By Juan Montoya
To the migrant workers picking cherries at the Lester Southwell farm between Omena and Peshawbestown, Michigan, July 20, 1969 was just another muggy day made bearable only by the cool breezes blowing over the chilly, clear, blue waters of Omena Bay across Michigan Highway 22 from their labor camp.They were picking black cherries after they had gotten done with the napoleons (light red) sweets, and toward the end of the season in August, would move on to the tarts, or sour cherries favored by pie makers all over the world.
Today was special.
Not only were they picking their favorite cherries, large lumpy syrupy blacks, but the kids and teenagers in the camp had rigged a black and white television they had bought at one of those garage sales that seemed to sprout each Friday and Saturday along the Suttons Bay to Traverse City route where local residents knew migrants passed on their weekend runs for food and other household necessities.
They had pitched in and paid $10 for the set and rigged it with aluminum foil and wire clothes hangers to acquire a somewhat discernible image from nearby television broadcasters, most notably the Traverse City CBS affiliate Channel 9-10.
The kids would watch cartoons and sitcoms during the day when the teens and adults were out in the orchards with their ladders and pails, and in the evenings the young adults watched the prime-time comedy shows. By maneuvering the wire hangers and the aluminum wrapped around them, they could get a good image.
But today, July 20, they knew that man was set to land on the moon. That night, the moon waxed near three-quarters and reflected off the clear waters of Omena Bay as it merged with Grand Traverse Bay to the south. The night was clear and cool, hovering in the 60s. As the kids gathered closer to the set Walter Cronkite was narrating the play-by-play as the astronauts made ready their descent toward the lunar surface.
They were all enthralled at the prospect of a man landing on the moon. It would have been even more relevant to them then if they had known the Neil Armstrong, the first man who landed on the moon, knew something about field work having grown up in a farm in Wapokaneta, Ohio, south of the Michigan-Ohio state line below Lima, where they would travel next to pick tomatoes.
When the first frosts singed the edges of the tomato leaf and sleet arrived in early to mid-October, they'd return to Brownsville, in the Rio Grande Valley.
Outside, in the grassy parking area of the labor camp, the adult males stood in a small circle around their cars parked in front of their respective cabins and talked adult talk about how much their families picked today, what was coming tomorrow, and where they would travel at the end of the cherry season when the sour cherry trees in the orchard had been plucked clean. These were the days before the tree-shaking automatic machines replaced agricultural labor. It had been a profitable year.
Then Cronkite and CBS switched to the NASA transmission from the lunar surface as Neil Armstrong (just a white blurry, bouncing image on the set against the darkness of space), pronounced his famous words, "One small step for man,..." Cronkite had to cut in and translate the staticky slurs pronounced some 250,000 miles away and finish the sentence..."one giant leap for mankind."
The kids burst out in shouts and screams and ran out of the small cabin in celebration to the amazement of the adults gathered in front of the camp.
"Que tienen?" asked one of the adults.
"La luna!" they shouted jumping and pointed at it. "El hombre is on the moon!"
The men looked up at the moon, bright and distant in the sky.
To some of them, who had never finished elementary school and some who had spent their entire lives without getting a chance to get near one, their claims must have seemed ludicrous.
"Tan locos," they said turning back to subjects that really mattered.
13 comments:
A number of deliveries may arrive days later than anticipated due to a third and fourth party technology outages. WHAT? SO THAT IS WHY HEB IS CLOSED???
its pub's fault.
HEB is closed? All HEBs? OMG the sky is falling!
News, not old shit from your past, montoya.
So much going on and you're stuck in boring history.
Mayra is on fire. Gonna whip your chente and you're not paying attention, guey! No one cares about your farmworker past!!!
GO MAYRA!!!!
El Captain Bob's is desperate for help. Where is Cata and Garzoria. Ladies please step in and help the man. He was high on drugs on the Erasmo show and needed help. Right now the God.Family. component does not exist for MAGA Captain. It never has really. Captain Bob's needs Mayra Flores to come eat at his restaurant. It may close first than the museum.
July 20, 2024 at 11:50 AM
No seas pendejo that's where I met your mama en los surcos IDIOTA. Man was she good entre enmedio de los surcos ESTUPIDO
MARICON
MUSEUM? you mean downtown. downtown was closed down when all the theatres moved outta here. there were 7 of them in the downtown area. majestic, queen, captiol, mexico, iris, el grande y victoria.
Montoya, it is all about the work ethic our parents instilled in us. Our lives were simple but we were innocent and happy.
Thanks!
So the moon landing was filmed at a migrant camp?
Weren't they called internment camps in the 40's
Nice story, Juan.
Puro pedo! We never went to the moon. If we did go back then with primitive technology,then why are we having such a hard time returning to the moon with the better and modern technology we have now? Heck! SpaceX can't even get a rocket to leave Boca Chica and why is NASA contracting private companies to get us to the moon, if we already went? Why not return to the moon with the same improved 60's technology. Maybe because we never went. Stanley Kubrick, did a great job fooling the world.
Another big lie by the media. We never landed on the moon. It was one big hoax.
Lots of people believe that the moon landing was done on a movie set. Even the Russians believe that the USA never landed there. These people think they're smarter than everyone else, but they are not. Somebody has to be the lowest rung on the ladder. It might as well be them.
I've been to the moon many times but to the dark side. I remember I went there when I was at the charro drive inn and that hoppon many times. El ruenez and la star were also launchers to the moon.
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