Deck the halls
with cedar
and red chiles!
"Christmas
Eve fell as balmy as April," wrote O. Henry in 1903, thereby
summing up the distinguishing mark of a Texas Christmas:
its hot. O. Henry didnt know the blizzardy
side of the state, living as he did in the south of it,
but he knew that few native Texans witness many white
Christmases. Most of us resign ourselves to green ones.
Unless we live in East Texas, where pines are native, we
have to buy our Christmas trees from the Optimist club.
Without fireplaces, we lack the proper place to hang
stockings, roast chestnuts (well, pecans then), and look
for bootprints in the morning ashes. It makes us a little
wistful, but we have faced the inescapable truth: the
Christmas of Currier & Ives will never be ours.
Luckily, over the years we have created
traditions of our own. In the case of the Christmas tree,
our forebears used cedar, a pestilent plant that had
never before done anyone much good. A. C. Greene recalls
childhood trips to fetch "the least lopsided and
wind-whipped" tree. If cedar was unavailable, a
sapling, tumbleweed, or cactus might serve. Decorations
varied--popcorn garlands, candles, strings of red chiles
and garlic. On top, of course, was a lone star.
Texas does have mistletoe, which, like
cedar, is a nuisance that redeems itself only in
December. All over the state you can spot mistletoe
snippers gingerly scaling barbed wire to cut bunches from beleaguered
mesquites by the side of the road. The familiar shrub with
its pearly berries must have provided European immigrants with
a welcome reminder of home.
In addition to Christmas kisses under
the mistletoe, immigrants brought to Texas a wealth of
other customs. The Germans offered Kris Kringle and
pfeffernuesses and caroling; around the original German
settlements you can still hear the words "stille
Nacht, heilige Nacht" sung to a well-known
melody. Mexico gave us buñuelos, poinsettias,
and luminarias, those lanterns made of candles
inside sand-weighted paper bags. Bright Mexican goods and
decorations, which seem so gaudy most of the year, fit
right in at Christmastime.
Our most influential culture, though,
was that of the cowboy. The range life was a solitary
one, and holidays meant a rare chance to socialize. Most
towns held a dance, and cowboys would ride all day to
attend. Caroling was a mite civilized for early Texas
tastes, so cowboys initiated the Christmas serenade, a
shivareelike procession whose sole purpose was to make a
huge commotion. On Christmas morning they settled down
long enough for a church service or a few impromptu
prayers; for all their horseplay, cowboys were believers.
Later in the day, married couples invited them in for
revelry and chow; they reciprocated by smuggling in trinkets
for the children, who surely redoubled their faith in
Santa when goodies miraculously appeared in their
stockings, with not a store for miles. Texas kids, J.
Evetts Haley wrote, "knew exactly what Santa's sled
and reindeer looked like"--after all, they grew up around
harness and livestock.
Not so commonplace on the frontier was
overindulgence, but during the holidays even thrifty
Texans enjoyed this most universal of Christmas
traditions. Cooks cheerfully used up hoards of dried
fruit and sugar to make treats like fruitcake, an old
Texas favorite, but the real delicacies were fresh foods
brought in for the occasion. Bertha McKee Dobie
remembered her father's once asking "the name of
that vegetable that is shipped in at Christmas." It
was celery. Eggs went for eggnog; oranges were
sugarplums. The high point of any gathering might well
have been the whiskey, for Christmas was one day when
drinking could be done in public and to excess.
Excess has become a Texas tradition
too. We always try to be the biggest, the noisiest, the
best. We string colored lights on everything from fences
to pump jacks, drink Noche Buena instead of wassail, and
ring cowbells instead of sleigh bells. Who needs
snow-covered pine trees anyway? They just block out the
stars in our big December sky. |