It's school time once again, and actually has been for the last few weeks. I'm running a little behind on posts.
Anyway, it's school time once again, and school buses are on the streets. This isn't one of those PSAs to advise you to watch for kids. It's just a lead-in for one of my latest finds.
I went to at an estate sale of a former bus driver for a local elementary school last weekend. There were lots of items that had clearly been given to him by his passengers through the years. One that caught my eye was this Toy Bus Animal Crackers box.
As a kid, I always wished I could walk to school like I saw kids on TV do. And it wouldn't have been that far of a walk as my elementary school was probably no more than a 1/2 mile from my house. But bus service was provided and I rode.
I have a mixed bag of school bus memories. In kindergarten, I had 1/2 day classes (mornings), so all of the kindergarten students rode home on the same bus, so I got to see where everyone lived. It was fun riding down streets I'd never been down before (something I enjoy doing to this day) and seeing all of my fellow students' homes.
In my Junior High years (now know as "Middle School"), I was the first picked up so I had my choice of seats. It also meant I was one of the last to get off. One year in high school, I was the last to be picked up. Often, the bus was full so I had to endure the "Forrest Gump" walk of shame down the aisle hoping for charitable riders that didn't mind 3 in a seat (there were none).
Later in high school, I became friends with some of the girl upperclassmen who drove down my street to school. If they saw me, they would stop and pick me up (a thrill for me, obviously). The problem was, sometimes they were late. This particular year, the bus actually came up my street first, then back down on the way to school, so I had the option of getting on the bus on the way or on the way back. Although, it really wasn't an option. If the bus driver saw me on the way up the street, she would stop and make me get on ("I'm not stopping again."). So my "ingenius" plan was, if I saw the bus coming up the street, I would run and hide behind my mom's car so it would go by, with hopes the girls would drive by and pick me up, and if they didn't, I could just catch the bus on the way back. This went on for weeks and I thought was pretty darn smart for working the system. That is until the day I got on the bus and the girl that lived down the street from me said, "You know, we see you hiding every day..."
Did you ride a bus to school? What memories do you have?
I rode the bus from grades 1-8 as I live a mile and a half from the school. I have lots of bus memories mostly of the bus drivers. There was Mac an older black man who was missing a finger. We loved Mac. Somewhere around 5th grade I was made to endure a driver name Irv who I disliked and who allowed some boys on the bus to bully me. Mac never allowed bullying. During High School I walked.
ReplyDeleteI had a bus driver who we all called "Joe". We had him for several years until we learned his name wasn't "Joe". But he was a nice guy and always stuck up for me if anyone gave me trouble. A few years after I graduated he saw my mom getting mail and stopped to ask how I was doing.
Delete"Pipe down! It sounds like a zoo back there!"
ReplyDeleteYour "different animal on each side" theory kinda makes sense (they should have been rendered in side positions), until you realize that there wouldn't be two drivers. Or maybe there was--Perhaps Bud had to bring along his twin brother to help keep those rowdies in line. "The dung in the bus rolls round and round, round and round, round and round..." "SHUT UP! SHUT UP!"
"He steps on the clutch and stinks up the bus..."
Delete"I WILL PULL THIS BUS OVER!!!!"
Great estate find! I only had to ride the bus during the 2.5 years I lived in Florida, where very little is built like neighborhoods that mix residential, commercial and schools. It was miserable.
ReplyDeleteOtherwise I walked to and from school in 1st through 6th grades and throughout high school, in a mixture of Pennsylvania and southern New Jersey towns. Wonder how many kids would make the 5-block walk I made alone in second grade today.
Thanks, Chris. Had to be some cold walks in Winter in Penn and NJ.
Delete