It’s The Pitts: Tule
Man
Cattle Network 12/19/06 by
Lee Pitts
The economy has been bad in the Klamath
Basin of southern Oregon ever since our
all-knowing government decided to shut
off the farmer’s water in order to save
some sucker fish. (These are the same
fish that the feds spent decades trying
to obliterate.) When residents
complained that the region would go
broke if their water was turned off the
brain-dead bureaucrats told them the
same thing they told the logging
communities after the spotted owl
turned them into ghost towns: They would
simply have to depend on other
industries, such as the service trade
and tourism.
There are a few problems with this
solution in the Klamath basin. If there
aren’t any farmers who’ll be left to
provide services to? Sucker fish
generally don’t buy a lot of groceries
or need their carpets cleaned. As for
tourism, there aren’t any Disneylands or
Grand Canyons in the immediate vicinity
and, being inland, cruise ships seldom
dock there. For some reason summer
vacationeers don’t go out of their way
to see the sucker fish either. About the
biggest drawing card for tourists is
that there aren’t a lot of other
tourists in the area competing for
services.
The inhabitants of southern Oregon are
resilient folks and just because the
government is trying to depopulate the
area doesn’t mean they’re going to tuck
tail and run. Charley is a good example
of the resourceful people who live there
and he took the fed’s advice and tried
to come up with something to stimulate
the tourist trade. He didn’t own enough
earth moving equipment to create a Bryce
or a Zion and an Old Faithful-like
attraction would require using some of
the sucker fish’s water. He realized
that the idea of creating a Civil War
Battlefield was nuttier than Jamoca
Almond Fudge and his hand-drawn Indian
cave paintings looked a little phony.
Then an idea hit him like a falling sack
of spuds: Britain has Nessy, their Loch
Ness Monster and the far North has
Sasquatch, so why couldn’t Charley give
the Klamath Basin their own Big
Foot-like creature? Charley called him
“Tule Man” and ordered up lots of ash
trays and T-shirts to sell to all the
tourists traps that would soon be
springing up.
Luckily for Charley there’s plenty of
raw material to work with in the wild
tules that grow in the marshes all over
the Klamath basin. He tied tules to
every appendage of his body. They stuck
out two feet above his head and made his
arms six feet long. He attached the
tules with orange fluorescent hay bale
twine and chinked it all with mud. His
entire body was covered in tules except
for two small slits for him to see
through. When Charley was done
transforming himself into Tule Man he
smelled worse than a wet coyote, but he
was willing to make the sacrifice in
order to save his community.
Next, Charley hid in a ditch alongside a
two lane country road on a night that
was so dark even the bats and raccoons
stayed home. And then he waited.
Finally he heard a car. PERFECT! It was
Mrs. O’Toole. No one had a better social
network than her.
The elderly driver swerved to miss the
hideous creature that lumbered across
the road, making threatening gestures
with its long stalks. After a brief
glimpse in her headlights the monster
disappeared from whence it came... into
the tule marsh. If Mrs. O’Toole survived
the experience she would surely spread
the sighting of Tule Man far and wide.
It wouldn’t be long before satellite
trucks from all the major news networks
would be camped out in Klamath Falls.
Motels would be full of reporters and
tourists.
Charley got rid of the evidence and went
home to watch for reports of Tule Man
but there was nothing on the morning
news or the nightly news. The local
newspaper carried not one word about the
creature. In fact, Charlie heard nothing
until he ventured into town to pick up a
barrel of oil from his distributor.
As he was loading the barrel the fella
on the dock said, “Mrs. O’Toole was in
the other day and she said she saw you
the other night crossing the road and
you didn’t even wave or say hello.” |