Living Madly: The Chairs of Summer

Photo courtesy Uriel Mont
Living Madly: The Chairs of Summer
By Emilie-Noelle Provost
Over the past five years, Rob and I have spent several weekends at the Eagle Mountain House in Jackson, New Hampshire. We began staying at the hotel because it’s close to many of the places we like to go hiking. One of the best things about the hotel, built in 1879, is its enormous wrap-around front porch lined with wooden rocking chairs.
As we sipped coffee on the hotel’s porch on a recent Sunday morning, I started thinking about these chairs: the generations of summer visitors who have sat in them; the conversations they’ve had; the marriage proposals; the breaking of bad news; the cocktails people have enjoyed while taking in the mountain views.
Eagle Mountain’s sturdy rockers reminded me of similar ones on the porch of the historic Gosport Hotel on Star Island, located off the coast of Portsmouth, New Hampshire. I spent several summers hanging out in these chairs growing up. As much as my life changed over those years, the chairs, solid and hard-worn, were always the same.
At the house where I lived as a kid, we had a set of heavy wooden outdoor chairs with removable vinyl cushions. Hand-me-downs from a family member who no longer wanted them, these chairs were monstrosities. It took two adults to move one. The cushions soaked up rainwater like sponges, and if you happened to stub a toe on one of the chairs’ legs, you’d be hopping around for ten minutes, howling. When my friends came over, we usually sat on the lawn.
The first summer I lived on my own, after graduating from college, I bought two green plastic chairs at a hardware store. I lived in Boston and didn’t have a car, so I carried them the three blocks back to my apartment. My roommate and I put the chairs out on our miniature balcony, which overlooked the kitchen of a Chinese restaurant. We spent much of that summer sitting in them while grilling burgers on a rickety hibachi we’d picked up at CVS, and drinking gin and tonics out of plastic cups.
Rob bought me a foldable canvas sand chair with the Rolling Rock beer logo on it—a promotional item he’d picked up for a few bucks at a liquor store—when I was pregnant with Madelaine. It’s one of the most comfortable beach chairs I’ve owned, but as that summer wore on and my belly grew bigger, I usually needed help to get out of it and back into a standing position.
When Madelaine was a toddler, we got her a pint-size white resin chair, just the right size for a two-year-old. She used to like to sit outside in it to eat lunch, an upturned 5-gallon bucket serving as her dining table. We were living in our first house at the time. When we sold it, we got rid of most of our outdoor furniture, but not that chair. She’ll be 27 this year, and that little seat is still stored up in the rafters of our garage.
For a number of summers, Rob complained about the fact that it’s nearly impossible to find the old fashioned aluminum-frame chairs—the foldable kind with backs and seats woven from vinyl straps—that his parents had when he was growing up. Several years ago, quite by accident, Madelaine and I found a few of these chairs for sale at a discount department store, and bought one for him for Father’s Day. We put a fancy bow on the chair and set it up in the middle of the garage so he’d find it when he took the trash out. Its metal frame digs into the back of your legs after you’ve been sitting in it for a while, but it’s still the only chair Rob uses whenever we have people over during the summer.
We’ve wiled away many summer evenings in the four red plastic Adirondack chairs we bought when we moved into the house where we live now. But they only seem to last a season or two before they break and have to be replaced. We’re down to two of these chairs now—both sure to break soon. We still haven’t decided what to replace them with.
Weighing a mere two pounds each and folding neatly into custom carrying cases with handles, our newest summer chairs are stored in the back of our car. Made of polyester mesh and steel, these two comfy high-tech seats are ideal for relaxing and enjoying drinks and snacks after a long hike. They weren’t inexpensive, but they were worth every penny.
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Emilie-Noelle Provost (she/her) – Author of The River Is Everywhere, a National Indie Excellence Award, American Fiction Award, and American Legacy Award finalist, and The Blue Bottle, a middle-grade adventure with sea monsters. Visit her at emilienoelleprovost.com.
This brought back a nice memory. I have the two aluminum foldable chairs with the vinyl straps that belonged to my parents in my attic. The name Clark printed on the back is barely visible now. Dad put his name on them when he would secure a good spot early in the day at Boarding House Park for the Friday night concerts they enjoyed. I have a picture of him sitting in that chair on his porch.