One day a year, my sons think I’m “totally awesome.”
Nine cases of fireworks? Check. Six 24-tube angled mortar racks?
Check. Four hundred feet of fuse? Check. Lumber, glue, wood screws,
zip ties, duct tape, flashlights, igniter torches? Check.
Yep, looks like another typical Fourth of July for me.
By the time you read this, I’ll be sweating in the Alabama sun,
cussing up a storm as I assemble yet another of my fabulous family
fireworks displays.
Cussing is an essential skill for an amateur pyrotechnician.
There never seems to be enough time to set up a show, and I’ve got
less than 48 hours to get ready for that moment — 9:30 p.m. CDT
Friday — when I cue the music and signal my sons that it’s time to
light the fuses.
Pyrotechnics comes from a Greek word that, loosely
translated, means “blow stuff up,” but when the object is to put on
a really impressive show, it[s a little more complicated than
that.
My finale this year will conclude with 144 gold willow breaks,
shot at angles from three separate firing stations to fill the sky
and elicit the “ooh-ahh” crowd reaction that is every
pyrotechnican’s ultimate reward.
“Better than Disneyworld,” they said in 2005. That was the year
when, with the able assistance of my twin sons, I produced a
10-minute Fourth of July spectacular featuring nearly $3,000 worth
of consumer fireworks.
That’s $3,000 wholesale, by the way. When a man goes
crazy for fireworks, he sooner or later figures out it’s cheaper to
buy the stuff by the case.
HOW DID I BECOME so addicted to fireworks? The basic motives were
love and pride. As the liberals might say, I did it for the
children.
Growing up near Atlanta, I was no more into cherry-bomb
hooliganism than any other normal red-blooded American boy. My
older brother Kirby was more of the fireworks buff in the family.
He always had a supply of roman candles and rockets every Fourth of
July and New Year’s Eve, and I usually just watched.
Then, in 1997, I got a job in Washington and came north with my
wife, our 8-year-old daughter and our twin sons. The boys were then
5 and learning to read, and as we headed rolled northward through
Tennessee, the little geniuses quickly deciphered the word
“fireworks” beckoning from billboards alongside I-81.
“Daddy! Daddy! Fireworks!” they’d howl from their car seats,
begging me to obey the signs that commanded: “Exit Here!”
I resisted the temptation, but with each subsequent trip down
home as the boys grew older, the pleadings became more insistent. A
couple of years later, returning from a Christmas visit to Georgia,
I finally gave in and got about $25 worth of roman candles and
rockets.
Our first family New Year’s Eve “show” — shivering in suburban
Maryland’s midnight cold to ring in 1999 — was a spectacular
success in my boys’ eyes, and that was when the addiction
began.
Shooting fireworks with my sons was one of the finest fatherly
experiences you could imagine. My wife didn’t exactly approve, and
so these occasional pyrotechnical excursions with the boys became
sort of a male-bonding conspiracy, a manly defiance of womanly
worries about safety and breaking the law.
Ah, yes — the law. Although perfectly legal in Tennessee, the
fireworks that provided our little nighttime amusements were
prohibited in Maryland. This merely added to the delicious
frisson of danger: “Hurry up, Dad, before somebody calls
the cops!”
Outlaw pyro-Dad, boldly defying both the law and Mom — I was a
mighty hero to my boys every New Year’s and Fourth of July.
THEN CAME THE infamous debacle of 2004. We had moved farther out
into the countryside by then and, as Independence Day approached
that year, I decided the boys and I were ready to put on a real
show.
Acquiring a $200 stash of fireworks, I planned a three-minute
sequence of effects. More than a dozen guests responded to our
invitation. Burgers were grilled while my sons helped me set up the
firing stations at the nearby site we’d chosen for the
performance.
Darkness came, and we were just about ready to start shooting
when the thunderstorm hit. Our fuses got soaked and the sequence
I’d planned turned in a desperate quest merely to get the stuff to
ignite.
My boys were in tears from the disappointment and embarrassment
— they’d invited their friends, too — and my humiliation was
extreme.
Vindication of the family honor was required, and there was only
one way to do it. For 2005, my sons and I would have to stage the
biggest amateur fireworks display anyone had ever seen.
On the Internet, I discovered online forums where fireworks
fanatics gathered to discuss their hobby — the latest products,
special effects, fusing, show-production techniques and so forth.
That’s where I learned the joy of buying wholesale, and soon I
joined a buying group with my online buddies to order cases and
cases of fireworks.
By the time July 2005 arrived, I’d accumulated a stockpile worth
nearly $3,000, and built special racks to hold our roman candles
and fire our mortar shells — miniature consumer versions of the
shells professionals use in their displays.
I took a week of vacation to complete final preparations for the
big show, my sons helping me measure fuses to the precise lengths
required to time everything just right. I edited a special tape of
patriotic music, bought butane torches for ignition and even got
hardhats and goggles for myself and my two-boy crew, so we’d be
safe from the sparks and falling debris.
More than 100 spectators were on hand as night fell and we
finished connecting the final fuses. We’d borrowed a 500-watt sound
system for the music. The video camera was on its tripod, ready to
capture the aerial extravaganza. I asked our pastor to say a few
words of prayer, and then — showtime!
Opening with a roman-candle display to the majestic fanfare of
“Also Sprach Zarathustra,” we proceeded through the “Armed Forces
Medley” (featuring different-colored effects to salute each branch
of the service) and then into a one-minute finale of more than 400
aerial bursts to the tune of “America the Beautiful.”
The song ended, the final shells exploded and the spectators
applauded, not realizing they’d been fooled by the pyrotechnician’s
favorite trick — the fake finale.
My boys and I had already lit the fuses for the real
finale and were scampering off the field when the crowd heard the
opening strains of “God Bless America,” signaling that the show
wasn’t over yet. The video camera caught the rest:
The ending was a bit ragged because I’d mismeasured some fuses,
but my sons didn’t mind. After lighting the finale fuses, the boys
had raced back to the spectator area to sit with their friends who
raved that they’d never seen anything so awesome in their
lives.
The cheers and applause ended, and I was chatting with my buddy
who had operated the video camera when I turned in surprise to see
my sons running toward me. They bowled me over in a sort of
half-hug, half-tackle, and we tumbled together to the ground in a
triumphant embrace.
Vindication was complete.
SINCE THEN, our fireworks shows have been scaled down a good bit,
and in response to legal concerns, we’ve relocated the annual event
to Alabama, where it’s all perfectly legit.
So now I’m spending two days sweating and cussing in the Alabama
sun, putting together the lakeside show that will light the night
this Fourth of July.
My wife complains about the expense, but I look at this way:
Nine cases of fireworks? About $600. Four hundred feet of fuse?
About $60.
One day of being the most awesome Dad in the world?
Priceless.
The debacle of this president’s administration is both a cause
and a symptom of the decline of American values. Unless Congress
impeaches him, that decline will go on unchecked. An eminent jurist
surveys the damage and assesses the chances for the recovery of our
culture.
The American Christmas, like the songs that celebrate it,
makes room for everybody under the rainbow. Is that why so
many people seem to be hostile to it?