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Scraps of Mother and Son

1996. Teaching English at Morris Schott Middle School, coaching the volleyball team, and parenting sometimes in between.  One way that my sons and I reconnected with one another with our crazy life,  was by taking long walks. We lived in a Goverment built community in Beverly, WA. Lovely solid homes, across the highway from Wanapum Dam--built in the 1950's by the workers for whom these homes were built. Lava craggy, Eastern Washington desert hills running  parallel to the Columbia. Rattlesnakes everywhere--we once counted 8 in our backyard at once.  Black Widows here and there, even scorpions. We could see the river scape from our living room and the wind pounded most of the time. A beautiful and eerie sound and sight everywhere we turned.  This was one of our temporary adventures.

As we walked, ten year old Kevin, my smallest angel, picked up small bits of scrap iron and rocks and handed them to me for safekeeping.  I won't paint this rose-colored. We were uncomfortably hot, we were sandy, we were partly bored, partly putting distance between us and anger.

We were making our lives bearable, one moment at a time. Together.

And this is a remnant from one of our walks.  I call it Mother and Son.


There is something about a rock and some iron that puts daily life into perspective. Our troubles are as fleeting as our joys. Our material life will one day be scraps that a mother and son will find, and decide how it fits in their lives.

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Pig Iron

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pig_iron

Pig iron is the intermediate product of smelting iron ore. It is the molten iron from the blast furnace, which is a large and cylinder-shaped furnace charged with iron ore, coke, and limestone. Charcoal and anthracite have also been used as fuel. Pig iron has a very high carboncontent, typically 3.5–4.5%,[1] along with silica and other constituents of dross, which makes it very brittle and not useful directly as a material except for limited applications.

The traditional shape of the molds used for pig iron ingots was a branching structure formed in sand, with many individual ingots at right angles[2] to a central channel or runner, resembling a litter of piglets being suckled by a sow. When the metal had cooled and hardened, the smaller ingots (the pigs) were simply broken from the runner (the sow), hence the name pig iron.[3] As pig iron is intended for remelting, the uneven size of the ingots and the inclusion of small amounts of sand caused only insignificant problems considering the ease of casting and handling them.

 

How many of us even KNOW what Johnny Cash is talking about in this song. Such a great way to learn about metallurgy. 

Recorded spring or summer, 1957; Memphis Released on the album With his hot and blue guitar Written by Ledbetter and Lomax


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