The Caching of Stan McBee
(With profound apologies to Robert W. Service, whose poems
should be read and enjoyed by all.)
There are strange things found on the
caching-ground
'Neath the
There are rattlesnakes sly, and cholla that
fly,
And temps that reach
What's 'round the next bend could make hair stand on
end,
But the strangest sight you'll ever see,
Is
if you find the cache that has nothing but ash --
The remains of old Stan McBee.
Now, Stan McBee always went out with
glee
To locate the latest site.
He
found quite a few, even placed one or two,
Just to keep his Cache Karma right.
He
lived all alone, so the urge to get goin'
Was no cause for family strife.
'Twas but one little fly in the ointment, or
I
Would say Stan had a cache-perfect life.
That flaw had to do with his left and right
shoe;
Seems he never once got them to trod
As
a pair, or a team. Sad to say, it would seem
That my caching friend Stan was a clod.
Ten yards with his gait, sure as flush beats a
straight,
He'd be sprawling out flat on the trail.
He
fell once too often, and started to soften,
Old
He
called me one day in his affable way,
And said, "Meet me. I'll buy you a beer!"
But when I got there and saw him in the
chair,
I knew there was no cause for cheer.
"I
just came from the doc's. I've tripped too many
rocks,
Son, I ain't got much more time to stay.
When I take the last fall, my attorney will
call
You, and please do what she has to say."
I
was saddened no end, but a friend stays a friend,
And I promised I'd honor his plea.
We
shook hands in farewell. Though it hurts me to
tell,
'Twas the last time he ever saw me.
Weeks passed, one or two, then a phone call came
through
from a law office down in
"At our office near Mill, we'll be reading the
will
Of the late cacher, Stanley McBee."
I arrived right at ten, and was soon ushered
in
To the office of Mary Sinclair,
She asked me to sit, and I near threw a
fit
When I saw there was only
one chair.
"You were
He left all his possessions to you.
But to get his bequest, he left one last
request
That you alone can and must do."
With that she reached o'er, and up from the
floor
Moved a green ammo case to the table.
"Stan's been cremated. His will clearly
stated
You must do this task if you’re able.
Here's a long and a lat; now you must go seek
that
Site, and under a cottonwood tree,
Hide this ammo-can cache, though it be filled with
ash.
It stays secret between you and me."
Armed with my GPS, and just barely a
guess,
I set out to seek the location
Of
that place in the land where my good old friend
Stan
Without too much grief, and to my great
relief,
‘Round that waypoint I steadily tightened,
As
I drew near the spot, my nerve endings were shot,
For some reason I felt rather frightened.
The site suited him, it was up on the
Rim,
(Maybe not. These are beans I won’t spill.)
And in spite of the trees, I got signals with
ease:
There’s the spot, just atop a small hill!
As
I set down the case, my heart started to race,
Beause someone had been here 'fore me!
There's a lined yellow sheet, that was folded so
neat,
'Neath a rock by that cottonwood tree.
"Son," said the note, and you know who
wrote,
"You're a fine cacher and a good friend.
In
spite of my spills and my physical ills,
You were here for me right to the end.
Now I want you to savor the depth of the
favor
You've done me. It's not overstated:
Thanks to you and your Garmin, this clumsy ol’
varmin'
Can at last say: I'm COORDINATED!"
There are strange things found on the
caching-ground
'Neath the
There are rattlesnakes sly, and cholla that
fly,
And temps that reach
What's 'round the next bend could make hair stand on
end,
But the strangest sight you'll ever see,
Is
if you find the cache that has nothing but ash
--
The remains of old Stan McBee.
© Copyright 2002, Stephen N. Gross. All rights
reserved.