February Photos

Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Photos: A Drive to Omaha

A drive to visit my brother at the nursing home



Elkhorn River

Ackerhurst Dairy Farm

Ackerhurst Dairy Farm











Tractor going for a big hay bale for the animals.





















Ackerhurst Dairy Farm





Nursing home.  It's a lovely place, and the workers are dedicated and caring.  We are so thankful for this place.


Monday, December 26, 2022

Journal: Glory to God in the Highest

 


Suddenly, at 4:00 p.m. last Tuesday, it occurred to me:  I had planned to give Victoria’s mother-in-law Ruth a thumb drive with pictures of her late mother, Mary, who was a dear friend of mine who passed away much too early.  She was only 44 when she died of cancer, leaving behind a young family.  Her youngest was only 4.  I had sent Ruth a couple of pictures of Mary last summer as I was scanning photos, and she told Victoria she was so happy to get them, because she didn’t have any photos of her mother.  Not any!  

I told Victoria back then that I had a bunch, and would give them to Ruth when I was done scanning.  Well, I’m done, aren’t I?!

I got meseff in gear, because the very next night, Wednesday the 21st, we would have our Christmas program, and all our Christmas cards would be doled out thereafter.

I ran upstairs for one of those underdeveloped thumb drives.  It would work fine for this. 

I plugged it in, and learned that it had 15,988 photos on it, from when I tried uploading all the photos for the kids.  That’s about 42GB – and it was supposed to hold 2TB.  I deleted all those.  42GB would sorta be overkill for the few dozen pictures I thought I’d give Ruth; but she would be able to use it for other backup if she wished.

Then while I ran searches for pictures of Mary, I backed up all my photos – over a quarter million of them – onto two other big hard drives.  I like photographical insurance!

As usual, my project grew.  There was a lot of room on that 42GB thumb drive, after all!  After finding quite a number of pictures of Mary, I decided to hunt for other members of Ruth’s family whilst I was at it.  

Mary used to play the organ at our church while I played the piano, and together we had a Jr. Choir that we enjoyed so much.  She left a big empty spot when she passed away.  Here she is with her little girl Ruth, who is now Victoria’s mother-in-law.  



Victoria couldn’t ask for a more loving, generous, and always-willing-to-help mother-in-law than Ruth.

In chatting with a friend a few days ago, I used the word ‘serendipity’.  I hardly ever use that word, since it often means ‘luck’ or ‘karma’ – and I don’t like that notion, when I know that everything is and was in the Master’s great plan since before the world began; nothing befalls us by chance.  But every now and then I use it to mean, ‘Things worked out just right.’  The first time I heard someone say it, when I was about, oh, 3 years old, I think, I was insulted, because I thought they had said, “Sarah is dippity!”  I wasn’t sure what ‘dippity’ was, but I figured it could hardly be good, a word like that! 

As I searched through photos, I found this one:  



Now, that’s already funny enough, with Victoria holding her hands out for what reason I cannot remember, and Kurt caught in mid-blink; but Victoria made it hilarious by tossing it into her photo editor, inserting a beribboned box into her hands, and putting google-eye glasses on Kurt.  I laughed when she did it, and I laughed all over again when I came upon them.



Wednesday afternoon as I finished loading thumb drive and hard drives, a little male downy woodpecker landed in the lilac bush right outside the kitchen window.  They’re the cutest little things.  (Picture from American Bird Conservancy)



By 3:30 p.m., I was done with Ruth’s thumb drive.  Instead of ‘a few dozen’ photos, as I’d first intended, I had found 2,704 photos for her.

When do my projects and Big Ideas ever stop where I had planned for them to?  🙄  Anyway, I finished in the nick of time.  It was almost time to get ready for our Christmas program that night.  It would start at 6:30 p.m., and we needed to get there a little early in order to put our Christmas cards into the designated bags in the Fellowship Hall.  I tucked the thumb drive into Bill and Ruth’s Christmas card and sealed it.

If you would like to watch the program, it’s posted here:  http://www.bbccolumbus.com/thirtyone.htm

Here’s one of the pictures I put on that thumb drive – Baby Willie, Ruth and her husband Bill’s first little grandson, taken at the Fourth-of-July picnic, 2022.  



He’s our youngest grandson, one of 18 grandsons for Larry and me; but let me tell you a fact:  that doesn’t make us love him any less!  🥰  When you have more children and grandchildren, you don’t divide your love by whatever that number might be; you multiply it!

This photo is Mary, Ruth’s mother, taken December 26, 1992, as she worked in the church kitchen at our annual Christmas dinner.  That would’ve been just eight months before she passed away.  



And here is Ruth’s daughter, also named Mary, at our Fourth-of-July picnic in 1999:



Victoria’s oldest little girl is named Carolyn Ruth, after her Grandma.  Ruth was so pleased with that.  

At ten ’til four, I glanced out the window again, and saw that the snow had begun.  According to AccuWeather, wind would pick up later, and we would be in for near-blizzard conditions.  Hopefully, we would get home from church before the roads got dicey and visibility dropped.  Winter arrived at exactly 3:46 p.m. that day (according to the meteorologists), and a cold one it was:  11°, with a wind chill of -5°.

I sent a text to Larry, informing him that I was heading to church at 5:50 p.m., whether with him, or without him.

He must’ve taken me seriously, because, amazingly enough, he came home early enough that he was ready to leave by ten ’til six.  We got there with plenty of time to put cards into bags and then seat ourselves well before the prelude began.

The brass ensemble played a few Christmas songs... the congregation sang some... Brother Robert (my nephew, our pastor) (do I say that often enough that I no longer need to?) preached a sermon from the dear old Christmas story... and after that was the program by the children, with songs and scriptures and poems.

I love watching the littlest ones walk up on the stage and sing their little songs. 

Of course, that particular group of children included our five littlest granddaughters.

Keira marched up on the stage, turned toward the audience, and smiled, despite her shyness.  Malinda sang every single word, looking serious and earnest.  Violet, upon turning and gazing out at the vast audience, looked somewhat petrified, but she, too, sang with all her heart.  Carolyn somehow wound up behind a boy who was a wee bit taller than her, so I only saw her as she walked up the steps and crossed the platform, and then returned to the pew; but she was so cute and pretty in her Christmas dress and long curls.  Elsie spotted her Grandpa and smiled a tiny smile, and then gave extra effort to her singing.

We visited with several of our children and grandchildren after the service – and I was totally delighted and surprised to discover that a sweet teacher of mine from Jr. High – the ‘helper teacher’ in my 7th-grade Home Ec room (that was 50 years ago!) – was visiting!  I believe that’s the first time she has come.  I loved her then... and I love her now.  She’s a dear.

One time I was sewing away, and she, a quiet, ladylike person who never, ever created a scene, crept up behind me, walloped me with a rolled-up paper, and said quietly in my ear, “Sarah Swiney!  (pronounced ‘Swunny’)  Just because the pedal goes all the way down doesn’t mean you have to press it all the way down when you sew!!!”

I turned and grinned at her.  I was shy, but I liked her.  So I said, said I, “But I sure got to the end of that seam in a hurry, didn’t I?”

And then my sweet, quiet teacher tried to ‘tsk-tsk’ at me – but abruptly lost her decorum and gave an uncharacteristic bark of laughter instead. 

Oliver is such a sweet baby.  Andrew was holding him, all snuggled on his shoulder, walking around the big Christmas tree in the front foyer.  I greeted Andrew, talked to the baby, and he gave me a sleepy little smile, and then blinked verrrrrry slowly.

We got home safely through the snowy, windy cold, and had a late supper of beef vegetable soup, yogurt, grape juice, and orange-cranberry muffins, fresh out of the oven.  Soon thereafter, I was snuggled into my recliner with a big heating pad over the top of me and a smaller one rolled behind my neck, going through our many Christmas cards.  There were lots and lots of pictures.  Robert and Margaret gave us four black slate coasters with little rounded ‘legs’ under them, with our church etched into them.  They gave every family in the church a few.  Their daughter Abigail made them with her laser etching machine.



By midnight, it was -7°, and the wind chill was 36 below.  It was snowing, and the wind was gusting up to 31 mph.

“I’m beginning to think you have a photographic memory,” commented a friend, upon reading the story about my home-ec teacher.  “You have memories from such a young age and remember soooo many details.”

It’s true, I do remember things from way back when.  It’s spotty before the age of 3, but I remember having my picture taken at a studio downtown when I was 18 months old.  I didn’t like the dark room, and I was offended (though I never made a peep) because they kept handing me a toy, taking a picture, and then without a word of explanation, jerking the toy from my grasp and handing me another.  Ve ver not amused.

Can you can see it in my face?



But I think I remember things for this reason:  I write about them.  I’ve done that since I was able to write, from about age 5 and on.  My father, being a minister, got a lot of correspondence, and every now and then, about once a week, he’d gather up his stationery, his good pen, and his Bible, in case he needed to look up a verse.  He had a good deal of it memorized, or, if not, he could almost invariably turn right to it.

I, wanting to do everything possible with my Daddy, would run for my stationery.  Mama saw that I had lined tablets to write on, a sharp pencil, and one of those soft yellow erasers.

Mama was a good teacher.  She told me, “Don’t write, ‘How are you?  I hope you are fine.  I am fine.  I hope you are very fine.  I am very fine.  I hope you are very, very fine.  I am very, very fine.’  (hee hee)  Just write the way you talk, and tell Grandma (or the aunts or uncles or cousins or friends) what you did yesterday, what you did today, what you thought about it, and what you hope to do tomorrow.  Tell her a funny thing someone said.  Respond to whatever she wrote to you in her last letter.  Tell her what it looks like out the window, and what your kitty is doing, and what he looks like while he’s doing it.”

So that’s what I did.  I have on my computer most of the letters I wrote to Larry’s Grandmother and several uncles and aunts since 1998.  I wish I had all those I wrote the 30 years prior to that!  But just the fact that I once wrote it helps me remember – and all my pictures bring back many memories, too. 

Teddy, 1988


As I scanned the old pictures, I sometimes paused and wrote down a remembered story from long ago.  I told the kids, “I’m not just scanning pictures for you, I’m pushing back Alzheimer’s a few years for me!”  😄

Mostly, though, I want to remember the many mercies we have received from the Lord.

By 2:30 in the morning, it was -10°, with a wind chill of -36°.  Out in Chadron, Nebraska, though, it was 25 below zero, and the wind chill was 52 below!  Yikes, that’s cold.

That’s a whole lot colder than it was in Utqiagvik, Alaska, the United States’ northernmost town:  it was 12° there.  Even nearby Point Barrow, northernmost point of land, was 10°, with a wind chill of -10°.

Things were really rattling around outside the house.  The pieces of metal roofing Larry got on don’t have the ridge cap on yet, so the wind goes swooping down between the panels and the old roof, turning it into a giant tuba, complete with obligatory roaring and bellowing.

The cold did not let up on Thursday, either.  In fact, it got colder.  At noon, it was 12 below zero, and the ‘feel like’ temperature was 41 below.  The main floor of our house was only 61°, even though I had the furnace set at 70.

“I reckon I should put on some flip-flops before I go out to fill the bird feeders,” I remarked.  (Don’t worry; I put on parka and galoshes and gloves.)

I put another large space heater in the kitchen.  Nevertheless, the temperature on the main floor dropped steadily, almost a degree each hour.  When I turned the water on at the sink, the pressure was low.  Eeek, that meant there was ice in the lines somewhere.  I turned it on hot, full blast, and left it that way for a couple of minutes, until water flow was back to normal.  I went downstairs and turned a space heater on low in the bathroom.  It was not terribly cold in the basement; I decided things would probably be all right. 

Jr. Choir, June 24, 1994


Meanwhile, I was in my usual toasty condition after taking a steaming hot shower, and then sipping coffee whilst blow-drying and curling my hair. 

The coffee was a mixture of Winter Wonderland and Amarillo? ... nooo...  Armadillo? ... noooo...  Amaretto!  That’s it.  The combination is because I ran out of Winter Wonderland coffee beans before the grinder was full, so I added some Amaretto-flavored beans.

One time some years ago, an acquaintance, upon learning that I was drinking Amaretto coffee, and knowing that I’d had a cold, complete with ear infection, and was still taking antibiotics, got all concerned and informed me that I must not, must not, combine antibiotics and alcohol!  

I thought, Huh?

I looked up Amaretto, and surprised my poor little naïve brain, having thought all these years that it was merely an almond/apricot flavoring, with the expensive stuff being ‘real’ and the cheap stuff being ‘imitation’.  However! – Amaretto (Italian for “a little bitter”) is a sweet Italian liqueur(!) that originated in Saronno.  Depending on the brand, it may be made from apricot kernels, bitter almonds, peach stones, or almonds, all of which are natural sources of the benzaldehyde that provides the almond-like flavor of the liqueur.  It generally contains 21 to 28 percent alcohol by volume.  When served as a beverage, Amaretto can be drunk by itself, used as an ingredient to create several popular mixed drinks, or added to coffee.

!  My woid.  

Now, I was almost certain that none of the coffee beans I purchase from Christopher Bean are alcoholic; but I wanted to be sure.  I don’t want to be drinking anything alcoholic, whether I’m on antibiotics or not.

I went to the Christopher Bean website posthaste, and was glad to see I was right; it’s nonalcoholic. 

I ain’t no shtaggerin’ drunk, ya hear?!

I toasted half a bagel, slathered it with butter, and put honey on one side and apple jelly on the other.  Then I sat down to read the funnies while I ate.

I turned on the little heater beside me.  Another bite of bagel, and I covered my legs with a lap blanket.  One more bite, and I put on another sweater.

Hester and Lydia, Christmas 2000


By the time I’d finished that bagel half, my hands were freezing.  I cleaned off the table and donned my fingerless gloves.  I can’t quite type at my usual 200 words per minute with them on, though.



As soon as I’d read the funnies, the news, and a few emails, I got in gear and started cleaning the house with vigor.  Best way to warm up I could think of!

Hester, upon learning how cold our house was, invited me to her house to warm up.  I thanked her, assured her I was fine, and had plenty to do to keep myself warm, but added, “I’ll remember that!”

She asked if I could bring our coffeemaker to our get-together on Saturday.  “Caleb said he’d bring some coffee,” she told me.

“Caleb makes turpentine, though,” said I, making Hester laugh.  “I’ll grind some coffee beans and bring enough for two or three pots, just in case anybody other than me likes non-turpentined coffee.”

She said that would be good and added, “My K-cup machine has a reusable cup for grounds.  So the turpentine people can use that.”  hee hee

Back when he still lived at home, I liked it when he made coffee, because somehow he made it just right.  (Except for the time when he unknowingly spilled a gob [definition: heaps and mounds] of pumpkin spice onto the spout of the coffeepot, and I, not noticing, poured myself a cup – with the entire gob of pumpkin spice going into that one hapless cup.)

Nowadays, though, he makes it so strong.  So does Teddy, for that matter.  I take a sip – and ask if they have a fork handy.

The little birds clustered around the feeders looked like butterballs, their feathers were so puffed out in their attempts to stay warm.  Amazing that they can survive such weather.  Some that normally don’t eat suet were struggling to hang onto the feeder long enough to grab themselves a beak full.  It’s full of protein, and would help them stay warmer.

What was really funny was late one spring when a young, still-speckled robin was having an identity crisis, evidently, and thought he was a nuthatch or a woodpecker.  He was popping up from the railing trying to grab bites of suet.  At one point, he latched onto the bottom bars on the suet cage, flapped madly, got a bite, and then tumbled loose and barely got himself upright before landing back on the railing all in a sprawl.  His mother was sitting a little ways over on the deck, staring at him, probably thinking, You birdbrained teenager.

The suet he liked was full of berries; that’s one of the things robins love.

By 6:00 p.m., the house had warmed all the way up to 63°.  The floors were vacuumed and swept, a bit of dusting was done, shower curtains, window curtains, and rugs were in the wash machine and dryer, and I was scrubbing away in the bathroom, where it wasn’t too cold at all.  I’d even removed my scarf and one sweater. 

“How many did you start with, though?” asked Hester, having again inquired into my welfare.

Hester (with Lydia behind her) 01-02-94


“Only two!” I told her.

“I accomplished getting my hair done at the Keira salon,” she said, “and some laundry.  So you’re doing better than me.”

“Those Keira salons are important!” I assured her. 

Sometimes while I was sitting on the floor doing one girl’s hair on a Saturday night, a little girl would be behind me doing my hair, and another little girl would be behind that one doing her hair.  Teddy called this ‘The Hairdo Choo Choo’.  😂

I took a little time out to eat Larry’s Snickers bar out of his bag of nuts and candy that we got at the Christmas program.  Out of the goodness of my heart, you know, to keep him from having troubles with his dentures.

I’ll give him my Milky Way as a replacement.  (We won’t mention the fact that I don’t like it anyway.)

“Last year when we showed Keira what was in the candy bags at church,” Hester told me, “She very loudly said, ‘Now we have food for the squirrels!!!’ 🫣

Years ago, back when some of the early-bird personages amongst us used to buy nuts at the After-Christmas sales for the next Christmas (at least, that’s what I accused them of doing), those nuts were almost always stale and horrid.  We’d put them on the back picnic table and have fun watching the squirrels and the blue jays carting off with them.  The blue jays could cram about eight peanuts (in the shell) into their gullets, and then have three in their beaks – double the amount the squirrels could squirrel away in their cheeks!  We were amazed.

The blue jays would fly off awkwardly, looking like they were suffering from goiters.

I went back to cleaning before I froze to death.

I couldn’t get the mini blinds out of the window in the bathroom to save my life!  I tried scrubbing the thing while it hung there, and made a muddy mess.  Siggghhhh... 

I decided to wait until Larry could help me.

Soon it was time for supper.  I pulled from the freezer some of the spiral ham from Larry’s friend in Genoa, warmed it in the microwave, and heated up Campbell’s potato ham chowder to go with it.  While that was heating, I mixed up some cranberry-orange muffins and popped them into the oven.  Oui yogurt finished the menu.

I kept warm cleaning and scrubbing house a good part of the day, but when I sat down at the table to eat supper, the wind came whistling right through the window beside me as if it was no barricade at all.

Meanwhile, the same cold system we were experiencing was heading toward eastern Tennessee, where Todd and Dorcas and their children live.  “We are worried for our baby goats,” said Dorcas, “So I made a few sweaters for two of them today.  The other goats were smelling them at first, wondering what they were, lol.”



Here’s Brooklyn, who just turned one:



At a quarter ’til eleven, we lost power.  I called the power company, and was assured they would be coming soon. 

Larry was in Genoa, 20 miles away.  He headed home to fire up the generator.  Problem:  his pickup heater wasn’t working right – and he’d also left his coat, hat, and gloves in it.  He put them on, but they were stiff with cold.  So he was freezing cold before he was even halfway home.

Upon arriving, he got the small generator running, and plugged one space heater directly into it.  It could run the heater and a few lights; no more.

The big generator kept gelling up and chugging to a stop.  Larry went on working on it.  (He would later discover that it wasn’t gelled up, after all.  The gas-line switch was turned to ‘Off’.  🙄)

Down the hill, line workers were repairing or replacing a transformer.  That’s no easy job!  A good deal of the time, they’re out working in bad weather, be it summer or winter.

By the light of my little battery-powered lantern, I hung the bathroom curtains and the shower curtains.  I had spread them out on my bed after they came out of the dryer so they wouldn’t wrinkle while waiting for Larry to get the blinds out of the window.

But he sure wouldn’t want to do it at that hour of the night, and certainly not after being out in the cold trying to get the generator to run.  And I couldn’t leave them on the bed; someone might need to actually sleep in it.

By the time I was done with that, I was getting really worried about Larry out there in the cold.  I called him on his phone.  He didn’t answer.  After the third try, I started pulling on boots, coat, hat, gloves – and then several lights came on.

There was no sure way of telling if the power had come on, or if Larry had gotten the generator running.

Trevor reading a book we gave him.


He came in the door just as I was preparing to head out.  He was so cold, he couldn’t even feel his feet when he took his boots off.

That man needs a new clock! – his does not tell him how long he’s been doing something, when he’s intent on the project.

I checked the water – and discovered the cold water pipes to the kitchen sink were frozen.  Or were they?  The hot water still flowed, and all the other cold water taps worked.  Maybe there was a chunk of ice in a pipe directly under the sink?  I opened the cupboard doors and felt the pipes.  They didn’t feel all that cold, but I left the doors open and directed a space heater that way, turned the faucet to the ‘On’ position, and hoped it thawed before it burst.

Larry had turned off a few breakers, including the water pump breaker (by accident – for some reason, the breakers are not labeled), to keep the main one from blowing when only the small generator was running.  Sometimes when the pump gets turned off, or we don’t have electricity for a while, junk gets into the pipes somehow, and Larry has to blow them out with his big air compressor.  Perhaps that was the problem?

The power had been off for 2 ½ hours, from 10:45 p.m. to 1:15 a.m., and the house got down to 50°.  Why does 50° feel so much colder indoors on a far-below-zero night than it does on a balmy spring day outside?  I work out in the gardens in temperatures like that; so why do I feel frozen solid when it’s that temperature in the house?

Larry took a hot bath, and felt a little better.  I stayed pretty warm in fleece-lined leggings with fleece pajamas over them, a fleece robe, two pairs of thick slipper socks, a scarf, a wide knit headband with fleece on the inside, and a big fleece blanket over me.

Everything was nice and soft – except for the scarf.  I think it’s made of metal and glass shards, porcupine quills, and hair of yak and woolly mammoth.

Friday morning, Loren’s sister-in-law Judy and her husband Randy visited him.  They gave him some Motor Trend magazines and a box of Baker’s chocolates, which he had to try right away.  He proclaimed them very good.  Judy’s grown children sent cookies and pictures, too. 

Loren sometimes tells Judy things he never says to me, and that day he told them that he really likes it there at Prairie Meadows.  That’s the first time he’s said that (without prompting) that I know of.

While they were there, a young man came in with his guitar, and they all sang Christmas carols while he played.  “He was really good!” said Judy.

When they left, Loren told them how glad he was to see them.  “Stop and visit whenever you have time!” he said.

“We always feel a little sad when we leave,” said Judy, “although we’re glad he’s there, and we don’t have to worry about him, because he’s safe and well taken care of.”

I’m so thankful he continues to do well there.  The staff really does work at doing a lot of things for their residents, and at doing many activities with them.  It’s so much better than any place here in town – and the amazing thing is, it’s cheaper, too.

Dorcas, Custer State Park, Black Hills, SD 08-10-93


By 1:00 p.m. Friday, it was -2°, with a wind chill of -29°.  The house had warmed up to 60°.  By nighttime, it was all the way up to 65°.  That, because Larry had gotten some wood pellets and started the wood-pellet stove burning early in the morning.  It wasn’t long before the floor was considerably warmer.

When I was a little girl, we had an elderly neighbor (well, I thought she was elderly; probably she was only a little older than I am now, and I’m just a young spring chicken, right?  Right!)  Anyway, my sweet, ladylike mother, who never said anything bad about anybody (or if she ever did, we all knew they deserved it), said that she liked chatting with that neighbor lady.

“It’s relaxing,” said Mama, “because I never have to think of anything to say in return, since she talks both breathing out, and breathing in!” 🤣

One of the lady’s favorite things to say – and she said it often – was, “I just mind my own business—” (totally untrue, haha) “—and pay my taxes!”

We still say that.  “I just mind my own business and pay my taxes!”

Anyway, during one winter, we had a cold snap.  Mama checked on our neighbor lady – let’s call her, hmmm... ‘Miss Gaddis’ will do – to see if she was all right and had everything she needed.

“Oh, I’m fine, thank you!” chattered Miss Gaddis.  “If the power goes off, I’ll just climb in bed and turn on my electric blanket!”

“I didn’t have even a split second to explain to her why that wouldn’t work!” laughed Mama.  “She was halfway through the next subject before I could blink.”  ðŸ˜‚

We say that, too:  “If the power goes off, I’ll just crawl in bed and turn on the electric blanket.”

I went upstairs to turn my quilting studio from a photo-scanning studio back to its original usage, but after doing only a wee bit, I came back downstairs.  It was too, too cold up there.  I left the space heater (a big EdenPURE heater) running, and hoped it would warm the room enough that I could do a little work in there after supper.

Our meal that evening was meatloaf made from ground deer meat, with lots of eggs and Ritz crackers.  When it was nearly done baking, I put a glaze of ketchup and brown sugar on it.  Quick and easy – and scrumptious.  We had green beans on the side, with grape juice to drink, and blueberry cream cheese muffins, fresh out of the oven, for dessert.

I paid some bills, put a load of Larry’s warm winter clothes into the washing machine, and washed the dishes.  It didn’t matter that only the hot water was working; the sink was so cold that, once it was full, the temperature was just right.

But whataya know, of all things, after washing that sink full of dishes, the cold water was suddenly and inexplicitly working again just fine.  And the water was as clear as ever. 

The only bad thing is that this will reinforce Larry’s belief that if you just leave things alone, most of them will repair and resolve themselves.  ðŸ˜‚

All this work, and I only had a little over 4,000 steps on my VeryFitPro watch!  I should put it on my right wrist one of these days, and see what a difference it makes.  Sometimes I run up and down the stairs with something in my left hand – a full coffee mug, for instance – and the watch registers practically nothing, because of course I’m holding that arm vewy, vewy still.

I went back upstairs, and found the temperature in my quilting studio quite tolerable.  I put away a few more things, and then, as if I hadn’t scanned enough pictures, now I’m scanning all the pictures friends gave us for Christmas.  😊  It won’t take long; I’ll be done soon.

Lydia, August 1995


It wasn’t quite as cold that night –  -2°, with a wind chill of -23°.

Saturday morning, I started getting ready to go to our family get-together at Hester and Andrew’s house – but Larry was sick.  When he laid down in his recliner at 11:00 in the morning, I knew, This isn’t good.  He’d gotten way too cold Thursday night, doubtless lowering his resistance to the bugs that have been going around lately.

I carried all the presents up from the gift-wrapping room downstairs, and loaded them into the Mercedes, trying to be quiet so as not to awaken Larry.  He carried out one big box that was too big for me to handle.  

Whew, that was a big job.  It was 12°, with a wind chill of -6°.  Going in and out, from hot to cold, a couple dozen times was a shock to the senses.  I had earaches and a headache before I was done.

I decided instead of stopping at the grocery store to get fruit and vegetable trays, I would instead take all the little applesauce and peach cups and yogurt in my refrigerator, and the deer meatloaf I’d made Friday night.  I could warm up the meatloaf in Hester’s oven.

With everybody else’s contributions, I knew there would be plenty of food, and maybe everyone would forgive Grandma for not having enough of each food item to go around the entire tribe.

When I got there, Kurt promptly came out to help carry things in.  Within minutes, Bobby and Hannah and their family arrived, and all the children grabbed presents, and, presto-whizz-bang-whoosh, just like that, it was done.

Keira had the job of telling visitors where they could hang their coats.  She hurried to greet me when I first stepped in the door, pointing out the mirrored closet beside the staircase and telling me I could hang my coat there.  She looked a wee bit disappointed when I told her I needed to get a few more things from my car.

When the gifts were all inside, I finally followed her to the closet, opened it – and then stood and exclaimed over it. 

“Wow,” said I, “This closet is plumb empty!  How’d you do that?!”

Keira giggled and gave a little hop.

There were wooden hangers on the rod, so I made use of one.

Keira, satisfied, went off to direct more people to the closet.

Teddy’s family arrived.  “You can hang your coats in the closet with the mirror!” she informed them, hopping excitedly from one foot to the other and pointing.  And,” she added in her cute piping way, “it’s plumb empty!”  ðŸ˜„

Baby Willie, who’s ten months now, held out his arms to me and gave me a hug when I took him.  I handed him a toy, and he smiled and said, “Dee-doo!”



He then abandoned the toy in favor of my necklace, which consisted of big wooden beads and hearts, with a wooden Sunbonnet Sue on one side and Sunbonnet Sam on the other.  He tried it out for taste.

Jacob, who’s 12, walked by, paused, looked at Willie, and grinned.  Willie grinned back.  I offered Jacob the other side of my necklace from the one Willie was chewing on.

Jacob laughed, so Willie laughed, too.

Isn’t it fun to see cousins of all ages enjoying each other?

Ethan, Teddy and Amy’s oldest, gave us a jar of clear, golden honey from his beehives.



Kurt and Victoria gave me a scrumptious-smelling jar of bath salts that Victoria made with essential oils, and they gave us a box of cheeses, crackers, and sausage.

Among other things, Andrew and Hester gave me a book, Wearable Quilts, by Roselyn Gadia-Smitley.



Caleb and Maria gave me a soft, cowl-collared, fringed, southwestern-style navy-and-cream sweater jacket.  Did Caleb remember how I used to drool over sweaters just like this out in the gift shops of the Rockies?  They also gave us a bottle of pure maple syrup, and for Larry, a plaid flannel shirt with thick, soft fleece inside.

Several of the others gave us handfuls of gift cards to Cabela's, Cracker Barrel, and other places we like to go.

The children were soon busy playing.  Some traipsed off downstairs; some went up the stairs to the second and third floors.  The third-floor attic is finished off as a pretty children’s playroom.

Violet came back into the kitchen where most of us adults were, looking for her mother.  She was sauntering along in her somewhat-nonchalant way, but when she found Victoria, she announced,  “There are too many people, and I’m scay-oed!” 

Victoria scooped her up for a minute or two, and Violet wrapped her legs around her Mama like a little monkey.  After a bit, Violet said in her low-pitched voice, “I’m all right now,” and off she went. 

I found her a little later playing in the office/playroom on the main floor, happy and content – all by herself.

As we collected paper plates and plasticware and lined up to go through the kitchen and collect our food, Josiah walked past, giving me one of his friendly grins.  I whapped him two or three times on the arm with my empty paper plate, just because. 

Jacob, walking right behind him, looked at me, looked at the back of Josiah – and whapped him two or three times on the other arm.

Josiah turned and looked at me, surprised.

“I didn’t do, I didn’t do it!” I cried, pointing at Jacob.

As I wandered around taking pictures, Warren stopped in his tracks and smiled sweetly every time I aimed my camera anywhere near him.  I therefore have a dozen pictures with Warren in them – and none whatsoever of Jeffrey, except for his back, which doesn’t count.

I went out to the enclosed porch, where Andrew and Hester had set up a couple of tables for the children, and there was Lyle.  He’s 15, and the tallest of all his siblings. 

“How tall are you now?” I asked.

“Almost 6 feet,” he told me.

“Didn’t anyone tell you,” I demanded, “that it’s against the rules to spoil the stairstep configuration of your family like that?!”

He looked at me for a second or two, and then promptly blamed it on Emma, who at 16 is 15 months older than him, for being so short.  😂

Suddenly, in the middle of all the gaiety and fun, I noticed poor little Malinda over there on the piano bench with nary a present to her name!



I held out my hand and called, “Malinda!  Come with Grandma, and we’ll go round up that present, wherever it might be!”

She gladly came scampering across the room, and soon we’d found her gift bag.

Here she is with the stuffed Shar-Pei puppy we gave her – one of those pups with the rumpled faces.  



She really laughed when she pulled it out of her bag.  She was delighted with the bright red silicone mini-muffin pan, with the colorful paper lines and two bags of muffin mix, and all the other things in her bag.  She forgot she’d ever felt forlorn in her livelong life.

She thought the sock monkey at the bottom of the bag was totally hilarious.  On the front of the monkey’s shirt, it says, “Shop ’til you drop,” and the monkey is holding a shopping bag.  When I read it to her, she laughed, and hurried off to show her Mama (Lydia).

Keira loves rocks.  Once when they were out in Colorado, Hester told Keira that if she collected any more rocks, there wouldn’t be any mountains left!

I loved rocks, too, when I was little.  Daddy used to call me his ‘little rockhound’.  Every now and then Mama would give me a bit of money and let me go in a rock shop out in the mountains somewhere and gets some polished rocks.

For about 55 years, I’ve had a treasured little box of polished rocks.  I used to pour them out, sort them, look at them with a magnifying glass, and compare them to pictures of various types of rocks in the encyclopedias. 

Knowing how much Keira loves rocks, I decided to give her this set of rocks for Christmas.  So I poured them into a ‘milk bottle’ that used to have milk chocolate candies in it – and as I poured, I well remembered each of those pretty rocks.  I wrote a note about the rocks, and taped it to the bottle.



Bobby, who was sitting beside Keira (Keira has always loved her ‘Unca Bob’), spotted the note, and read it to her. 

I told Keira, “When I started pouring those rocks into that bottle, I still liked them so much, I almost decided to keep them!” 

She laughed, while carefully turning the bottle to look at the rocks.

Later that evening, Hester sent a couple of pictures and a video, writing, “Keira had to get the rocks out as soon as everyone was gone.”

In the video she says, speaking of me, “She wanted to keep them, but she still gave them to me!  She’s not greedy at all!!!”



Hester added, “😆😆  Apparently we’ve talked a lot about not being greedy lately.”

In one picture, Keira is sorting the rocks into the muffin tin we gave her, and she even broke out the package of paper muffin tin liners.

I sent the last pan of deer meatloaf home with Jeremy and Lydia, because it was one of the few things Lydia could eat that didn’t hurt her mouth.  Her implant (a molar) came loose last week, and she had to have it screwed back in.  Both sides of her mouth are hurting.

By the time Kurt and Victoria were getting ready to go, Violet was having a grand time playing with her cousins.  Look at her face as she tugs on her boots.  Can you tell she wasn’t nearly ready to depart?



The kids, upon hearing that their father was sick, all started doing this and that to help:  Hannah went back home and gathered up their nebulizer and some albuterol to put in it, and took it to Larry along with a divided dish of various kinds of food.



When I got ready to go, Victoria asked me to stop by her house for some ‘natural’ additive for the nebulizer (Larry can switch back and forth from albuterol to this, with no ill effects) and vitamins, etc., that have helped her family when they were sick.

Hester and Victoria filled a large tray with even more food (enough for me, too) for me to take home.  Maria tucked in several of her homemade sweet dinner buns.



Jeremy and Lydia beat me home, bringing Larry some organic cough syrup (which he pretended to glug and get the hiccups), and then Jeremy helped me carry in presents and food and suchlike from the Benz.

Teddy, goofy kid, texted his father his phone number (as if it was a ‘New Contact’) and his address (two miles to our east) with a GPS pin on a map.  That was to tell him (again!) that Teddy is just down the road, and Larry can (and should) call him for help anytime, any hour, he might need it.

Our kids are good to us.

Teddy lost a sheep (the oldest in the herd) to the cold Friday, and also a calf.  The other animals are having it pretty rough, too.  A milk cow that had parasites earlier this year doesn’t have as good of a coat of fur as she should have, so Teddy covered her with an insulated blanket.  He’s feeding them all extra grain; but this kind of cold takes a toll on livestock.

Some friends got their two granddaughters dollhouses – one for each of them – which they planned to put together on Christmas Day.

My parents got me a dollhouse when I was 3 or 4.  It was one of those cardboard things that probably looked better in the picture on the box than it did when it was put together.  But it had a piece of ‘grass’ that one unrolled in front of it, and when it was sprinkled with water, it would grow.  Theoretically. 

I was sooooooo looking forward to playing with that house – but no one ever had time to put it together for me.  Ever.



There were some cheapie dolls that came with it, about the size of Barbie dolls, but if you breathed on them too hard, they came apart at all the joints.

So I played with the dolls – gently – and wished and wished someone would put the dollhouse together for me.

That, along with a few other unfinished projects in my childhood (such as a pretty, pale green robe my mother started sewing for me), might be the reason I so detest unfinished projects.

I did eventually find that green robe in Mama’s basement, the main part of it, and, wonder of wonders, the not-yet-attached sleeves.  The facings (and the pattern) were long lost. 

But I knew how to create facings.  I finished the robe for one of the girls (Hannah, maybe?), and she was pleased as could be with it.

Here’s Eva, Caleb and Maria’s little girl, telling me ‘thank you’ for the wooden stack-and-sort toy.



The boys liked their cars, and several stopped in the middle of gift-unwrapping to come and tell me ‘thank you’ for this and that.

I always hope they all considered things fair and equal, and were happy with what they got.

The various cold remedies, plus some medications we had in the cupboard, seemed to help Larry.  His fever went down, and the tightness and burning in his chest went away.  The nebulizer treatment with albuterol stopped his wheezing, and he didn’t cough too much during the night.  But a swelled-up wood pellet got stuck in the auger in the wood-burning stove and the house got all smoked up about 1:15 a.m. that night.  Ugh.

It took an hour to clear the smoke out, and both of us felt half sick.  My head was still thumping a bit when I got up at a quarter ’til 7 to get ready for church.  Larry wasn’t at all well enough to go.

We had our usual Sunday School and church in the morning, and then we had Christmas dinner in our Fellowship Hall.  It was roast beef, mashed potatoes and gravy, green beans, onions, some kind of berry jello, chef salad, milk or juice, coffee or tea, French bread fresh out of the oven, sliced and buttered hot, and a variety of pies with ice cream.

Poor Baby Oliver tipped a bowl of hot gravy onto his hand.  He cried, and of course he had gravy all over his clothes; so Andrew took Hester and Oliver home, then came back after a little while.  Keira, two chairs down from me, finished eating, then spotted her Grandpa Ricky, and went with him until Andrew returned.  Oliver’s hand is okay, just a bit red with a small blister on it.  Hester sent a few pictures to show that he’s back in his usual good spirits.




Our usual evening service was moved to 2:00 p.m.

After the service, as people were filing out of the sanctuary, I went and sat down by my sister Lura Kay.  She looked up, smiling, and I said, “Merry Christmas!” – which made both of us laugh, because, you know, we’ve been celebrating Christmas ‘together’, sort of, what with our program Wednesday night, and Christmas services and dinner all day Sunday.  It’s like being out in the falling snow with someone for hours on end and then saying, “It’s snowing!” 

I told Lura Kay how Loren was doing, and we were chatting about this and that, when along came her daughter Susan to tell her that it was sleeting and getting slick out, and to ask if Lura Kay would like Susan to drive her home (in Lura Kay’s car).  Lura Kay is 82.

Lura Kay harrumphed.  “Don’t you think I can drive?!” she asked.

I laughed, and said, “It’s sooo insulting when your kids act like you aren’t capable of doing anything anymore.”

We had barely stepped into the hallway when along came Caleb. 

“It’s getting pretty slick out,” he told me.  “Would you like me to drive your car up to the front doors under the awning?”  ðŸ˜„

I was not too proud to take him up on his offer.

Here’s little Brooklyn in a hat and jumper Dorcas crocheted for her.



Jocelyn wrote to wish us a Merry Christmas.  Both Justin and Juliana are sick, with very sore throats and fever, poor kids.

Larry made waffles this morning with the new Belgian waffle maker we got last week.  Yummy, they were big and soft on the inside and crispy on the outside; just right.

He was feeling quite a bit better – and he was getting cabin fever.  He had his usual day-after-Christmas phone chat with his brother Kenny (which they conduct even when they’ve visited with each other at the Christmas dinner at church).  Larry puts his phone on speaker so I can hear; it’s so funny to hear them talk to each other.  I can’t decide if it’s more like Laurel and Hardy, or like Abbott and Costello.  Maybe a combination. 

A little later, Larry put on warm clothes and went to Bomgaars to get some good oak pellets.  They won’t be swollen out of shape, nor will they have paint residue and other contaminants in them like those cheaper ones.  They are denser and heavier, and will burn longer and hotter; so the extra price of a dollar a bag will doubtless be well worth it. 

The last time some of those cheap pellets got caught in the auger, it ruined it, and Larry had to replace it with a new one, which cost $200.  😖



Teddy called to ask how Larry is doing.  One of his cows is down, and he can’t get it up.  It has a 3-week-old calf.  He’s pumping magnesium and ... ? something else the vet recommended into her.  She’s been down since last night.  He keeps moving her from side to side so she doesn’t damage her legs, laying on them too long.  He tries to get her up, but she just can’t do it.  The calf has figured out how to nurse despite his mother being down.  He was shivering last night, so Teddy covered him with a blanket and banked hay for him.  This morning Teddy found him snuggled next to his mother. 

If that cow doesn’t make it, they’ll have an orphaned calf to care for.

Larry then went to Genoa to put a new thermostat in his pickup.  When he drove home, he was happy that it got toasty warm inside.

Tomorrow I plan to go visit Loren.  The temperature is supposed to get all the way up to 48°!  Imagine that.  Larry can’t come to the nursing home with the cold he has, but he plans to go to work.

And now I’d better make plans to fly into the feathers!



,,,>^..^<,,,          Sarah Lynn          ,,,>^..^<,,,