SLIGHTLY OFF THE MARK
Did you
hear about the pothole that swallowed Cleveland?
It spit the
city back out. Thought it didn’t have good taste.
Actually, a
few years ago I wrote a story inspired by a news report I read, in which a hole
opened up and really did swallow an entire intersection in Cleveland. Cleveland
residents will tell you nobody beats them for potholes, by any measure: depth,
width, hang-time while falling into it …
But
everyone else in every other community across the country, large and small,
will make the same claim. Potholes are a nationwide problem, like politicians,
Obamacare, and bobbleheads. (I can’t help it, they freak me out. Bobbleheads,
too.)
Potholes
happen due to fatigue. No, not the driver: the road surface develops a crack,
and the cracks form a pattern called crocodile cracking. At that point
crocodile skin is stronger than the pavement, so the cracks spread until the
pressure of passing vehicles pops whole areas loose. They’re usually made worse
by large temperature changes, so around here they’re a winter and spring thing.
But like politicians, potholes can pop up anywhere, anytime, and cause great
damage.
I know it
seems like I’m poking a lot of fun at politicians, but in this case there are many
similarities between them and potholes: They both cost money, and both have
seasons in which they appear more often. Both cause people to curse and demand something
be done about them, but most people never actually do anything to fix things
themselves.
In some parts
of the country potholes are called kettles or chuckholes, and there are other
things they’re called that I can’t repeat here. (See above about people
cursing.) I don’t know who chuck is, but he must be extremely unpopular.
In the end
the only people who like potholes are those who collect hubcaps.
At some
point potholes become sinkholes; I suppose that’s when they get through all the
road stuff and reach the things that used to be there before the road. There
have been cases where people have driven into sinkholes, only to find old
Indian burial grounds. I don’t need to tell you that’s not good karma.
But let’s
stick to potholes. They’re bad enough by themselves: A pothole on a county road
near Huntertown could be seen from space. A pothole on an Albion side street was
used for location shooting in an Indiana Jones movie. A pothole on US 33 in
Churubusco once swallowed an entire marching band.
(The brave
band kept playing, and the echo effect so impressed the parade judges that the
band was awarded first place in the three feet down or lower category.)
The good
news is that there are ways to repair potholes. The bad news is that the
material most often used in repairing potholes consists of toothpaste and
ground up material made of former Lady Gaga outfits. (Ironically, her outfits
often do make me say “Gah!”)
Experts say
Colgate holds up longer, but Sensodyne doesn’t hurt as much when you hit it.
Actually,
the main problem with patching potholes isn’t the material, it’s the time. The
throw-and-go method takes the least amount of time, and lasts the least amount
of time. I think the name would tend to suggest that.
There’s
also the throw and roll, which my brother and I used to do until my mom got
tired of buying bandages and made us stop. It takes about two minutes more per
pothole, which doesn’t seem bad until you get a big outbreak (think teenage
acne) and crews are filling them as fast as compact cars can disappear.
The other
time is the time of year: No matter how they’re patched, repairs don’t hold up
as well in the winter as they do in the summer. That being the case, road
repair crews often don’t even try to make permanent repairs during bad weather
– they just want it to hold up until some other poor sap has to deal with it
when the weather gets better Unfortunately, unless they’re job-hoppers, the
first poor sap often has to deal with the same hole more than once.
So what can
we fill potholes with that will do the job but be more permanent? We can’t use
politicians – their spines aren’t stiff enough.
After a
great deal of thought, I’ve solved the problem. I came up with something that
never deteriorates, something harder than asphalt, and something that is in
plentiful supply in winter, right when it’s needed most:
Fruitcake.
You’re
welcome.
Plus no one actually wants to eat fruitcake, so it's a win-win.
ReplyDeleteYou sure gave me a great laugh with this one. Fruitcake. And it would work too.
ReplyDeleteThe government is probably already doing a study on it ...
Delete