Friday, December 20, 2013

Sights and Sounds of the Season



We were two little girls when my sister and I were coached by my mother to perform at her annual lodge Christmas potluck and program.  I had memorized a couple of lines to say and my sister got into a box wrapped as a present.  At the right word in my little poem, she jumped out of the box.  SURPRISE!

I'm not sure Christmas programs or concerts have changed much since the 50's.  It is the season to watch little children sing and bands and orchestras  play a variety of all the Christmas music that is out there.

In the last week we have attended five concerts.  It started out with our grandson Carter's first grade program.  All the children were dressed in their pajamas and they sang their hearts out.  The songs seemed complicated to me, but most of the children knew all the words.  Of course programs with young children can never go perfectly.  There was one little boy who was holding a stuffed animal and then he had the animal on his head.  When the music teacher saw that, she wandered over in front of him and gave him a word. 



Above: Hart first and second graders perform at their Christmas program.  Below: Close up of Carter (blond boy) and his classmates acting out their song in pajamas.   



Children's programs were a big part of my upbringing.  Christmas programs at church were very important events.  One year, when I was probably eight or nine, I was an angel and had a speaking part.  My mother made me a halo to wear.  She used some old tarnished tinsel that had been in the attic.  When we got to church the night of the program I noticed another angel also had a halo, only her halo was wrapped in bright new gold tinsel.  For a minute I felt jealous, but then remembered that I was the angel with the speaking part.

The holiday concerts we attended this season were put on by the West Michigan Symphony, the Hart Music Series and the Hart Bands.  We listened to our grandson Jay play his saxophone in the sixth grade band.  Both the high school band and the West Michigan Symphony played the yearly classic, Sleigh Ride. 


Sleigh Ride can be delightful if everyone is going at the same tempo. But if they are not....Katie bar the door.  The slapping of the reigns must be off rhythm and the neigh of the horse has to be right on cue.  I remember playing that song when I was in band and it never came off perfectly.  I imagine many band directors have their students play it just because it is a tradition.  For the audience it can be a source of amusement.  The Hart High School Band pulled it off although one of their drummers was trying to slow it down.  The symphony is expected to play it well, so no surprises there. 

Our last concert was a recital of young violin and cello players.  Our granddaughter Avery started cello lessons in the fall and the instructors who teach cello and violin put their students in front of an audience.  There were many violin solos and the youngest players performed as a group, as did the cello players.  The older violin students had memorized longer and more difficult pieces and only had a few blips.

Coming out of the church where the young string players performed was a time to look at the Christmas lights.  Since we are headed for a white Christmas, the decorations seem more intense this year and bring back memories of the Christmases of old when we always seemed to have snow.  The music adds to the beauty and children performing is the best thing of all. 

I am taking time to listen to the sounds of the season and enjoy the simple scenes. 


Scenes of the Season








 
 
Sounds of the Season
 
 


 
Music
 
Sleigh Ride - Boston Pops
 
 
Carol of the Bells - Boston Pops
 
Little Drummer Boy - Pentatonix
 
 
Photos 3, 5 & 12 taken by Hack Ramseyer
 

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

By the Flickering Firelight

After my mother died in 1970, I became pregnant with our first child.  It was a year of sadness and happiness and changes all around.  We moved from Lansing to Shelby to live a year with my father in order to help him through his grief. Even before my mother died we had plans to build a house of our own in the countryside outside of Hart.  Living for a time in my childhood home was a transition between the city teaching jobs we were leaving and the home and teaching jobs we would have in the beautiful area where I grew up. 

My husband was hired in Fremont to teach German and history and I was hoping to find a teaching job in the area after having a baby and taking a year off.  Even though we did not pay rent, it was a difficult year financially with only one teacher's salary.  In order to supplement our income I subbed at Shelby.

After having our daughter Aimee in December, I returned to subbing.  I was desperate to find someone to take care of our baby and when I called my Aunt Margie she came to my rescue.  I don't remember her ever turning me down.  Her husband, my Uncle Tom, was my mother's brother and he was a larger than life personality.  I loved both of them immensely.

The thing I remember most about taking Aimee to their home, often before the light of day, was the ambiance.  My Uncle Tom would be sitting in a comfortable chair by a roaring fire.  I loved the feeling of that fire and the warmth that always greeted me when I entered that house.  I can still visualize my Uncle Tom and his boisterous way of showing me that it was no problem to take care of our baby.

A fire in a fireplace has always been intriguing to me.  It is mesmerizing to watch the color of the flames and hear the crackle of the burning wood. Throughout my life fire has been a part of things I remember so fondly.

When I was in college I worked one summer at a resort, Lakeside Inn on White Lake outside of Whitehall.  My brother had gotten married that summer and he and his wife lived close by.  My sister-in-law had worked at Lakeside Inn during college and helped me get the job.  Some evenings a fire would be built close to the water and my brother would come and play his guitar for the guests.  Both he and I loved to sing and my brother, the folk music and the firelight are etched in my mind as a wonderful time in my life.

There were other fires on other beaches along Lake Michigan that bring back memories including fires we built to cook dinner on when we owned a lot on Lake Michigan.  I would wrap meat, potatoes and vegetables in tin foil and they would cook while we swam.  Our two children and often their cousins would frolic in the waves and be starving by the time everything was cooked.

There is a fire now on July 4th at my son's house where the grandchildren roast marshmallows and shove chocolate and their marshmallows into graham crackers.  S'mores have been around a long time and watching the grandchildren eat them with relish takes me back.

I gravitate to fire anywhere I am.  At Glacier National Park we stayed in a lodge next to Lake McDonald. It was a cool night and there was a fire in a huge stone fireplace in the lodge's great room that made me linger.  At Caberfae when the family goes skiing there is a stone fireplace that is a magnet for everyone coming in off the slopes.  I always try to get a chair right in front.

Last Christmas I received a gift that makes my love of fires so much easier.  I can still build a fire in our fireplace in our family room, but my husband installed a gas unit in our living room fireplace.  Now with a press of a button I can see the flames.  It isn't quite the same as wood crackling and the sweet smell of wood smoke, but it satisfies my need to feel both the warmth physically and mentally.

I'm not sure why I need fire in my life, but I believe eons ago, when humans discovered flames, there was an instant change in their lives.  The gloom of a tough life must have dissipated a little and a small joy probably glimmered in their eyes.  I wish the warmth and beauty of flickering flames could be a part of every one's life.  It is the season when firelight can do wonders to help us through the long dark nights. 



 
 
 

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Mozart at Midnight




The handbill on the large wooden doors of St. Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna announced a concert of Mozart's Requiem for December 4 at midnight.  The year was 2007 and we were in Vienna for the Christmas markets.

"It might be too late at night for us," my husband said.

"I'm going," I remarked.  "If you don't want to go, I think I can get back down here by myself."

"Why is the concert starting so late?" my husband inquired at the ticket office inside the church.  We learned the Requiem was performed at midnight on December 4 in order to end at the approximate time Mozart died on December 5.  We were happy there were still tickets available as we both realized it would be a once in a lifetime concert.

The night of the concert was cold as we walked toward St. Stephen's.  There was a light show on the cathedral and the Christmas lights were spectacular hanging like giant chandeliers in an area called the Graben off St. Stephen's
Platz. There were also tiny lights that cascaded like waterfalls on the street, the Kohlmarkt. On another side street huge red lights in the form of globes hung in the middle of the street. There were also panels of red lights with a white design and strobe lights.

We stood in line in front of the cathedral as we couldn't get in until 11:30.  Once we took our seats close to the back of the church, we watched young people look for empty seats closer to the orchestra and singers and move up from the seats for which they had tickets.  We didn't feel like being so daring.

As scheduled, the concert began at midnight.  The Requiem is a powerful piece of music, both sad and beautiful.  I was very familiar with the music because I had showed the movie Amadeus to my senior English classes several years in a row. 

St. Stephen's is a huge cathedral and there were many lights above the center aisle.  Along the side of the church smaller lights glowed like candle light.  As the Requiem was played, at different intervals, one light after another above the center aisle was turned off until at the end one light remained.  With the last note, it too was extinguished.

In the silence, priests came in and rang little bells and then walked down the main aisle ringing them before they walked off to the side and were silent.  Death, the end, the sadness for those who are left behind and in Mozart's case, the music that would no longer be composed.  The stillness was deafening.  It was an experience like no other.

We came out into the cold night and because the public transportation was closed down, we walked the half hour back to our hotel at two in the morning.  I could see the stars.  I glanced up at a building and saw through a high window two chandeliers twinkling in a large room.  We walked through a Christmas market with the shutters closed on the many booths.  We walked up Maria Hilferstrasse, the main shopping street, until we got to the side street that led to our hotel. 

There are events in life that can stop one's breath for a second because of the beauty.  Mozart at midnight was such a moment. 



 



 
 

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

The Yin and Yang of November




There have been a lot of words in my head since the first of this month concerning what I wanted to say about November.  However as the days went by, my thoughts changed from Pollyanna-ish to dark and back again.  I kept trying to think of a title that contained alliteration such as November Nuances or November in the North. In the middle of one night, the title The Dance of November came to me and I had a good lead paragraph, but I didn't write it down.  In the morning the title remained, but not a word of the paragraph showed up in my brain.

Not until yesterday afternoon, when I was walking across our lawn with the dog, did the right words pop into my head.  The sun was shining and everything seemed golden.  The lawn was bright green and the creek was rushing.  It felt good to be out in the nippy air with the dog by my side.

I sat on a bench by the creek and everything seemed right with the world.  The term yin and yang seemed to fit what my moods have been this month, but I had to do some research to make sure I was thinking of it correctly.  I was.  The term deals with opposites and this month is a reminder, especially this year, of what has happened in history in November.

In 1963 I was sitting in my senior English class with Mr. Hill who was substituting for our regular teacher.  The high school secretary came on the PA and said that President Kennedy had been shot and killed in Texas.  We all looked at each other and were speechless.  Mr. Hill gazed at all of us and said, "Let us pray."  We bowed our heads and the room was silent.

That weekend was one of being glued to our black and white television sets to catch all the news.  A high school dance was canceled along with college football games.  On Monday I went to my friend Jean's house to watch the funeral.  It was the beginning of a different time.  The innocence in our lives was gone.

November in many ways reminds me of March, with weather that can either be like a lamb or a lion.  The great lakes can get ferocious and such was the case on November 10, 1975 when the Edmund Fitzgerald went down in Lake Superior with all 29 crew members.  November has always been a treacherous time to be on the great lakes.  This month we had our first snow and then a wind storm with power outages, but it was nothing compared to the storm on Lake Superior in 1975.  The song by Gordon Lightfoot, The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald tells the story of that ship wreck. 

November is a transition month when nature is at its most subtle.  The colors that wowed us in October have turned to a burnished brown.  Yet there are bits of color if we look closely. Red berries on dark branches, a last yellow leaf in the creek, the green of the pine trees or a bright scarf on a child.  There is a nip in the air, but there is a coziness to the house.  Knit lap blankets and quilts come out of the attic.  The fire in the wood burner radiates a special warmth.

 
 

The month gives me an excuse to cuddle up with a blanket and a cup of tea.  I like to read a book in a comfortable chair with a fire in the fireplace.  For me November is a peaceful month before the holidays hit with full force. 

I love the years when our family gathers at our house for Thanksgiving dinner.  It is my favorite holiday as there is a comfort in the good food and that we can all be together.  The grandchildren are growing and changing and on that day I am especially thankful for the part they play in our lives.

The yin and yang of the month is different for everyone.  Gray days and rain can be depressing.  Events in our lives that make us sad are the yin.  Thinking of life and its fullness can be up lifting and thus the yang.  November is a time to step back and see how we can stand up to the weather that blows our way.  We can not have light without shadow.  It is a part of who we are the lives we live. 





The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald - Gordon Lightfoot

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9vST6hVRj2A
 

Thursday, November 14, 2013

The need to unstuff my little world

There are minimalists, collectors, over collectors and hoarders.  When I watch American Pickers I see mostly men who have collected beyond their capacity to store their stuff. Yet they don't want to part with much.  I feel I may be in that category.  My attics are groaning with so many articles that are crying to be set free.

I started cleaning out an area in our basement and was determined to give things away to Good Will.  Before I let the box go out the door I had removed three things I thought were too good to part with.  Never mind that my shelves are so crowded that many of the vases I have collected over the years have to be set on the floor.  How did I get myself in such a mess?

It started with the first thing I remember collecting, small trinket boxes.  They were so cute and didn't take up much room.  Plus they were affordable.  My favorite was one I bought at a gift shop in the Hotel Chateau Frontenac in Quebec City.  

Later that collection seemed to be growing out of control so I went on to something else.  Violets!  Anything that was beautiful, like a porcelain plate, or a small painting of violets had to be mine.  Any piece of linen with violets seemed too beautiful to pass up also.  Two antique dealers that knew me started putting things aside, items that were painted with violets, and then asked me if I was interested in buying whatever they had saved.  How could I turn them down?

Before I knew it I had more violet things then I could display so I decided to be more eclectic.  My collecting then became anything I thought was beautiful.  Dishes were easy to find but then I became more selective within that category.  My husband showed me a video he used in teaching his German classes. It was about the Meissen Porcelain Factory in Germany and the hunt was on.  I found my first Meissen plate in a shop in Pentwater.  After that I searched eBay and found that people selling Meissen in the U.S. were not demanding the prices that Meissen was fetching in Europe.

My husband and I were in a shop in Munich years ago where all they sold was Meissen porcelain.  When we told the shop owner we were school teachers from America his demeanor changed.  Then he asked us, "How can school teachers afford Meissen?"  It ticked me off.  Actually all I could afford in his shop was a small cup and saucer; so we left without buying anything and I told him we may be back.  I wanted to buy something just to spite him, but then my common sense took over.  However over the years I have found affordable Meissen in America.

We went to the Augarten Porcelain factory in Vienna in 2007 and the porcelain in their factory shop was very beautiful and resembled the hand painted patterns of Meissen.  Augarten is also hand painted.  I bought a couple of small things and since then have found many bargains in America.  But my days of collecting porcelain have come to an end as well.  Now much of it is packed away in boxes as I have too many pieces to display.  And so it goes with my collecting bugs.

I'm not sure when it happened that I got interested in collecting vintage and European linens. I think it started when we took my husband's German students on four different trips to Europe.  In Switzerland, Austria and Germany I found shops with beautiful affordable embroidered tablecloths.  Those pieces were easy to bring back home and so it began.

But to tell the truth, I now feel overwhelmed with stuff.  My attics are screaming to be cleaned out and things sold or given away.  However that is easier said than done.  Like a hoarder, if someone tried to come in and just tell me to get rid of my stuff, I would protest.  I have boxes of treasures and trinkets from estate sales, auctions, antique shops and yard sales that have not seen the light of day for years.  Yet if I were to examine the contents I would find something of value and think I needed to keep whatever it was.

I cannot begin to purge everything through my antique booth at Silver Hills in Pentwater, yet I have this thought of impending doom that my children will curse me one day when they have to sort and sell and throw out.  Yet, in a way I feel a sense of mischievous glee that all the while they are doing that, they will sigh and think, "Oh mother dear...what were you thinking?"  They might forgo the "dear."  But they will eventually come to the end of it after months of hard work and delight that they have a few dollars to spend on whatever they want. 

My collecting has slowed down to a snail's pace, but I would be telling a lie if I said it had stopped all together.  Once a collector, always a collector.  I recently bought a vintage toy.  It has a small wooden horse which looks like a piece from an old puzzle hooked to a tin cart.  I filled the cart with small vintage bottle brush trees that I bought at the same antique mall where I got the toy.  I figured that after Christmas I could add the little toy to my horse collection.  Have I told you about my horse collection?




Monday, November 11, 2013

Granddaughters and Giggles

If laughter makes one live longer, then my two granddaughters in Novi will keep me going for many years.  A visit with them is both a revelation in how old I'm getting and how young they are keeping me.  I will explain.

Friday morning Adrianna was ready to go wait for the bus.  She said, "Grandma, do you know when a person is too fat?"  I was waiting for some comment about my weight when she said,  "A person is too fat if they are wearing the largest size and they can't find a size larger."

I broke out in a loud laugh and when I laughed she started laughing in musical tones.  We both were laughing at each other's laughter as she headed out the door.  When Bella heard us she said, "Grandma, I've got a joke for you."

"What's your joke Bella?"

"What do boy chipmunks call girl chipmunks?"  I was stumped.

Bella laughed and said, "Chickmunks!"  I told her that was a good one and giggled at her joke.

On Saturday Bella went to a birthday party and my daughter, Adrianna and I were going to go pick her up and then go shoe shopping for the girls.  I was changing my clothes and putting on a white long sleeved top to wear under a sweater.  Adrianna said, "Grandma, you have stains on that.  One here and one there."  I laughed because all of a sudden I felt like an old woman who gets food on herself and always wears stained clothes.  I hadn't even noticed the stains when I packed the shirt.

Later as Adrianna and I were waiting in the car while my daughter ran into Michaels to get Bella at the birthday party Adrianna asked, "Grandma, why do you always have to clean when you come to see us?"  I told her to come up in the front seat as I wanted to seriously explain to her how overwhelming their big house was to clean and how she needed to help her mother more than she was doing.  As she slipped onto my lap....she's almost as tall as I am....her legs dangled out the open door and she giggled, "Grandma, you have a hair growing on your chin." 

We both started laughing as she is always the one to see such things.  "My mom carries tweezers in her purse."  We dug but came up with nothing but nail clippers.  She clipped away and said I just had a little stub left.  By this time we were laughing so hard.  Old ladies with stains and chin hair is about as funny as it gets in Adrianna's world.

After shoe shopping we all went out to dinner at one of my favorite restaurants in Northville called Bone Fish.  Because the restaurant is so popular, even though we got there around 4:30, we had half an hour to wait.  An eleven year old and a nine year old can get a little wound up.  There was great jazzy music being played so while waiting in line I grabbed Bella's hands and started to dance.  Bella looked up at her mother and said, "Mom, Grandma is embarrassing me."

Several years ago Adrianna told me she could not take me to her school because I laughed too much.  Now she says she loves to hear me laugh so she goes out of her way to say and do amusing things to get my reaction.  

On the way home Bella said she would like to take care of old people when she grows up.  She remarked, "They are so cute.  I don't mean I want to change their pants; I just want to talk to them."  Then I burst out laughing.

Whenever I leave their house, I wish my two granddaughters lived closer to us.  The wonderful thing is they are coming for Thanksgiving and the laughter will continue.  They will keep me young for awhile longer. 


Adrianna and Bella ....sweet sisters......loving granddaughters....and that's no joke....

Thursday, October 31, 2013

ThINgS tHaT Go BuMp iN ThE nIGhT




When I taught American Literature to high school students, this was the time of year we read Washington Irving's The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and then I showed the movie.  That always led to the discussion of ghosts and things that go bump in the night.

Over the years a couple of stories stand out.  One student told the class she lived in a house with a cupola at the top.  One day her mother was outside and looked up at the cupola and saw someone through its window.  The strange thing was, she said, that they always kept the door to the cupola locked.  This student also said that sometimes they would hear notes from their piano being played, but no one was near it. 

Another student told about a swing that hung from a tree outside their country house.  Several family members saw, at different times, a young girl in a white dress on that swing, but when they would look again, she would be gone.

I have never seen any paranormal activity, but I don't doubt it exists as I have had strange feelings.  One night I felt a poke on my arm that woke me out of a sound sleep.  About a month later there was a tug on my toe that woke me up.  I laughed about the incidences and thought my father was trying to get my attention from the other side.

Several months later I was popping corn at the stove when I felt someone behind me. I thought for a second it might be my husband, but he was downstairs in the family room. Then the hair on the back of my neck stood up. I turned around and said out loud, "Go away.  I don't want you here."  Again I thought it might be my father and if it was, I didn't want to hurt his feelings.  I just didn't like him sneaking up on me. 

I know other people who have had unexplained experiences.  My daughter felt the spirit of our deceased neighbor Otto when she and her husband were building their new house.  They were installing an architectural piece of a griffin that had originally come from a  bank in Chicago that was being torn down. We had removed it from Otto's house before it had to be demolished.  My daughter and her husband liked the piece and decided to incorporate it on the outside of their house next to the front door.

While they were installing it, my daughter recalls that she felt Otto's presence and his satisfaction that they were using this old piece of art, but she could also smell his spirit.  Anna and Otto's house always had a distinct aroma.  I asked my daughter if the aroma might not have been coming from the sculpture, but she said they hadn't smelled anything when they were transporting it back to Novi. She is convinced Otto was there along with the old architectural griffin.

My sister woke up to look at the clock while visiting her daughter in a rental in Mississippi.  Standing next to the bed she saw the figure of a man in his pajamas.  There was no head on the figure, but he held one hand out in front of him.  She looked back at the clock and when she turned to look again, he was  gone. Several people had seen that apparition in the house.  The story was that a man had died in there who liked coffee.  My sister thought he might have been holding a cup of coffee in front of him although she didn't see a cup.

Sitting in my chair in our family room by myself last week I glanced at the window and saw a white mist off to one side and then it disappeared.  I thought it was a figment of my imagination because my eyes aren't very strong looking at a distance.  But then I had a chill of fright that came out of nowhere. 

All such stories can be taken with a grain of salt.  Are there spirits which return or linger or can't move on?  We may never know unless we become one ourselves.  Sleep well tonight my friends. 




 

Monday, October 28, 2013

Halloween In My Day

Small town America in the 1950's was not much different from today where mothers still scramble to get their children costumes for Halloween.  Back in my day, costumes were mainly homemade and my mother learned what competition she was up against with other mothers when I was five. 

In Shelby, where I grew up, there was an annual Halloween costume contest.  I don't know when it started; I just know when my mother started me in the competition.  The organizers divided children into age groups.  I was in kindergarten when I first walked across the stage in a Dutch girl outfit.  My last name was Vaneps, so why not?  My mother bought the costume at what we called the Dime Store (Ben Franklin) in downtown Shelby and it was made out of a cheap kind of plastic.

I remember that Halloween night was very cold and the stage was on the football field.  Plastic does not keep a child warm.  I was a shy shivering little girl and I hated walking up some steps and across the stage.  I then stood with those who came before and those who came after to wait the announcement of the winners.  I wasn't one of them.  My mother never again bought a cheap costume.

Mothers in Shelby knew that if their child was going to win, the costume had to be creative in order to catch the judge's eye.  There was a girl in my class whose name was Mary Ann and her mother made her the most spectacular costumes.  One year she was The World.  Her mother had probably used chicken wire and then covered it with cloth and put the continents where they belonged.  She won hands down.

My mother got very clever after the plastic costume year.  She found an old robe that looked like a Japanese kimono.  She shortened it for me, wrapped a sash tightly around my waist, put cork on my eyes, pulled my hair back and tucked chrysanthemums behind my ear.  That year I won one of the prized silver dollars.

My most memorable year was probably when I was in 4th or 5th grade.  My best friend Jean had a worm costume, but it took two people to carry it off.  We had to stuff ourselves inside this long tube of material and get on the floor and scooch along.  Since it was her costume, she got to be in front with her face sticking out.  Her mother put a cute sparkly mask on her.  I, on the other hand, had to be in the back and all I got was an air hole.

I remember us slinking along the floor and we had to go up some stairs to get to the stage.  By this time the adults had gotten smart and had moved the contest inside the high school where they used the stage in the gym.  As I was trying to slither along someone kicked me in the side.  I had a feeling it was Jean's brother, but I could never prove it.  Needless to say, I felt miserable as the back end of that worm.  The only consolation was that we won.  However I don't remember if we both got a silver dollar or had to split one.

In high school when we were too old to take part in Halloween, a classmate had a Halloween party at her house.  I do remember bobbing for apples and that all of us wore costumes, but I have no memory of what I wore.

Another year in high school I ran around town with a group of friends and the only naughty thing we did was soap the car windows of our Latin teacher.  We knew since she lived by herself, it wouldn't be nice to use wax.  We also didn't want to scare her or get caught so we tried to keep our giggles from getting too loud.  We really were good kids.

Now Halloween seems to be mostly about the candy.  Candy was not so important when we were growing up.  Oh, I don't mean that we didn't love candy.  It just wasn't as plentiful.  We got homemade treats like popcorn balls, cookies and fudge when we went trick or treating and we were never driven into town, but taken only to the neighbors.

As a working mother getting my own kids ready for Halloween always seemed a chore.  We used everyday things from around the house and sometimes they designed part of their costume.  But it was always last minute.  So it was with wonder that I watched my daughter-in-law make a costume for her youngest this year and I marvel that there are still mothers who take the time to be creative.  Halloween memories can last a lifetime and there are still parents who know the fun of that.  Trick or Treat!



 

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Cold.....Crisp.....Colorful






Sometimes words aren't necessary to describe what we see before us. When my husband told me I should hurry to catch the sunlight on the trees by our son's house, I grabbed my camera although I was still in my pajamas.  The sky was gray and the sun was going in and out behind the clouds.  I had to snap fast.  In the afternoon I just wandered the neighborhood looking for colorful scenes and the sun again was instrumental in my getting some good shots.

Peak color reminds us that it can be here today and gone tomorrow.  Cold weather is settling in and even though we haven't had a hard frost yet, it is coming.  Today reminds me that sometimes I have to stop what work I'm doing in the house in order to reap the benefits of what nature tosses our way.  She is saying, "Catch it while you can because tomorrow I might bring you snowflakes."  I caught it as best I could and now I'm tossing it on to you.











































Monday, October 21, 2013

A Shiny New Penny

When Honey, granddaughter Avery's dog, died in June it was a sad time for all of us who loved her.  I spent time with Honey when I knew she wouldn't make it by petting her and talking to her.  It was hard to let go of a pal who went on walks with me and protected us, in her mind, against strangers.

Avery's parents decided that they would wait until the summer of 2014 to get another dog, but Avery had other thoughts.  One day in August she asked her mother if they could go the local animal shelter to look at the dogs.  Her mother agreed, but told her they were not coming home with a dog.  Famous last words.

Avery called me and said there was a dog at the shelter that was named Henny.  She was a red husky and probably part sheltie.  She told me she was a medium sized dog.  They hadn't brought her home because she had to ask her dad if they could adopt her and of course her father, who is a dog lover, agreed.  Avery said that she was going to rename her Penny.

Penny had to be neutered before coming to the Ramseyer residence and that was done.  Getting a dog that is at least a year old can have its own problems because no one knows the history of the animal.  This dog was found roaming with no collar and no one claimed her.  Apparently she was covered with fleas which the shelter had eradicated.

In three months Penny has acclimated to her new home.  At first she was tied up most of the time and walked on a leash as there was a fear she would run away.  Now she is both tied up and also let loose for long periods of time to run.
There will come a time when she will not have to be tied at all. 

Penny's first day at her new home with Jay and Avery.





She comes when her name is called and seems to have settled into roaming between the Ramseyer house, our house and the neighbor's where they welcome her warmly.  However if I let her loose during the day she always returns home to wait for her family to get there in the late afternoon.
 
Her markings make her look like a raccoon face but when running she is fast and sleek like a coyote.  She is a friendly dog who is so soft to pet.  I love her fur and her sweet personality.  I'm not sure how someone could have given her up or dumped her by the side of the road.  Luckily she was taken in by a little girl who loves her and a grandma who watches out for her welfare.  She has a wonderful dog life. 
 
 
 
 

 
 

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Taking pride in the land

"I like to see a man

proud of the place

in which he lives.

I like to see a

man live so that

his place will

be proud of him."

                 -Abraham Lincoln


Those words are written on a little plaque that I found antiquing one day and I knew I had to take it home to my husband Hack.  The farm that we bought from our German neighbors in 1979 has been lovingly taken care of by this man who devotes most waking hours to improving its beauty.

We do not farm, but the land with its meadows, springs, pond, creeks and forests are a source of deep fulfillment.  Land can not remain pristine without a lot of trimming, picking up branches and cutting wood for burning in the winter.

All these things keep Hack busy throughout the year.  Our lawn, which once was a field for crops and then an overgrown meadow, is now the view out our front window.  This lawn is irrigated and is five plus acres.  It is a reminder of the green hillsides in Switzerland, Austria, southern Germany and Norway and it would be easy to picture sheep grazing there.

I see the land as Hack's legacy to his grandchildren and future great grandchildren.  The grandchildren who live on the "farm" have a deep attachment to the land.  Avery knows where there is a good climbing tree.  Carter and Jay go to the sandy areas where they find rocks for their collections.  All of them know where the best blackberries grow and the dog, just added to their family, has room to run. 

We have seen many beautiful landscapes in the world, but there is something about our land in Michigan that is irreplaceable.  We know we are lucky to have found a spot that rewards us with Hack's hard work and pride of place.  Abraham Lincoln was right.  I believe the land is as proud of the man who takes care of it, as he is of it. 

Granddaughter Bella in the barnyard meadow under the apple blossoms this past spring.









 
        


Granddaughter Adrianna

wading in the spring

and other scenes

around our land.





 

Monday, October 14, 2013

A Glorious Weekend UP NORTH

I always consider that we already live "Up North," yet there is an undetermined line we cross north of Manistee or Mesick or Cadillac, depending what road we are on, that distinguishes a true UP NORTH feeling for me.

Over eight years ago we started a tradition, when the grandchildren were tots and still wore footed pajamas, that we would gather at a condo at Boyne Mountain, south of Petoskey for a family fall getaway weekend.  At the end of the summer the grand kids start asking, "When are we going to Boyne?"  They remind us that we can't slip up and not go as their memories are strong of a place where we can eat out as a family, go up the chair lift to see the colors, play at the water park and shop in the nearby picturesque town of Boyne City.  Plus it is a place where the cousins can bond.

The second weekend in October usually brings peak color in that Northern Michigan region.  This year did not disappoint.  North of Mesick, near the Manistee River, the colors were bright and beautiful. The further north we drove, the more intense the reds, yellows and oranges became. 

North of Mesick, close to the Manistee River. 

One traditional stop before we get to Boyne is Friske's Farm Market on U.S. 31 south of Charlevoix.  The place was humming with donut, cider and lunch buyers.  We bought two dozen apple donuts which we knew would be gobbled down by children and adults.

Friday night always finds our family at the Red Mesa Grill in downtown Boyne City.  It is famous for its Mexican food and margaritas.  We are a large group and our waitress this year took us all in stride.  Back at the condo it was time for the grand kids to hit the hot tub and then bed.

Saturday was a warm sunny almost summer like day.  Golfing and shopping were on the agenda.  Boyne City sits on the eastern shore of Lake Charlevoix and after shopping downtown, I walked with the grand kids over to the farmer's market.  Small town farmer's markets are so colorful and they found a vendor with small cups of homemade ice cream which they gobbled down.  Then back to the condo for a rest and more hot tub time for the children.  It was also picture taking time for me. 


The five grands left to right:  Jay, Avery, Bella, Adrianna, & Carter. 


 
 After the golfers got back, Hack and I took our three granddaughters to a place called Coveyou Farm Market where they have a plethora of mum plants in every hue one could imagine.  The view from this farm, south of Petoskey, looks out over Walloon Lake.  The barn, mums, sunshine, giggling granddaughters and view were too much to take in without brimming with joy on my part.

The girls spotted a table in the barn where they were selling cider and donuts.  Adrianna asked, "Grandma
would you like to contribute to the well being of Adrianna?"  I laughed and asked if she wanted a glass of cider for 75 cents or a donut for 75 cents.  The better bargain was both for $1.25.  I gave Adrianna $4.00 to buy them all both cider and a donut and asked her how much money would be left over.  They all did the problem in their heads and came up with the right answer.








 Avery, Bella and Adrianna with their donuts and cider
                                                        



A Look Around Coveyou Scenic Farm Market

 

 
 


 



Going back to Boyne, the next thing on our agenda was the ski lift up the mountain.  Boyne was giving free rides and the day couldn't have been more perfect.  Only two could fit in each chair and Adrianna said it had been decided that she would go with me, Bella and Avery would go together and Grandpa would go alone. 

I have bonded with Adrianna since she was a wee one and I get a kick out of her sappy sense of humor which has followed her to the age of eleven and the 6th grade.  As we were riding up, her sister and Avery were in the chair behind us.  Adrianna turned around and yelled, "Bella, how IS you?"  When Bella yelled back that she was fine, Adrianna yelled, "Avery, how IS you?'  Avery answered that she was fine.  "Grandpa, how is YOU?" was her final yell.  Grandpa could not hear her as he was two chairs back.  I laughed and Adrianna was delighted that she had amused me.





 View from the top of  Boyne Mountain with Brett & Carter, Heather & Jay going up. 

 
 


After ordering pizza for dinner, the highlight for the grands was the Avalanche Bay Indoor Water Park at Boyne.  Several of them asked me, "Grandma, will you come to the water park and stay with us until it closes?"  I said I would come, but I probably wouldn't stay until it closed.  Since I am not big on water slides I knew my only experiences there would be the hot tub and lazy river.

The kids are in their glory there, but as I looked up at the long enclosed tubes which they call slides, I knew that the darkness along with the water would put me into panic mode.  Getting on a tube and going down the lazy river was my big adventure.  Jay and Adrianna were floating on a tube along with their grandfather and me and when I wasn't looking shoved us through a big waterfall.  That amused them very much.  I looked like a drowned rat.

The weekend ended with a breakfast at a wonderful restaurant in Boyne City called Cafe Sante.  Sunday was a bit gray and the weather had turned fallish.  Because the sun was in and out, the colors seemed more intense.  The drive home was picturesque.  As we entered our county, Oceana, I could see that over the weekend there was more color evident near home.  I assume in the next week it will be peak here and there will be no need to go further north as it will start to fade there.

The beauty of October is short lived and it must be grasped in all its glory when it appears.  Our grandson Jay was at the top of Boyne Mountain playing Frisbee with his mom, dad and brother and said, "I'm happy."  What more is there to life but to make memories for children and cherish the time spent with them?  Every year the children are a bit older, as are we, and one day this UP NORTH trip will end.

Or will it?  Jay asked me why Grandpa and I got the big bedroom at the condo?  I told him it was because we were the backers of this expedition.  He wanted to know what that meant and when I told him he asked how much it cost to stay for a weekend.  I asked him why he wanted to know and he said, "Because one day I will be paying for this."  Will the tradition continue into the next generation?  What a nice tribute that would be. 






 Click on pictures to enlarge.