Thursday, November 8, 2012

Colored Eggs



Every summer, we went to Price, Utah to visit Grandma and Grandpa Rasmussen.  We'd load up our blue VW van

Ours had curtains just like this one.


with suitcases, kids, chocolate licorice, and starbursts.




We'd leave early in the morning and make the long trip in one day.



We'd usually roll in around 8 or 9 o'clock at night.  Mom and Dad would park far from the house, and my sister and I would walk up the long driveway to the front door with our suitcases in hand.

My sister Kristi had the blue one



and I had the gold one


We'd ring the doorbell and say, "Mom and Dad made us walk all the way from Las Cruces to come see you!"  Grandma would always exclaim how tired we must be and that we should come in and rest.  She never seemed to get tired of our silly joke.

Visiting Grandma's house was a special time.  Each year we knew we would get to eat homemade bread, 



make zucchini boats, 

Pretend that's a zucchini floating down the gutter, and pretend that is a little girl watching.

pick cherries from her trees, 



and best of all, get with the Rasmussen cousins and play COLORED EGGS!


Did you ever play colored eggs as a child?  You didn't?  I'm so sorry.  Let me teach you how to play.

In order to play colored eggs you need at least 3 people, but the ideal number is between 8 and 15.  (Actually I have no idea what the ideal number is, I just made that up.)

One person is the big bad wolf

One person is the mother


and everyone else are the children.


The wolf has to go far away from the mother and the children so that they can discuss what color each one is going to be.  We finally had to make a rule that you could only choose colors found in a box of crayons.

But we could never agree on what size box.
Once everyone has picked a color, the person who is the wolf goes up to the mother.  She turns her back to the wolf so that he or she can knock on her back.

The wolf knocks and says, "KNOCK! KNOCK!"

The mother turns around and asks, "Who is it?"

The wolf replies, "THE BIG BAD WOLF!"

The mother asks, "What do you want?"

The wolf answers, "COLORED EGGS!"

The mother asks, "What color?"

Then the wolf starts guessing colors.  

BLUE! 


The mother has to remember if any of the children picked the color blue.  

If no one did then she says, "Wrong color!"  And the wolf has to guess another color. 

If someone is blue, then that person has to run as fast as they can to a designated spot (ours was a blue spruce tree)



and return to home base before the wolf touched the runner.  If he or she was caught, they became the new wolf.  If they made it home safe, the wolf had to guess another color.

The family also picked a bonus color.  This was a color that meant everyone had to run if the wolf picked it, including the mother.

We played this game so often that we got tired of the traditional colors.  I was usually the one who would pick obscure colors like

mauve,



chartreuse,



and turquoise.


I think it goes without saying that I really hate to run.


A few months ago I was talking to one of my cousins about this game and said to her, "That was such a fun game you taught us.  The only time we ever played it was in Price with you."

She said, "What do you mean?  You taught it to us.  The only time WE played it was when you came to visit."

So how this game began is a mystery.  The world may never know.

This post features:

Alice Houston Rasmussen (1913-2001)

My grandmother

me --> Ruth Rasmussen Buchanan --> Alice Houston Rasmussen



7 comments:

  1. I played this game with a family in Las Cruces one time. We have an extra rule. There is a bonus color. If the wolf guesses the bonus color, EVERYONE has to run. Whenever the bonus color is called out the smallest kid would start crying and yell "It is not fair!"

    Also, when we decided who was a color, we (I am a middle child remember, so fairness is important) would assign Yellow, Red and Blue to the fastest kids and peach, light green and clear to the slow kids. We like to hedge our bets.

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    1. That's so funny! Who did you play with in Las Cruces? I

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    2. That's so funny! Who did you play with in Las Cruces? I

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  2. Thanks. I forgot about bonus colors. I added it in.

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    Replies
    1. I never knew about this game until I heard you and Elisa talking about it. It is such a hoot that neither of you can remember who taught who! Good story Heather.

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  3. I loved those suitcases! Mine was plainer - just red and blue - I think it's still up in the attic. Did you really have that cool phone? Lucky you!

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  4. I'm certain you were the one who taught the Holdaway kids how to play Colored Eggs!

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