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Friday, March 15, 2024
Personal Essay by Rick Fordyce in the Seattle Times
3/9/24, 10:22 AM The Seattle Times
https://replica.seattletimes.com/html5/reader/production/default.aspx?pubname=&pubid=84d463e0-c035-4c49-902d-95c722bfe073 1/3
Even on Cape Cod, the smell of cedar
takes me back to Granite Falls
MY TAKE | Personal essays
BY RICK FORDYCE - SPECIAL TO THE SEATTLE TIMES
Do you believe in fate? I don’t.
But maybe I should, given how it all began.
I was 19 when I went to the Fremont bar, the one that on Wednesday nights
had a live band and cheap beer and would take any fake ID under the sun. I
saw the girl in the corner who was not dancing, downed my beer and after a
brief introduction, onto the dance floor we strode.
It was a few dates later that I was introduced to her older brother, who
happened to drive a supply truck for an Eastside roofing company — for all
those hundreds and hundreds of cedar-shake roofs. His regular helper was
out, he needed one for the next day and off I went.
There’s been no turning back. At first, in that winter of 1972, the job took us
all over the Eastside, from Bothell to Renton, with Kirkland, Bellevue and
Issaquah in between; a carpet of tract houses unrolling over forests and
farms from the shores of Lake Washington to the Cascade Mountains.
We started early from the tiny office in Kirkland — 7 a.m., which for a 19-
year-old stoner was a challenge.
First, it was over to the supply yard, where a forklift loaded the flatbed with
enough bundles of cedar shakes for two or three houses.
It is one of the purest smells I know of, freshly split cedar; slightly pungent,
almost intoxicating when inhaled, a doorway into a world outside of which
nothing else exists.
And then it was off in the truck to Newport Shores or Somerset or Juanita or
Yarrow Point. I’d back the truck up to the newly framed house, put a plank
across and handcarry 20 or 30 50-pound bundles of fresh-split cedar shakes
onto the roof, slatted so that the cedar could breathe because it still sought
oxygen.
And then there were the shake mills of North Bend and Granite Falls. Over
time, when the Kirkland yard ran out, they trusted me to drive the 40 miles
up Highway 9 to Granite Falls, where the shake mill sat at the base of the
Mountain Loop Highway.
I grew up around the University District of Seattle, which in 1972 looked like
a university district, but the shake mill in Granite Falls, which in one form or
another had been there since 1900, looked like 1900. Into the muddy yard I
pulled the truck, and into the office with the order I went, and then drove the
truck to the splitting shed where the pallets of bundles awaited. And it was
there that I could catch a glimpse into the shed of the work crew as they split
the shakes.
In that winter of 1972, the Burt Reynolds movie “Deliverance” was playing in
theaters, and had the director ever needed extras to populate the
Appalachian hills that the cast wandered into, they could not have done
better than the older crew members of the Granite Falls mill. Few had all 10
fingers; their grins, aimed at the green city kid, revealed teeth — those that
were remaining — of yellow-green, stained by cigars, the glowing stubs of
which angled out through the whiskers of their mouths. Clothing, in warmer
weather, was denim and flannel but in the rainy winter months, old, dark,
bulky coats, stitched and patched, covered the multiple layers underneath.
Muddy boots, and, on some, a pointed wool cap, completed their work garb.
The enormous old growth cedar trees that once carpeted the Northwest coast
are largely gone, but homes were made to last. By the 1970s, the use of the
last of the true old growth for cedar shakes was ending. Before then, that was
all that was used and driving around rural Puget Sound one would frequently
see a long-ago collapsed barn, or shed or cabin with a still functioning roof.
Raining out? No problem, salmon supper’s at noon in my great-great-greatgreatgrandfather’s longhouse,
one Indigenous citizen may have said to
another, back in the day.
I will still occasionally put on a red cedar roof, but only in the wealthiest of
neighborhoods, as the price of cedar shingles is now prohibitive despite the
use of the inferior quality new growth.
Back east on Cape Cod, where once upon a time my shingling trade migrated,
the occasional red cedar roof comes along in the wealthiest of ocean-view
neighborhoods.
There, overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, when I open a bundle and the
wondrous smell of cedar fills the air, I will snatch the small white label as it
blows away and read the mill location, which now is usually Forks, 3,000
miles away. But sometimes the label will say “Granite Falls.” And I
remember it all began on a dance floor in Fremont.
Rick Fordyce is a Seattle native and third generation Washingtonian. He is
the author of three books of fiction, including “I Climbed Mt. Rainier With
Jimi Hendrix’s High School Counselor and Other stories of the Pacific
Northwest.” He lives in Seattle and on Cape Cod.
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Personal Essay by Rick Fordyce in the Seattle Times
3/9/24, 10:22 AM The Seattle Times https://replica.seattletimes.com/html5/reader/production/default.aspx?pubname=&pubid=84d463e0-c035-4...
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