Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Trinket board with Ojo de Dios
Once I used the little bulletin board for posting important notes. Now I have a wall sized bulletin board on another wall, and important things on the little one.
Starting at twelve o'clock, a tiny gold lapel pin that says Attitude. They were part of the dress code of a company my daughter worked for. She gave me one.
One of Beth's first business cards.
A fabric bookmark found by my friend Carol at an antique show. Probably a give away for a company named Bo-Peep, trademark warranted.
On burlap, something my granddaughter Bekka made in first or second grade. That is her hand in foil in the middle. Bekka will be 21 this year. A friendship bracelet Laura made is hanging on it too, but may be too small to make out.
Next the owl macrame. Beth made that in a grade school art class.
Larry's whistle. Larry hired me as the controller of a small company that was swallowed years later by a larger company and when an even larger company swallowed that company the little company was spit out and left to die. I left before it was spit out. Larry was not part of the original sale. He was leaving for health reasons. He used the whistle at company picnics, and when he left he gave it to me, to be in charge. He died before he was fifty. A good man.
Blue mardi gras fish beads. Someone handed them to me at a show, for good luck.
God's eye. Ojo de Dios. Wikipedia gives a long account of the Indian spiritual connection of this little object. It also is a simple yarn weaving, easy construction for children to understand and do. Francis made this one; he may have been about five years old.
Santa Claus pencil. I found the pencil in my Christmas stocking the last year mom was alive. Jan says it wasn't from her, so I figure it was from mom.
A cartoon Jan once cut out for me. Two suits with brief cases are passing the door that says Account ant. An ant is working at the desk. One suit says to another "All this time I thought it was a misprint." I'm an accountant. Get it?
That's the story of my God's eye.
Monday, February 25, 2013
How cold was it yesterday?
Beth noted a park event for yesterday in
her Cleveland paper: Drop by with your family for
fun in the snow! Test your skills at winter challenges such as snowball making
and throwing, fort building, sled pulling, and more. Challenge others and
yourself in snowshoe games. Dress for the weather. Enjoy hot chocolate by a
roaring fire within Ledges Shelter. No snow? No problem! If the weather does
not cooperate, we'll have other outdoor games to play. Ledges Shelter, 10 a.m.
- 2 p.m.
We arranged to meet at noon, turn the cousins loose,
sit by the roaring fire and drink hot chocolate. Laura was ready to leave before I got out of
bed. I put her off until after
breakfast; we arrived around eleven.
There was no snow.
There was a roaring fire in each end of the CCC
lodge, built in the thirties. Two
rangers were happy to see us come in. On
inquiry I learned we were the first fun in the snow customers.
I asked if they drew the short straw, and
the tall young ranger said actually, they had invented this straw, and they had
a good backup plan, too. A button toss
game and making god’s eyes from a bucket of yarn. There was no snow
.
It was cold. It could have been worse. The day’s high temperature was thirty at
midnight, and went down all day. I had on my standard winter gear, starting
with a long sleeved tee shirt that is merino wool sandwiched between knitted
tee shirt cotton, a turtle neck, another shirt, my winter coat. I was cold.
The girls were game to be the practice children for back-up activities. No snow.
One ranger left his ranger hat on the table. Much as I covet a ranger hat, I only took a
picture. I looked around later on and
saw the hat was the focus of a game.
A
family with four young children came in and most children descended on the
yarn box to make god’s eyes. Eventually
the ranger enticed them all out for kickball.
There were no chairs for sitting around a roaring fire in a damn
cold lodge, so I wandered around and took pictures. I’ve mentioned that I like how well the
federal government has maintained all these buildings. I posted a picture of the outside of this
lodge on that starkly blue winter day a couple of weeks ago:
Two weeks ago
Roaring fires notwithstanding, the building is only a
shelter. The stones are impressive, but
the corners let in the outdoors. It was cold.
The two chinks of light between the stone and the wood are from outdoors
The window panes are original
glass, single pane. The hinges and
fasteners are iron. I don’t know if they
were purchased or if the CCC employed blacksmiths, too. I’d wager they did, as all the quarried rock
in the walls came from Deep Lock Quarry nearby and was cut on site. I like the age patina on everything.
I was not unhappy until my feet grew cold. I don’t tolerate that nonsense. A text to Beth showed her still at home,
a not unexpected state of affairs. We
made a backup plan to meet at the house, and the girls and I took our leave about 12:30, with the
young family eating their picnic lunch on a blanket in front of the fire, cups
of hot chocolate all around.
Three cousins kibitzing the afternoon chess game of two more
cousins. Around a warm kitchen table.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Another Krueger, another bird
The Krueger who survived his encounter with the Bobwhite
Quail in 1961 was a bold and enthusiastic young fellow with a culinary habit may
have led to his demise a year or two later.
He loved Japanese beetles and patrolled the top of the grape arbor,
feasting. Dad found him under the grape
arbor, beyond resuscitation by the vet, and blamed it on the damn beetles. Who knows.
Fast forward to the summer of 1966. Beth could walk, I was hugely pregnant with
Shelly and my husband brought home a kitten.
Because pets were not allowed we drew all the apartment curtains and
lived in semi darkness until we moved the week after Shelly was born. Krueger was named in honor of the late
Krueger, who was named for college friend.
I’ve named many cats after friends.
In spite of living in semi darkness the first five months,
Krueger had a happy and expansive personality.
He and Beth were fast friends and playmates. She drug him around; he invented the game of
chase Beth and knock her down. Round and
round the short dividing wall between the kitchen and living room, then Krueger
would double back and jump on her chest, knocking her
down. Laughter, squeals from two year
old Beth and the game recommenced.
We moved from the apartment to a house to another house in
Krueger’s long life, without ruffling a whisker, but most of his years were
spent in our Mentor house. Krueger
started the cat trail that led from one corner of the back yard, diagonally to
the elm tree then straight into the back garage door that led to the door into
the house. In twenty years there I
watched that cat trail, used by all my felines, turn to hard pack with no grass
and visible as a depression under the snow.
My neighbor across the street called me one evening to come
get my cat’s litter out from under his porch.
“But my cat is a male.” “Well,
he’s the father!” “My cat is neutered.”
“Oh, please get these kittens!” I
don’t recall if I did.
I was gifted a canary once, in a Taj Mahal cage. Harry Canary led to Carrie Nation, the finch,
and her husband and babies, and a parakeet each for my daughters. There was a
cat population to deal with too; Krueger, Phoebe Snow and BoomBoom. The solution was to hang the cages by hooks
in the ceiling. This led to hard packed
areas in the carpeting underneath; cats sitting patiently, waiting for a bird
to fall. It never happened.
Somewhere around the age of thirteen or fourteen, Krueger
began to decline; his liver rapidly failing.
Dr. Kroh, our wonderful vet, took good care of all my animals. He put Krueger’s throat back in his body
after a failed encounter with a pair of Airedales. He put a pin in BoomBooms front leg when the
shattered bone couldn’t be rejoined. The
last time he saw Krueger Dr. Kroh said take him home, make him comfortable for
a few days.
We put Krueger on a warm bed under the kitchen table, food
and water under his nose. We carried him
out occasionally to relieve himself, and he watched the family activity from
his spot. At Saturday chore time Shelly
spread papers on the table and took down her parakeet to clean his cage. The first time ever the parakeet jumped
straight out to have a look at the big world.
He escaped outstretched hands over and over. He landed on the floor, strutted right past
the helpless cat. Krueger stretched his
neck, went chomp and had his bird.
Krueger died the next day.
But think about it. All his life
waiting and then the bird walked straight into his mouth.
Krueger was borrowed from the internet
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Do you know Windsmoke?
Last Saturday I took one last look at my blog list before
turning in early. All day I had a
splitting headache; time to give it up until morning. At night, though, I enjoy taking a peek at
blogs across the world, where it already is tomorrow.
Windsmoke posted, a disturbing Goodbye. His haiku sometimes is sad, sometimes final;
people josh him and he is right back with his riddles. But Saturday was goodbye until we meet again,
in the afterlife.
My God, Australia is big; I don’t know many of us there, and
those I do live a state or two away. And
we don’t even know his name. Windsmoke, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia. “Hello, 911, please
send someone to check on Windsmoke.”
If you know him, please leave a note there or here. Did he join a monastery, or the universe?
Cups on the Bus
A while back Delores at The Feathered Nest announced a
Valentine Day give away. As I recall,
the rules were comment on any blog of hers up to Valentine Day and get your
name in the hat for the drawing.
I made a mental note to restrain myself from commenting. I didn’t even know what she would be shipping
away, but I do hardly need more stuff; it’s quite fine with me to see “stuff”
head off to people who will be able to use it.
I slipped up back there in contest land; I must have had a
thing or two to comment about. My short
term memory is as good as gone these days.
One day on my blog she announced I was a winner, keep my eye out for the
prize.
And it came today, too big for our big mail box and
delivered to the door by our nice USPS lady.
Jan and I peeled the layers together.
First a ginormous shopping bag, to join the pile in the car that go into
the grocery store. We really do that;
bring our own bags.
Then, two cups. And I’m
quoting here, “Don’t leave these on the bus.”
Very good, Delores. But they came
preloaded. With a beverage? Lifting the lids we found chocolate mint
cookies!
Well, the loot is all divvied up and partially consumed. Thank
you, Delores. We are using what we didn't eat.
The ginormous shopping bag, two cups for the bus, sacreficial cookies
Smells suspiciously Canadian to Toby
Monday, February 18, 2013
A day off school and work
Yesterday’s four inches are melting fast today. Jan saw three bluebirds in the back yard this
morning. They must be passing through;
we don’t have enough meadow about to keep them happy. No rail fences to sit on, either. My mental image of bluebirds. The wrens already are jousting for the wren
houses in the oak tree.
I’ve talked to Emily and Hamilton about the sort of summer
jobs they might find. It’s been so long
since I’ve thought about more than Cousin Camp in the summer. Now half the cousins live
here. Always planning, Grandma suggested
they could take the week of spring break in March to hoof it around town and
see what might be available.
Then Presidents’ Day dropped right into our laps. The library, where I envisioned Emily
volunteering for the summer, is not open today, but they already love Emily,
who has borrowed hundreds of books and music CD’s on her six month old
card. I’m sure they would have her in a
heartbeat to re-shelve books.
At supper last night I approached Hamilton about making the
rounds today, get a head start, so to speak.
That suited him and then a little miffed Emily said she would like to
go, too. “I can get a work permit,
Gramma.” So, the plan for today.
First stop, the big nursery/garden center they can walk
to. Already the sign announces
experienced nursery workers wanted.
Apparently enthusiasm helps, too.
They came out with applications.
We went down into the village and they went into the two restaurants. “Can you work weekends?” They came out with applications. We stopped at the golf course, too, but the
dynamic duo couldn’t find anyone about, and we came home.
So far this afternoon I have handed over Emily’s social
security number, told her the trade names of job duties she had in the
past. Emily worked after school last
year restocking shelves, pricing and bagging at a little store near her old
house. Yes, she was only thirteen, so
the name of the store will remain a secret.
Her applications are complete.
Hamilton is off at the movies with Sarah. (I have no idea
how he acquired a girlfriend on such short notice; especially one who already
had a boyfriend. They both play
trombone? Maybe I’ll ask Emily.) He won’t
be done today, but we’ll get the applications back quickly.
I did stop at the town hall to check messages. There were none. What road garage but ours would have a line
strung from the leaf machine to dry the garage rags?
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Blue herons in shades of grey
The herons are back, nesting at the rookery. We came back from Kathleen’s yesterday,
chased by Alberta Clipper number seven or eight, scudding heavy grey clouds
across the sky.
I told Jan I saw a heron
a couple of days ago. She’s seen one,
too, so we came across Yellow Creek Road to get to the rookery.
The park has made a small pull off area near
the Bath Road bridge over the river.
Usually it’s packed with cars that have stopped to watch the magnificent
birds, but no so many yesterday.
Grey
trees, grey sky and grey birds. Click to enlarge a picture for a nice view of nest construction.
Friday, February 15, 2013
Quilts, Quilts, and Rescue quilts
Some of the people in my house are retired, but my sister
isn’t there, yet. Still working. Jan quilts for her Rolodex of customers. She makes quilts for us. We all have warm flannel winter quilts and
pretty summer quilts for our beds. She
makes quilts to hang in the studio to give customers visuals of how she might
quilt their quilts.
Of course there are more.
The rescue quilts.
Jan seldom meets an abandoned quilt top she does not
love. In all fairness, the maker
probably did not abandon the quilt, but ran out of time to quilt it. Heirs and assigns, not valuing the work, put
it right in the estate sale, or send it straight off to a thrift shop or
Goodwill. So many unfinished quilts tops
find their way into Jan’s studio she bought a separate cabinet to hold them.
Rescued tops, waiting...waiting...
Toby helping
As she has time she puts them together with a backing and
batting, gets them quilted and bound.
Jan knows so much about old quilt patterns, old quilt fabrics, old quilt
piecing styles, that when she’s done she says she can hear some one’s grandma
in heaven, smiling and saying “Look, it’s done!
Someone can use that quilt, now.”
Jan has donated many of her rescue quilts to be raffled for
charities. Many of them have gone to
TLC, the Transitional Living Center we make quilts for. Her rule of thumb: keep them until she has admired them enough,
then let them go. Still, they backed up
on her. There are a couple of tubs of
finished rescue quilts in the studio.
On a recent trip to The Crooked River Herb Farm Shop Jan put
her head together with Kathleen and they came up with the scheme to
simultaneously fill an empty corner of Kathleen’s expanded shop and fund the
purchase of more abandoned quilt tops by selling some in the shop. That’s what Jan and I did today.
Kathleen watching
Jan displaying, customer watching
A quilt label
Display front
Display back
The Quilt Corner
Monday, February 11, 2013
Alberta clipper
Average trajectory of an Alberta Clipper
This is straight
from my other friend, Wikipedia, who follows Google as my hero. With apologies
to Jane. I would never call it a
Canadian Clipper, or even a Canada Clipper.
Actually, I like Alberta as a name.
My friend Linda’s mother’s name is Alberta, and the clipper lives up to that
name. Our Alberta ran a dairy farm in
New York, raised kids, fed the hired hands and took over the family fertilizer
business when necessary. Alberta is ninety
five. She could do it all over again
tomorrow, if asked.
As the Alberta
clipper heads down to Ohio, it passes over several Great Lakes. By itself the clipper is not a great snow
maker, perhaps a couple of inches. But
over an open great lake, it picks up moisture.
Over two or three great lakes it picks up a great deal of moisture. Lake Erie is the third great lake the clipper
passes over on its way to my house, if that is it's destination.
Now I live on
top of a ridge that marks the division between the Lake Erie watershed and the
Ohio River watershed. The Cuyahoga
River, two miles down the hill north and west of me, flows into Lake Erie. I remember learning in geography that it
rains along the west coast because storms come off the Pacific Ocean, slam into
the Cascade Mountains and drop all the rain on the west side. Great American Desert on the east side, broad
brushing it.
That’s what
happens here in northeastern Ohio. All
that moisture hits the watershed ridge and drops as snow. And, where squalls persist, to quote one
weatherman, even more snow. All
accompanied by leaden grey skies and blustery winds. Akron, Ohio, ten miles south of us, may only
get a dusting. Alberta hit the ridge and
dumped the snow up here
.
Alberta
Clippers mean take the kids to the bus in the morning, and maybe even wait
there for them at night. They mean stay
home if you don’t need to go out, stay warm, read a book or get out some
sewing. They aren’t all that bad. And, they may be over for the winter. We’re half way through the month this week.
Friday, February 8, 2013
Alberta Clipper Five
I took my camera to work today, to take a picture of red dry
hydrants for Lisleman. They shone like rubies in Tuesday’s sunshine. I’m not expecting to get back a day like that
any time soon. They’re just dull looking
dry hydrants, with Alberta Clipper Five closing in.
At the end of that post, Jenny commented that hydrants in
her town are painted to coordinate with local landmarks. That is a magnificent idea and I think
Nick and the kids at the art academy might see these as the Loch Ness
monster. Or anything.
Because dry hydrants would make a rather dry post I thought
I’d just go down to the corner and take another picture to show you another
story, when I heard the heron—and looked up and found him. One more wing flap
and he was over the cedars.
This poor golf course is the winter home of deer, Canadian
geese and mallard ducks. It’s a
beautiful golf course, thickly fertilized all winter. I thought about cleaning it all up every spring
and asked a friend who managed a golf course in New York. She went wild. Don’t even talk to her about it. And, the goose crap is toxic.
So, there are shoulder to shoulder deer and geese on the
golf course all winter. Come spring,
only the geese are left. Several years ago I realized the geese nested around the lake. Then the little
yellow fluff balls would appear, running about like cartoon ducks. And the hawks swooped down and took them
away. One morning the hill would be
yellow with goslings and at day’s end I could watch the last gosling whisked
away.
I stopped taking that road into the valley once I saw the
geese nesting; breakfasting hawks were not a pretty sight, even if they are
endangered red tail hawks. I was even
more angry with the stupid geese who couldn’t be bothered to go across the
street and use the marsh for a nursery.
You don’t even want to know how they watched their broods lifted off
without raising a wing, then sauntered around the lake as if nothing happened.
Then two years ago the golf course left the low corner at
the road unmowed, and a little marsh sprang up on this side. I watched for geese nesting on the lawn, and
there were none. I resumed using Truxell
to get to work and back, keeping my eye on the lake and the corner. And sometime in June those half grown geese
began emerging from their private marsh.
It didn’t improve my opinion of their parents’ IQ’s, but at least they
knew what to do with this marsh when they found it. Here it is, waiting for spring to turn into
the goose nursery.
And then I telephotoed up the hill, past the marsh, onto the
golf course. Yes, that is goose, duck
and deer shit littering the ground under the cedars.
And, Alberta Clipper number Five is swirling around outside. While we will get only two to four inches
this time, I’m thinking about New England and New York taking the two to four
feet pounding.
Lest we forget Tuesday. Golf course with deer track.
Thursday, February 7, 2013
A rare sort of winter day
Yesterday, between Alberta clippers number four and five,
the sky was clear, the sun brilliant. I
took my camera for a ride.
Every morning I go down into the valley to go to work. My favorite route is Kendall Road. Its name changes to Truxell half way down;
all our roads have first names and the Truxell farm was on this road. Charles Truxell was a trustee in the sixties.
Hayward Kendall donated a huge tract of land to the state to be used in
perpetuity for park purposes, and named in honor of his mother, Virginia
Kendall. It was a state park when I grew
up, and now is part of the national park that ate Boston.
The road in the summer is canopied over by the tree
leaves. My summer pictures of driving
through a tunnel of deciduous trees have not been spectacular. But the reason for the canopy is so evident
in the winter months I got successful pictures of their bones.
I pulled in and out of parking lots the entire length of the
road. Beside Kendall Lake, there are
trailheads for The Ledges and for The Octagon rock trails. Every parking lot is lined with quarried
rock; there were two major quarries in the area up to the twentieth
century. One quarry now is The Quarry, a
summer swimming hole for kids, and the other is Deep Lock Quarry, maintained by
the Metropolitan Park Service.
When I left home with the camera my intent was to take
pictures of shadows The blazing blue sky wound up preempting shadows, but here
is an interesting tree.
This is one of many creeks through the glacial ravines that
empty into the lake. There is another
little water course behind my house that travels to the lake. About twenty years ago, with township zoning
only slightly more lax than it currently is, the landowner up the hill behind
us decided to clear cut his woods. Nothing
I said to the township or the EPA resulted in a stop work order. At the next big rain storm the stark naked
hill of course descended by the tons into our little creek. Smothered our apple orchard, too. When an EPA fellow finally appeared he shook
his head and said “Lady, you have a helluva mess here.” Jan and I went toe to toe with the Amish
chainsawers and saved trees on our property.
That’s a good story for some time.
Eventually the hill washed entirely downstream to the lake
and silted it in. It had to be drained
and dredged a couple of years ago. It
didn’t have to happen. Here’s the lake
from the parking lot, and a deer trail.
Many of the shelters at the trail heads were WPA projects
that became state or local parks, and now part of the National Park. I love the stonework and am happy it’s being
maintained. Steps to a trail and an interesting tree.
At the end of the road I turned at the golf course and came
back. The tree is at the end of one of
the lakes on the golf course, and the lakes have what the fire district calls
dry hydrants. Along the road there are
two pipes that terminate in the lake and can be attached to the tanker by a
hose at the working end. If there is a
fire in the district, godforbid, the tankers take on loads of water at the lake
and go fight the fire. For years the
hydrants were black. One day one of my
favorite fireman, Nick, put down a receipt for paint and brushes on my desk,
and went out and painted them red. They
still look spiffy.
I made my U turn to come home, and was obliged to take this
picture:
Almost all year long our narrow township roads are clogged
by spandex warriors. We clean up their
stinking sports drink bottles. Often we
can’t get out of our own roads to go grocery shopping. And we even have to tell them how to
behave. Another story. I guess I’ll be in business for awhile.
Sunday, February 3, 2013
With 26 leaden soldiers I can conquer the world
When I was a kid I said endlessly, and surely annoyingly, “I
read in a book,…” and would add my morsel to the conversation. I don’t recall the point at which I put it
all together and derived my own opinions.
I still read endlessly.
On line magazines, newspapers and blogs have saved me from subscribing
to more newspapers than I could conveniently recycle.
Our childhood library contained books with stories of famous
people and events, or historical turning points. They arrived monthly. I have no idea how my parents subscribed to them. They were bound with green dimpled covers around
inexpensive paper. In retrospect,
American people, events, history.
I read about Thomas Edison, Abraham Lincoln, The Santa Fe
Trail. Flatboats on the Monongahela,
Alleghany and Ohio Rivers. Paso por aquà on a rock face in the southwest. I found even more books in the library.
For a long
period I devoured histories of the settlement of the Western Reserve and the
Ohio Valley, and the spread into prairies of Indiana and Illinois. In a book that must have been about the
movement of newspapers into the west, I read that line, “With 26 leaden
soldiers I can conquer the world.” It
was put into the mouth of a newspaper editor, who ascribed it to someone whose
name I could not remember.
I recall in the history the printing equipment crossed the
Kankakee River. How strange I can recall
that, but not the person who owns the line.
My friend Google tells me it must be Benjamin Franklin: “Give me 26 lead
soldiers and I can conquer the world.” I
was struck when I read it, and even now, the verb is “can,” not “will.” Sorry, the auxiliary verb. No arrogance, but ability. I’ve read a lot by and about Franklin, and
that was his style.
The news last night had a piece on sleep being essential for
moving short term memory from the front of our brains to the hard drive, long
term memory at the back. Now that is a
new problem for me, and I need to read more about it.
Saturday, February 2, 2013
Valentine box
I took my camera when I went to smile over the giggles from
the basement.
Concentration. Or
not.
I remember Valentine boxes. On Valentine’s Day they sat on
our desks. We lined up around the outer wall,
then, led by Miss Milani, we went up one aisle and down another, dropping our
cards in boxes.
I almost remember decorating them.
Janice admired the box, too, and said we needed to get
cards. “Oh, no,” Aunt Janice, “I’m
making my own!” I’m sure Laura will draw
a cat on every one.
Emily’s friends say he's cute, in a nerdy way.
If you want whiskers, grow your own.
Goodbye from here, where we are housebound and watching today's three and a half inches of snow fall.
Labels:
Emily,
grandchildren,
Hamilton,
Laura,
Toby
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