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Saturday, July 5, 2025 at 10:17 AM
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Is this You? - A Cherry-Dipped Ice Cream Cone Day

Is this You? - A Cherry-Dipped Ice Cream Cone Day

Oh man, when someone in the neighborhood got a new appliance, the box was the star of the block for days. Snow or sun, there were things done to and with a huge box that kept kids busy outside. The best was a freezer. Not only was it tall, it could start out as a fort. It soon got torn, or cut if someone had their pen knife, into a slide down the only hill on the block that was worth anything. After a day or two, it began to show its age and might end up under a sprinkler or out on the lawn as a warm brown place to lay in the sun and imagine what you saw in the clouds. After about a week, it started to come apart, and parents would start to say things like, “Pick up that mess. You got all the goodie out of that box.” Frayed and wet and coming apart, the box soon became the object of laughter at who fell as they tried to ride it down the grassy hill. And that was being a kid.

So many things can bring summer back in splashes and flashes. But none so much as some treat that you may have had as a kid. But. Yes, a treat-filled “but.” Not just everyday treats. Cookies were a dime a dozen; popsicles were in the freezer and handily ready to get slurped up on a hot, after-box sliding afternoon.  No, I am remembering those special treats. Once in a while, treats. Not very often, but just often enough, my family would go out after dark to the local Dairy Queen for ice cream. As I look back, I can feel the angst my mom must have had at seeing three little kids try to eat ice cream in the back seat of the 1955 green station wagon the family had and not get any on the plastic seat covers from Fingerhut.  I think back, and I would never have had the patience to feed sticky, melting, napkin-sticking ice cream to three kids. However, it was usually on Sunday evenings just before bath time as come Monday all of us went back to school pink and scrubbed.

The other day, I was traveling home, and those cones came to mind. Oh, not just a plain ole cone. Not on your life. Mine was a cherry-dipped cone. Magically, the people at the DQ would build up the ice cream all round and smooth with a curlicue on the top. Then, the magic. The cone was dipped upside down in this red goo, and as it came out the goo hardened to this yummy shell all over the ice cream. It was so pretty red, and when you got it in your hand and took a bite off of the top, the ice cream underneath was just a little melted so you could suck at the top of the cone and get this cool liquid with the cherry goo from the curlicue, too. I could never understand why anyone would want a chocolate-dipped cone when the red was so pretty and yummy. 

So now I am a grown-up. Would that amazing memory of a cherry-dipped ice cream cone still taste as good as I remembered? Would that first bite off the top still have that little bit of melted goodness? Would it be as cool and fun as I remember playing with a giant chunk of cardboard for days on the lawn in the summertime with the other kids on the block? And more to the point, just where was the Dairy Queen in the next town I was coming to? 

In my vehicles, I, like I am sure most of us do, have loose change and maybe a few bucks folded up somewhere. I call that stash my Pepsi money, even though I prefer Coke. It sounds better to say my Pepsi rather than my Coke money. So I zipped down the road, looking at my hoard of coins in a highly anticipated cherry cone state. Lucky for me, the next town had a Dairy Queen that I had opportunity to visit with a friend last summer. Such a chilling treat then, as I knew it would be now.

Deciding on a medium cone. I am an adult, after all. I drove up and placed my lip-smacking cherry-dipped order. It was almost five bucks. What happened to the nickel cones? Haha. Didn’t matter. My lips were ready.

The drive-up window opened and out came this red, cheery cherry piece of heaven. With, get this, one, yes, one little napkin. Happiness. Sometimes it’s just sticky. Enjoy.

Trina lives in Diamond Valley, north of Eureka, Nevada. She loves to hear from readers. Email her at [email protected].

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COMMENTS
Comment author: Mike HinzComment text: I knew Sam as a member of our church growing up. He always had a warm smile, a kind word, and a great sense of humor! He will be great missed!Comment publication date: 7/2/25, 11:57 AMComment source: Obituary -- Samuel Bruce WickizerComment author: Mike HinzComment text: Great teacher, great coach, but even a better person!!! Rest in peace Mr. BeachComment publication date: 7/2/25, 11:53 AMComment source: Obituary -- Jack Victor Beach, Jr.Comment author: Mike HinzComment text: I had Mrs Hedges for First Grade at Northside Elementary in 1969. I still, to this day, remember her as a wonderful teacher…one of my favorites!!Comment publication date: 7/2/25, 11:29 AMComment source: Obituary - Nancy Marie Hedges C Comment author: Carl C. HagenComment text: What are MFNs and PBMs ?? ............................ From the editor: This is a very good question and we apologize for not catching that wasn't in there. We reached out to the writer/submitter and got this info back...hope it's helpful. PBM: Pharmacy Benefit Managers are pharmacies that are owned by insurance companies. (CVS is one.) They negotiate with drug makers to get reduced pricing for medications, but they historically have not passed along those savings to patients. https://www.ftc.gov/system/files/ftc_gov/pdf/pharmacy-benefit-managers-staff-report.pdf MFN: Most Favored Nation pricing is a policy that means a country agrees to offer the same trade concessions (like tariffs or price reductions) to all member nations of the World Trade Organization (WTO). When applied to pharmaceuticals, it could disrupt global access, deter innovation, and obscure the deeper systemic issues in American health care. https://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/2025/05/22/the-global-risks-of-americas-most-favored-nation-drug-pricing-policy/Comment publication date: 6/23/25, 7:47 AMComment source: L E T T E R TO THE EDITOR
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