Basking in Basque influence
I am reasonably sure that everyone knows that the Basques were and
are a fiercely independent race that inhabits the mountains between
France and Spain. The Basques fought both, surrendered to neither
and, from the news I read, are still fighting. At the risk of
oversimplification, I would say that the men are uniformly strong,
handsome and brave. The women invariably beautiful and strong willed.
So much for a peanut shell disposition of a great ethnic group.
As far as our area is concerned, the Basques originally came as
sheep herders who lived in funny little houses on wheels that all of
us youngsters were warned to stay out of.
The original Basque to enter Orange County history was a sheep
herder named Bastanchury. Eventually, tired of smelling dust from
herds of sheep, he settled down and planted an orange grove. From
that came the Bastanchury ranch, at one time the greatest spread of
citrus known to man -- thousands and thousands of acres of oranges
and lemons.
Then, the Great Depression hit, and overnight, the Bastanchury
holdings were decimated. If there is a degree below bankruptcy, the
Bastanchurys hit it -- and never totally recovered. Out of curiosity,
I looked in the phone book and there are only a couple of Bastanchury
listings, one for water, one for plumbing and one just a name, but
presumably all relatives of the original family.
While on the subject of Basques, I cannot conclude without a few
words about my favorite Basque family, the Oxararts, particularly Sam
and Charley. Sam had the capacity for doing the unusual, the
unexpected, the outlandish. Who else do you know who keeps a frozen
cat in the refrigerator?
While you search your memory, let me hasten to say that this was
not an early experiment in cryogenics. It was just that when Sam’s
cat died, he was uncertain just what he wanted to do about it. Have a
formal funeral with his oldest friend, Judge Robert Gardner,
officiating? Well, Judge Robert, nonconformist though he was,
rebelled at that one. If memory serves, he eventually took the frozen
corpse to the vet to dispose of.
As for Charley, he didn’t get in the same sort of scrapes as his
brother, but he had a sense of humor that could get him in trouble.
Charley had black hair and skin that never sunburned like us blonds.
No matter how long he was in the sun he just got a deeper shade of
tan. Well, one weekend we went down to Baja for some skin diving. On
the way back we stopped in a bar. Several hours later we headed for
the border. We pulled into the line of cars waiting to cross back
into the States. When we got to the front of the line, the border
guard hardly looked up.
“Where you from?” he asked.
“United States,” I replied.
He started to wave us through. Then he got a look at Charley--dark
skin, black hair. “Hold on,” he said. “Where you from?”
“Chihuahua,” said Charley.
It took a whole lot of explaining to convince the guard that
Charley was actually from Balboa, and I wasn’t smuggling illegals
over the border. But then, things were never dull with the Oxararts.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a
Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His column runs
Tuesdays.
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