Friday, August 16, 2013

Botanical Dragnet (a letter to the Earth)

Joe Friday and his buddy Spike --  just umbel cops, but they always get their man.

About the author:  Punster Extraordinaire John Baxter grew up in Burns, a very small town in the Chalk Bluff country of southeast Wyoming.  He used to tell us there was a statue of him there; I think he was joking but I still haven't checked.  John started his education in the one-room school in Burns (he and his brother were the only pupils one year), and went on to become Professor of Mycology at the University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee.  His other claim to fame was that he was the father-in-law of a Talking Head.

When I met John, he was retired, living in Laramie with wife Jane, and busy with mycology projects at the University.  The state biological inventory where I worked was tucked into a corner of the Solheim Mycological Herbarium ... thus our paths were destined to cross.  We became very fond of John and his wonderful irrepressible sense of humor.  It provided a bit of sunshine to our underfunded under-appreciated existence.

John Baxter passed away August 23, 2002, but he lives on in our memories.
Burns, Wyoming, at about the time of John Baxter's birth.  Original source unknown.


Botanical Dragnet
Guest post by John “Barney” Baxter, sent from parts unknown.
To assist the uninitiated, all technical terms have live links.

My name is Joe Friday.  I was born in Raceme, Wisconsin.  My buddy Spike and I are just umbel cops, but we can go anywhere a catkin, and we always get our man.

It was warm in Los Angeles.  It was so warm that Spike and I were beginning to drupe, and we were about to go to Abies bar and get plastid, when a call came in that a supermarket had been held up.  We drove down there and talked to a checker.  She was palea and nervous.  “Don’t panicle, Ma’am,” I said, “I just want the FAX.”  “Well, lemma see,” she said, “this guy came in with a pistil, and I knew he meant to stigma up, so I gave him all the cash.  Then I watched him pedicel away on his pericycle.  It had one petal missing.”
this guy came in with a pistil ... so I gave him all the cash
I could tell by the style of the caper that it was the work of Pericycle Pete, the notorious supermarket bandit.  We spent a week looking for apetalous pericycle, with no success.  We were deep in glume.  Then one day there was a knock awn the door.  “Come in,” I said, and who should walk in but Sadie the Shoplifter, a gal whose favorite trick was to Caryophyllaceae bit of feminine apparel from some display counter.  “Boys,” said Sadie, “I’ve stolon my last bit of lingerie -- I’m Cereus, I’m going to lead you to Pericycle Pete’s hangout.”

We hoped that Sadie’s change of heartwood mean that she wouldn’t stele anymore.  She took us to Pete’s hideout, a sleazy apartment that he had rented from those notorious slumlords, Phil O. Dendron and his wife, Rhoda Dendron.  “Culm awn out, Pete,” I yelled, “You ought to see the nice nucellus fellows have for you.  Yew won’t pine away -- yew’ll spruce up fir a change when you cedar cell.”

His only anther was to fire a pistil from a window.  We let him rachis with fire for awhile, then we broke down the door.  He had exhausted his ammunition, and the floor was littered with Brassicaceaes. “Boys” he said, “I’m glad it’s over. I lost my shoes, and mitosis cold.”
I lost my shoes, and mitosis cold
Sadie warned us that the sapwood try to escape, so we took him to the station and locked him up in a guard cell.  We put Sadie in a nearby companion cell.  Later she cracked up, so we sent her to the insane xylem.  Then our Irish police chief, Luke O’Plast, gave me a raise so now I have a funiculus to jingle in my pocket.  I also have my name over my office door inflorescence lights, and I feel quite superior ovary the whole thing. -- Ament
we took him to the station and locked him up in a guard cell


3 comments:

  1. I lived in Laramie in the 1980s. I became friends with Jane Baxter and visited Jane and John several times in their home. Jane told me her favorite place to camp was amid the lodgepole pines. She loved the smell of the pines, clear earth under the pines, the mystical nature of all those thin, straight trunks, the sound of the breeze among the branches. She said John hated the lodgepole pines and called the lodgepole forests a biological desert. Jane was the master of the marriage, the psychologist, the leader. Jane and John camped in the lodgepole pines as often as Jane wanted.

    Don Bailey

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  2. Another great bit of humor by the late John Barney Baxter, the bard of burns, WY, the hardest working man in mycology, and the poet lariat of Wyoming. Nice to hear from John from the great ascus in the sky

    Walter Fertig
    Phoenix, AZ (but formerly Laramie- the Paris of Wyoming)

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    Replies
    1. Hi Walt! Thanks for the Comment, made me smile!! I thought of John (fondly of course) just last Friday as I passed the Antelope Truck Stop. I was tempted to stop and see if they still offer meatballs laced with fungi ;-)

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