Monday, October 15, 2018

Orange Nesbitt's ~ Just Another Round ~


When I say two words … ‘Great memories’ … what comes to mind? And if I were to add one particular factor, that is your earliest childhood memory, what would it be? Perhaps as interesting is what is the trigger that ranks this as one of those great memories? For me, it's all about Orange Nesbitt’s.

Many were the visits to the southwest corner of my father’s home state of Iowa, most to good ole Red Oak, but this memory … it takes place in the spot on the road called ‘Hastings'. I challenge you to find it on the map. 

Although I easily recall the two or three trips to Iowa aboard my grandfather's semi, at least one flight, one via car and perhaps even one via train. Whether it was one of these or another, I have not a clue to how I arrived in Hasting on this visit.


If my memory serves me right I stayed with my uncle Jimmy for perhaps three or four nights. It was circa the summer of 1966, with baseball and Sandy Koufax becoming an integral part of this lads life. Shortly after arriving Jimmy took me around the town so I could be familiar with all six or seven streets. Then we walked up to the town center to the store, the post office and the pool hall … oh, of course these were all one and the same. He introduced me to the man behind the counter of the store, no not Oz … most likely the owner. And he told him that he could add whatever his nephew Ricky purchased onto his tab.
Jimmy 1958

The following days were filled with new buddies, a new game called billiards and a childhood favorite Orange Nesbitt’s. On my last visit to downtown Hastings, accompanied by Jimmy, he asked the man behind the counter what the amount was on his nephew's tab. Now remember a soda in the mid sixties was but a mere 10 cents and a candy bar even less at 5 cents. I would imagine that Jimmy was likely expecting that I might have had two, maybe three soda pop's per day and perhaps the same amount of candy bars and hence a tab somewhere between one to two dollars would be reasonable. What my uncle's initial response was, I don't know, but looking back I now realize that the ten dollar plus tab must have been quite the surprise. 

Jimmy 2010
Apparently somewhere I had heard the phrase, “Give them another round on me”. I'm thinking that I made some new found buddies quite happy, at least for a couple days during that summer of 66'. The man behind the counter, well he was making a little extra on Jimmy and I'm sure smiling all the way to the proverbial bank. And uncle Jimmy, he just grinned, paid his nephew Ricky's tab and learned not to be fooled by the savviness of an eight year old boy. 



 There will likely be some in my family whose remembrance of Jimmy is much less favorable. And I totally understand. You see, my uncle Jimmy would become, or was likely even then, an alcoholic. Many lives were hurt in his wake. I know that my own father tried to assist a couple times with jobs, that in turn he would once again lose because of the bottle. 

September of 2010 brought two big surprises in my life. One, the sudden death of my father. Two, while notifying family and friends of his death, to discover that uncle Jimmy, whom I presumed dead since the 90's, was actually alive. Later that month I would call and talk to Jimmy.  Living with his wife in a shelter, Jimmy told me that he had recently received his twenty year sobriety pin. Shame and many burnt bridges had kept him from reconnecting with family. We enjoyed a couple laughs, including the mention of that brief visit and his nephew having quite the affinity for Orange Nesbitt's.

Jimmy died the summer of 2017. I imagine that he was sober until the end. For me, he is often remembered when drinking an orange soda, if only it could be a Nesbitt’s 😃