It's a smell I can't forget, the smell of the sea. On a breezy night,
sitting on my dock at Lake Granbury, it comes wafting in on these
inland waters bringing salty memories.
Daddy, aka Dr. Willis G. Hewatt of TCU's Biology Dept. from 1934-1975,
taught, among other subjects, courses in Invertebrate Zoology and
General Science. For many years, beginning in 1936, as part of the
spring semester curriculum, students in these two classes accompanied
the professor, his wife, and two daughters on an Easter holiday
field trip to Galveston and, later, to Rockport on the Texas gulf
coast. The trip was short (Friday through Monday was all the "spring
break" the university allotted then), but stuffed with sea-searching
-- on the beach, the jetties, the boat, in the marshes and mud flats,
and in the after-catch makeshift lab set up in one of the apartments
we rented for our stay.
What a great time we had! Of course, the teacher made it great.
He loved the sea, and his enthusiasm was catching. "Oh, yes!" he
would say, "why that's the ghost crab,Oxypode albicans; "Oh, yes!
that's the little sand crab, Upogebia." "This beautiful purple clam
is Murex," and on and on. The excitement of discovery was always
fresh. A student would pick up some beastie from the beach or the
water and bring it wonderingly to Dr. Hewatt to identify. He would
not only identify it but always made it seem that he had seen it
for the first time and that the catch was really quite remarkable,
and go on to tell, Kipling-fashion, how the beast got to be just
so.
I recall that, years later, after I had wandered far away from
that time, I visited the Museum of Natural History in Washington,
D.C., where I gravitated to a marine habitat exhibit in which my
experienced eye caught a crystalline shrimp, rock barnacles, a sand
camouflaged sea star, anemones that, furled, blended into the rocky
terrain, and a lobster barely visible in a small cave in the rocks.
A young boy and his parents came up beside me, searched the scene
for a few minutes, shrugged their shoulders, and ambled on to the
next tank. I so wanted to pull them back and show them the wonders
the sea water held, to make their eyes light up with knowing as
had the eyes of so many TCU students (and my own!), but I was reticent
to insert myself into their family outing, and let the moment pass.
The last trip I made to the gulf as the professor's daughter was
in the spring of 1953. Although I was enrolled in TCU that year,
I was not officially a student in one of the good doctor's classes,
but, as usual, I was allowed to tag along. We left the parking lot
behind the Winton-Scott science building at noon on Thursday in
a caravan of eight cars, Daddy's and seven volunteered by the students.
Mother and Daddy were in the No. 1 car with their passengers, and
each subsequent car was tagged with a number that showed boldly
through the rear windshield. Control of speed and organization came
from the No. 8 car, because each one in the caravan was to keep
the car in back in view at all times. It worked well, until that
lead car hit the metropolis of Houston, which at that time had no
freeways, throughways, or loops to avoid the city streets. The way
Willis Hewatt drove through that city, or any city, made it hard
to keep any attemp at organization intact, and he was usually found
impatiently awaiting his charges on the southern outskirts of Houston.
Another of his schemes for control involved me, and I didn't really
know it until years later when he admitted that he had intentionally
placed me in the car driven by one Don Perry, whose other passengers
were Hubert Parrott, Jack Temple, and Tom Evans. If you had known,
then or since, those carefree (?) football players, you, too, would
have surmised that if any rowdy behavior was to surface on this
road trip, it would come from this group. What better way to keep
that in check than to have the professor's daughter, sweet Joan
(?), in amongst them?
In Rockport, I remember we stayed at the Oak Shore Apartments
at Fulton Beach, to which the students were assigned not only their
sleep accommodations, but also their housekeeping duties. All were
expected to share in the cleaning and preparation of meals. I wish
I could recall some of the delicacies served under those circumstances!
Although precious in memory, the trip to the gulf at Easter would
not have been enough to have set that briny smell in my olfactory
system these many years since. Every summer of my youth, through
my freshman year in college, was spent on the Louisiana coast or
in tidewater Virginia, and one year, when I was eleven, in Puerto
Rico. Daddy would be offered a summer teaching position at the LSU
marine installation on Grande Isle, or at the Virginia Fisheries
Laboratory at Gloucester Point, or that one year's leave of absence
from TCU to direct the invertebrate zoology program at the University
of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez. He never left the family behind (except
for one boring summer, in the days prior to discovery of cause,
when there was a polio scare sweeping the nation, and it was deemed
safer for "the girls" to keep them close to home). With that exception,
Mother, Beth, and I went to every location and on virtually every
field trip from that location with Daddy and the students.
My clearest visions of those days are of the teacher-father standing
on the beach or reef or marsh in his old beat-up tennis shoes and
swim trunks, holding a sea creature in his broad flat palm, with
a group of rapt students gathered round, listening in on his expertise;
and of my mother's quiet, gentle, reassuring presence managing the
troops.
The specific places and people have become fuzzy with time, but
sitting on my dock, I can feel the fine sand between my toes, hear
the rhythm of waves, and savor the sweet feeling of clean after
showering away the sticky salt. The flavor of it all is lodged in
my nose and my mind. I can sense the sea on Lake Granbury.
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