Friday, June 28, 2024

Heh

 

A news report triggered a major flashback memory of my childhood.


The Hudson River Estuary Program fisheries staff reeled in a giant fish out of the Hudson River in New York last week.

The Atlantic sturgeon spreads six feet in length, weighing around 220 pounds, according to a Facebook post from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYS DEC).

It was caught near Hyde Park, about 80 miles from New York City.

. . .

The staff suspected the unique fish to be a female that had not yet spawned.

Atlantic sturgeons typically spend most of the year in the ocean, but the adults move in the Hudson during this time of year to spawn, the NYS DEC post said. 

Atlantic sturgeons are the Hudson River’s biggest fish, and New York State’s largest sturgeon species, the post said.


There's more at the link.

And the flashback?

Apparently, during World War II, American servicemen brought to the European theater a large number of songs from their homes.  My father, in turn, brought some of them home with him.  One of them, which my father used to hum (and, when my mother wasn't within hearing, sing), was "The Virgin Sturgeon Song".  The first verse is sort-of-suitable for polite company, so here it is:


Caviar comes from the virgin sturgeon.
The virgin sturgeon's a very fine fish;
But the virgin sturgeon needs no urgin' -
That's why caviar is such a rare dish.


There are many other verses, most less polite (and the lyrics at the link leave out all of the really "military verses" that Dad learned - he wouldn't sing those unless he was absolutely sure we kids were out of earshot!  I had to wait until I was in uniform myself before he'd share them.)  If you do an Internet search, you'll find several recordings of the song, some less... er... raw than others.  No, I'm not going to embed one here!  There are ladies among my readership!

It was weird.  As I read that report, I could literally hear my long-dead father's voice in my head, singing the Virgin Sturgeon Song softly to himself as he repaired a piece of furniture or worked on our car.  It was almost unconscious for him, a sort of meditative mouth music.  The song was also one of the less... ah... impolite pieces he brought back from the war, so if Mom caught him singing it (particularly in the presence of us kids), he wasn't in as much trouble as he would be if she caught him singing "The Rape of the Sphinx" or "The Old Bazaar in Cairo".  (An expurgated - highly expurgated - version of the latter may be heard here.)

Ah . . . memories!

Peter


5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ahhh, memories indeed. Sounds like you have a great one there.

STxAR said...

Dad used to sing "My bonnie has tuberculosis. My bonnie has a rotten left lung. She spits up bloody corruption. And rolls it around with her tongue." My first grade teacher wasn't very impressed when I "mouth music-ed" during a project.

glasslass said...

My stepfather was Swedish and at Thanksgiving through Christmas we were treated to Yogi Yorgesson Christmas songs sung with a deep Swedish accent. YouTube has them.

boron said...

Oh, yes!
"I don't want to be a soldier, I don't want to go to war;
I'd rather hang around me old home town,
livin' off the earnings of a high-priced ..."
I was six when I learned that one - with a proper British accent
At a family gathering, one of my aunts asked me to sing something;
my Mom had told the gathering (proudly) that she'd put me in a music school...

Francis Turner said...

Does the sphinx one start like this?

The sexual life of the camel is stranger thank any one thinks
At the height of the mating season, it tries to bugger the sphinx...

There are versions of that song, the sturgeon song and many many other similar at https://www.horntip.com/ if people want to learn more of them,