Wednesday, May 18, 2016

2014 May 14-May 17 Storytellers visit the Shoals and UNA Front Porch Storytelling Festival

Thursday, May 15, 2014 
Storytellers visit Shoals 

2014, May 14, 8:30–11:30 A.M.
Free Storytelling Workshop UNA front porch storytelling festival with Dolores Hydock

2014, May 14,12:30-3:30 P.M. Florence Library Bill Huddleston
Using Storytelling for Adults: Storytelling anywhere for anyone

2014 May 15,11:30-12:30 P.M. Florence Library Dolores Hydock 
Footprints on the sky, Memories of Chandler Mountain 

2014 May 15,1:30-2:30 P.M. Keller Library Dolores Hydock 
Norman Rockwell, every picture tells a story. 


Friday, May 16, 2014
9:00–9:50 A.M. Walt Aldridge talked about his writing 
10:00–10:50 A.M. BIL LEPP talked about I love my dentist
11:00–11:50 A.M. Dolores Hydock told a story about Sallie Independence Foster
12noon 2:00 P.M. Lunch
2:00–2:50 P.M. Donal Davis-
3:00–3:50 P.M. Diane Ferlatte told a story about Burr Rabbit
4:00–4:50 P.M. Barbara McBride-Smith
7:00–9:00 P.M. Olio, Aldridge, Davis, Ferlatte, Hydock, Lepp, and McBride-Smith (I did not attend the evening performances)


Saturday, May 17, 2014
9:00–9:50 A.M. Barbara McBride-Smith 
10:00–10:50 A.M. Donald Davis-cripple Joe
11:00–11:50 A.M. Diane Ferlatte talked about her mother
12noon-2:00 P.M. lunch
2:00–2:50 P.M. Dolores Hydock-Talked about her mom & her cat, and women of the West
3:00–3:50 P.M. Bil Lepp-Talked mountain lions
4:00–4:50 P.M. Walt Aldridge-Talked about his music
5-7 dinner

7-9 Olio, Aldridge, Davis, Ferlatte, Hydock, Lepp, and McBride-Smith

This was my first time attending the festival.
I loved every minute and every story told.
I attended the workshop at UNA, the seminar at the Florence Library, and the storytelling event at both the Florence and Keller Libraries.  
I wish I could perform and tell stories like the storytellers. 



I spent the whole day at the Performance Center in the Guillot Building at UNA listening to great storytellers.
Barbara McBride-Smith didn't come to the festival because I wrote everything down. I think someone in her family was ill and she was unable to attend. The schedule above was changed. 

The first storyteller was Walt Aldridge. He sang & played his guitar for several songs that he wrote, "I loved her first," "No getting over me," and "Modern day Bonnie and Clyde." He discussed songwriting and the process of getting his songs produced. He works at UNA in the Department of the Entertainment Industry. He brought his mother and fiancée with him.

Bil Lepp told the story "I like my dentist"! Bil's first trip to the dentist was to have a tooth pulled, but the amusing part was when he returned to have his teeth cleaned. The hygienist left the room and told Bil not to get out of his seat. She should have told him not to touch anything. I thought I would laugh my socks off as he told the story. Bil is an older version of Dennis the Menace.

Bill told a story about when he was just a small boy and how his dad was going to shoot Santa Claus's reindeer, Rudolph. One day, he asks his dad how he got the bald spot on the top of his head, and his dad replies, 'Rudolph shot over it, leaving me with this bald spot.' Dad is going to kill Rudolph! I thought this was going to be the worst Christmas ever! So many things happened that year, and just before Christmas morning, I decided to unwrap the presents under the tree. I re-wrapped presents, put them back under the Christmas tree, and went to bed. The next morning, Rudolph was not dead, and I rushed to open my presents —but to my surprise! My presents were different; instead of a football, I got a rag wrapped up in a football. I hurried to open another present only to find a can of soup. Mom knew I had opened my presents and rewrapperewrappedhe was teaching me a lesson!!!!!!

Dolores Hydock brings to life the story of a 12-year-old girl, Sallie Independence Foster, who has three brothers who fought in the Civil War. 
Sallie's life after she marries, the birth of her children, the death of her mother, the death of her oldest daughter, the death of her husband, and then her own death. 
These stories are from Sallie's journals and letters, as well as from letters her brothers wrote home during the Civil War.
Bobby Horton softly played and beautifully sang as a supporting musician.

Diane Ferlatte, a storyteller, along with Eric Swinderman, performed by singing and telling many stories. She told a story about a tiger who had all the food and would not share it with the other animals, and how he was outsmarted by Br'er Rabbit. She told a true story about Fannie Lou Hamer and her famous quote: "All my life I've been sick and tired. Now I'm sick and tired of being sick and tired."

Donald Davis's storyteller told the story about his mother, a schoolteacher, who did not want to learn to drive. Another story is about riding the octopus at the fair and how the two unfortunate and pitiful kittens came to be part of their family. Very funny —I couldn't stop laughing
Donald shared another story about his family, specifically about being a one-car family, and how his mother learned to drive. My dad was a banker, and my mother was a teacher. One day, my dad said to my mother You need to know how to drive, so I won't have to take you to work and the kids to school. Finally, she learned to drive, but when my dad said we needed two cars, that was where she drew the line. Therefore, for years, we were a one-car family, and Dad tried and tried to persuade Mom to get another car. 
Finally, one day it worked! We drove by this car lot, and Dad told Mom, 'I just need half a car, just one that will get me to work and back.' Mom said for Dad and me to get out of the car, and we did. Then she slid into the driver's seat and drove off. 

The salesperson came outside and said," Can I help you ?" My dad said, I just need a car to get me back and forth to work. "Therefore, he took us around to the back side of the car lot where the cars were parked on the gravel. He said Just Today, you can have any car back here for just $100, so my dad thought, I'm going to get the biggest one back here. My dad said How much for this one and the salesperson said Today, you could have it for $75.00. The salesperson said every time you fill up with gas, you fill up with oil, so my dad paid the salesman. We started home, and that new car sputtered and sputtered. I said, 'Dad, what is wrong with the car?' Dad kindly replied, 'The car has a mind of its own.' Our new car changed its mind more than 40 times on the way home. I said, 'Dad, what is that smell inside the car?' and Dad kindly replied, 'A new car smell.' But to me, it smelled like mothballs and urine.  
Well, we drove that car for about three years. I turned sixteen and began sharing driving duties with my dad in the old car. One day, I borrowed the car to pick up my friends because we were going to the bowling alley, and they replied, 'Can this car go faster? We could get there quicker if we walked.' Therefore, I gunned it! It went from twenty-five to fifty-five when we heard this awful sound. It just stopped, and we just laughed, not thinking we would have to walk back home. I called my dad and told him that our neighbor had brought a rope and was pulling the old car home. Dad had told our neighbor, the school principal where Mom worked, not to say anything to her about the car.
Mom was not home, so my dad parked the car in its regular spot and hung the keys where he always turned them. At supper that night, I waited for Dad to tell Mom about the vehicle, but he never did. He just said Maw, tomorrow I will need your car to go across town, and you can drive the old one. That was the end of that!
The next day, my mom, my brother, and I loaded into the old car, and my mom tried to crank it. It made an awful sound, and I said Mom, you flooded it! Therefore, she tried again, and it still would not crank. Mom said to go next door and get our neighbor, so I did. He came over to the car and said to Mom, " I think you have broken it. He took us to school that morning and brought us home that evening. Mom sat down to make the best supper ever for Dad. We sat down to supper that night, and not a word was said about the old car except that Mom said, I have talked to your uncle about getting a new car. " My daddy was happy, but he did not let on to Mom. Therefore, the next day we drove over to my uncle's car lot and bought a new car, and that is how we became a two-car family.

Day 3: Saturday, May 17, 2014
The first storyteller was Dolores Hydock – she told a story about her niece getting ready for college, taking her shopping in Birmingham's malls, and spending quite a bit of time on the sofa, talking. She told the story about her very independent mom who came to live with her. 
The white independent cat knocked on her door. Could this be her dead mother?  
Could this independent white cat be her mother reincarnated? 
Dolores can bring even the dullest stories to life. She is funny, inspiring, innovative, creative, and a great storyteller.

Bil Lepp shared a story about hiking in a California state park and encountering a mountain lion. He baptized the mountain lion nine times because cats are believed to have nine lives. Bill has a fantastic imitation and is a great storyteller. On both days, he brought his wife, two children, mother, and father-in-law to support him. Bil reminded me of Jeff Foxworthy

Donald Davis told the story of how his father became known as cripple Joe. Donald said if my dad had not been a cripple, his life would have been so different. He said my dad always said to make the most of what life deals you.
Donald is funny, intelligent, and very down-to-earth. I could listen to him all day.

Diane Ferlatte, accompanied by Eric Swinderman, sang and shared stories about her mother's life growing up in Louisiana, her marriage, her move to California, her experiences traveling by airplane, living with her and her grandchildren, and her eventual death. She sang several spiritual songs. Diane puts her soul into songs and storytelling.

Walt Aldridge told stories about songwriting. His first song was "Holding her & Loving you," recorded by Earl Thomas Conley. Walt sang a song about a spiritual prayer of a child, and somehow that prayer filtered through into heaven to be answered by GOD! Walt is funny, witty, wise, a great storyteller, and very down-to-earth.

Dolores brought to life the true stories of strong women who settled in the West. Thankfully, I did not live in the good old days of the Wild West, when people traveled for up to 5 months to reach California. It was recounted that it was difficult for women to make a living during the 1800s, and men, n well n women, could be bold and willing to take risks to be different. 

Day 1: I spent the day at UNA in a workshop with Dolores Hydock and several other women who were given new names.

Day 2: I spent the day at the Florence Library, where I listened to Dolores share her story about Chandler Mountain. Then, I traveled to the Keller Library in Tuscumbia to hear Dolores tell the story of Norman Rockwell. Drove home only to come back to Tuscumbia to see the Wild West Rodeo Stampede Parade and hear the Pine Hill Hiank's sing.

Day 3: I spent the entire day at the UNA Storytelling Festival sitting beside my friend Wanda, listening to Walt Aldridge, Bil Lepp, Donald Davis, Diane Ferlatte with Eric Swinderman, Dolores Hydock, and Bobby Horton

Day 4: I spent the entire day at the UNA Storytelling Festival sitting beside my friend Wanda, listening to Walt Aldridge, Bil Lepp, Donald Davis, Diane Ferlatte with Eric Swinderman, Dolores Hydock, and Bobby Horton


I had the best time ever, and I hope to repeat it again next year, on Friday, May 15, & Saturday, May 16, 2015.



Monday, May 16, 2016

2015 May 16 What door do I use?

A funny thing happened to me today
At the performance center, I had to go to the restroom
I was not sure where it was and asked my friend sitting next to me
She said I don't know,
But when you find it, let me know.
I open the double doors leading outside the performance center
The restroom was straight
In front of me.
I used the restroom and started to return butt, but I was not sure which door I came through.
I tried the door in front of me. It would not open!
I looked at the two kids sitting next to the door and said,
"Did I come through this
Door?"
The 2 kids had this puzzled look on their faces.
I tried the door again.
I looked back at the 2 kids and said, "I guess u have to use the latch
to open the
Door.!
As I walked inside, they probably
said,
"What was wrong with that woman!"

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

2010 April 7, Wednesday, A day trip to Tulepo MS

Hubby and I traveled south along the Natchez Trace, stopping along the way to take pictures of markers. Bear Creek Mound, Pharr MoundsDonivan SloughOld TraceTwenty Mile Bottom.

We arrived in Tupelo, MS, the birthplace of Elvis Presley. We walked around the house and looked inside, we walked along the Walk of Life printed on the granite marker laid around the birth home. We saw the statue of Elvis at age 13. We saw the Elvis Presley marker and the Blues marker, telling about his influence on Blues music. We walked into the church where Elvis and his family attended. We visited Elvis's chapel, "a place of meditation". We walked along the eight-foot "Story Wall", about Elvis's life told by friends of the family. We stopped to watch the fountain with thirteen upper spouts representing his life in Tupelo. We visited the gift shop. 
Our last stop was Memphis Bound, where we saw a replica of the 1939 green Plymouth that Elvis drove to Memphis, TN.


We rode downtown in Lee County, Tupelo, stopping to take pictures. We stopped at the Convention Center and saw the Shake Rag Blues Marker, which tells about Elvis's influence on Blues Music. Inside on display were pictures of Elvis and Elvis's White jumpsuit. 
We saw the Lyric Theater, where the family may have gone to see a movie. Our last stop in Tupelo was the Tupelo National Battlefield
Bear Creek Mound
Pharr Mounds
Pharr Mounds
Donivan Slough 
Old Trace 
Twenty Mile Bottom
Elvis Presley's birth home was built in 1934
Elvis Presley's birth home 
Statue of Elvis Presley as a boy
Elvis Presley's boyhood church 
Elvis Presley Museum 
1939 Plymouth
Shake Rag Blues Marker 
Shake Rag Blues Marker 
Colorful guitar with Elvis' face
Convention Center display of Elvis Presley and Marty Stewart
Fair Park and City Hall
Lyric Theater "All Shook Up" 


Tupelo National Battlefield
Battle of Tupelo and The Western Campaign 1864
We ate lunch at Cracker Barrel.
Tupelo National Battlefield 
We took a different route home. We stopped in Red Bay, Alabama, where I took a few pictures of a mural on the side of a store building, and some war memorials. 
Mural in Red Bay
Music Hall of Fame in Tuscumbia 
We ended our trip by stopping at the Music Hall of Fame to take a picture of the Blues Marker.

The Blues Trail from Mississippi to Alabama 
The Blues Trail from Mississippi to Alabama 

It had been a full day of driving south on the Natchez Trace, stopping to see several sights. A stop at Elvis Presley's birth home site. We made a stop at the Lee County-Tupelo Convention Center.
We visited the Tupelo National Battlefield. We ate lunch at Cracker Barrel. We stopped in Red Bay. Our last stop was at the Music Hall of Fame, where the Alabama to Mississippi Blues Marker was located.

Monday, May 9, 2016

2010 & 2015 Coffee Cemetery then and now

September 8, 2010 

I saw a tree full of these.
Road to the Cemetery 
Coffee Cemetery could not be seen from the road. There was a historical marker providing information about the Cemetery.
We pulled into someone's driveway and parked in the area where one could park to enter the road leading to the Cemetery. There was a gate that I had to go through. Then down this long dirt road to the Cemetery.
The Cemetery was well kept, but there was no way to get inside the wall, so I leaned over it to take pictures of the graves. 
Many of Coffee's family members are buried in this Cemetery.
Just a few feet away are several unmarked slave graves

Information about the Coffee family:
General John R. Coffee, son of Captain Joshua and Elizabeth (Graves) Coffee, married Mary Donelson on October 3, 1809, in Davidson County, TN. There were ten known children born of this union: Mary (Hutchings), John Donelson, Elizabeth, Andrew Jackson, Rachel Jackson (Dyas), Alexander Donelson, Catherine Harriet, Emily, William Donelson, and Joshua Coffee.
General John R. Coffee fought in the War of 1812 under the command of Andrew Jackson. He raised the 2nd Regiment of Volunteer Mounted Riflemen, which was made up of primarily Tennessee militiamen and a few Alabamians. On September 4, 1814, he was involved in the Andrew Jackson-Benton Brothers duel. He married Mary Donelson, daughter of John and Mary (Purnell) Donelson, and a relative of Andrew Jackson's wife, Rachel Donelson Robards Jackson. His father, Captain Joshua Coff, is believed to have served in the Revolutionary War.

He was a merchant, a partner in land speculation with Andrew Jackson, and worked as a surveyor in Florence, Lauderdale Co., AL. Surveying the boundary line between Alabama and Mississippi. www.findagrave.com


Coffee Cemetery 
Coffee Cemetery 

I went back to the Cemetery Site on April 10, 2015.
I no longer had to walk through the woods to the Cemetery. 
There was a sidewall Cemetery. The Cemetery could be seen from the road, which was once hidden in the woods. 
I could not get to the Cemetery due to construction. 
Walmart bought the land, and before they would let Walmart build a store, the area had to be surveyed for slave graves, and many grave sites were found. That area was set aside, and Wal-Mart built its store, but not on any grave sites.


Coffee Cemetery 2015
Every orange flag represents a slave grave.

2010 March 27, Saturday, Grandkid discovering the Natural Resources of Florence

I took three of my grandchildren to the Hall Memorial Native Plant Garden at TVA.
Where we saw the Iris Crostata, Jacob's Ladder, Bloodroot, Solidago caesiaSessile Leaf BellwortOakleaf HydrangeaOhio SpiderwortWild ColumbinePurple Phacelia & others. 
The grandchildren listened patiently as Mr. Rose told them about all the wildflowers. 
We left the garden and went deeper into the woods to see more wildflowers. 
The grandkids love walking in the woods. I am sure some of the information stayed in their heads.
A group picture at the end of the hike. 
Walking deeper into the woods, looking for wildflowers
The grandkids wanted to explore the TVA Waterfall. As we were walking along the banks of the Tennessee River, we saw many birds. We could see the TVA Dam,  the Marriott Hotel, River Heritage Park, and the Tower 380 Degrees Restaurant
Standing on the banks of the river
the backdrop of the Waterfall 
We stopped at Domino's for a pizza and took it to Deibert Park
After we finished eating, we walked the trail to learn more about our environment. We stopped at the pond to watch the turtles pop their heads up out of the water. 
Watching the turtles
Watching for the Turtles
We walked deeper into the woods, where we saw signs listing the different creatures, plants, and trees we might see.

The grandkids discovered some of the metal art displayed in the park to bring a bit of culture to the park. 
Discovering Art 
The grandkids enjoyed playing on the train, monkey bars, swings, horses, tire swing, and seesaw.
We stopped at my dad's to wish him a Happy Birthday. It had been a full day for all of us. 
Riding the train 
Swinging 
  





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