Pineapples at the end
of June
What we actually go for
are K- rations. Those wonderful packages of wonderful food, which the
Americans treat with such nonchalance.
What we most often harvest, however, are cartons of cigarettes: Lucky Strike, Old Gold, Chesterfields, Pall Mall. Ten packages of twenty cigs each, in a carton, called a “Stange” or Pole. Our trips to the farmers of the Innviertel really get successful. It’s incredible how much food you can get for a “Stange” of 200 cigarettes. We hit the farms in accordance with the farmer’s preference. Today we have Lucky Strikes. We know from whom we can get the most food in return. We develop a veritable Black Market in Cigarettes, Eatables and Silverware.
It is comical: Less than a year ago or so, we brought them our Silverware for their food. Today we bring them cigarettes for, in some cases, the same silverware and food. There is a seemingly never ending demand for cigarettes.
What we most often harvest, however, are cartons of cigarettes: Lucky Strike, Old Gold, Chesterfields, Pall Mall. Ten packages of twenty cigs each, in a carton, called a “Stange” or Pole. Our trips to the farmers of the Innviertel really get successful. It’s incredible how much food you can get for a “Stange” of 200 cigarettes. We hit the farms in accordance with the farmer’s preference. Today we have Lucky Strikes. We know from whom we can get the most food in return. We develop a veritable Black Market in Cigarettes, Eatables and Silverware.
It is comical: Less than a year ago or so, we brought them our Silverware for their food. Today we bring them cigarettes for, in some cases, the same silverware and food. There is a seemingly never ending demand for cigarettes.
It is a dark and stormy
night;. No, I’m just kidding. It is just dark.
Hermann, his friend from
high school Helmut and I meet at the Fountain just in front of our
house: Stadtplatz 22.
We are dressed in black
track suits and black slip-on, thin soled running shoes. There is
still a strict curfew in place.
Kurt lives with his mother
in one room at the Gasthaus Gans and cannot get away.
It is about 2 or 3 o’clock
in the morning. The main square is jammed, as always, with military
vehicles. Jeeps, trucks, and still the occasional light armoured car,
parked side by side with just enough space to open doors to get in or
out.
We have learnt where the
Americans usually keep their cigarettes. We split up, so as not to
present too large a target. Silently I move from truck to jeep to
truck. The most dangerous moment comes when you open or close the door. It
makes a clicking sound.
I can feel my rapid heart beat in my neck and I have to wipe my sweaty hands along my pants. I prefer the open jeep, where I can just reach in, grab a carton, sometimes from the open shelve underneath the dash board, sometimes just lying on the seat, and move on. (by now we ignore K rations,)
There is a holstered pistol. I ignore it, grab this night’s fourth carton of cigarettes and slip down the Fischergasse and in a round about way, home.
I can feel my rapid heart beat in my neck and I have to wipe my sweaty hands along my pants. I prefer the open jeep, where I can just reach in, grab a carton, sometimes from the open shelve underneath the dash board, sometimes just lying on the seat, and move on. (by now we ignore K rations,)
There is a holstered pistol. I ignore it, grab this night’s fourth carton of cigarettes and slip down the Fischergasse and in a round about way, home.
The front door is locked.
In my track suit’s breast pocket I carry the key. Up the two
flights of stairs and back to bed. Cigarettes are stored underneath
my bed, where the hand grenades used to be. The whole excursion took
less than an hour, and I am very pleased with myself.
The Nussgarten,
or, as we call the place when we speak to our many American friends,
the Nutgarden, was a Beer garden, much beloved by a certain group of
Buergers during the
summer time. Four walnut trees give plenty of shade to seven or
eight wooden tables with six chairs each, Situated right atop the
city walls, it affords a lovely view over the confluence of the Inn
and the Enknach rivers and the wooded area running along up-river
for miles and miles.
On one side a small kitchen in which Goulash, Sausages and Sauerkraut and Sandwiches are prepared.
The beer barrels are
lowered from the building on street level above via an interesting
contraption of pulleys ending in four clamps which grab the barrel
and allow it to be lowered through a hole in the ceiling, right into
the kitchen.
As always after such a
raid, (we call it a “buying trip”) we meet at about 9 o’clock
in the morning in the Nussgarten to compare success and plan the next
trip to the farms.
Helmut “bought” five
cartons, I just four. Hermann, sitting on the wall, his legs dangling
over the side (for a bleeder he takes real chances) has a broad grin
on his face. “ I got none. Not a single cigarette.” He sounds
almost proud. “I got something much better.” We don’t ask. We
just look at him. We know he’ll tell us. He leans forward and
although at this time in the morning we are alone in the Nussgarten,
he whispers: “I got six pine apples.”
We are totally stunned.
“What in hell are we
going to do with pine apples?” I ask Hermann .
Helmut just looks
uncomprehendingly.
I don’t much like it
when Hermann, just because he is 4 years older than I am, adopts a
superior attitude.
Although I must admit that
at almost 17 he knows a good deal more than I do. And in any event,
he is my best friend. He is my “blood brother”. But that’s
another story.
I repeat my question:
“What in hell will we do with pine apples? I have never eaten any.
I don’t even know if I’d like them.”
Hermann smiles: “These
are not for eating” he says. “ Pine apples is what the Americans
call them, because they look like small pine apples”. He pauses:
“These pine apples are
hand grenades.”
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at the very right hand edge of this picture there is a tower like structure and right next to it a flag. This is the "Nussgarten".
If, as I alway tell you, you click on this picture, you will enlarge it and you will see what I am talking about.
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