Mom came by her wandering foot genetically. She was born in 1918 and on her father’s
vacation excursions. Niagara Falls or
the Pacific Ocean, all the same to him, from Cleveland, Ohio. I wonder what my grandmother thought of
lugging bedding for a family, and probably guests, from one set of tourist
cabins to another. I do recall Mom
telling of one vacation in which she had cherry pie for breakfast every
morning.
Travel and vacations were important when I was a child. A trip of several days to St. Louis when I
was about six or seven involved motels and hotels, and probably tipped my
frugal mother (and father) into the camping mode, the accommodation I recall
from my childhood. Some of my first
blogs recounted family camping, and especially a tent my dad fashioned of a parachute, marbles, and a tent pole.
Mom budgeted for the annual family vacation. She had a shoe box with envelopes, each
labeled with something she was saving for.
One envelope was the vacation fund and the figures would accumulate down
the outside of the envelope. On one very
cold winter morning the engine block of the family car cracked. But by cashing some bonds and using the
vacation fund our family left behind the 1935 Dodge. My brother Walt and I were not sorry to be
sitting in the back seat of a 1948 Dodge.
No more sheet metal slicing the backs of our legs.
When we moved to this house Mom was seventy, and still
travelling. In the preceding decade she
had visited friends and relatives in Missouri, Texas, Florida and points
between, accompanied by friends or her sisters-in-law. Camping days were over, but I know Mom looked
for the best motel deal available. I
have mental images of her at a motel counter, with tiny, white haired Aunt
Helen Rita, negotiating a better rate.
Our Uncle Hank retired after we moved here, and mom noticed
him and Aunt Flo taking a lot of little weekend trips—by bus. Their church senior group organized the
jaunts and mom was welcome to join them, if there was an unsold seat left. After missing a few trips she would have
enjoyed mom took matters into her own hands and joined Uncle Hank’s church.
The senior group of the church organized tours that required
air travel and although Aunt Flo and Uncle Hank could be off to Disneyland or
Broadway, mom was not interested in those tours. Until the trip to Las Vegas came up. Her cousin Tommy and his wife Mary would be
coming from Texas to join them for several days in Las Vegas. Mom was so excited she bought a new suit
case.
It would be my mother’s first ever airplane trip and I said
I would see her to her gate and wait until she boarded (1995). Well, she could
figure that out by herself! It’s a long
trudge to the gates at Cleveland Hopkins, but she only allowed me drop
her. As I slowed down, knowing my mom, I
handed her two dollar bills and said that the approaching man, the Sky Cap,
would be carrying her bag, and please tip him, and everyone else who helped
her. That’s how they earned a
living. I could not get out of the car
in time; she got her suit case and marched right past the outstretched hand of
the Sky Cap.
When I picked her up a week later she handed me two dollars,
announcing she had carried her bag herself.
Everywhere. She and Tommy had a wonderful time. In my files I have a picture of others in the
party facing their machines, pulling handles, but Mom and Tommy sitting
shoulder to shoulder, backs to a machine, chatting like long lost cousins. I may never find the picture to illustrate
the story, but you can see it in your mind’s eye, I know. Oh, yes, she didn’t waste any money on those
casinos, either.
Mom and Uncle Hank on vacation, about 1931
Your mom had adventure in her soul.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful story, and wonderfully told. Some people are born travelers. My mom and brother are two of those. My father and I are stay-at-home people, but we love a good story about someone else's travel!
ReplyDeletecherry pie for breakfast - I have done that a few times. I hope your mom enjoy a show while she was there. There are free shows outside a few of the places.
ReplyDeleteA Happy New Year to you Joanne - may your 'wandering foot' get some exercise this year ... :)
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely, lovely story - and memories for you to hug as well. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteWonderful story. I really love the parachute tent - very stylish!
ReplyDeleteYour Mom sounds like she was a quite the character. Cute story.
ReplyDeleteI too can picture them with their backs to the one armed bandits. Casinos don't really "do it" for me either.
It sounds like she was a master of traveling on a budget!
ReplyDeleteWe never went on family vacations when I was growing up. Only one time that I can remember. We spent several weeks in Mexico City. My parents had friends there. But my parents went on vacations every year. They always got a sitter for us kids. or sent us to summer camp for 6 weeks. maybe that was supposed to be our vacations. I never saw any of the sights of this country until I had kids of my own and we did take family vacations. we took driving trips to all sorts of places.
ReplyDeleteHow cute! I like that she joined the church to be able to go on those trips. She does sound like she had a great sense of adventure and also was very careful with money spent, which I'm sure allowed her to travel more.
ReplyDeletebetty
I so love your stories! You take me to a different time and place. Peopled with wonderful, unique individuals. Sigh. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteFrugal! For awhile I thought you were describing my mother--still holding on to her $2--carrying the bag herself! We daughters will never be like that!
ReplyDeleteLove your mom! What a fun story. She is our kind of gal.
ReplyDelete