Tuesday, May 31, 2011

OWAV:)...05/31/11...5am...41°...rain overnight, cloudy

I have write group today, maybe repot geraniums for the front porch...simmer soup bones for broth and make a meat loaf for dinner...that way Herb will have food for his dinner  tomorrow while I'm in Walla Walla with Pat...Looking forward to the trip over Tollgate, always such a pretty drive and then lots of blooms in the WW valley...have asparagus ordered and will visit with LeaAnn.

Spring Gold
Pam stopped by yesterday afternoon with mushrooms!..I had spaghetti ready, so we had dinner, then went mushroom hunting...Herb and I usually go to Fergi, sometimes we find then and sometimes not...Herb and Pam had much better luck than I...my only claim was that I found the first one...spent about two hours amid sprinkles of rain, thunder in the distance and occasional sun breaks...Arrived back home where we sorted and cleaned mushrooms and decided to eat some fresh, dry some and saute and freeze the rest...Herb is making mushrooms and scrambled eggs for breakfast...I can taste them already.

In summary of Daddy's life my thoughts are:  If it can be called a fault, I think his kind heart and generous nature were at the top of the list..He was always there to help other people and would give the shirt off his back if he thought they needed it...People and relatives alike took advantage of him...I don't think that day to day his immediate family went without, because he worked doubly hard to make sure we didn't...But in the long run, it may have been a reason that because he gave so much to other people, he could never get ahead... Usually when you are a giving person, it comes back to you two-fold, but it didn't seem to work that way for him...I don't mean to sound like he never got paid back because he did in many ways...It just seems to me that most of the time he gave much more than he received...I saw a statement just the other day that said, "If you work hard, you will be lucky." Not true in his case...I remember a time when I was about twelve years old and I overheard a conversation about relatives of ours...The statement was made: "Everything they touch turns to money." I said, "I wish they would touch something for us."  Everyone laughed, but later Daddy ask me why I said that, if there was something I wanted or needed...I said, "No, I just wish we had enough money so you didn't have to work so hard."  Out of love for him our entire family worked hard trying to lighten his load, we worshiped the ground he walked on and in return he gave us unconditional love that he expressed freely and often...He taught us honesty, love, kindness, respect, humor, generosity and that hard work never hurt anyone...

Alcoholism was a problem that Daddy shared with his brothers and later, his son was also its victim, all heavy drinkers...He stayed away from alcohol most of the time, but he could not have a social drink...One drink led to another, then another...He turned to alcohol in times of high stress, such as holidays...Things didn't seem so bad, when alcohol took off the edge...When drinking he would buy luxuries for his family, luxuries that we didn't need and definitely couldn't afford...It made some rough times for our family and I remember some Christmas's, not because of the gifts, but because Daddy was drinking and our house was in turmoil...I think he drank at that time to forget the Christmas of 1936, when they lost, their son, Joel...

I thought my world would end when I knew his death was imminent...but I found that that wasn't an option and though it is not easy, life does go on...

I'm going to stop now because I have written and rewritten until some of this is scrambled like the eggs I had for breakfast and at a later day, it will be rewritten again... OWAV:)

Monday, May 30, 2011

OWAV:)...05/30/11...5am...40°...Cloudy, Rainy

Stormy, cold, wind, slivers of sun...that was yesterday...Looks like more of the same today..  Herb did laundry...after starting a fire downstairs to dry the sheets...I basically did nothing but fix pork chops and salad for dinner...Almost forgot...made banana bread using a jar of old apple butter and applesauce, instead of so much sugar...decided to use butter instead of oil...
                              Banana Nut Bread

1 cube butter (softened)                       3 or 4 black bananas                    
1/2 cup sugar                                      3 eggs
1 cup apple butter                               4 cups flour (scant)
  (I think any kind of old preserves       1 1/2 tsp baking soda 
    would work)                                   2 tsp salt
1 cup applesauce                                 2 tsp vanilla

This recipe is very forgiving, try different combinations of fruit to suit your tastes... I put softened butter in bowl, mixed in sugar, added preserves and applesauce, bananas, eggs...  then added small amounts of flour, salt and soda mixture, stirring after each addition...  chopped walnuts and vanilla went in last...Spooned into 5 small aluminum loaf pans...put them on a large cookie sheet and baked at 350° for 30 minutes...checked, 5 more minutes.

Lake Fork Idaho summer of 1960...Our ranch sold, an auction was held to liquidate machinery and raise enough money to start building the "log house" of my Mother's dreams...The site on another acreage had already been picked and plans drawn up...The auction didn't go well, basically giving stuff away...Daddy refused to sell his machinery for nothing...In the end, the machinery was taken as a down payment on a 10 x 60 trailer house that was placed on a basement...A new home with a beautiful view of Jug Handle and the valley...Not at all what they had envisioned, but Mom and Dad were soon hard at work, finishing the basement and landscaping the property...Late fall of 1960, Daddy was having more than his usual indigestion and stomach pain, treatment for ulcers didn't help,  gall bladder surgery was scheduled...Daddy was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer at the age of 53, six months to live...He waged a courageous fight against this deadly disease, for the next year he and Mom continued working hard on the new place...
Christmas came and went that year, everyone knowing it would be our last one together...all of us putting on a brave front...in the spring of 1961, Mom and Daddy worked and played, on the Salmon River, where they were employed by one of the fishing guides as cook and handy man...rototilled and planted a new garden spot... By then Daddy was in continual pain...He walked down the aisle of the Community Church, June 10, with me on his arm and tears in his eyes, he gave me away as I married Herb Allen...A bitter sweet day...In and out of the hospital all summer...Mom was his caregiver, learning to give him shots for pain, so he could spend time with her at home, instead of in the hospital...Death came on October 15 a year after the diagnosis, Daddy was 54 years old...had fathered six children and was grandfather to fourteen...Maybe I can finish this tomorrow...too many tears... OWAV:)☹

Sunday, May 29, 2011

OWAV:)...05/29/11...5am...37°...Cloudy

Good comments on my blog yesterday...Thank you all very much!..That is an easy way to get my thoughts on paper, because sometimes they come so fast and furious that I have to be quick or I lose them...I hope to eventually expand on many of these thoughts to make complete stories...Stay tuned.

Yesterday morning Herb fixed ham, eggs, hashbrowns and toast for our breakfast...He has started doing breakfast the last few years and has gotten good at eggs, oatmeal and cold cereal...I certainly don't complain, nice to have someone else cook...After blogging I went to a couple of yard sales and the opening day of the Farmers Market here in Joseph...a good turnout at the market both in booths and people...had the usual booths and some new ones as well...Kept running into people I know so did as much visiting as looking...fun to reconnect with people after our long, long winter...I bought a few bedding plants and took them to the main street planter boxes...now we have a little more color in the newly cleaned out beds...

Had asked Pam to come to dinner, her choice of day...she picked yesterday, so Herb fixed tri tip steak and I added asparagus, baked potato, and greens served with homemade "Blue Cheese Dressing"...I got this recipe from my sister-in-law Marlene, many years ago...

1 quart good quality mayonnaise, (Not Low Fat) 1/4 -1/2 grated onion, 1-2 cloves grated garlic, few shakes of worcestershire sauce, 2-4 Tbls. lemon juice, and 1/4 to 1/2 lb. bleu cheese...I don't measure, just dump mayo into large bowl, grate onion and garlic into it and add the other ingredients..  Stir well, needs to sit for awhile for flavor to go through...Put back into quart jar and anything leftover is to taste and adjust ingredients if needed...This will keep forever in the fridge, but it never lasts long around here...I add sour cream (to taste) to a small portion when I get ready to serve it...use it as a dressing, dip, sandwich spread, I've been known to clean off the spoon all by itself, nothing added...Yummy!!!  Thank you Molly...

Joe and Blanche Ashton 1950
On with the story...I've been reading from Aunt Peggy's book "Precious Gems" and recordings of Mom telling about her life, that Mona and Jerry transcribed into a document.    Trying to get the sequence right after Daddy's back injury...


The next paragraph is from Aunt Peggy's book "Precious Gems" written by my sister Loraine Smith..."On the third of March 1939, Daddy fell while riding coal down the chute in the cole mine and suffered a broken back.  For the following three years Daddy was in and out of hospitals:  Kemmerer, Mayo Clinic, to a Masseur in Ogden, and Dr. Heater in Salt Lake City.  Dr Heater removed four inches of bone from Daddy's leg and fussed it into his spine, making it rigid so he could not bend from the waist.  He could not work in the mines anymore."


❝The family struggled on after "Baby's" death (that is how Mom always referred to Joel)...Daddy went to work in the coal mines in Diamondville...He injured his back in a  mine accident...in and out of hospitals for several years, to the Mayo Brothers Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. http://www.mayoclinic.org/careerawareness/mi-history.html 
There wasn't enough money for Mom to go with him, so he was just put on the train and and "shipped" back there...Hard to imagine...Mom said that with the back injury he was in the hospitals for a total of 96 days...He was eventually awarded a settlement from the mining company and with that money, in 1940, a small farm was purchased in Porterville, Utah...There was enough money to buy milk cows and a new start was made...Daddy went to work at the Cement Plant in Devil Slide as the janitor...They had to have cash for everyday essentials...In October 1942 I arrived on the scene...Loraine and Barbara soon married, and by my third birthday I was an aunt to George Smith and Alan Reed Stephens...My brother, George graduated from high school, married Marlene Madden...Mom and Dad decided to move again...They drove from Porterville, through Idaho, almost to the Canadian border looking for property to buy...They bought a five hundred acre ranch in Lake Fork, Idaho...December 3, 1950 a caravan of three trucks, (machinery, household furniture and horses) one "touring car" and a pickup truck left Porterville, at 5pm in a rainstorm that soon turned to snow...(another story)...Two days later we arrived at Lake Fork and our new home...There was enough timber on this property to pay off the mortgage...but before Daddy was able to start on the timber a local lumber company made a claim on the timber rights...they came in and started cutting the timber...Many agonizing months later a lawsuit was settled in Daddy's favor, but after the lawyer and all the bills were paid, little money was left over and the timber was gone...He again turned to milk cows for cash flow, got bummer lambs to start a herd of sheep and bought a few cattle to start a herd...He did custom baling and combining, worked our own farm...working daylight to dark trying to make a living and get ahead...Mona and I worked side by side with him whether it was with cows, sheep, driving tractor, milking cows...Mona graduated in 1955, married Jerry Park in 1956, moved to Boston to be a Navy wife...Finally in June 1960 a buyer was found and the ranch was sold...machinery was auctioned off...the dream was that with bills paid off there would be enough money to build a home and retire... Daddy would work odd jobs, again for cash flow...stay tuned..OWAV:)


Saturday, May 28, 2011

OWAV:)...05/28/11...4am...34°

No scrabble games waiting for me...played angry birds, trying to improve (for no reason) some of my scores...

My mind as I typed this date goes to my mom, today would have been her 102 birthday...she has been gone almost seven years...but my mind also goes to my brother, George, his birth date 05/25/31, gone for three years...then to my dad, his birthday 05/14/07, gone for almost 50 years...While killing pigs, my mind kept flashing through Daddy's life...

Born Elmer Isaac Ashton-1907, to George and Idella Ashton...the fifth child in a family of eight...His mother injured in a horse and buggy accident, confined to a wheelchair, died when he was twelve...soon to appear was a "wicked stepmother, Belle"...Daddy quit school after eighth grade...worked herding sheep from the age of ten...staying away from home... reasons, stepmother and sometimes abusive father...lived with and partially raised by uncles on his mother's side, uncle's Rawl and Marsh Eastman..at an early age he learned to whistle, the uncles nicknamed him "Whistling Joe", Joe stuck with him the rest of his life, only on legal documents did the name "Elmer" appear...While herding sheep and "cowboying", a woman living on her parents neighboring ranch stole his heart...or maybe it was her two daughter's, Loraine and Barbara, from a previous marriage, who soon called him "Daddy Joe"...Daddy loved children and claimed the girls as his own when he married Blanche Parkin Fields in 1930..."Joe" cowboyed, rodeoed, and took a full time job working in the coal mines in Diamondville, Wyoming...Most of the people in Diamondville were of Italian decent, it was the prohibition era and the years of the great depression...My two older sisters have fond memories of this time, although their life was wrought with hardship...Joe and Blanche became parents, two sons and a daughter, George born in 1931, Joel in 1934 and Mona in 1936...Tragedy struck in December of 1936 with Joel's death, double pneumonia, antibiotic's not available...Mona, two weeks old and Christmas five days away...The family struggled on, Joe was in a mining accident, vertebrae broken in his back...to be continued

http://www.diamondvillewyo.com/history.htm
check out the history of Diamondville, Wyoming

Friday, May 27, 2011

OWAV:)...05/27/11...5am...40°...Cloudy/Sunny

Last of daffodils to bloom 
Record breaking news...Eight check marks on my blog comments...Does that mean that eight different people read it OR did one person check eight different times?..I choose to believe that eight people read it and can only hope they enjoyed it...You keep reading, I'll keep writing.

Looks like a decent day to do the Mainstreet planter boxes...Phi Master Sorority has taken care of three boxes since the revamping of Joseph's main street in 2005 (?)...Every year at this time we do the weeding, planting and fertilizing for another summer... sometimes adding more perennials and always planting annuals, such as pansies, marigolds, petunias, geraniums...With the combination we have now, we weed and deadhead, during the summer months and the bed will bloom into October...Then we cut everything back and the beds are ready for winter...Our Joseph main street is a sight to behold, as during the summer flower boxes bloom all along the six blocks in the business area, and in fall the sugar maples turn brilliant shades of pinkish orange to flaming red... Be back later

Wallowa County Museum and the happy gardeners!
3pm...Four ladies from Phi Master sorority spent three hours this morning, weeding downtown planter boxes...two of us are pushing 70 (one has two artificial knees) and the other two pushing 80 (one with an artificial hip)...what a team  ...luckily we didn't have to call in a hoist to get any of us up off the paver sidewalk or an ambulance to haul anyone to the hospital... The planting will have to wait for another day, because three hours did us in...as we finished up, the weather started to turn nasty, now it is raining, trying to snow...OH JOY!

I came home caught up on scrabble games, uploaded photos from my camera to computer, so have shared a couple with you.  I made creamy tomato vegetable soup for our dinner and we had leftover rhubarb pie from last night...done cooking for the day.

I took a pan of "dinner rolls" to Becky's Birthday party and got rave reviews so will share the recipe...Basic Dough (rolls, cinnamon rolls, etc)

5-6 cups flour            1 tsp salt
2 cups hot water         1/4 cup sugar                
1 cube butter             3 eggs
2 pkg dry yeast          1 cube butter (softened to spread over dough)

Using a large bowl, I place 5 cups of flour in the bowl and make a well (place the following ingredients in the well)...Two cups hot water, cut the cube of butter into the hot water(stir a little)...the cold butter cools the water enough to then add the yeast, sprinkle sugar over top of the yeast...let sit until yeast dissolves and starts to bubble (about 15 minutes).. add the beaten eggs and salt..Start stirring in the flour, working it from the sides of the bowl... When it is too thick to stir start kneading with your hands adding the other cup of flour... This is the tricky part because it takes a few time of making any bread to get the feel of the dough...you want a soft dough but one that forms into a nice ball of dough...It might take more or less than 6 cups of flour...Cover and let stand for about an hour, dough will be about double in size...Roll our on to a floured surface and gently press and stretch until it is about 1/2 inch thick or use a rolling pin, just be gentle and don't try to make it all even, you will need a little flour on top of the dough as well, to keep it from sticking...spread softened butter over dough...then I use a pizza cutter and cut strips about 2 -2 1/2 inches wide, long ways and then 3-4 inches the other way...Fold these strips in half and place on a large parchment covered cookie sheet (with sides)...(My rolls come out all shapes and sizes, don't worry about that, they will all taste good, if I have two small ends I just put one on top of the other and don't worry about re-rolling the dough)...let rise for  60 to 90 minutes, bake at 350° for 20 minutes...Don't get discouraged it they don't turn out feather light the first time it does take practice with any yeast dough, but it is worth the effort...OWAV:)

Thursday, May 26, 2011

OWAV:)...05/26/11...6am...35°...Snowy, Breezy,

This morning my beautiful flowers are covered with snow. Yesterday the deer had eaten nearly all of the trolius buds!..Now the sun is shinning and we are all in one piece...house still standing, safe from flooding on Barton Heights...troubles are minor...Positive thinking.

It was so nice yesterday I planted cucumber seeds, making twelve hills,  covered them with milk jugs (bottoms cut out) and piled straw all around...Threw flower seeds in all flower beds and raked over them to cover...maybe some will grow...decided to plant the tomato starts residing in the greenhouse...I carefully prepared the ground, set in the tomato starts, covered tomato cages with plastic bags and pushed the legs of the cages into the ground, covering the starts...my version of mini greenhouses...Later in the evening when it started raining with the possibility of snow, I covered the three cages with a sheet...maybe that kept the snow off so they didn't all freeze...

I fixed deer steak for dinner (from last fall), I would like it fresh but they probably don't serve that in "JAIL"...We had fresh asparagus from our garden and lots of greens from "Arrowhead Farms"...avacodo, peapods and cucumber from Costco...

Herb scattered grass seed out back, where the old lean-to was and covered it with straw... He has the fence finished between us and Williams...now the pasture is ready for Debbie to bring a few animals to keep the grass eaten down.

Tomorrow we are supposed to do downtown planter boxes for sorority, weather permitting... Don't have any plans for the weekend except gardening at home...The apple and plum tree is about ready to bloom, so hope it quits snowing soon...OWAV:)

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

OWAV:)...05/25/11...6am...frosty...Some Sun:)

Spent most of yesterday at Ruth Wineteers, our usual meeting place for write group...read some of our writings...played a game of scrabble...had lunch, then since it was still so rainy, we played another game of scrabble...Much different playing scrabble on a real board instead of on the computer...I've certainly improved my skills by playing on the computer.

Arrived home to the sun shinning, Herb mowing lawns and wondering where I wanted to spread the grass...I mulched raspberry bed with grass, then walked to neighbor Marsha's for starts out of her greenhouse and gardens...came home with tomatoes and sweet peas and several lavender plants to replace mine that have killed out the last two years...with a few hours of sun today maybe I can set up tomatoes cages in plastic bags and get the tomatoes moved out of the greenhouse...also plant cucumber seeds and place gallon plastic jugs overtop each hill...helps them to germinate...maybe plant potatoes...

As always, I have to think of things to thaw for meals for the rest of the week...this weather, keeps me thinking stews, casseroles, maybe meat loaf or spaghetti...

I wrote the following story for my memoir class... The story is about a time over fifty years ago and is as I remember it...OWAV:)


 BLUE FROSTING
Front row, Idella, Connie 3rd grade
 Mom shifted into a lower gear as we rounded yet another corner, while driving to school, on the slick, snow covered road.  It was snowing and blowing so hard, that the wipers had a hard time keeping the windshield clean.  Almost, as if out of nowhere a shadowy figure appeared on the roadside.  As we got closer we could see that it was a young girl.  She was bundled against the cold wind, wearing a coat much to large for her.  A scarf was wrapped around her head and tied under her chin.  She walked slowly as the boots she wore seemed too large for her feet.  She immediately moved off the road, into the bar pit.  Mom stopped the car and I rolled down the window to ask if she wanted a ride.  She moved farther away from our car, shaking her head from side to side, it became very apparent that she wouldn’t accept a ride from us.  
My Mom was driving me to Wood Grove, a one room school that I attended for the next five years.  It was December 1950.  I was eight years old, in the third grade and we recently moved from Porterville, Utah to Lake Fork, Idaho. 
Wood Grove, truly a one room school, with only twelve students.  Students of all ages sat in the rows of desks filling the room. The teacher sat in a desk at the front of the room and black boards covered the wall directly behind her.  Windows lined a wall and a piano stood on the other side of the room.  A large pot belly stove, radiating heat, filled an entire corner.  Freshly split wood stacked nearby, and coats hung to dry behind the stove.  Boots, mittens and caps lay strewn on the floor.  The smell of wet wool permeated the air.
I quickly removed my outer layer of clothing, while the teacher arranged a desk next to the wall for me to sit in.  I sat down behind a boy, with blond hair, named Jimmy Kantola, also in third grade.  Just then the door opened and in walked the girl, we had seen on the roadway.  She sat in the desk behind me.  I soon learned that her name was Connie Thompson and everyday, she walked over a mile to school, in any kind of weather, and often her clothing was less than adequate. 
  Connie, a very shy girl hadn’t been schooled in social graces.  When spoken to, she would duck her head and turn away.  I don’t remember her being teased or shunned because of the clothing she wore or the meager lunches she brought to school.  All the families were poor (ours included), but her family was very poor.  No one wore expensive clothes and most of the kids rode horseback or walked to school.  The difference being that their clothing was warmer and fit better.  In the summer all of us rode bicycles or walked.  By my second year in school at Wood Grove, Connie and I had became best friends.  
I learned that her mother was reclusive, seldom leaving their home.  Her father, worked at the local saw mill, and often stopped at the tavern on his way home from work. Money that could have bought groceries and warm clothing, quite often was spent at the tavern.  Her older brother, James, had mental problems and didn’t attend school.  Connie never told me any of these things, but they were common knowledge in the community.
  The Thompson family lived on a small acreage with outbuildings for their cow and chickens.  The milk cow never seemed to have enough pasture or hay to keep her well fed and therefore her milk would soon dry up.  The chickens were free range, not by choice, but because there wasn’t any grain for them to eat. 
Their house was a small two story building with an outdoor toilet nearby.  I spent many hours and sometimes overnight at their home playing with Connie.  I ate meals with them and felt comfortable visiting there.  One thing I remember vividly is a 9 X 12 dark chocolate cake, with bright blue frosting.  It is the only dessert I remember and we had it many times when I went there to play.  I wonder if it was something Mrs. Thompson made to add color to her otherwise gray and bleak world.  
Mrs. Thompson worked very hard, and kept their house spotlessly clean.  Not easy to do since their house lacked electricity and running water.  She hauled water and heated it on the wood stove for cooking, bathing, laundry and cleaning.  She ironed the families clothes with irons heated on the wood stove and they read using kerosene lanterns.   Her name was Madeline.
Connie lived about two miles away and I would ride my bike there, and we would play house all day.  We labored for hours making mud pies in all shapes and sizes. Family dogs, stretched out in the sun, watching us while we pretended to cook lunch for them.  It took very little to keep us entertained, our imagination providing us everything that we needed. Television had been invented, but not available in Valley County.
Connie spent many days and nights at my house and with my family.  It gave her the opportunity to socialize with my larger extended family and in the process she became more outgoing and gained some self confidence.
I remember my years at Wood Grove as a special part of my life.  The 50‘s were a wonderful time to grow up.  As farm kids we all worked hard, doing the endless chores, milking cows, feeding bummer lambs and calves.  Our lives were uncomplicated and our freedom was endless. The five years at Wood Grove School passed quickly.
The year Connie and I started eighth grade the school system under went major changes.  The one room schools closed and all students rode busses to McCall or Donnelly (nearby towns) where we joined other students.  Roseberry School became a Junior High school with about forty students in the two grades.  At this school we made new friends and our friendship started to fade. 
 Our high school years saw us move farther apart, Connie with her new friends and me with mine.  I remained active in band and joined other clubs sponsored by the school.  Sometime during our Sophomore year Connie quit high school and was soon married, a baby on the way.  She moved to Council, Idaho, with her new husband.
I heard about her through mutual friends and our paths crossed occasionally at the local grocery store.  Over the next few years, Mrs. Thompson was treated for breast cancer and Connie’s brother, James moved to the Boise valley and lived in a group home.  
     I graduated from high school, attended beauty college and was married, living in Utah and had children of my own, the next time I heard anything about Connie.  My husbands parents had retired and moved to Council.  Connie called their home and left a message asking that I call her the next time we came for a visit.  
       I had mixed feelings about seeing her after so many years, but felt I should return her call.  We had a short phone conversation, and set a time for her to come to my in-laws house so we could continue our visit.  The day arrived but Connie didn’t.  I thought I might get a phone call explaining why, but I never heard from her again.  Maybe her thoughts like mine decided that too much time had passed or maybe a child got sick, or her husband said it wasn’t a good idea.  I don’t know, so many things could have happened and now forty years later I will always wonder?

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

OWAV:)...05/24/11...6am...39°...Rain

I have write group today and not much to write about...the gloomy days and unceasing rain are getting to everyone...keep reminding ourselves that we are lucky, after looking at the photos of Joplin, Missouri...116 people dead and the town nearly demolished...a chance of more tornadoes...I am thankful for where I live, but it is hard not to think that June is almost here and the days start getting shorter on June 22nd...then we start back the other way...we need sunshine, warm evenings, days spent on the deck, in the warm outside air...spring has been nonexistent and summer can be short...Line from a childhood poem..."Rain, rain go away, come again some other day."

Herb is stirring in his chair, must be time for breakfast.

I enjoyed memoir class and learned from it...I do feel overwhelmed with all the work I should do, editing, revision, or rewriting to make my stories more enjoyable for the reader...I tell myself to take baby steps, one sentence at a time, then a paragraph and stop thinking of the entire project...I want a quick fix, twitch my nose, and it is done...only happens on television.

Guess I better go eat...maybe with a refueling my mind will function better...OWAV:)

Monday, May 23, 2011

OWAV:)...05/23/11...6am...45°...Raining

Must have rained all night...when will it stop...supposed to be warmer but wet...Whatever!!!

Mostly lazy day yesterday...Worked on my blog...Did some house cleaning... Finished reading "After the Falls" good book...Started a new books in addition to the one I'm reading...neither of them grabbed me...We will read "The Help" for book club this month... I've read it but will have to refresh...It is an excellent book...did some railroad stuff...talked to Bob on ichat...more rain in Portland...Cienna did well in her swim meet...they did their usual Sunday market...so had lots of veggies and fruit (strawberries) to eat...I went to bed early again...crazy, crazy dreams...Awoke to the rain...did scrabble games...Rusty "chatted in"...he is doing odds and ends after being gone for two months...will be coming to Joseph late next week.

Coming up this week...Last Memoir class tonight...Have written a story titled "Blue Frosting" from the prompt "Wonder what happened to so and so"...Katey will hand it back tonight with suggestions, then I will rewrite it and add it to my blog....I have write group on Tuesday, but nothing else pushing me until the weather dries up and we can get into the garden and plant...Sure glad I did roundup on the flowerbeds last week...Must set a date this week to work on downtown planter boxes for sorority...and make a couple of collages for sorority year book...Friend Pat and I will go to Walla Walla on June 1st...should be a fun trip...visit nurseries and get asparagus...

I think it is breakfast time and also time to think about dinner...have goat shanks to brown and put in the over to slow cook until our dinner time...leftover mashed potatoes and fresh asparagus...Sounds good!...OWAV:)

Sunday, May 22, 2011

OWAV:...05/22/11...11am...52°...Cloudy

Not moving very fast this morning...Was so totally exhausted last night, I went to bed at 8pm and slept straight through until 6am...I have put things away this morning, have Brots and Sauerkraut in a 200° oven and will make mashed potatoes to go with that for dinner today...Very Easy.

One of the rejects
I was up at 5am yesterday, started making pies shortly thereafter...Ended up making three pies...I burned the top crust on one, one didn't set and the other one I took to the sale...we took the "rejects" to Becky's birthday party later in the day...Pie sale went okay...We had way more pies than needed, for the crowd...I think next year I'm going to donate twenty dollars and leave town...Of course I said that this year, but it didn't happen...Herb set up the canopy for us...I stayed at the "Dandelion Festival" helping set up and get it going and went back down at 4pm to take it all down...In the meantime I mixed and baked dinner rolls for Becky's party... Enjoyed visiting around the backyard campfire, at John and Becky's, eating potluck and Johns BBQ...he bought himself and Becky a joint present for her birthday...A Traeger Grill, so we can look forward to many more BBQ'S at their house...We left early and home to bed!

❝Band Trips❞ I was a member of the Donnelly-McCall band for five years, 1955-60... Playing the tenor saxophone...On our trips to Lewiston, we either rode the bus, or rode with parents (my mom took us one year) who volunteered to take cars loaded with kids...Cars did not come equip with seat belts in those days so you took as many kids as the car would hold...In the 57 Chevy we put four in the back seat and three in front, no problem...After the first year almost everyone stayed at the "Lewis and Clark Hotel" a Lewiston landmark, now used for office spaces... At that time it was the only hotel in Lewiston and by sharing rooms we could afford to stay there...It had an elevator, which because it was such a novelty, we rode for entertainment...from the first flour to the fifth floor and back again...stopping in between, checking out the other floors...What a bunch of hayseeds we were...In addition to music competitions, on Saturday a parade was held along Lewiston's Main Street and ended up in a park at the other end of town...The second year we went to Lewiston, Mr. Boyd had bought used band uniforms from "somewhere", which were altered to fit (sort of) and we were so proud of our matching uniforms and hats...now we were dressed like the other bands...He also had to teach us how to march and do a routine while playing a march, on our musical instruments...I think I was his biggest challenge, as he tried to teach me to march... repeating "left, right, left right, left right left" I was always out of step...As he singled me out and watched me, I was starting out with my right foot... After many tries and saying "Now Idella, which is your left foot?"...He finally got me to start with the left foot...Fifty years later I'm still "directionally challenged."  Just ask Herb and both kids!!

Band opened a whole new world for me in school, it was a place where I could belong and have the experience of traveling to other places...in addition to the band and marching band, we also had a pep band and about five of us made up an ensemble...The pep band played at all pep rallies and football games...went anywhere that the basketball team was playing, usually on the same bus...Many times we stayed overnight because we were traveling over 100 miles to towns in Idaho...We stayed in private homes on these trips... The ensemble played at home (McCall) for entertainment for meetings, such as rotary and women's organizations... Each year in November, the weekend after Thanksgiving, we made the trip to Boise for the Santa Claus Parade, the official start of the Christmas Season...I also remember marching at halftime of a college football game in Boise, and the pep band playing during a college basketball game at the University of Idaho...It didn't take Mr. Boyd long to increase participation in both band and chorus, making it an important part of the school curriculum...He was definitely one of those special teachers.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Thursday, May 19, 2011

OWAV:)...05/19/11...45°...5am...Sunshine

Yesterday was a beautiful day in Lewiston, Idaho and Clarkston, Washington...didn't even smell bad...That area is famous for being a stinky city due to the pulp mill situated on the Clearwater River...The Snake River and Clearwater come together in Lewiston, and eventually empty into the Columbia at Tri-Cities Washington...and then on to the Pacific Ocean...Lewiston is an inland seaport city, thanks to the locks on the Columbia...Logs first and wood products and grain (I believe) have been the main exports out of Lewiston...April, May and into June in Lewiston are green, lush, trees and shrubs blooming, then come the roses and the start of a very hot, dry summer...We avoid Lewiston in the summer.

OWAV:)...05/20/11

My first trip to Lewiston was in 1956...I was in eighth grade...Our new band teacher Mr. Boyd had primed us all winter for this trip...We were practicing music such as marches, and classical music so we would be ready for the competitions he had entered us in...Most of us had never heard classical music or entered in any kind of competition...Mr. Boyd expected the best out of his students and soon gained our respect...Two things at the top of his list were: One, you never came late to class and two, you never forgot and left your instrument at home...When he stepped onto the podium, everyone came to attention immediately...

Lewiston, a city of 5,000 people and over 200 miles from McCall, was the largest city that many of us had ever visited...The school board agreed to furnish a bus for transportation, and Mr. Boyd explained to the girls that Lewiston had a YWCA...(Young Woman's Christian Association) for us to spend the two nights...None of us had ever heard of a YWCA...I think the cost was $1.00 per night and they furnished an iron and ironing board..and had a bathroom on every floor... I have no idea where the boys stayed, unless it was in rooms at the "Lewis and Clark" hotel where Mr. Boyd could chaperon them...The girls didn't have a chaperon, but I think the YWCA had "hours" and "lights out", similar to college dorms...We were all too scared to even think of doing anything that might get us in trouble.

We needed money for meals, lodging and a few dollars to go shopping...I, of course worried about getting lost, and was reassured by our neighbors, that Lewiston had one main street and the YWCA was located there...All we had to remember was: to be dressed in black pants and freshly ironed white shirts and waiting for the bus at the appointed time...We must have resembled a bunch of quail, as Mr. Boyd "herded" us to the various music competitions held at the Lewiston High School...I don't remember him ever loosing his temper...Free time was spent shopping, we paraded up and down Lewiston's Main Street...trying to decide how to spend our meager spending money...two movie theaters were available and John Phillip Sousa's life story played every year at one or the other... Just for our benefit..."Stars and Stripes Forever" rang in our ears for months afterwards... To be continued...

I have a coffee date this morning...will be meeting Pat and her sisters, who are here for a visit...Should be fun and I plan to stay away from the triple shot of espresso!!!

I stayed up until 11pm last night killing the last of the "pigs" on Angry Birds and making sure I had found all of the golden eggs...Now I can get something done!!!OWAV:)

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

OWAV:)...05/18/11...6am...34°...Partly Cloudy

We are off to Lewiston this morning for a Costco run...Should be a pretty day there...trees leafed out...many more flowers in bloom...I've always love Lewiston in the spring time...I started going there when I was in eighth grade and joined the high school band...(Another story)...

Worked outside some yesterday, spraying roundup, watering the greenhouse, and went to Garden Club...I have some things to plant but the ground is so saturated and soft that I try to stay out of the flower beds until they are drier...

I have some railroad stuff to do this week and also signs for the Dandelion Festival...Now I  better get ready so we can be on our way to the big city...maybe more later...OWAV:)

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

OWAV:)...05/17/11...5am...31°...Sunshine

The full moon waded through clouds as I drove home after memoir class last night...three other ladies rode in the car with me...we marveled at the mountains illuminated in the moonlight...how beautiful this valley is wearing its night time face, covered with newly fallen snow...even though it is May.

Yesterday started early...I quickly caught up my scrabble games...passed on writing my blog...and got right down to the business of making pies...for the last few years I have hosted the May book club meeting here on Barton Heights...It gives me a way to show off the spring garden, filled with daffodils...also to practice my pie baking skills...the rhubarb I pulled last night is succulent and crisp...perfect for rhubarb custard pies...By 9am two pies are cooling on the marble slab, cream has been whipped into soft peaks, now ready to serve...soon the house is filled with the chatter of ten women gathered for our monthly meeting...they help themselves to pie, coffee or tea, talking continually...we have a lively discussion about the book "Committed"... two hours later, I sit on the couch...feeling like a tornado or at least a whirlwind has passed through my house...Some of these ladies are high energy and I am tired just from listening to them...

I settle down to finish my homework for memoir class...It starts with the prompt, I wonder what happened to so and so?...I'm writing about my school days at "Wood Grove" school in Lake Fork, Idaho and a friendship with a girl when we were in third grade...I lost track of her many years ago...I spend the rest of the day writing, rewriting and getting very frustrated...this story is not coming easy...

6pm...homework finished...printer is clacking away, spitting out six pages...pages to be turned in to Katey...I'm back in school again...waiting for a "grade"...pass or fail... excellent or fair...I'll find out next week...Katey's main topic tonight is "To Be Verbs" (all forms of was, were, is, are, be) she is adamant that they be used sparingly!  Also "Killer Filler" such as had, (I'd, we'd), that, mean (I mean), and just..my pages are filled with these very words...My work has just begun...

Garden club this afternoon...maybe the weather will be nice enough we can spend time outside...Herb will mix the sprayer full of roundup this morning, flowerbeds here and downtown all need weeds and grass killed so they are easier to manage...don't use near as much as I use to...

News on the pie sale this coming weekend...not supposed to sell custard pies...government regulations are going to kill the small, bake food sales, that this community relies on as a money maker...I hate them having their fingers in my PIES!!!...OWAV:)

Sunday, May 15, 2011

OWAV:)...05/15/11...6am...44°...Cloudy

I have a busy day ahead...the house needs another cleaning for book group tomorrow...A dessert has to be made...I have a five page story to write by Monday night...think of some thing for dinner.

The weather isn't cooperating so we can sit outside for book group...a real "frog strangler" went through last night...thunder boomed, lightning flashed and rain flooded the road in front of our house... Now I understand why they had flood warnings posted for both the Grande Rhonde and the Imnaha rivers in Wallowa County...It may continue through Tuesday...meaning it is not over yet...My poor daffodils took a beating...They were at their most beautiful yesterday and I'm so glad I brought a huge bouquet into the house to enjoy...

Pam and her friend and hiking partner Michelle Baird stopped in yesterday to view the garden and get starts...It was perfect weather...warm but not hot...ground was still nice and moist...with shovel and plastic bags in hand we made our way around the garden, digging and bagging sedum, meadow rue, ladies mantle, bleeding heart, lamium, pasque, etc. etc.  I don't envy them, their job of planting all the starts they took home...It is fun showing people around...imparting some of the knowledge I have gained over the past twenty years...Not an expert by any means...I love sharing plants and ideas about gardening.

Time yesterday was spent planting new starts of sage and rudbeckia, brought from the nursery...digging weeds and always rearranging plants in my mind, so they add color or texture in another spot...On with my day...OWAV:)

Saturday, May 14, 2011

OWAV:)...05/14/11...5am...50°...Cloudy

Have some catching up to do today...Got through the sorority birthday party...It is the only party where we exchange gifts, as we are "old" and don't need more stuff...I came home with a sun tea jar, very useful for the summer months...now onto the "Dandelion Festival" coming up next weekend...we each have to make two pies to sell, and volunteer in the booth selling them...last year the weather was wonderful and we had good sales...again it will depend on the weather how well we do...time will tell...

Primroses as well as daffodils are in bloom
Pat arrived yesterday at 10am and we worked on our memoir assignment, which starts with a prompt of: "I wonder what happened to so and so?"...We had tea, visited, and related our stories to each other so we could come up with more ideas...We have to have 5 double spaced pages to turn in on Monday night...We walked around the yard looking for plants, that I can dig and share with her, that will grow in her new garden at the lake...To me that is what gardening is about... Sharing the bounty of new starts.
I finished up scrabble games...Went to Alder Slope Nursery to get more bedding plants to finish filling my small planters and repotting others into larger pots so they will be a good size when it is time to plant the barrels...So many things to choose from there...I spent 2 hours making my decisions and came home with three flats...Never begrudge the money spent on starts...because they become a memorial to our parents, that brings joy to all of us who are still living...I quote my Mother-in-law, "Flowers are for the living, don't waste them on me when I'm gone".  In keeping with this wish, every year I plant so the living can enjoy and on the occasion that we get to McCall and Council, we place a single rose on each of our parents graves.

Sharpening Wheel
Speaking of parents, brings me to another thought...A few years ago Rusty arrived with an old "sharpening wheel" for me to use as garden art...I don't remember now, if he knew the significance of this particular piece or if he just thought it would make a good addition to my collection...I'm reminded of the many hours Daddy spent peddling one similar to this contraption, while he sharpened mowing machine sickles...Soon his strong, stocky body  was soaked in sweat, sparks flying as the metal of the blades hit the moving stone, as he peddled and balanced the 8 foot long sickle bar...This was one of the ways he saved money, as the individual blades could be sharpened several times before they had to be replaced with new blades...I think Daddy had somehow made his sharpener, using an old bicycle frame.  

Funny thing I saw in the paper last night...Enterprise Schools are advertising for a "Part Time Football"...On that note I will close for another day...OWAV:)



Thursday, May 12, 2011

OWAV:...05/12/11...5am...41°...Cloudy☹...

I was so hoping for another sunny day...

Yesterday was so gorgeous and I did accomplish some things...Got back home about noon after stuffing envelopes at Fishtrap and going to the grocery store for a few things...I repotted bedding plants that were bought in LaGrande...It was so warm on the deck I kept thinking it would be nice if the trees were leafed out to give me a little shade...worked for about three hours...trimmed the root bound starts...put them in larger containers with new potting soil... Also trimmed off all of the blooms so they will develop a wider root system and put up more shoots...Planted the fiber pots that go on the old cream separator and put them in the greenhouse along with the other starts...I will have to go to Alder Slope Nursery this afternoon and get Lobelia and Alyssum to finish filling them...also some red geraniums for the front porch.

I think we have used up all of the leftovers so will have to think of something for dinner, it will be another warming meal, since the weather is cloudy...I still have to come up with a gift for tonight...maybe something from Alder Slope...probably too lazy to make anything and cellar shelves are getting kind of bare...

Plumbers came yesterday and snaked the sewer that has been giving us problems since February...he pushed something on through, only hope it doesn't block the end where it goes into the city line...time will tell...can't imagine what would have blocked it...Herb said nothing came back on the snake, like tree roots...?...they were supposed to run a thing down that took pictures, but it is in Boise getting repaired...

Meeting Pat tomorrow, so we can work on our memoir assignment...should be fun...think we are having something chocolate...I did suggest we meet at my house for a less distracting venue...Must go...Shower time for me...maybe the sun will break through...OWAV:)

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

OWAV:)...05/11/11...7am...45°...Sunshine...☼☼☼

What a glorious morning!!!slept later than usual this morning...so sitting here in the sun thinking I have to start moving...go to Fishtrap this morning and help with a mailing... staying only two hours, do a little shopping...then home to transplant bedding plants into larger pots and get them in the greenhouse...long range forecast is still pretty iffy but at least it looks like the temps are going to be a little warmer...

Yesterday we had fun with the writers group here for our usual sharing of stories...I had fixed clam chowder, salad, iffy lemon dessert (they said it was good)...Kathy brought quiche so we had a very nice lunch...sent Kathy home with daffodils for herself and some for Chris, our writer friend, who is in the nursing home...Kathy goes in for shoulder surgery next monday and will be in for a long recovery...She broke both shoulders last winter and has been through "Hell" with therapy, not doing much good...Now she will have a titanium shoulder...

I sat on the deck, reading and soaking in the sun, while Herb finished mowing lawns... chatted with Bob for a short time, then Becky and Tate arrived for a visit...Haven't seen Becky since she got home and she starts to work on Monday...Sent her home with some of the lemon dessert and a bouquet of daffodils.

Katey, memoir teacher and friend from the Imnaha retreat is coming tomorrow for tea and a tour of the garden...she is a writer and teacher...trying to get her first book published... full of ideas...very driven to succeed...in her early thirties...should be fun...Has a new boy friend...I thought he was a cowboy...but now I think not...maybe I will find out more...

I have to come up with a birthday gift for tomorrow nights Sorority birthday party...am about to finish the book "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks"...it was good but got kind of "drug" down in the middle...Will start on "Girl Who Fell From the Sky" tonight.

Jane told Bill that I liked the barn better and I replied..."She ask what I thought about the building going on" and I said, "I liked the Barn"...not more not less...Have a sunny day... OWAV:)

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

OWAV:)...05/10/11...4:30am...41°...Partly Cloudy

Procrastinating this morning...did the scrabble games...killed a few pigs and finished my coffee...Sun is trying to peak through and I must get moving as write group meets here at 10am this morning...

Yesterday was another cold, nasty day...left the light on nearly all day in the green house...  I started prepping food for today's lunch, chopped celery and onions, then decided to experiment with a new dessert...after dirtying every bowl in the house (slight exaggeration) I came up with a "Lemon Fluff" that was supposed to be kind of a cheesecake...It has a pretzel crust and the filling is made up of cream cheese, freshly made lemon pudding, whipped cream, jello...Sounded good in my mind...Not what I had envisioned at all in the 9 x 12 pan...one layer didn't set up...crust is soggy...taste is off...I was hoping to find something to take the place of lemon meringue pie without so much work and so many dirty dishes...didn't work...more dirty dishes and a huge dessert that at its best is practically inedible...Damn,Damn,DAMN!!!

Memoir class last night went well, seven in attendance...My "Dumpster Diving Mama" got lots of laughs and lightened up an evening that had been quite serious until then...Since I hadn't taken the first session, I didn't follow the prompts entirely...Katey said that as a Vignette it could certainly stand by itself...that is fine with me!!  One prompt for next week is "Oh I had forgotten about that, I wonder what happened to So and So? "  Nothing has popped into my mind yet...maybe tomorrow...

Sun is hitting Ruby Peak...time to make my move...May the sun shine on your world today...  OWAV:)

Monday, May 9, 2011

OWAV:)...05/09/11...5am...37°...Cloudy

Thanks Bob, for doing the Scrabble games...now I must get on with my blogging...Don't want it to happen but think we will go directly from winter to summer...forecast is not improving at all...still cold, rainy, dreary, dismal...It is May already...I wanna scream!!!

Herb and I spent a quiet day, mostly reading...He cooked a steak for Mother's Day and I added sauteed mushrooms and garlic, mashed potatoes and greens to complete the meal...  Bobi rang in for a chat and to wish me happy mothers day...had talked to Rusty a few days ago...niece Susan called, always enjoy hearing from her...also talked to Becky on the phone and Pam stopped in for a visit after their "rainy" BBQ, that really wasn't too rainy...

I hear the carpenters next door sawing and tapping away, maybe they will finish up in the coming week.  I'm writing on my assignment for tonights memoir class, trying to rewrite a story I already have...might be a mistake...Also we are having write group here tomorrow and I need to make soup or ??? for that...think we will have what is left of the steak for our dinner...Must clean the bathroom and straighten up the house...Same old stuff, different day.

That's about it from Barton Heights...get dressed...put on a happy face and count my blessings!!.Hugs to all...OWAV:)

Sunday, May 8, 2011

OWAV:)...05/08/11...38°...raining-again

Up since 4am...no scrabble games...where is everybody...am I the only way that doesn't have a life?  Worked on a story for Monday night's memoir class...trying to write with a plan in mind instead of just winging it...hard for me to do...

Yesterday turned out to be a half-way decent day, with rain in the morning but clearing off and temperatures in the mid fifties for the rest of the day...

I spent the afternoon on Alder Slope, at "Sunrise Iron" volunteering with my friend Pat...   greeting people, selling snacks and answering questions..."Sunrise Iron" is one man's collection of restored farm machinery...  He is sharing this collection with the public on the first Saturday of the month for the next six months... Erl is a hard working farmer who restores old machinery as a hobby, in his spare time...People came from Enterprise and the surrounding area and also from Union county to see his collection...A free raffle was held...a couple brought their dutch ovens and cooked desserts to sell...Celia, the mule, was there for kids to ride...and Erl greeted each guest and answered questions about the old machines...all of the machines have a history and Erl related the history as well as his own story of how he acquired each one...If enough people show up in the next few months, it might work into a business that Erl can keep doing in retirement...

Back home, Herb had already eaten, so I warmed up a plate of spaghetti for me...then settled in to read the afternoon away...

I'm reading "The Immortal Story of Henrietta Lacks." A fascinating story about a black lady that died of cervical cancer in the fifties...Unbeknown to her or any of her family, the doctor took tissue samples from her cervix, and tried to grow them in his lab...Amazingly the cancerous tissue started growing and multiplying like crazy and is still alive today...These cells have been shipped all over the world..flown into space...used in research that led to the polio vaccine, chemotherapy, and many, many other medical break-through...Millions of dollars have been made and her family has never seen a penny of it...

We were invited to Becky and Johns for a rainy cookout...have opted to stay home and Herb will cook us a steak...and we will spend the day reading and computering...  Happy Mothers Day to all...OWAV:)

Saturday, May 7, 2011

OWAV:)...05/07/11...4:30am...40°...raining...☔

In bed shortly after 8pm last night...don't know why a shopping trip tires me out so...slept well and rested by 4am...woke up earlier, but lay there listening to the rain and fell back to sleep...I like that drifting in and out of slumber with the rain falling softly...

We arrived in LaGrande before 8am yesterday, nice scenic drive...saw baby colts on the way and just before we went into the Minim Canyon, Herb spotted a small herd of elk grazing in the field...the canyon was beautiful...so many shades of green with a few yellows and oranges thrown in for contrast...white blossoms as the bushes have started their spring bloom...

We stop briefly at Walmart then go to Grocery Outlet where we have time to check out all the aisles and then on to Bimart..Herb goes inside...I go to the greenhouse...choose an assortment of orange-yellow marigolds, assorted color pansies, yellow, pink, white and purple snapdragons, purple and pink petunias and purple and white stock for their lovely fragrance...now with two flats of bedding plants that will fill the planters that we enjoy all summer on the deck...I go inside the store to meet up with Herb and finish the shopping list, then on to our 10:30am eye appointments at Dr Pettits.

While at the eye doctor we visit with Wallowa County friends that we seldom see in WC...  Also while I am trying to find a new pair of glasses frames, Annette, from write group, and her friend Martha, arrive at the frame shop...we have fun visiting and helping each other in our hunt for new frames...Then we must be on our way to our chiropractor, Dr Bonds for our monthly adjustment..  Yard sale signs appear on Sunset Drive...a brief stop and on we go...

We go to lunch at "Foley Station" more of an upscale restaurant than our usual...with wine at $6.75 a glass we both pass and drink water...have the lunch special, mine with salad and Herb having a cup of clam chowder...The book store is next door, when I spend a half hour...then on to buy my face cream and we will be on our way home by 2pm...stop in Lostine at friend Kathy's to deliver a start of my fern peony and pick up starts of fox tail lilies that she has saved for me...quickly look at her garden, admire all of her "funny" looking chickens and then we are home at last... unload the car and settle in for the evening...catch up on scrabble, email etc...

Doesn't look like the rain is going to let up anytime soon...last nights paper says this has been the coldest April on record...Also in last night paper, in the obituaries, I read about the life of Mrs. Lovely and Mr. Nice...OWAV:)

 

Friday, May 6, 2011

OWAV:)...05/06/11...4:30am...36°...PC

Looks like a good day to go to LaGrande...have a long list including, eye doctor, chiropractor, grocery outlet, bimart, book store, health food store and dinner...Oh maybe a yard sale or two.

Had a productive day yesterday...fixed spaghetti sauce to simmer in the oven while I was outside...started with my usual walk-around checking things out...the warm days are really bringing out the daffodil blooms...construction workers must have read my blog from yesterday or else their radio broke!!☺..Peace and quiet all day, except for the saw as they started putting siding on the new garage...roofing is done...I started pruning the apricot tree...had to get Herb to help as the ladder was on a tippy place and I needed to climb higher...then I moved on to the lilacs lower to the ground and easier...worked and rested, worked and rested...cleaned up my mess...about 1pm I came in to fix dinner..

Climbing the ladder brings back the memory of doing mom's yard work for her and pruning the apple tree...She was close to ninety...I was only fifty five, but had no balance...I was on the ladder with the lopers and hand pruners...she was holding the ladder...we did just fine unless one of us had a "giggling fit"...never did fall off of the ladder!

Must get dressed and ready to go to LaGrande...Herb has the dishwasher emptied and will soon have our customary piece of toast fixed for a quick breakfast before we leave...should be able to get our grocery outlet shopping done early before the crowd arrives...OWAV:)

Thursday, May 5, 2011

OWAV:)...05/05/11...4am...34°...Sunny

Didn't feel bad about waking up at 4am this morning...I went to sleep reading "Committed" at 8pm last night, so closed the book, went to bed and crashed...Amazing what a little sunshine and exercise will do for a person...Also doesn't say much for the book...The book is about "committing" to a marriage, but every time I say the title I think of "committed" as being sent to a mental institution...having been married for almost 50 years, I think I see the similarity...LOL...Oooops there's my weird sense of humor showing up again!!

What a perfect day yesterday...sunshine, blue skies...if only the construction workers next door would either turn down their music or put something on that actually sounds like music, instead of just "screeching"...now I'm showing my age...I puttered around for awhile trying to decide what to do first...still looking for sprouts on the new fall plantings...pruned the lilac bush...then started on the ornamental apricot, too tall so must get the ladder...mulched the daylily bed with chips...Herb arrived home with my peat moss and alfalfa pellets...put half of them on the potato plot and veggie garden, plus fertilized the garlic bed with llama poop...garlic is nearly 8" tall...Between jobs I sat on the deck to rest, but a cool breeze would get me up and moving again.

Made a rich gravy for the leftover pork roast...served it with mashed potatoes and green salad...always reminds me of the few restaurant meals we ate when I was a kid...the standard on most menu's was hot pork, beef or turkey sandwiches...they consisted of two slices of toasted white bread with sliced meat on top, then gravy covering the entire plate... my friend Jane calls them "dinner sandwiches"...comfort food at its best...seems like that price was about $2.00 a plate...Another choice was breaded veal cutlets...that's what Daddy always had.

Sun is coming through our east window, casting a bright glow on the bouquet of daffodils  on the coffee table...temperature is moving up...scrabble done...coffee all gone...it is 6am and I am ready to start moving...don't think I will read any of "committed" or I might go back to sleep or "crazy".

Have eye appointments in LaGrande tomorrow...our shopping list is long and maybe catch a yard sale or two...hope the sun is shinning in your part of the world...OWAV:)

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

OWAV:)...05/04/11...5:30am...33°...Sunshine

1st daffodil bouquet 2011
Looks like one of those perfect May days in Wallowa County...60° is the forecast high for today.. I was pleasantly surprise yesterday to see a few seeds sprouting in the little greenhouse...It has been up for two weeks now with both a light and heating pad going almost full time, some days when the sun shines, I turn them off for a few hours...It will be interesting to see what they do in the three weeks left, before they can go into the ground...

Write group yesterday was interesting as always, five of us regulars and a guest, Martha, from California, but who grew up in Elgin OR...I read my reunion piece and Martha who graduated in '59 could relate to the "dress code"...difference being that living close to the pendleton woolen mills, her mother bought wool fabric and made her clothes like the ones that were so popular back then...She agreed that you weren't "anybody" without the right clothing...sad but true...Kathy brought a dozen eggs in exchange for a jar of dill pickles.

I arrived home from write group to the smell of pork roast that was cooking in a slow oven...dinner was so good...Rusty called late afternoon, to tell us he was BBQing lobster tail and steak for their dinner...will be in Maryland for another two weeks at least...most of it on waiting time...at least getting paid but quite boring...

Yesterday I finished the book "An Incomplete Revenge" by Jacqueline Winspear...She weaves a wonderful story and keeps you guessing until the end...I even resisted reading ahead because sometimes I just have to know what is going to happen...Herb picked up three of the books on my list from the library yesterday including "Committed" our pick for book group this month...started it this morning...

Friend Wendy stopped by with a bar of kitchen soap, made using lots of herbs including some from my garden...the is a new soap so she wants feedback about texture, smell etc...  We made a deal to trade pickles for soap...a jar for a bar...great for me as I usually give my pickles away...Had another visitor, neighbor Dave, whose chickens love to come to our house and scratch and eat out of our yard...something about the grass being greener... Anyway he came bringing us a dozen eggs...now we have lots of eggs so will be eating hard boiled eggs, deviled eggs, omelets, maybe custard...I'm thinking about going for a walk...OWAV:)

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

OWAV:)...05/03/11...5am...33°...☀/clouds

Up since 5am...drinking coffee...played the only scrabble game that was finished...then played angry birds, trying to get more 3 stars...my excuse for not starting on the blog is this...can't hold the coffee cup and type but can do scrabble and shoot pigs with one hand.

Yesterday was spent writing my bio for our 51st class reunion coming up in late June...Of course I didn't pay much attention to the cut/off date, because June seemed light years away when I received the notice...May 1st was the date so I emailed it yesterday, one day late... Now it is done...good or bad...time to move on.

On Sunday Herb and I spent the morning outside enjoying the beautiful sunshine...He working on the garden fence...needed some sprucing up...me planting a few rows of seeds...  I put in beets, carrots and mixed green with radishes thrown in for spacing...My mom kept popping into my mind as I worked away on my own style of gardening...I'm sure she was turning over in her grave as I made wide, crooked rows in the untilled soil...this is called lasagna gardening...very different from her gardening days.

When I was growing up Mom's garden was her own territory... her escape...Daddy would plow the garden space...then she would take over...not sure how she managed because roto-tillers hadn't been invented...Kids were allowed in the garden only if they stayed on the paths, maybe they could sample a fresh pea or a raspberry...then she shooed us away while she went back to work.

Many years later she could hardly wait for the soil to dry out enough so she could use the roto-tiller...oh how she loved that machine...I can see her now, wearing a long sleeved man's shirt with a baseball cap on her head...always guarding her skin from the hot sun...first she would go up and down, then across, and last diagonal of the garden plot...following in the track of the tiller as she went...holding the machine steady, her strong body shaking as she hung on...moving back and forth, up and down, sometimes in reverse...Then resting in the shade she would admire the freshly plowed soil...mentally planning where every seed would go.

In the cool of a morning..."row marker" in hand, she measured off long even rows and using a pointed hoe, handed down from her mother, she made the furrows before planting her seeds...potatoes, beans, peas, carrots, beets, greens and corn...each row was marked, with a stick she had sharpened with a hatchet before pushing it into the ground...again she sat to admire her work...For the next two weeks she faithfully water and weeded if necessary, as she waited for her garden to grow.  

She used her "wheel hoe", handed down from her parents, for weeding between rows, always keeping the soil loose so the water would penetrate...All summer she weeded and harvested, eating fresh vegetables, sharing with family and friends, canning and pickling, always putting away for the coming winter...Each year the tiller was harder for her to start and more difficult to keep under control...soon my brother started tilling her garden while she watched...not happy about it but accepted what had to be.

While shopping one day in early spring, she spotted a small roto-tiller and from the gleam in her eye I knew that we would be taking it home...It wasn't meant to till the entire garden but could be used for weeding and cultivating between the rows...Now she could get her roto-tilling fix as she jiggled and shook her way up and down each row in her relentless war against the weeds...She celebrated her 89th birthday that year...OWAV:)




OWAV:)...05/02/11...4am...broken clouds


                              
Idella Ashton Allen 1960
Idella Ashton Allen 2011
                                                                                                                       
       CONTACT INFORMATION                                                                                         
109 Barton Heights
Joseph, OR 97846


PHONE/E-MAIL:                                                                                                               
541-432-5211          
                                                                                                                                                     
LIFE SINCE MCCALL DONNELLY





After high school graduation I attended and graduated from El-Cel-Cis Beauty College in Boise, Idaho.  In June of 1961 I married Herb Allen, (our 50th wedding anniversary will be celebrated this year.)  We lived in McCall, Moscow and New Meadows, Idaho.  Our two children were born in Valley County, Idaho.  Bobi, April 23 1962 and Rusty, June 22, 1965.  Herb was transferred to Duchesne, Utah, in 1966, where we lived for 7 years.  In 1973 we moved to Joseph, Oregon.  We have called Joseph home for almost 40 years, love it here, and hope to live out our life in this very spot.

I spent the early years, mostly as a stay at home mom, practicing the art of cutting and styling hair at home, as a “kitchen sink operator”.  Worked for a short time clerking in a drug store, very short time sorting potatoes on a potato digger. (Everyone should have to do dirty, manual labor, for a reality check!)  Then in 1977 I found my dream job.  I started work at the Joseph School District as the assistant cook, making all the breads and desserts.  Oh yes, I washed my share of cafeteria trays as well.  In 1983 I became the supervisor of the lunch program, worked with a staff of three other people and on most days we fed upwards of 300 students and 30 adults.  Joseph schools had the reputation of having one of the best hot lunch programs in Oregon.  This was made possible by the support of the school administration and the Joseph community.  In the 1990’s, laws changed, money was tight and cuts were made to all school programs.  Our prized lunch program would never be the same.  

In March 1992 I fell victim to a viral infection of my inner ears, spent the next year with my world literally spinning in circles.  I was forced to cut back on my working hours as I spent most of my days sitting, staring straight ahead trying to avoid yet another dizzy spell.  In 1993 I spent many days in the “dizzy clinic” at Oregon Health Sciences University undergoing tests.  Final diagnosis was, bi-lateral loss of my vestibular system.  In laymen’s terms, my bodies balance system no longer worked.  I continued to work part time for two more years using a years worth of sick leave in the process.  I retired from the school in 1995 and with my body adjusting over the years, I now live a fairly “normal” life.  I am no longer able to ride a bike, ski, hike etc., but I count my blessing everyday for the things I am able to do.

Retirement for me has been good.  Time spent traveling to Australia, Mexico, Hawaii, Arizona and other states. We have a small acreage in Joseph and have tried to fill it with many gardens, vegetables and flowers.  We do some volunteer work, scour yard sales, read, and work at learning the computer, (not easy at our age.)  For three years, (2005-2008) Herb and I sold (Oma’s Grainy Bread) at the local Farmers Market.  It was quite an undertaking as we made 40 loaves of bread every week in our home kitchen.  Although not lucrative, it was a very satisfying experience.  We met new people and made new friends and found out just how many people had never eaten a really good loaf of bread.  Most weeks we sold out, at the 4-hour market.


Cienna Ashton Wall
Our daughter Bobi, stay at home Mom, part time manager of a Farmers Market.  She has one child, born in July 1998, thus we assumed a new identity, Oma and Papa.  Time with our granddaughter Cienna “Ashton” Wall, is very precious.  She and her parents live in the Portland, Oregon area, 350 miles from Joseph.  Her parents have been very generous and she has come for an extended stay with us once, and sometimes twice a year for the past 13 years.  Since she is nearing high school age, is on a swim team and plays violin in the school orchestra, we know those long visits won’t last forever, so we make the most of every one.

Our son Rusty, not married, has a home in Bend, Oregon. He works in a specialized construction business (for LTW-Doppelmayr), assembling stacker cranes and the tracks for them to run on, in distribution warehouses. His job has made him a world traveler.  Back home in Bend he works on and restores old cars.

I, along with the rest of the class of 1960 am wondering where have all the years gone?  It seems like only yesterday that we, after the graduation ceremony embarked upon our new life.  Little did we know that we had lived a carefree life, especially when compared to the life of our grand children.

What, with the freedom I enjoyed, for me it was an idyllic time growing up.  I knew when I was expected home and as a child living on a farm, I knew what my responsibilities were.  But beyond that, I had unlimited freedom.  The transition was a little tough going from a one-room schoolhouse and trying to blend in with others who lived in town, were more sophisticated, and had known each other from first grade.  For the last 5 years I had been wearing jeans and t-shirts, so for me high school was a foreign world filled with “Jantzen skirts and sweaters”, and more than one pair of shoes.  I, like other’s survived all that and grew into a stronger person because of it.

I probably won’t make it to the reunion but if anyone would like to get in touch, please email me and we can reconnect about old times and/or life as senior citizens.  I recently joined the “blogging world”, if interested in my daily “ramblings” you can find me at; omanumber1.blogspot.com


Sunday, May 1, 2011

OWAV:)...05/01/11...7am...30°...☼...Yes!!!

Woke up at 3am with a coughing spell...wandered into the bathroom...then looked out the window to see a million stars...back to bed and finally back to sleep...brilliant yellow orb and birds singing were my alarm clock at 6am...May 1st and at least one day of spring has arrived!!!

Yesterday it snowed, rained, cold breeze blew all day long...Sun peaked out for brief periods...I cleaned out the refridgerator, straightened the pantry, swept and vacumned... just some general house cleaning...looked halfway presentable when Pat stopped by for a visit.

I finished reading my book, between scrabble games and angry birds.  I've started on a new series by Jacqueline Winspear, first book is "Maisie Dobbs."..It was very good and I have another one (not in sequence) but will read it anyway..."An Incomplete Revenge"...Also have started another series by Alan Bradley, the "Flavia De Luce" series...the first one was "The sweetness at the bottom of the pie" and this one is "The weed that strings the hangman's bag", what a title...Also have to read "Committed" by Gilbert for book group in three weeks.

Now I must get moving and go outside...plant some seeds...trim the little apple tree...dig a weed or two and replace my vitamin-D...that according to blood tests is severely under supplemented...I wonder why???

Yesterday Herb noticed three pairs of Gold Finches checking out our bird houses and eating seeds on the quaking aspen...He quickly filled the feeder and now he says they are having a "hell of a time" chasing each other around trying to keep the feeder to themselves...keep your fingers crossed that a pair will take up residence in our yard.

Fixing chicken, potato salad and ??? for dinner...Must go--OWAV:)