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Listen to or read the narrative of the latest installment of the classic Ozarks commentary by beloved Ozarks singer and storyteller Marideth Sisco, host of the long-running series, These Ozarks Hills.
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These Ozark Hills -the book
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Storyteller Marideth Sisco Now Booking

Another New Book
I have assembled another book of stories, essays and episodes from the radio series, which I intend to print and bind myself, again using that Japanese stitch that seems to hold the pages so well. It will be coming out about the same time as the larger book which contain all five years of radio episodes. This little hand bound book differs in that it contains a number of stories and commentaries that have never appeared in print nor on the radio, and includes only a few radio episodes that I see as a good fit with these other stories. It will be available November 1 from this web site. The Five Years of These Ozarks Hills is due for release Oct. 15 – well ahead of the Christmas rush (not that I’d drop that hint or anything). Here is an excerpt from the introduction:
The town of Butterfield can be found, if you’re not distracted by cows or a giant chicken processing plant, just off Highway 37 in Barry County, down in the southwest corner of Missouri, almost too close to Branson, and a long way from being described as thriving. It’s seen better days, and worse ones, and is in a period now where it’s difficult to tell if its future is looking up or down. Most of the folks who live there like it that way.
But the Butterfield that exists in these stories and essays is not that town. It is, rather, the town upon which this one was built, and exists now only in my imagination, and the imaginations of those who, like me, once lived there and are living still. And that’s a smaller population than once lived there or lives there now.
The original town was laid out in the mid-1800s by representatives of a Scottish land development company. Developers hoping to make it a major railroad stop and perhaps proclaim it the county seat were disappointed in both pursuits. Still, it once hosted a bank, a hotel, a cafe, two grocery stores, a feed store, a shoe store, an apartment house and a strawberry association packing shed. The cafe was about the last to go. But in my time there as a child, the town was still intact. My two aunts, Neva and Juanita, had a grocery store in the old bank building and had an apartment where they both lived with Neva’s son, Charlie. Charlie’s dad, Roose Johnson, was killed in a car accident when Charlie was five. I never knew him because I was born when Charlie was nine. My mother and I lived across the tracks at the old hotel, that was owned by my great aunt Laura. She lived there too until she died in 1945. I was sitting on her lap when she died. After that, my mother went to California, where my father was in the brig for having come home when my birth was imminent. They frown on that when you’re in the Navy and there’s a war going on. I stayed with my two aunts and my grandmother until they returned. My earliest memories are of lying in that crib watching the glowing cinders fall through the grate of the coal stove at the back of the room. I had the run of the store and I’m told I had to be restrained when I attempted to give every child that came in the store a candy bar. I was also told my aunts took such loving care of that infant me that my cheeks became chapped from my grandmother’s attempts to scrub off the lipstick, for they kissed me every time they passed. When my grandmother threw up her hands and ordered them to stop, they responded by kissing the bottoms of my feet instead. I attribute every ounce of faith, charity and kindness in my being, as well as my lifelong love of women’s energy, to that early infusion of overflowing affection. It has shaped me more than any other life experience, save only the deaths of my parents. But that story is for later.
Both my mother and my father were from large, disorderly families that were always coming and going and were tangled together in a number of offhand ways, such as the odd relationship between my father’s father and Charlie’s father’s sister, causing my dad and his sister Louise to evict said grandfather from his wife’s house and send him packing. He and Margaret moved to western Kansas where he had a long career as sheriff. Margaret’s two sisters, Flossie and Shug stayed around, and Shug, who looked like a tall, muscular lesbian version of my mother, used to come by and visit to see if Neva, her sister-in-law and brother’s widow, needed any help. Then there was Granny’s family, the very straight-laced Fergusons, who came by now and then to see how she was managing, and Daddy’s brothers and sisters, to hear news of him, and it was all very hard to keep track of. My great uncle Tom Ferguson, granny’s brother, would assist in my care by taking me with him to auctions where he worked as clerk, and he would teach me the words to songs and have me sing them for the people at the auction. I have never experienced stage fright, and for that I blame Tom.
Then Tom died, my mother and dad came home from the coast, and we started out on that traditional Ozarks life path of going out to find work to make enough money to come home on. I traveled with them until the eighth grade, when, after nine schools in seven years, I declared I wanted to go to school in just one place. So they sent me home to live with my grandmother in the old hotel that Aunt Laura had left to my mother, and I returned to Butterfield. Nearly all the stories I tell have their genesis in that town and the people who raised me and gave me eyes to forever see the world around me in light of the world where I began. I hope you enjoy the ones you find in here.
Posted in Tidbits, Uncategorized
Tagged Butterfield, family, Ferguson, marideth sisco, media, Ozarks, self publishing
5 Comments
Cushaw Season!
The Cushaw patch was picked Thursday in anticipation of Isacc moving into the area. Two of the squash had small splits in them and rain would have only made the situation worse. They have been weighed and named as of last night. I will double check the largest as it weighed in at 50 pounds. More photos soon. Click the Moonmooring link to see a slideshow of the squash.
Or – The Cushaw Squash Gala
Nestled deep below the cool canopy of fading leaves, next to the moist earth and straw, each of these babies appears as a unique individual, curled for the long grow as if sleeping.
Six seeds on a scrappy hill in a new garden – a cardboard bed was laid and they soon leaped from the dirt. Finally one day the bees work was prosperous and tiny bulbous forms appeared. Dozens and dozens of marble sized squash began forming and fear rose in the hearts of the planters (that would be myself actually – the planter). Thankfully only twelve Cushaw reached adulthood, some bizarrely twisted or uncurled.
Thursday, the day before the last blue moon until 2026 (?) Isacc was threatening to dump two – ten inches of rain. A small split appeared in each of two Cushaw and the day of picking became clear…
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A DESERT OASIS
Come to a neighborhood near you —
OUT DRINKING COFFEE today in the midst of another early, bird-filled morning, I began to grasp fully the notion that my little garden west of the house has more and more, as the surrounding area gets drier and drier, become a true oasis, not just for me, but for area wildlife.
Two days ago, I came upon a still-spotted fawn delicately making its way down the roadway, sampling grass heads and briars and whatever tender growth might be found. It was out in the middle of the day, obviously seeking food. There was still a little bit of water nearby in neighboring ponds, but it’s dwindling with every day of no rain.
This morning, dozing my way to wakefulness in the middle of coffee, I was counting the friendly neighbors buzzing by — goldfinches, cardinals, hummingbirds and more, I suddenly snapped awake at the sight of a large covey of quail meandering through an area adjacent to the garden that had been watered inadvertently by a random hose break and actually had to be mowed. They were eating the seed heads of the freshly cut grass. Before I could get the binoculars for a closer look, something startled them and they were gone.
I don’t begrudge them food or water, and in fact, keep a small basin filled near the back door for anyone, winged, two-legged or four, who needs a drink. But every new arrival tells me how bad it’s getting out there. Without the blessing of a stout (so far) well, I’d be in the same boat. I’m studying daily on how to conserve more. Just as some folks are hanging on to their breeding stock in hopes of enough rain for a little more returning pasture, I’m hanging onto my garden oasis. It fed me yesterday and today, and will do so again tomorrow. With everything and everyone else, we’re hanging on, hoping hard and waiting for the times to get better — Say, do you hear a song in that?
Music wise, we’ve been suffering through a drouth as well, with CD sales off and too much time between gigs. But still we hear from folks near and far — as near as Walmart and as far as Italy and Australia — saying they’ve just seen the movie and looooove the music. And we’re keeping busy, Linda finishing an album, Van ready to start one and the Band working up a new album as we speak. My little legendary self is about to hit another quite amazing milestone (the band has kidded me repeatedly about being described in the program last weekend in KC as “the legendary folk singer”). Sometime today, this little bitty blog is going to receive its 100,000th hit. I know I promised cake. I’m working on it.
Posted in Tidbits, Uncategorized
Tagged Blackberry Winter Band, bottle tree, drought, North American birds, oasis, water conservation, wildlife, zinnias
3 Comments
Missouri Arts Council Touring Program
Good morning Mouseketeers!
We’re just in from a wonderful weekend in Kansas City, where we played at the historic Folly Theater, KC’s oldest, in a benefit for the Bright Futures Fund, an education organization.There, the most often asked question from out-of-towners was “How can we get this group to come to our town?”
Actually, it’s easy, thanks to the Missouri Touring Performers Roster, a Missouri Arts Council program, which provides funding assistance for booking touring performers like us. It’s available to any not-for-profit organization in the state, college or university.
You see, we don’t all live near each other, and travel is expensive. The touring program funds, however, can offset those expenses and others, making us affordable to smaller venues. It’s designed to make performance art more available statewide.
Here’s how it works. Say your local arts council-civic center-theater- or other non-profit decides to book us for a concert. They contact us to see when we’re available, then immediately file a brief application, available on-line, with the MAC touring program, and the program will pay up to 60 percent of our fee. Nice of them, yes?
But say you’re fans, but you’re not in Missouri. Guess what, a similar program exists that covers all of Nebraska, Kansas, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas, and covers 40 percent of the fee. Those funds come from the Mid-America Arts Alliance.
There’s no catch, but there is a caution. Both funds are a limited, set amount, and it’s first come, first served. So the earlier the application, the more likely it’ll be funded. So if you like our music and want your neighbors to see our smiling faces, get with your local organizations and let them know. We’d love to come see you in your home town.
Posted in Tidbits
Tagged Blackberry Winter Band, Folly Theater, grants, Kansas City, Mac, Missouri Arts Council, Music, Shenendoah
1 Comment
Bell
Or Bella, Bellamie and sometimes even Bellabella.
Posted via; Sarah who is dog sitting.
These Ozark Hills, 8-2012
This is Marideth Sisco for These Ozarks Hills. Since early spring, I’ve been spending lots of time out in the garden, and I thank you all for your patience while I’ve blabbed on about it. Every day amazes me, for I have actually managed to produce a patch about as big and as varied as I once could do, back before the twin gremlins of age and illness wrestled me to the ground and kept me there longer than I would have liked.
I learned a lot from that period of debility, not the least of which was that pride is a poor servant when it comes to attempting self-sufficiency without the means to accomplish it. Just that realization gave me a good many things to reflect on, such as the value of friends, the interrelationships of a community and extended family, and just that bedrock foundation of people who often don’t know you at all, but who are willing and able to take care of your needs – folks you may not even know about except at arm’s length, but they’re right by your side when you need them most.
Now I’m back on my feet, and can prove it by referring everyone to my little garden, which I’ve been doing shamelessly, even on-line. My reasoning, if pride needs a reason, is that I live some distance out in the country, and there’s just not all that many people who get to see it first hand. Shameless, I know. But how else am I gonna get to brag on my behemoth squash, that have now grown way past the good food and impressive vegetable categories and into those slightly menacing pale and misshapen orbs that lurk in the tall vine forest and give me odd dreams of how to process and store some 400 lbs. of Cushaws. An embarrassment of riches, indeed.
But now the summer’s in high swing so the garden work must be done before it just gets too darn hot, which leaves more time in the hot afternoons for some serious musing, planning the next morning’s chores, weighing what might be the best use of time, etc. And that’s what I was doing today, when I wandered off into thinking about the language we use, and how many meanings we can put into a single word.
Consider the word “Hand,” for instance. We can give or receive a helping hand or a handout, offer a hands-up, a handshake, or become the winner, hands down. It there’s a problem, we can handle it, sometimes singlehandedly. If it’s a skill, we can become handy at it, and if we’re working for someone, we hope they’ll consider us a good hand. If we don’t want to interfere, we can respect a hands-off policy. But if we’re sly, we might do something underhanded. If a cop asks for our ID, we’ll likely hand it over, whereas if we throw a baseball, we might want to do that overhand, In tennis, of course, we’re more likely to use the backhand. But in childhood, we try to avoid being backhanded, or given the back of the hand. it’s a questionable gift, as is the left-handed compliment. And isn’t the French word for coarseness or awkwardness, gauche, translated literally as left-handedness. I’ve always had a little trouble with that one, being a person of the left-handed persuasion.
At this point I must take a left turn and give a moment of thanks for the growing diversity that seems to be accompanying our increasingly complex global culture … a fact that can be demonstrated in the very nature of handedness. It used to be a given that right-handed was better, more correct. Tools like scissors were made specifically to be used with the right hand. When I was a child, my very knowledgable and well-meaning first-grade teacher was the Wanda Gray for whom a Springfield school was named. I knew even then she was going to be renowned, because on the last day of class I came back to the room to fetch some forgotten thing and found her crying at her desk because our little band of heathen children wouldn’t be coming back to her the next Monday. I never forgot that.
But I also never forgot that she was adamant, as was the custom of the day, that I learn to write with my right hand. And she would come around regularly and turn my paper the opposite way to encourage me. But I was firm in my conviction of handedness, and so now I write upside down with my paper turned the wrong way, and I like it just fine. Teachers, for the most part, don’t do that anymore. But I don’t fault Wanda Gray. Otherwise, as a teacher, I found her very even-handed in her judgments, and as was said of unfrivolous professional women in those days, she was to my child’s eyes quite handsome.
These days in the garden, of course, I take special pride in how much of the work has been done by hand, garden tools and the annual tiller notwithstanding. In the same way, I take pleasure in how many of the fruits of my labor are the creative kind, or as a craftsperson would say, they’re made out of hand.
But you know, of all these uses of that same small word, the one that makes me most uncomfortable, and the one I use least, is single-handed. While it’s true that what one makes of a life is through that one person’s choices, along with their skills and their smarts and if they’re lucky, their native Ozarks ingenuity. But not one of us does it alone. If you don’t believe that, wait until you’re older, and a little less handy, and find yourself in danger of becoming underfoot instead. There’s nothing like a little dip into frailty to recognize our human interdependency as well as our interconnectedness. That I am here at all is the result of countless hands, often the hands of strangers, who bore me up in my hour of need and brought me back to the garden. Before that journey into frailty, I’d have sworn I’d never need that kind of help. But that was hubris talking, that arrogant pride that makes us believe that if we don’t know a thing, then it is not worth knowing.
These days, I set my hands to brushing aside pesky pridefulness while my mind marvels at how small I am in the larger context, where each day I am privileged to have a small hand in the weaving of the single organism that is the garden and the gardener. This is Marideth Sisco, celebrating high summer in a life handmade, but far from singlehandedly, in these Ozarks Hills.
Posted in gardening, radio show
Tagged family, gardening, language, marideth sisco, neighbors, Ozarks, right handed, semantics
6 Comments
Misc. Thoughts
Well, apart from the armadillo who’s been uprooting onions and doing a kind of bizarre Okra-tipping, and the blister beetles who would like to eat everything but are being discouraged by Safer’s Soap and loud radio music, it’s been a wonderful July in the garden. The cushaws are suffering being reined in, for they would have taken the front yard, the porch and the entire garden by now otherwise, and the winter squash out on the west end are beginning to pop tiny butternuts and buttercups. Next will be the black futsus, that sort of resemble a cross between buttercup and acorn in both color and habit. They’re mostly ignoring the circular trellis I put up for them to climb on and are snaking out in every direction. I’d worry about them getting out into the mower’s way. But it’s a drought, and there’s nothing much to mow except where I’ve forgotten to shut off the hose and inadvertently watered a bit of the yard. The fall beans are in and up, armored in anti-armadillo chicken wire. Also newly in are some scraggly fall potatoes that may or may not make. I’m still searching for a place to sow a fall crop of beets for canning, and making feeble attempts at a fence. A supply of posts is arriving soon from Calico, and that should make the job possible, if not easier.
It’s all one step at a time, and with delays, small budgets and problem solving, it’s more like three steps forward, two and a half back. But always forward. Makes me think of this ridiculous election race, with all the name calling and the flat-out lies and the vast energy and money thrown into the effort to demonize this President without saying he mustn’t succeed because he’s black, and everybody knows a black man can’t be president. Without proselytizing, can I just say that given what he started with and how huge the effort has been to make sure he doesn’t succeed, he’s done amazingly well. Certainly he’s not perfect, but he’s trying hard to get the country back on its feet, and I confess I find what’s being offered as the alternative frankly horrifying. That’s all I’m saying.
Posted in gardening
Tagged armadillo, gardening, organic gardening, ozark garden, politics
8 Comments













