Showing posts with label growing up. Show all posts
Showing posts with label growing up. Show all posts

Monday, July 25, 2022

I grew up on a little creek in Alabama

 I grew up on a little creek in Alabama.

Way out in the country, far from the town

Nothing but family & farmland around

Crickets & mourning doves make their sound

The best people I knew were called Maw & Paw

They owned this land & farmed it all

Paw had a pet goose & rooster named Clyde

Maw taught me not to cuss or ever tell a lie

When I think back, only happiness inside


We called them Maw and Paw.

Come inside and sit a spell y’all 

Make yourself a plate & some sweet iced tea

Turnip greens, pinto beans, Maw smiles at me 

If I could go back there just one last time 

I would eat from paws Muscadine vine 


Paw was a veteran who served in World War II

He was by far the smartest man I ever knew 

Now, Maw loved to needle crochet & sew 

I believe she could do it with her eyes closed 

A horse named Cricket and a catfish pond

Apple trees, watermelons, and far beyond 

How they did it all, I will never comprehend 

They fed family, animals, and friends 


We called them Maw and Paw

The best people I ever knew

Cold Banana banana pudding & warm chicken stew

If I could go back there just one last time

I would eat from paws red grapevine 


Blueberries, strawberries, beans & potatoes 

Cherry trees, peach trees, plums & tomatoes


Oh, if I could go back there just one more time

Written by my daughter about her grandparents


Saturday, May 18, 2019

2019 Shoals Front Porch Pop-up & Storytelling Festival

Shoals Front Porch Storytelling Festival 2019 
March 5, 2019, 11:30-1PM, 2019  Dolores Hydock Through the Back Door ~ The Music that Bridged the Bayou. Mardi Gras luncheon, Sheffield Public Library, Sheffield, AL

May 6, 2019, 2-3PM, 2019  Dolores Hydock Helen Keller Library 511 N Main St. Tuscumbia, Al 
Literary Treason: the Writings of Bess Streeter Aldrich 
This program looks at the life and work of Bess Streeter Aldridge, a Nebraska Writer of the 1930s who accomplished what a few others did:
While she raised her family as a single mother, she had a successful, self-supporting career as a female writer during the first half of the 20th century.
The program describes her early life and later career success and includes a telling of “Jundo Swans,” Aldrich’s funny, touching short story that’s a reminder that there.
It's no disaster like an elementary school play and no friend as important as your best friend when you’re ten years old.

May 16, 2019, 10-11AM Dishing the dirt Cypress Lake Golf & Tennis Club 1311 E Sixth St. Muscle Shoals, Al Sponsored by Muscle Shoals Public Library Tickets are $5, including a light brunch before the program call 256-386-9212 
Whether you’ve got the greenest thumb since Johnny Appleseed or you managed to kill a rock garden, you’ll enjoy these stories about Mother Nature, Frederic the French Yard-Man, and people who grow philosophy as well as phlox on their little piece of earth. 

May 16, 2019, 4-5PM Pop-UP Concert with Josh Goforth Florence-Lauderdale Public Library
350 N Wood Ave, Florence, AL  
 Storyteller, ballad singer, and multi-instrumentalist Josh Goforth is a native of Madison County in western North Carolina. Situated deep in the Blue Ridge Mountains, this area is known for its keeping of unbroken ballad and storytelling traditions brought by early Scots-Irish and English settlers in the mid-17th century. It was also fertile ground for the rise of American string band music played on fiddle, banjo, and guitar. Proud to share his Appalachian heritage with audiences near and far, Josh Goforth draws from each of these wellsprings. Join us for a FREE pop-up concert with Josh at 4 p.m. on Thursday, May 16, to kick off the Shoals Storytelling Festival!  

May 17, 8:45 AM – 5 PM (with lunch break): The Shoals Storytelling Festival featuring Donald Davis, Dolores Hydock, Bil Lepp, and Josh Goforth
8:50-9:00 Welcome
9:00-9:30 Bil Lep
9:30-10:30 Josh Goforth
10:30-10:45 Break
10:45-11:30 Dolores Hydock
11:30-12:00 Donald Davis 
12:00—2:00 Lunch
2:00-2:30 Josh Goforth
2:30-3:30 Bil Lep
3:30-3:50 Break
3:50-5:00 Donald Davis (Went home at 5pm)
5:00-7:00 Dinner 

7-9 PM–Storyteller Showcase with Donald Davis, Dolores Hydock, Bil Lepp, and Josh Goforth

May 18, 9AM – 5:15 PM (with lunch break): The Shoals Storytelling Festival featuring Donald Davis, Dolores Hydock, Bil Lepp, Eric Kirkman, and Josh Goforth
9:00-9:30 Donald Davis 
9:30-10:30 Eric Kirkman
10:30-10:45 Break
10:45-12:00 Dolores Hydock
12:00—2:00 Lunch
2:00-2:30 Bil Lep
2:30-3:00 Josh Goforth
3:00-3:50 Eric Kirkman 
3:50-4:15 Break
4:15-4:45 Dolores Hydock
4:45-5:15 5:00 Donald Davis (Went home at 5pm)
5:15-7:00 Dinner

7-9PM – Performance with Firekid, Dillon Hodges, and Heidi Feek

For the past two days, I have enjoyed spending time with my friends at the Shoals Theater Storytelling Festival.
Friday, we ate lunch at Legends(I think everyone ate lunch there) I enjoyed a plate of fried okra, fried shrimp, and Jack Danial's apples. 
Saturday, my friend and I shared a bowl of white cheese dip and chicken and steak feta for lunch. We topped it off with a cup of their complimentary ice cream.
On Friday and Saturday, we enjoyed listening to the following entertainers
Josh Goforth, Bill Lepp, Donald Davis, Dolores Hydock, and Dr. Eric Kirkman.
Josh Goforth is a multi-talented storyteller who uses a variety of stringed instruments for his ballads and stories.
His stories included friends and relatives, many about his tobacco chewing, never taking the shortcut to hard work grand-paw.
Bill Lepp's, believe it or not, Paul Bunyon tall tales!
Donald Davis's school days growing up and his jokester father.
Dolores's stories included a white cat (Huck), a black cat, a speckled cat, and a one-eyed cat and the lessons she learned from them.
Audry Williams her side of the story of fame.
Dr. Eric Kirkman sings and uses musical instruments to tell the African American influence on American music.
Thursday Pop-up Shows 
Cypress Lake Golf & Tennis Club Dolores Hydock told stories about Dishing the Dirt from the Garden, and we were served ham, sausage biscuits, fruit, pastries, muffins, orange juice, coffee, and water. There were door prizes.
Florence Library Josh Goforth played the guitar, a banjo, and fiddle sang ballads, & told stories about life in Madison Couty, North Carolina.

The storytelling festival has come to a bittersweet end, and cannot wait until next year.



Thursday, February 26, 2015

Growing up

Growing up 
We grew up in the country and two of my siblings and I went to a country school.
When we moved to the city, my siblings attended Brandon Elementary School and some attended the free Maud Lindsey Kindergarten.

My first and second-grade teacher was Mrs. Jones
She would start every morning by having the class recite the pledge of allegiance to the flag and then we would say a prayer.
Mrs. Jones had a word wheel that was full of beginner words that we practiced every day.
Our first readers were the Dick, Jane, and Sally Series.
Look, Dick, look, look, see Spot run.
Help, help, said Sally.

The best time of the school day was when our teacher released us to go outside, that is when all that built-up energy exploded into fun.
We would jump, run, hop, skip, and swing, no matter what the weather, hot, cold, snowing, raining, or even when the sun was shining brightly.

When the teacher called us to return inside, our energy was still boiling.
We would come running, all the while the teacher would be saying, DON’T RUN!
I can still remember that tragic day when my best friend and I came running into the building after being told to not run.
We were the last ones in line at the water fountain, and I can still remember how great, that cold water tasted.
The water only slowed us down for a few seconds, as down the hall we ran.
I was suddenly stopped, not by a teacher, but by a door, for I had run straight into the latch of the lunchroom door.
The next thing I knew I was on the floor blood running down my face.
I was taken to the first aid room, where a bandage was applied to a gash, which was above my left eyebrow.
You would have thought that an accident would have slowed me down, but think again.
  
As children growing up in the country, we had to make our own fun, and we had a very vivid imagination, our horses were made of sticks, and our boyfriends, were characters from the television shows that we watched.
A big screen tubed television set in a wooden cabinet, playing the black and white shows was our first.
We watched many westerns Gun Smoke, Bonanza, Have Gun Will Travel, and Maverick. My favorite show, which was not a western, was Adventures in Paradise.
Everyone detested the nights we had to watch the president make his speech because he was on every channel.
To get better reception, my dad had brought home a power line pole that he put our antenna on.
The Power pole had spikes staggering up it, which allowed him to walk up to the top.
My dad had to use a ladder to get to the first set of spikes, not sure if this was to keep us from climbing to the top or not.

When we were not watching television, we were outside, which was most of the time.
There were just a few neighborhood kids that lived nearby, that were close to our ages.
My friend, who was an only child, lived down the road from us with her parents, her grandparents lived next door, and her grandmother was Cherokee Indian.

My friend's parents had several detached buildings scattered around their home.
One of those buildings contained a variety of discarded bags of clothes, hats, purses, and shoes. 
We would go inside this building and dig through each bag, trying on different dresses, shoes, and hats, to find just the right one, that we would wear that day.

Our imaginations would take us to faraway places.
As, I would find myself, aboard a large schooner with Gardner McKay, in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
A storm would be brewing, and our boat would be rocking back and forth, as the waves tossed us to and fore, which did not matter because I was standing to next a dark-skinned, browned-eyed, the man with his brown hair blowing in the wind.

We could always smell food cooking, coming from my friend's grandmother’s kitchen, and when she opened that screen door holding a plate of sugar cookies, we knew it was time for a break.
Her grandmother would call us and say, I have hot cookies and some fresh milk, and we would come running.

The older we got the more adventurous we became.
We played all the time in the forest but were told not to go near HORSESHOE BLUFF.
For some reason, we did not listen, and off we would go, walking along the cliffs and climbing down very tall trees to get to the base of the bluff.
We loved to watch the cascading waterfall, as we walked into the inclining bluff.
Such an enticing, dangerous place, where creatures could hide.
We could pretend to be cowgirls or Indian girls, that we're free to play wherever their hearts desired.

My imagination never stopped!
I would be swinging my legs back and forth pumping that swing higher and higher, stretching my legs upward towards the sky, and hoping just by chance maybe to touch the clouds. 
I would belt out a song that I had learned in church, while I was swinging. 
I felt like a bird as the words flew out of my mouth.
The big oak tree, held tight to the long cabled rope, as I twisted the rope tight as a tick and when the tension was released around I would go, getting drunk as a skunk.
What fun and I would do it repeatedly.

My dad was very inventive for he made us a go-cart. 
He used a wagon frame, a lawnmower motor, and a rope to make it work.
You would crank the Go-cart by pulling the string that was attached to the motor, but to turn it off, the spark plugs had to pull out.

There were more than enough hickory nuts to feed the forest animals and us.
We would grab several large paper sacks that were used to bring our groceries home, and take the grocery sacks into the woods, where we would fill them full, with hickory nuts of every size, kind, and variety that we could find.
We would return home with our nuts and find a good spot to crack them open, but first, we had to find two rocks, one to place the nut on, and another rock to hit the nut with.

We would retrieve one of the mother's large mixing bowls and fill the bowl full of cracked open nuts,
Then we would take the bowl full of nuts inside and pick the goodies out with the edge of a bobby pin.

In the early spring, when we knew we were going into town, we would get several paper sacks and fill them full with Polk salad and sell them in town.

Our house was built along the side of a hill; from our kitchen and bedroom windows, we could see for miles the forest.
In the distance, we could see a very large power line that looked like the kind that is used by Radio Station to pick up radio wave frequencies.
Our house was built by the sweat and brow of my parents, which took many years and was never completely finished, during the ten years that I lived there.
I can still see and feel the inside of our quaint spot on earth; which we called home, where we felt safe from the environment that surrounded us.
Our home began with just three rooms, but grew as we grew, from one bedroom into three.
Some of our walls were covered with sheetrock, while we walked on plank floors.
Our kitchen was filled with a long kitchen table, with just enough chairs for each of us to set in.
There was a stove, a refrigerator, a very large sink with cold water piped inside to our kitchen, and a very large bar for storage below and above.
The only plumbing inside our home was in the kitchen sink and that is where we would get our bathwater.
The water had to be boiled and poured into a very large tub, along with cold water which every child shared for a bath.
I remember once, sharing the tub with my bride doll, and after putting her head underwater, all her hair fell out. She no longer looked like a bride.

I guess raising eight children was not easy, especially when you put them to bed, only to be awakened by laughter and talking.
Very few cars drove by our house, so at night the only things that we could hear were the sounds outside.

We could hear the crickets rubbing their legs together, crooking of frogs, Junebugs, July-flies, owls hooting, wolfs howling, and sometimes we would hear the sound of a woman screaming, this was our mountain lion.

No curtains hang on our windows that face the forest; there was no need, what forest animal was going to peek inside?
Every now and then, the moon would peek inside; sometimes she would blink her eyes when the clouds covered them.
The fireflies could be seen throughout the forest as the night filled the sky.







2024 Christmas Journal Activies

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