Are you ready for Christmas once again? I’m getting there . . .
When it came time to wrap the presents for tomorrow, I found
my supply of coal depleted. Nothing
remained but a few crumbs. Local urchins must have been pilfering when I wasn’t
looking. Something had to be done, and
fast.
I drove a few miles north to an area where the railroad runs
close to Northeast street. Parking the
car in the weeds, I set off down the track.
A mile or so later, my objective came into sight: the old University coaling station.
I walked down the line until I reached the end, where years
of coal cars had covered the ground in fine black gravel. Bending down to scoop a few handfuls, my eye
was drawn by a glitter just ahead.
Slag.
I’ve walked thought that area countless times, and realized
I had missed it all those years.
Millions of pounds of coal had arrived through that siding, all to be
burned at the University heating plant.
So what happened to the residue?
The ash and slag were cleaned out of the furnaces on a regular
basis.
Some of the ash was used by the Mortuary College, to train
future crematory operators. Others in the same program practiced disposal,
spreading the ash in a fine layer over the School of Farming’s fields.
They never did find a use for the hard, glittery slag. In the end, the bigger chunks were piled next
to the coal, and loaded onto trains for disposal somewhere out West. Somewhere in the desert, whole neighborhoods
have been built on University slag, held together with fine cemented fly ash.
The power station is long closed, replaced by an efficient
nuclear reactor, but the siding remains, rusting away slowly. The brightest gems of slag are gone, but I
found enough glittery bits to make a special Christmas indeed.
Combined with a few handfuls of fine pebble coal, the effect
will be memorable.
I’m off to get ready.
The kids are coming soon.
Comments
This caused the gal who was sitting next to me to get all nauseous, and the teacher to tell me to leave the room. I went to the library and had a good time with a book until some administrative busybody looked me up.
Whatever happened to Jim Boughton?
Got Look me the Eye for myself this Christmas and could not put it down after I picked it up this morning.
It was great!
...am wondering about short circuit thinking when I was younger......
Seriously, whatever happened Jim Boughton?