Monday, November 7, 2022

2022 Nov 7, Early Morning Adventures

Early this morning, it was cold, wet and foggy. We rode to Jack for breakfast, where I ordered a single biscuit and gravy. Hubby ordered the big breakfast of eggs, sausage, hash rounds, biscuits, and gravy. As we rode home, we saw the sun trying to peak out. 

Sunrise 

 Later that morning, we rode to town and stopped at Hobby Lobby (lots of people looking for holiday decorations), Dollar Tree, and Ollie’s then to get our B12 shots. 
We rode to Muscle Shoals, stopped, and ate lunch at the new Highway 55 Restaurant. I ordered a hamburger with the fixings, onion rings, and unsweetened iced tea. I ate about half of my hamburger but all of my onion rings. Hubby also ordered a Mushroom hamburger and onion rings. He ate all his hamburger but not all his onion rings, so we had enough for another meal. 
 Bought gas at Murphy's and stopped at Foodland in Muscle Shoals for crab legs(they were on sale for $15.99 a pound.  Since we were on 6th Street, we headed to Leighton Pond on Fennel Road to see & listen to birds. 
Leighton Pond on Fennell Road 

All we saw was mud and a few fish flopping. Believe it or not, fish were swimming in the pond. If it gets any lower, there will not be any water for the fish to swim in. 
Hubby turned on the GPS System to take us to a different route home. On our way, we saw a small cemetery, the sign said Shaw Cemetery, just off 6th Street. Several of my relatives are buried in this cemetery. I did not take any pictures there. Next, we turned onto Shaw Road, and I said to hubby I wonder who the cemetery and road are named for and that is when we saw a historic marker.
The Shaw Home Colbert County
The Shaw Home Colbert Baldy Shaw purchased this property from the state of Alabama in 1830. In 1844, he constructed this home. Over the years, various property owners made changes and additions to the Shaw Home and its outbuildings. The canning building is directly north of the home and allows for the canning of garden-raised food without affecting the temperature of the main house. Evidence of Fennell Road is directly behind the canning building on the north boundary line of the home. During the Civil War, Fennell Road provided constant access to and from the many skirmishes between the Northern and Southern armies. The Battle of Town Creek was one of those skirmishes. The Shaw Home is currently a working farm with 2 wells and 9 farm buildings and is an existing example of the tranquility of life in the south. The home also serves as a reminder of the past sadness of the Civil War, fought between brothers, families, and states.
 Listed in the Alabama Register of Landmarks & Heritage Marker erected in 2013 by Drs. Gerald, and Patricia Miller Murray. 

Bales of Cotton wrapped in pink 

 We also saw hundreds of rolled cotton bales and fields still waiting to be harvested. We road to the Wheeler Dam but had to take a detour for the bridge was out on Highway 101. 


At Wheeler Dam, we saw a few cormorants diving for fish, herons flying overhead, and terns sitting on light poles as we crossed the dam. As we were leaving the dam, I heard several bird sounds. We rode to the park across the highway, where I walked around but did not hear any birds. 

Joe Wheeler State Park on the Lawrence County side is covered in colorful fallen leaves. 

We came back across the highway and road to the overlook at the dam, and that is where I heard a lot of Common Grackles and European Starlings. We rode up to Joe Wheeler State Park-Alabama near the entrance and stopped to listen to bird sounds. 

A couple of Muscovy ducks swimming in Wheeler Lake looking for fish

I walked down to the edge of the water, and that is where I saw several ducks on the other side of the almost dried-up lake. There were a couple of ducks swimming nearby, and I saw a Gray heron in the distance. I heard several red-bellied woodpeckers, hairy woodpeckers, American robins, Field sparrow song sparrows, a couple of Muscovy ducks, mallards, and lots of Kildeer. 

Three females standing near Joe Wheeler Lodge 

 We rode to the lodge, stopping near the wooded area, hoping to hear several birds, but we heard none. Then, as we started to leave, we saw a deer. I started taking pictures of it, and then I saw two more. I got out of the car and took several pictures. They were not frightened at all, even posed for me. The day started off damp and gloomy, but the sun came out for a while. It clouded back up but never rained. We did not plan the day's adventures but just let the day unfold. What fun we had!

Sunday, September 4, 2022

2022 Sep 3, Sugerfest & Historic Buildings Arab, Alabama

 Today, we rode to Arab to stroll through the park filled with over 100 vendors. Tents were lined up as far as the eye could see selling items from A to Z. 

Vendor Tents

The sweet aroma of baked goods filled the air, making my mouth water. You could almost taste the barbeque, hamburgers, and hotdogs that were being cooked. Lines of people at every food truck.

Funnel Cake, Ribbon Fries, and freshly squeezed lemonade were just a few of the food items sold.

Santa Fe Food Truck

There was a petting zoo with two large lazy cows, a goat trying to climb out of his pen, a miniature long-haired goat that kids just loved to pet, and many other animals.

Petting Zoo
Pony Rides

There was a long line for the pony rides. Kids were climbing walls, playing games, swinging, and sliding.

The splash was opened for those who wanted to cool off.

There was music playing in the concert area.

People play cornhole and other games.

But we were more interested in the Historic Village area where we saw. 

1. The Boyd Homestead
Boyd Homestead 1890-2006

Lola Boyd lived her entire 99 years in the Boyd Homestead.
Her dad, Matthew Boyd, built the home in 1890 on 160 acres of land in Arab. Ms. Lola was born in 1906 and was the youngest of 11 siblings. She graduated high school in 1929 from Arab and went to college and received her teaching degree from George C. Peabody College in Nashville, TN. 
This home was not built with indoor bathrooms or closets. An 
outhouse served as the bathroom, and a well was located outside the home that provided water for the family. The home also did not have electricity until the 1940s. 
Ms. Lola taught school and never married nor had children She helped take care of her parents and was given the Homestead after they passed. The home was then willed to the Historical Society after she died in 2006. The society moved and restored the home to mimic the 1940s era.

The Stage Coach INN @Elvin Light Museum 

2. The Elvin Light Museum

Inside were cubicles filled with different items from:

Hyatt's Boarding House

Dr. Ellis Porch and Dr. Braxton Smith's Office

Arab Infirmary Dr. Ellis Porch and Dr. Braxton Smith

The Thompson Family

Russell Rice, General Mdse Est. 1897

Peoples Drug Store

Reed Pring Shop 

Fleming Barber Shop 

The Stage Coach INN

3. The Ruth Homemaker's Clubhouse
Belongs to the Homemakers of Arab who hold demonstrations and enjoy canning, quilting, knitting, and mattress making. 

4. The Phillips Blacksmith

George C. Phillips Blacksmith Shop

Another very important business to the Farmers was the Blacksmith Shop where he could get his tools sharpened and mules shod. Mr. George Phillips had owned his own blacksmith shop in Scottsboro, Al, and was a resident blacksmith for the Georg C.  Phillips Blacksmith shop. Mr. Phillips has since passed away, but his legacy lives on. The Blacksmith Ship is built from vintage wood to mimic a structure from the 1940s era. 

The farmer looked forward to carrying his animals to the Blacksmith shop to be shooed. This was important to the well-being of the animals, but it also gave the farm a break from the farm and an opportunity to socialize with fellow farmers.

Horseshoeing is done today by a farrier who goes out to the farm every 4 to 6 weeks in a truck equipped with a forge.

Tractors have replaced the Mule. Therefore, the need for local blacksmith shops has diminished.

5. The Winslett Barn - used for weddings and events

6. The Rice Church 
The Rice Church 1910-1950s

This Church building, originally known as Liberty Primitive Baptist Church, was once located in the Rice Community near Arab. It was donated to the Historical Society in 1993 and restored to a manner representing rural churches from the early 1900s. Today, it is used for small weddings, memorial services, and spiritual needs. The Church would hold services, baptisms, weddings, and Christenings, sometimes all on the same day. Farmers that traveled far for Church would bring their own lunch and typically stay all day. 
They really took advantage of Sundays since this was the only day they would have time to attend.

Inside sat a woman playing old-time gospel music on the piano. She said the church where I now attend had a piano player but got sick and could not play, so the church asked her if she would fill in that was over 20 years ago. She was a retired teacher and had taught music. Her talent was far beyond the previous piano player, and the other players didn't want to come back. She played beautifully.

7. The Hunt School House
The Hunt School 1935-1952

This two-room school is very typical of the schools in Alabama built during the Great Depression era: high ceilings, a"cloakroom" for each classroom, and architectural details in the true Colonial Revival design. The Hunt School operated in a small community south of Arab from 1835-1952. When school buses became popular in 1952, students were bused into larger schools. The school year revolved around spring planting and fall harvesting since most students lived on a farm. The school went without electricity for the first ten years. There was no water, cafeteria, indoor bathrooms, or library. Children walked to school and washed their hands in a pan filled with water.

9. The Smith Country Store 

 Inside, it was filled with items of a different era. In the very back behind the coal heater sat a group singing and playing Bluegrass music. We listened to a couple of songs that I had never heard before.

10. The Smalley Grist Mill 

When a farmer and his family would move to a new area, there were two businesses he would immediately look for.

One was a grist mill where he could get this corn ground into cornmeal. Since cornbread was such an important food staple at the Great Depression supper table, the Historic Village needed to have a Grist Mill. Mr. Jerrell Smally bought the Grist Mill from Arab's old Farmers Ex change and donated it to the Arab Historical Society. The building was built from vintage lumber to mimic a structure from the 1940s era. 

During the Great Depression, everyone grew corn. A large family would consume as much as 300 pounds of corn a year. 
The farmers would gather a portion of their dried corn during harvest and take it to the local Grist Mill to get shucked, shelled, and ground for cornbread. They would pay for this service by leaving a portion of their corn with the miller.


Monday, July 25, 2022

Bird Sounds (Alabama) using Cornell Merlin App Backyard Song Birds



Acadian Flycatcher

Empidonax virescent

American Crow

Corvus brachyrhynchos 

American Flycatch 

Tyrannus savana

American Gold Finch

Spinus tristis

American Robin

Turdus migatorius 

Barn Swallow 

Hirundo rustica-

Belted Kingfisher

Megaceryle alcyon-

Black Kite 

Milvus migraines 

Black-White Warbler

Mniotilta varia

Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher

Polioptila cerulea

Blue Grosbeak

Passerine caeulea    

Blue Jay

Cyanocitta cristate

Brown-Headed Cowbird 

Molothrus ater-

Brown Thrasher 

Toxostoma rufum

Carolina Chickadee

Poecile carolinensis

Caroline Wren

Thryothorus ludovicianus 

Chimney Swift 

Chaetura pelagica

Chipping Sparrow

spizella passerina

Common Crackle 

Quiscaus quiscula

Common Nighthawk

Chordeiles minor

Common Yellow Throat

Geothlypis trichas     

Downy Woodpecker

Dryobates pubescens

Eastern Blue Bird

Sialia sails 

Eastern Phoebe

Sayornis phoebe

Eastern Towhee

Pupil erythrophthalmus 

Eastern Wood-Pewee

Scalia sialis-

Eurasian Penduline-Tit 

Remix pendulinus-

Field Sparrow

Spizella puslla

Grasshopper Sparrow

Ammodramus savannarum-

Great Crested Flycatcher

Myiarchus crintius-

Hairy Woodpecker 


House Sparrow 

Passer  domesticus

House Finch

Haemorhous Mexicans 

House Wren

Troglodytes aedon

Indigo Bunting

Passerine cyenea

Killdeer 

Charadrius Vociferus-

Least Sandpipper 

Calidris Minutilla-

Mouring Dove 

Zenaida macroua-

Northern Bobwhite 


Northern Cardinal 

Cardinalis cardinals 

Northern Flicker 

Colaptes auratus 

Northern Mocking Bird

Minus polyglottos

Northern Rough-Winged Swallow 

Steigidopteryx Serripennis-

Pileated Woodpecker

Dryocopus pileatus

Northern Parula

Setophaga Americana

Purple Finch 

Haemmorhous purpureus 

Purple Martin

Proven subis

Red-bellied Woodpecker 

Melanerpes carolinus 

Red-Eyed Vireoo 

Vireo olivaceous 

Red Shoulder Hawk 

Buteo lineatus

Red Tail Hawk 

Buteo Jamaicensis -

Red-winged Backbird

 Agelaius phoeniceus

Song Sparrow

Melospiza Melodia 

Scarlet Tanager

Pirange Olivace-

Summer Tanager

Pirange rubra

Tufted Titmouse

Baeolophus bicolor

Western Wood-Pewee

Contopus Sordidulus-

White-Eyed Vireo 

Vireo griseus 

Yellow-billed Cuckoo 

Coccyzus americanus

Yellow-Breasted Chat 

Icteria Virens 

White-breasted Nuthatch

Sitta carolinensis-

This are bird sounds that I have heard and recorded on my Iphone.

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, April 9, 2022

2022 April 9, Walking Tour Moulton, AL

 Today, I rode to Moulton, Alabama, to join a group of people where we enjoyed several different people talking about sites in Moulton. 

Our First Stop was the Moulton Negro High School, also called Moulton Rosenwald School. 


Moulton Negro High School, also called Moulton Rosenwald School. 
Near this site in the 1920s, a school was constructed with funds and labor from the African-American community along with funds from the Public Whites and the Rosenwald Foundation. In the 1950s, new buildings replaced wooden structures. Most of the block-laying, plastering, and mortar mixing was done by African-American volunteers. Much of the funding came from faculty, students, and their families. The school closed in 1970 due to desegregation. The school exemplified the educational pride of the African-American community. School Principals were Mrs. Maggie Truss, Mrs. Addie Irwin, Ms. Pearl F. Crenshaw, Mr. A.G. Petty, Mrs. Hazel A. Shelley, Mr. Samuel A. Shelley, Ms. Ora Smith, Mr. Noble Jones, Mr. James Poe, Mr. C.C. Chunn.

We listened to a woman speak about the school that once was a Negro High School but now is an elementary and junior high for remote learning. 

Next, we rode down the street to the Byler Road Church of Christ AME, where we listened to another woman talk about the history of the church. 

We then rode to the Freeman Tabernacle Church on Byler Road, where we listened to another woman talk about that church and its history. 

In 2019, the Freeman Tabernacle Missionary Baptist Church celebrated its 150th Anniversary. 

Isaac Owens donated the land for the church, and for a short time, the Baptists and Methodists worshiped together. 

Reverend Freeman was the minister of the church for over 35 years. 

Freeman Tabernacle church celebrated its 150 years of service in 2019. 

We stopped at the Old Moulton Cemetery and listened to several different women talk about important people buried in the cemetery. They were in period dresses.  

Alicia Carpenter played the character of Miss Lucy Downing, the daughter of James and Mary Downing. 

Her father died when she was about four years old, and her mother went to work for the Post Office. She was appointed postmistress of Moulton and served for 17 years. 

Mother Mollie Downing 1955-1933
wife of 
James Downing 
"Well done, thou good and faithful servant, enter thou"

                    Lucy Downing, daughter of James & Mollie Downing 1886-1968
    
Lucy never married, and she followed in her mother's footsteps as postmistress of Moulton. 

We stopped in front of the Smith Chapel CME Church and listened to a woman talk about the history of the church there. 


Smith Chapel C.M.E. Church 
On this site, in 1871, former slaves constructed one of the first churches and schools for African Americans in Moulton. The Colored Methodist purchased most of the materials used for the building. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Nabors Owen gave land for the Color Baptist and Colored Methodist Church and School Moulton. The congregations worshipped together until 1874. The course is named in honor of Rev. Andrew Smith, a former pastor


Mural of Moulton 

Stopped to take a picture of the mural, not quite finished, about the history of Moulton. 

My last stop was at The Hot Spot, where we listened to the history of the Hot Spot and the history of Byer Road. 

Byler Road 

Pioneer Alabama's settled path to new lands, agriculture, transport, and commerce began in Northwest Alabama. The 140-mile corridor was designed on Dec 19, 1819, by the state legislators. This was Alabama's first state legislative action. It started at the junction of Shoals Creek and Jackson Military Road, 10 miles northeast of Florence, AL. It ended at Warrior River Falls at the state capital crossing in Tuscaloosa, Al.


Saturday, February 5, 2022

2022 Feb 1, Day Trip to Guntersville, Alabama

Today, the hubby and I are going on an adventure to Guntersville. 

I had been told that there was an eagle nest along Lake Guntersville Park on Sunset Drive. 

We stopped at McDonald's along the way for a couple of apple pies and Diet Coke.

We saw several people at the park with their cameras with large lenses sitting on tripods, watching and waiting for the eagle to leave the nest. 

I had to use the restroom and went in search of one, but I did not find one, so we left.

We rode further down into the park, and there we found restrooms. Along the way, I spotted several ducks, geese, and seagulls along the waterfront, so we stopped. 

Ducks

People were walking, jogging, and feeding the waterfowl. 

I started taking pictures of the seagulls, geese, and ducks.  I spotted several sparrows scratching in the dirt, looking for food. 

One of my favorite birds is the Downy Woodpecker. 

Downy Woodpecker

I  heard a pecking, and this downy woodpecker was going to town on the side of a rotten tree. It was hard to get a good picture because he was in the shade most of the time, but I did get a couple of good pictures when he stopped pecking right before he flew away.

Hubby spotted a red-headed woodpecker. I was super excited to see a Redheaded Woodpecker, for I had only seen one in the wild. 

Red-headed Woodpecker 

I took pictures of the colorful Bluebirds.

You will not see a bluebird at your backyard feeders. 

Bluebird 

I took many pictures today, but I didn't get one of the bald eagles. 

That was okay because I got one of the red-headed woodpeckers. 

We rode to O'Bryan's in Hartselle for a late lunch. I ordered steak and sweet potato. 

We also stopped at Krogers, where we purchased a few groceries, a bouquet of flowers, and a potting plant.

The flowers that we bought at Krogers

We looked for hawks and bald eagles along the powerline near the old Papermill. We spotted a couple of red-tailed hawks. Didn't see any bald eagles. 

We stopped at Wheeler Dam, where we saw several Pelicans, cormorants, and a gray heron landing at the substation. 

Gray Heron 









2024 Christmas Journal Activies

 Merry Christmas and Happy New Year  To all my friends and family Hope this year brought you lots of health and happiness.  Just a recap ...