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The Origin of Kricket Krap®
written by: Bill Bricker
back to Garden Know How Index
We learned about
Cricket Crap in 1984 from a friend who suggested many years before
to go into the composting business. When he suggested cricket
droppings I nearly broke up laughing, but the joke was on me. This story is funny now, but far from
that when it happened. Here is a brief version:
Lou Ellen, my wife, named the
cricket droppings CC-84. Standing for Cricket Crap found in 1984. She
had previously been very instrumental in coming up with names and logos
for other products. This name was tried here in the local area and on
national Television, but it just did not fly. We changed the name to Gotta Grow
and still no go. The years went by and still no luck until Milo McGahee
of the Augusta paper recommended to me to name it
Kricket Krap. The sound was there and maybe this is what we needed. We
knew we were on the right track when Col Cliff Quilicci, USMC, my
previous boss and friend gave some CC-84 to a friend way out in Reno,
Nevada. The friend’s name was Ty Cobb and the story was entitled,
Kricket
Krap® is not anything to Poo-Poo. We knew we had the magic name
and immediately went to Washington, DC to register this nugget of Krap.
Within weeks,
seemingly everyone started writing and talking about
Kricket
Krap®. Disc Jockeys called wanting to know how we picked up the
droppings. Jokingly, I told them: We have wee little people, with wee
little shovels, who go out in the wee hours of the morning to pick up
the wee bits of cricket doo. Jim Wilson, host of the PBS Victory Garden
wrote: He cleans up after 2 billion crickets. This started a parade of
headlines. To include: Fertilizer Firm Has Multitude of
Employees’, Cricket Dung is Choice Food for Plants - Really, Cricket
Manure’s in Demand, Home Gardeners Chirp for Cricket Manure, Crickets
Contribute Good Luck To Unusual Organic Fertilizer, You Can Smell Success in Georgia with
Kricket Krap®, Cashing in on
Crickets for Sweet
Smell of Success, They Called a Spade a Spade and Fertilizer Took Off.
Jim then wrote an article about the headlines. This list of headlines is
still growing years later.
Everyone, including
all of the major newspapers in the USA, the garden and business
magazines, radio/TV all loved the logo, Kricket Krap®. The only exception
was most notably Ma Bell of the South. We found out we were in disfavor
when we wanted to put the name in the yellow pages. Our local reps
thought it was great, but, the heads on high, said no. They reasoned
the name Kricket Krap® might be offensive to some of their customers. I
pointed out that crap had
been used for years and certainly in this day and age was not a bad
word. Never the less, Kricket Krap® was not listed in the yellow pages.
AP in Atlanta heard of the dispute and took sides with us little guys,
resulting in international news coverage of Kricket Krap®. Another year
passed and Ma Bell still would not yield. Local lawyers volunteered to
help without charge, we declined and waited. AP again picked up the
story and around the world again,
Kricket Krap®.
After three years they backed off and we are finally in the yellow
pages!
We finally had a
product with the right name and light enough to package and sell via
mail order. This was achieved through the support of the family and
most notably Lorrie and Bill Bricker II. Bill is a magician on the
computer as well as being a talented artist. Lorrie’s typing ability and
keen eye makes for a great team. With their combined talent a mail order
catalog, which we called our Wish book, came into being. The name Wish
book
was a direct copy of what the Sears Roebuck catalog was called many years
ago and was found in the crapper of most homes years gone by. Our first
mail order Wish book consisted only of one sheet of paper. A far cry
from the 24 pages it became at it final print size. The Wish book contained our products as well as
stories about Bricko, my gardening experience, recycling, making compost
and new products we have tested, etc. People like our folksy approach
to cataloging. We will now offer this articles on this site in the area
of Garden Know How.
No matter how good
your product is you must have help to promote it nationally. We are
fortunate to have such help from national gardening experts as Jim
Bennett, TNN’s Weekend Gardener, and Jim Wilson, host of the Victory
Garden South on PBS, Virgil Adams of the Atlanta Constitution, the many
Garden Writers of America and a host of newspaper columnist. We will
never forget the first day that we went to see Jim Bennett with the
objective of obtaining some advertising from the Week End Gardener. Jim
was still in his back yard in Aiken SC working on making his show what
it is today. Jim was so intrigued with our product he followed us back
to Augusta. This was the beginning of a long lasting friendship, a lot
of free publicity and one heck of a lot of fun. It is a shame the cute
Kricket Krap name had not been found at that time. We learned from Jim
and he learned from us. A great person and one of the most creative men
we know.
No one will ever know
how much Virgil Adams contributed to our success. Virgil was a
University of Georgia hard-core Seven Dust, chemical fertilizer
communicator for the University. After he retired, he still gardened
and wrote about the synthetic way of gardening. After many years of
trying to obtain his support, he visited the farm. This visit plus the
fact the organic movement was arriving in Atlanta started Virgil to
writing about our products. He used the products and was so impressed
he started writing and wrote so much and so often, many accused Bricko
of paying Virgil for his copy. Everyone in our area knows that no amount of
money can buy Virgil Adams. He is a great man, honest, hardworking and
the world’s best gardener. We all look forward to seeing Mary and Virgil
once per year at least. They use to come down regularly all the way from Jefferson, Ga.
to buy a truck load of Bricko goodies, see the beautiful sights and have
some of our most tasty Bricko BBQ at our annual picnic.
To Jim Wilson, we owe
so much. He saw the value of our products and then brought the name
Kricket Krap to everyone’s attention. His story was copied hundreds of
times and folks are still trying to come up with a better headline: He
cleans up behind 2 billion crickets. Jim is the one who convinced me to
become a member of the Garden Writers Association of America. An
association which we think is one-of-a-kind and the best there is. We
thank all of these people and the hundreds of other writers for their
contribution to our success.
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