CRACKER
NIGHT
By Judith Joyce
When I was a
child, Cracker night was, after
Christmas the second most important celebration of the year. Even thinking
about that special night would make my heart race.
The lead up to cracker night was almost as
exciting as the night itself. All us kids would get a shoe box and start
filling it with fireworks bought with our pennies we had been saving up all
year. Sometimes my elder brother would think of us. He would come home from
work with bags full of crackers that were divided amongst us kids. These shoe
boxes were hid under our bed, so we could keep them safe. From time to time we
would take them out to see what we had and to make sure they were all still
there, and what an array of different crackers there were. Among the collection
there was penny bungers, tom thumbs, skyrockets, jumping jacks, Catherine wheels,
Roman Candles, Mount Vesuvius, sparklers and many more.
Cracker night also meant the building of a
bonfire. It was the tasked of all us to devote our afternoons in the lead up to
cracker night to build it. We would hunt every where to find enough wood and
junk to make it big enough to last all night. My dad would hammer nails on the
fence for the Catherine wheels, and fill bottles with sand for the skyrocket,
now all was set for the big night.
Finally the great night would arrive; we couldn’t wait till it got dark
so we could start the fun. Then it was on, the fire would be lit and go up in a blaze, then the fun would start. Roman
candles would bath us in a silvery shiny light, jumping jacks would pursue us
around the back yard, tom thumbs would do the same if you lit the whole string.
I love to hold the sparklers and race around the yard holding them up using
them as a sparkling torch. Dad would light the Catherine wheels and we would
watch as they made their perfect circle of dazzling colour. The penny bungers made the loudest noise especially
when my brothers put them under a tin can. They would go off with a tremendous BANG
taking the tin can with it.
One of my older brothers or Dad would have
to launch the skyrockets and us little kids were told to stand back in case
they went the wrong way which one invariably did. Rockets were stuck into
bottles of sand and the wick would be lit then whoosh off they would go into
the sky, then bang they would go with a shower of sparkling coloured stars and
fill the night with light.
Some of the crackers especially
Skyrockets were fizzers for when you lit them they would just go fizz and let
out a few sparks pop out of the bottle and land a few feet away and die. What a
disappointment for we had spent our hard money on a dud.
My sister had a disappointing time one year.
We were all letting our crackers off early in the night when a jumping jack
landed in her shoe box of crackers. The whole lot went off, one after another
and in a few seconds they were all gone. I can still remember the look on her
face she was so upset. We offered her some of ours but it just wasn’t the same.
But it taught us all a good lesson, to never leave our boxes of crackers
anywhere near where a spark could get to them.
All too soon the light show was over for we
all had ran out of crackers.
When the adults went inside we would stay by
the fire looking up at the sky to see other people’s skyrockets but by that
time the air was so full of smoke that it was getting difficult to see much at
all. Reluctantly we all headed for bed to dream of the exciting time we had
just had.
The next morning we were up bright and early
too go and hunt under every rock and cranny for the fireworks that had not
exploded and we use to find quite a few. We would then have fun letting them
off for the second time. Much to our
disappointment cracker night was over and we would have to wait for another
year for all the excitement to begin again.
So I
really want to thank the man who must have lived somewhere in China for giving
me so much fun and enjoyment for that one special night of each year.
I enjoyed this story, it reminded me of bonfire night on the farm when I was a kid.
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