My dad grew up on the shore of the Mississippi River in Wisconsin. Him and his brother would go for weeks long canoe trips in their mid-late teens and it was no big deal. They weathered a blizzard and a tornado on their own in the wilderness while out on those trips.
This sounds fine. I would do it with my Dad today since it's the summer and everything if I wanted to.
Hey hey, I was speaking of my Dad as a friend. He would be the only person I know interested and he's not even my legal guardian anyway. Plus I was thinking of him because he's the only person I know with a canoe as well.
You are very lucky and should be grateful. I believe the only reason nobody got in trouble is because nobody got hurt.
There are several factors here. First, things really were tons more relaxed back then. Today, the idea of incorporating that kind of thing into a school function wouldn't even cross anyone's mind. People have lost their jobs or been expelled for even joking about such things.
Bombs are dangerous. The reason school's don't allow explosives in their school is because somebody really could die. I would put it in the same classification of guns if guns were more show-like. I suppose the reason bombs aren't acceptable in schools now is because it's too jeopardizing to the people there.
Second, this was a very, very small town. Everyone knew each other. Everyone knew my dad and his best friend were the pyromaniac kids in town, and could laugh it off.
Well that's good then? It would be easier to manage stuff like this in a smaller town, however not everybody has that option because some schools are in large towns were it would be nigh impossible to know everybody and laugh off that they almost injured you. I don't think knowing somebody should be an excuse to let them be able to hurt you, but eh.
Third, they actually knew what they were doing and were aware of their mistake in advance, but that nobody would get hurt. The other guy even secured himself a state fireworks license a couple years later, and has been working in academics at the University of Wisconsin Center for Nanotechnology for 21 years. My dad's a pharmacokineticist who is globally respected for his work in medicine. They weren't your typical stupid punk kids.
Aware of their mistake in advance? I will congratulate them on predicting that nobody would get hurt then. Although if they knew the accident would happen I would have halted the play if it was going on and fix the mistake before the accident occurred.
before agro-business was highly corporatized.
That's farm life.
Even farm life has changed a lot, though that's not something I can comment on with many specifics. I've never experienced it myself, only seen bits and pieces, heard family who are still in farming talk about things, and compared kids growing up on farms today and their stories to what I know about my parent's childhoods. Generally things are owned and operated by bigger businesses now rather than families and farmhands, and more and more farmlands slowly surrounded by growing suburbs. There are still exceptions, but that doesn't mean much in the larger context.
Same, I can't really comment on this either. It's a fact that farm life is decreasing rapidly each year and it may or may not bother someone. It doesn't really bother me but for somebody who lived like so or at least knew somebody closely like so I'm sure it would be disheartening to see their childhood gradually phased out of normal daily living now.