Showing posts with label grandmother. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grandmother. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

2016 Friday, May 20, UNA Front Porch Storytelling Festival


Nick Foster and his grandmother performing Doug’s Tune

Friday, May 20, 2016 
9:00-9:30 
The introduction was a performance by Doctor Foster's grandson, Nick Foster, who played the banjo. He played a tune familiar to everyone that was played on the Andy Griffen Show, by the Darlings, called Doug’s Tune,” and he was joined by his grandmother.

Next, we watched a video about Katheryn Tucker Windham, she talked about going to the funeral home to make her final plans. She was now in her 90s. The funeral director asks for whom was the coffin and she replied for me. He showed her several coffins starting with the most expensive. That was more than she wanted to pay so she kept asking for a cheaper coffin. Katheryn thanked the undertaker and left. She decided that she was going to ask her friend, John, to make her a coffin. John said Kathryn I have never made a coffin. Katheryn said I want a solid pine box, the old fashion kind, with six sides. John measured Katheryn before the built the box to make sure she would fit. 
When John finished the coffin, Katheryn had him bring it to her house and put it on top of about twenty boxes full of insulators she had collected over the years. She said I don’t know why I collected the insulators but when I saw one, I got it and took it home. 
She also told me about collecting insulators. She said when I die to wrap me up in a quilt, put me in my coffin, and bury me, I do not want a funeral or anybody fussing over me. Then she read a poem by Jan Strutters 
“She was twice blessed: she was happy: she knew it. “
Kathryn Tucker Windham died June 12, 2011, and she is buried at New Live Oak Cemetery in Selma, Dallas County Alabama. 

9:30-10:00 Donald Davis from Waynesville, North Carolina
Donald said I was the eighth of thirteen children from Haywood County.
He said the worst month of the year was February by April the family was out of food, with only half-year of the growing season. 
His family had two large gardens where they grew four rows of corn and four rows of beans. He said the family grew every vegetable in the alphabet from A to Z. He said his mother’s sisters would come for a visit and they would always get the best can vegetables. His mom would order her chickens from Sears Catalog. 
His side mom would not watch the chickens being killed but would listen. 
He said when his dad chopped off the head of the chicken that his body would leave its head, his body would end up under the smokehouse. He would have to crawl under the smokehouse to retrieve the chicken. He said then his mom would cut up the chicken and then fry it up in a skillet. He said we recycled everything, we did not eat, we would give it to the pig, then we would eat the pig. 
He said we had a cow named Helen, our neighbor's name was also Helen, she was a right fleshy woman. When the cow would get out papa would holler for the cow, and he would say, Helen, I am nearby! Mom would say papa why do you do that? Papa would reply I cannot help it if she knows her a cow. 
He also told a story of when he and his brother went with his mother to can soup mix and apple sauce at the Cannery.
He and his brother played outside, throwing rocks, while his mother canned the soup. She asked Donald if he wanted to label the soup, and he said yes. He said when mom went back inside that he and his brother continued throwing rocks. 
She came out a little later and ask if he had finished labeling the soup mix, and he said yes. His mom said I am ready for you to label the apple sauce. 
He and his brother went inside to label the apple sauce but to his surprise, all the cans looked the same. 
He said to his brother you label half apple sauce and the other half soup mix. They had no clue what was inside each can. 

Everything was fine until the company came for supper and his dad wanted dessert. When we went to open the apple sauce, we got a soup mix. We open at least six or more but all was soup mix. Papa never asked the preacher over to dinner. 

10:00-10:30 Tim Lowery from Summerville, South Carolina 
He loved sweet tea, loved school and he grew up in Kentucky
He said he learned to drive a stick shift in the first grade. He was the first child the bus driver picked up. The bus driver had a cast on his arm and could not shift the gears. He asks him if he knew his ABCs. He said the gear shift was like the letter H. 
He said his first-grade teacher was a woman with a mustache and she carried everything she needed, her money, spoon, makeup, and reading glasses, up there. 
He said in first grade we learned to read from Dick and Jane Books. 
See Jane, run Spot run.  
He said one of the boys in my class was tired of Spot so he said died Spot die. His teacher took out her spoon, from up there and put it in his mouth. Everyone can remember having the spoon from up there put in their mouths.


10:45-11:15 Dolores Hydock from Redding, Pennsylvania 
Dolores talked about her parents and how they loved to dance. She said when her mother was cooking, she would dance. She would take her in her arms and dance. She said every Saturday night her dad would take her mom out to dance the polka. She said I would shine my dad's shoes. My mom would wear a Cherry Red dress, and fog up the room in perfume. She said that she and David Doggett taught ACME dance for twenty years. She said that she learned three lessons. Never take up more than your space. Always wear comfortable shoes and I didn't write down the third.
She said that she was from Redding Pennsylvania. When she was in high school that they were going to use a computer to hook everyone up with their perfect match. There were to answer twenty questions about the type of person that would be their perfect match. But the computer program backfired on them giving them the least perfect match. Everyone had to dance the first dance with their perfect match but after that, they were free to dance with other people everyone was relieved. 

11:15:11:45 Bil Lipp from South Charleston, West Virginia 
Bil’s father was a Methodist preacher and their church never got excited. All the kids went to a Baptist church 
11:45-12:15 We listened to Geraldine Buckley

12:15-1:30PM we ate our sack lunch. Peggy brought three of her friends, with her to the festival. Everyone shared what they brought. We sat at one of the tables in the hallway to eat our picnic lunch. 
After lunch, Peggy and two of her friends went back to the Performance Center. 
My friend and I went to the loft.

1:30-2:00 We listened to Rev Robert B. Jones from Detroit, Michigan he performed to praise and protest songs.
2:00-2:30 We listened to Donald Davis talk about his trip down into the Grand Canyon riding a Mule.  
3:15-3:45 We listened to Bil Lepp talked about the Baptist and Methodist Churches. About visiting the Baptist church and wanting to see the baptism waters. The preacher catches them and tells them they were going to hell for disobeying him. He talked about how the girl and boys were trying to raise money. They were using tin cans that were balanced and the one who put in the heaviest money would win. He and his friend brought a large bag of pennies.
He talked about bats in the attic.
He talked about being caught in a vacuum while watching a train come through a tunnel. 

3:45-5:00 We listened to Dolores talk about a true story of friendship, feeling, foreign, and finding your way home. 
How she and a friend went to Europe thinking they could live on five dollars a day. How her friend fell in love with a German boy and did not want to continue on their journey.
How she learned several different languages and took a job as a nanny for 3 French children. 

I had to leave at 4:30PM to be at my grandson's Wedding Rehearsal. 

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

2008, April 7, Monday, Having fun in the park with grandkids


I picked up Sierra, Montana, and Nevada at their grandmother Clanton's house.
I had packed a picnic lunch of peanut butter sandwiches, bananas, fruit bowls, and Mountain Dews
We ate lunch at St Florine Park, and when we finished, we walked the trail.

About midway through the trail was a hill of loose dirt
The kids wanted to climb atop the dirt hill, and I said they could.
They said Grannyncameme up, so I did.
We walked around on top of the dirt pile and up and down several times. 

The kids loved this area. 
We walked around the park and I took pictures. 
I took the kid's picture standing on a bridge next to a statue of an alligator.
Nevada 
Sierra 
Montana
We saw, sitting on a stump, some tin statue-singing frogs, which intrigued the kids. 

Along the walking trail, we saw a face carved into a tree; it had large marble-like eyes.
I took pictures of the kids everywhere in the park. 

When we finished walking, the grandkids played on the playground.
Deibert Park was the next place we went to. 
We walked on the trail, and there were signs everywhere about the animals one might see along the way.
Sculptures in Deibert Park
Sculptures in Deibert Park
The kids and I got very hot, so our next stop was McDonald's for an Oreo McFlurry
Next, we went to Loaves and Fishes, a thrift store in Muscle Shoals.
I let the grandkids pick out five books each and two movies. 
We stopped at train Tressel on the Colbert side of the Tennessee River.
We walked to the end and back by the time we finished, and Montana's long curly hair was glistening with sweat.


Our next stop was River Heritage Park, located next to the Marriott Hotel.
The kids played on the castle and the train playground equipment. 


Stopping for a pose
Having fun at River Heritage Park 
I made pictures of the kids playing, and when we were leaving the park, we stopped at the waterfall in front of the Marriott hotel.  

My granddaughter called and said she needed someone to pick her up at school.

For dinner, I baked a potato, and the grandkids dressed it with cheese, bacon bits, and sour cream.
For dessert, I served strawberry pie.

Strawberry pie is Montana's favorite, and he ate pie until he said Granny, my stomach is about to pop.

Hannah and Sierra went outside to ride scooters.
My grandson, Jake, came over to pick up his sister, Hannah. 
He was hungry, so he ate a potato with all the trimmings.
After Jake and Hannah left, I took the other grandkids to Ron's, where they played with Ron's Star Wars Dolls

We got home, and later that day, the grandkids' mom came to pick them up.  

I spent the day with grandkids climbing a dirt hill, hiking, picnicking, walking trails, playing in the park, reading signs, and making memories. 



Thursday, January 7, 2016

2006 May 12, Friday, Electroencephalogram (EEG) at Childrens Hospital in Birmingham

Today Meadow will see Dr Tony McGrath and she will have an EEG.
This is the third one within the past month.


Mother and daughter fun time
Meadow resting 
Preparing Meadow for the EEG 
Meadow having the EEG 
It showed seizure activity and Dr McGrath increased her dose of Topamax

Electroencephalogram (EEG)
An electroencephalogram (EEG) is a test that measures and records the electrical activity of your brain. Special sensors (electrodes camera.gif) are attached to your head and hooked by wires to a computer. The computer records your brain's electrical activity on the screen or on paper as wavy lines. Certain conditions, such as seizures, can be seen by the changes in the normal pattern of the brain's electrical activity.


Why It Is Done

An electroencephalogram (EEG) may be done to:
  • Diagnose epilepsy and see what type of seizures are occurring. EEG is the most useful and important test in confirming a diagnosis of epilepsy.
  • Check for problems with loss of consciousness or dementia.
  • Help find out a person's chance of recovery after a change in consciousness.
  • Find out if a person who is in a coma is brain dead.
  • Study sleep disorders, such as narcolepsy.
  • Watch brain activity while a person is receiving general anesthesia during brain surgery.
  • Help find out if a person has a physical problem (problems in the brain, spinal cord, or nervous system) or a mental health problem.

How To Prepare

Before the day of the electroencephalogram (EEG) test, tell your doctor if you are taking any medicines. Your doctor may ask you to stop taking certain medicines (such as sedatives and tranquilizers, muscle relaxants, sleeping aids, or medicines used to treat seizures) before the test. These medicines can affect your brain's usual electrical activity and cause abnormal test results.
Do not eat or drink foods that have caffeine (such as coffee, tea, cola, and chocolate) for 12 hours before the test.

Saturday, July 4, 2015

2001~ November 21-December 1, Celebrating Thanksgiving with Family & Traveling to Gulf Shores, AL

We stayed four days and five nights at Veteran Park to spend time with family for the Thanksgiving Holiday.

Day 1: Wednesday, November 21, 2001 
I spent the day with my children and grandchildren and ate Thanksgiving dinner.
Hannah, Nevada, Madison 

Nevada and Marcus are playing Video Games. 

Nevada, Jake is watching a movie. 

Nevada and Marcus in Jake's Room 
Day 2: Thursday, November 22, 2001
Celebrated Thanksgiving with family.

Day 3: Friday, November 23, 2001 
I spent the day with my granddaughter, Hannah, at the Conference Center and Veterans Park.
The Renaissance tower 

Hannah at the Conference Center 

Hannah at the Conference Center 

Hannah at Veterans Park 

Veterans Park 
Day 4: Saturday, November 24, 2001 
We celebrated Thanksgiving with Hubby's family.

Day 5: Sunday, November 25, 2001 
I spent the day with my grandmother.


My siblings and grandmother

Visiting my Grandmother
Day 6:  Monday, November 26, 2001
Hubby drove our Damon Escaper to the Luxury RV Park in Gulf Shores, Alabama, where we stayed a week with the other snowbirds.

Luxury RV Park
November is off-season at GulfShoress, and all you see are snowbirds. The pace slows down during the winter months. 
It is a good time to go sightseeing and drive along the Ocean. 
Luxury RV Park, Gulf Shores

Luxury RV Park, Gulf Shores
November 26, 2001
We toured ForMorgan's "Bowyers" Museum and walked among the ruins.
We walked along the windy beaches of Fort Bowyers, with the windy salt air blowing in our hair. We toured the museum, where we saw Mobile Point Lighthouse, a 4th-order Fresnel lens, built between 1873 and 1966. 
Fort Morgan "Bowyers" Museum 

Fort Morgan "Bowyers" Museum  

Fort Morgan "Bowyers" Museum  

Fort Morgan "Bowyers" Museum

Fort Morgan "Bowyers" Museum 
Day 7: Tuesday, November 27, 2001
We spent the day at the National Aviation Museum in Pensacola, which was festively decorated for the Christmas Holidays during WWII, with Christmas music playing in the background. 
On the upper level, we saw a grocery store, a barbershop, army camps, aircraft, jeeps, TV shows from that era, and jungle camps. 
We saw pin-up girls posted at camps, Hagia & Hagia Booz for fifteen cents, the Home of the Luck Marine, and what a house of a military family may have looked like. We saw Pawn & Loan, Sandy Ridge Grocery, a Colonial Bread sign, Jo, Jo's, a Buck Rodgers, and an airplane. We also saw maps, family pictures, and radios.
The museum was full of airplanes and jets of every size, shape, and color. 
There was a replica of a ship. We went inside and saw the sick bay area with medicines, bunk beds, and toilets. 

We saw the US Coast Guard, a miniature boat display with airplanes ready to defend our country, two floors of airplanes and flags from different countries, and a skylab that simulated flying. Hubby had always dreamed of being a pilot. 
We saw the cockpit of an airplane. We crawled inside and played 
We saw the 70-3M 129655 Aircraft, the Blue Angels US Navy 16483 Aircraft, and a flight of the Blue Angels over St. Louis hanging from the ceiling. 
Museum of Aviation in Pensacola

Museum of Aviation in Pensacola

Museum of Aviation in Pensacola

Museum of Aviation in Pensacola
We walked back upstairs, where we saw Jake's Garage, a sign for Pepis for five cents, and a Texaco sign. We also saw a malfunctioning melon scale and a popcorn theater.
We saw a hall filled with plaques of honor, and one was Alan Shepard, one of the first men to walk on the moon.

Our next stop was Big Lagoon State Park in Perdido Key, Florida. We were the only ones there as we walked along the boardwalk overlooking a natural lake teeming with wildlife. We saw an observation tower but did not climb it. We walked along the sandy beach, stopping at the water's edge. 

We ate dinner at Lambert's Restaurant, "Home of the trowed roll. "
They bring you all the food, and you can eat rolls. The original restaurant is in Sikeston, Missouri, and another is in Branson, Missouri. 


Day 8: Wednesday, November 28, 2001
We toured the USS Alabama Battleship at 2703 Battleship Parkway, Mobile, AL 36602.
We walked along the decks of the mighty USS Alabama. 
The ship received nine battle stars from WWII. We walked up and down many flights of stairs and saw many memorials honoring our veterans who died for our country. 
USS Alabama Battleship Mobile 

USS Alabama Battleship Mobile 

USS Alabama Battleship Mobile 

A-12 Blackbird Spy
We walked through the aircraft Pavilion and saw exhibits, including an A-12 Blackbird spy plane, a Tuskegee Airmen's P-51 Mustang, a Vietnam PBR River patrol boat, and many other military aircraft. 
We walked through the USS Alabama rose garden, saw the Coast Guard 1378 helicopter in black and white, and saw the F-15 Fighting Falcon Viper Replica of the USS Alabama. 
We saw the photo gallery at the Battleship Memorial Park. Christmas music played on the radio, and the park was decked with decorations.

Day 9-10:  November 29, 30, 2001
On Friday, we rode to Gulf Shores and walked along the beach, filling our shoes with sand. It had stormed the day before, so the Gulf was still violent, with pounding waves, and red flags were out.
We saw the iconic Pink Pony Restaurant and watched birds feeding on fish. It was a very windy, overcast, and pleasant day. 
During the summer, this beach is filled with tourists' voices, but today, it is silent. 

It is time for our vacation to come to a close, so we are heading out. At 11:30 A.M., we crossed Mobile Bay in our Damon Escaper, and we could see the USS Alabama in the distance as we neared the Mobile Bay tunnel. 
At 6:29 P.M., the sun is setting as we ride through Mississippi. We stop at Sam's Town Casino RV Park, where we stay for a few nights before beginning our journey home. 
We gambled in Sam's Town, Hollywood, and Harrods Casinos.
The casino in Tunica, MS

The casino in Tunica, MS

The casino in Tunica, MS
Day 11: Saturday, December 1, 2001 
We spent Thanksgiving with family, rode to Gulf Shores for a short vacation, saw the Museum of Naval Aviation and the USS Alabama, spent two nights in Tunica, and traveled home to Fenton, MO.

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Events with my grandparents2

Sweet Potato Kisses were one of my favorite desserts that my grandmother would prepare for us.
The receipt of her potato kisses:
You boil a small potato with the jacket on and cook until done.
Peel the potato, mash it up, and roll it out. 
Add powdered sugar and peanut butter to the center. 
Roll all ingredients into a ball and slice them into pieces.

During the holidays, my grandmother would spend hours making our Christmas presents.
She was very handy with a needle and thread. She would make sock monkeys, rag dolls, and dresses for us; every stitch was sewn in love. 

My grandmother had very little income, but she was able to make it stretch. 
She always had a beautifully decorated Christmas tree that would light up any room.
When she plugged the Christmas lights into the wall sockets, they would start to bubble, and the angel hair and icicles would gleam. 
She would make a pot of popcorn that we would string. She would cut construction paper into strips that we would glue together to create a rope to string on her tree.

My grandfather loved to smoke Prince Albert's tobacco. When he ran out, he would give us grandkids a nickel, and we would walk to the store to buy him some smoking tobacco and white paper.
I loved to watch my grandfather take the white papers and roll his tobacco inside.

While playing outside, I once stepped on a honey bee barefoot. My grandfather pulled the stinger out of my foot and covered the swollen spot with some of his Prince Albert tobacco.

I know my grandfather had a kind heart, or my grandmother would not have married my grandfather. As the years passed, my grandfather became increasingly dependent on alcohol.
When I was young, I remember sitting next to my grandfather on the sofa as he told scary stories. 
The one I remember most was about bloody bones.
The story would end with my grandfather saying,
He would go up one step, then two, and continue counting the steps, until suddenly he would shout, "Got you." We would jump up in fright.

My grandfather loved the feel of the earth with his hands. For many years, my grandparents maintained a vegetable garden that not only provided food for them but also sold the produce for income.

My grandparents' backyard was filled with apple, peach, pear, and plum trees, which my grandmother would pick and use to make jams and jellies. They sold the access for cash, which was their source of income.
My grandfather had one Chinaberry Tree that produced chinaberries, of which I never knew the use, and they stunk to high heaven.
We were forbidden to climb in the fruit trees, but that never stopped us.
My grandfather loved to tease us; he would tell us that if we swallowed a seed from any plant, it would grow inside of us.

It was my grandmother who introduced me to God and the Church. 
I would ride with my cousin and grand Church to a small Church on the north side of Sheffield. 
Mr. Ulman, a member of the Church, volunteered to take my grandmother and the Church Children to Church, as he passed by her house on his way to Church. 
I'm unsure if Mr. Ulman was single, but his wife never attended Church. He was an older man, so he could have been a churchgoer.
If not for Mr. Ulman, my grandmother would have had to walk to Church.

In Sunday class, I learned about Daniel's Church, the Lion's Den, Adam and Eve, Noah building the Ark, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, and how the angel walked inside the blazing furnace with them. 
We were given a pamphlet each week, which included a picture of that week's lesson, that we could take home. I treasured this.
After Sunday school class, we would reassemble in the auditorium for Church.
There would be someone playing the piano, or someone playing a squeezebox accordion.
It was terrific, the music that the machine would belt out. A man would stand while compressing and expanding the bellows while pressing buttons on the right side of the accordion.
One of my favorite Christian songs we sang during service was "WHEN THE ROLL IS CALLED UP YONDER."
The preacher would give a long sermon and then be dismissed, as would everyone.
I remember one Sunday night after services, Mr. Ullman was driving us home when the right door on the passenger's side of his car flew open. When Mr. Ullman turned left at the red light on North Montgomery Avenue, my cousin flew out right into the street.
Thank goodness we were not going too fast. She only had a few scratches on her elbow and hands.

My mom's parents relied on my dad to take them places, and my grandparents couldn't afford a car. 
When my grandmother wanted to visit her sister, who lived on Penny Lane in Huntsville, everyone would load into my parents' station wagon, and we would ride to Huntsville. 
It would be a day trip, and my aunt would prepare a nice meal for our visit.

My grandmother's father and stepmother lived in Town Creek.
When my grandmother wanted to visit her father, she and my grandfather would take the train from Sheffield to Town Creek. 
The Sheffield Depot was within walking distance of my grandparents' house.
In fact, the train tracks were so close that when I spent the night at my grandparents' house, I could hear the trains blowing their horns to warn people they were approaching as I lay in bed trying to sleep.

Sometimes, our whole family would pile into our station wagon, along with my grandparents, and we would all ride to Town Creek.
I loved to visit my great-grandfather. He was a kind-hearted soul, a jolly man, and very involved with us kids.
I remember my grandfather showing us how to put a straw stick into a hole, wiggle the straw, and we would pull out a worm he called Chicken Chokers.
Chicken Choppers are larvae of tiger beetles that ambush predators of other insects. They lie in wait in their burrows, their heads flush with the soil's surface.  
The chickens do more harm to the larvae than the grubs.

My great-grandparents lived in an old discarded military dining trailer they had purchased from the army. 

In the middle of the trailer were three steps leading to the front door.
Once inside, to the right was a large, round, oak dining table with a half-round bench encircling it.
A couple of steps down was the living room, which had a couple of rockers. Next to the rockers was their bed, and standing just out from the wall was a coal heater. 
The kitchen was built to cook for a large crowd of men at the very end of mess time.
My great-grandfather was visiting his son in Lakeland, Florida, when he passed away at the age of eighty. His body was returned to Alabama, where he was buried. 


The first funeral that I ever remember attending was that of my great-grandfather. 

2025 Oct 11-19, NCL Getaway Cruise 7-Day Canada and New England Round Trip New York, Bar Harbor & Halifax Part 2

Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick    Day 5, October 16, Thursday, Beautiful Bay of Fundy   We will be docking around 9 A.M. The time changed from ...