Monday, February 17, 2014

Winter Weather Wow

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This winter of 2014 has been one for the record books. Those who keep the books claim they had to go back to the 1940s to find anything close to our wintery mix.
I do not like this winter of 2014. It reminds me of bone-cold winters when pots froze solid overnight in the bedrooms during World War II. Mother had to carry them downstairs to thaw out before she could dump them outside in the privy.

To stay warm families spent the day sitting around the kitchen table in the kitchen. The cook stove always had a pot of boiled coffee steaming away on the stove. And there were two or three large teakettles filled with scalding-hot water to be diluted with cold for washing hands and face or to pour into the galvanized bathtub for a Saturday night bath. The kitchen was the place to sit and visit and drink coffee while listening to town gossip and local radio stations.

Super-stars like Ruth Lyons and her 50-50 Club on WLW Radio out of Cincinnati was a big hit around our house and my dad liked to listen to and watch Sally Flowers out of Columbus, Ohio whose show was copied after Ruth’s Cincinnati program. When it was cold out, the house was almost always cold everywhere except the kitchen but the good chairs to relax in were in the living room with the radio. So the families migrated there to hear their favorite shows on radio.

We washed our hair on bath night but did not have hair shampoo and the girls had to come up with things mixed with the water to rinse their hair in. My sister used vinegar and raw eggs mixed together to rinse her hair in.I don’t know anything about it or why she used this but it was a big deal to wash hair and rinse it and usually she would have a friend show up so she could wash her hair at the same time and used the same rinse water.

I never asked what to use to rinse hair because my mother used the same water that I just took a bath in. Sometimes the hard water and soap would result in a thick scum forming on top of the bath water and it had to be dipped off if the water was used by another person. But mother always used an old jelly glass of my bath water to rinse my hair with.

We never used to have salt trucks or trucks with snow plows on them. The county did collect cinders from boilers and scatter them at busy intersections to afford some traction on icy roads but once the snow fell it would stay all winter – packed down into a sheet of ice kids could ice skate on. Gordon kids had to walk to school in all kinds of weather and getting there was not easy if you were a small kid. Big kids could climb the field fences and walk out in the fields easier than we could forge our way through the mountain of snow drifts on the road. And once we got to school, our teacher, Miss Brown, would dip out red, cold, hands into buckets of cold water to restore the circulation and prevent frost bite.

Sunday, February 16, 2014

The Winter of 2014

The Winter of 2014
We have set a record for the total number of inches of snow this winter. The temperatures have been in the below zero range most of the month of January and into February. We just got some light snow overnight and this morning the cars are topped off. With the snow so deep it is hard to walk for our Jack Russell Terrier whose body drags in the snow and since he is a male, his parts drag in the snow. I can't even imagine what that feels like but I can think of some dirty jokes about it happening.

Friday, February 14, 2014

American Crow

 
Old crow poking holes in the ground to eat nuts the squirrels hid

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Car in Garage and Office

The car in the garage
Over the years, we have changed the two-car garage over to one large office space where we worked in our mail order business and where I did catalogs and newsletters to advertise our products and services. I think the most we ever made was $125,000.00 for a year's work.






We also had wooden beams that ran around the edge of the room and formed a cross in the center. There was s large sliding glass door in front and two side doors that were in place of the two car garage. After I did the television series I was no longer allowed to compete in selling supplies and we changed the room back into a 2-car garage.









Patty packed items for shipment to people around the world and where I had a slanted desk that I used to draw illustrations for various magazines. The office had a raised wooden floor and the walls and ceiling was covered with tongue and groove lumber

Monday, February 10, 2014

2014 Olympics on TV


I watched some of the Winter Olympics on television on Sunday. It looked very cold over there but I think we were cold here with 2º above 0º and the sun was out here too and that made me and Pepper Jax want to doze off and take a nap.

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Abe Lincoln's General Marquis de Layfayette in French Museum

Back in 1976 I was teaching Commercial Art at the Montgomery County Joint Vocational School (MVCTC) and Bill Combs, the principal of Arcanum High School, where I graduated from, and a member of the Darke County Bicentennial Committee came up with the idea of asking me to do a portrait of General Marquis de Layfayette, who served as a volunteer in the Continental army in the American Revolution.

The Darke County Bicentennial Committee, on behalf of the county citizenry, will present the portrait of the French general to the people of France at the July 5 celebration at the Darke County Fairgrounds. Jacques Dirck-Dille, consul general of the French Ambassador, will be in attendance to accept the portrait for the people of France (shown in the color photo).

Friday, February 7, 2014

Famous Name Confusing


I remember this like it was yesterday. The Dayton Daily News interviewed us for a story that appeared in their newspaper. It was the first of many such stories that usually happened on or around President Lincoln's February 12th birthday. We were still living in Gordon, Ohio and we had three children—Angela, Chris and Melinda.

The article, from the 1960s, indicated the "Lincolnian" woven about his famous name, he said: "In fact, I got quite a lot of publicity over it all while in Japan. The Hokkaido Times did a large feature and picture story on me. Then one day I walked into a store in the village of Sapporo on the island of Hokkaido. Everyone started whispering and the little children put their hands over their mouths so I couldn't see their smiles. The store owner politely explained in English, "We are highly honored. My family has just recognized your picture from the papers, and we are proud to have a relative of the great Mr. Abraham Lincoln who freed the slaves, come into our place. Allow me to personally show you over our store."

Thursday, February 6, 2014

The Feed Store


Always something to spend your money on. I cannot imagine one of those rawhide bones in Pepper Jax's bowl.

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Looking out


This is the office of my lung doctor—looking out at the building next door. It is a modern and furnished that way.

I took the photos with my new camera and am pleased with the results. While at the doctor's office, I found recent issues of Architectural Digest magazine and subscribed to it when I got home.

I was especially interested in the rooms and the decorations in them -- from paintings and drawings on the walls to pieces of unique furniture and sculptures. It brings back lots of memories of those times when I spent endless hours working on paintings and drawings to sell.

The building at the left is called Samaritan North and is where Patty and I go for most of our treatments. It is close to our home and is located right off the Interstate Highway. Patty had all of her radiation treatments for breast cancer at this hospital. And she still goes back once a year for a check up. This is supposed to be the location of a new hospital that will be a replacement for one that is located at the edge of Dayton.

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Punxsutawney Phil -- 6 more weeks of winter


We have this Punxsutawney Phil, our famous groundhog, who comes out of his hole in the ground, on the same date in February 2, 2014, and if he sees his shadow that means we will have 6 more weeks of winter weather. And it usually works out that way. This poor guy get jerked around by a bunch of guys with cameras, pencils and paper who puts him in the news whether he wants to be in the news or not. (AP Photo).

Monday, February 3, 2014

Smart Dog On Sofa

Smart dog on sofa, using sheet for a bed. Snow on Tuesday -- 8 inches or more.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Winter


Winter © Lincoln—
This has been much like winters I remember from the 1940s. Living conditions were totally different. Nobody had thermostats or furnaces in winter and only natural air conditioning in the summer—if you left the windows open. The snow fell, like it does nowadays but it never melted all winter and as cars packed the snow down until the streets were like ice and kids skated on them wearing ice skates.
This winter was cold, and stayed cold through January and our gas and electric bills from the utilities will reflect that because we used more natural gas for heating and we kept the lights on because it was always overcast, snowing or just plain gloomy weather. The dog didn't like to go outside and we seldom had to ask him more than once if he was ready to come back in the house. It was so cold on one occasion that he could not get his legs and feet to function properly and I thought I would have to go outside and pick him up and carry him back in the house. But he summoned up enough grit to make it back in the house on his own accord.
Last summer was hotter than the devil and we had to run the central air conditioning day and night—this winter was just the opposite—colder than brass monkey sitting on top of a fire hydrant in a sleet storm. Maybe this coming summer will be back to normal and the environment will not have to suffer through another dysfunctional year we brought on ourselves.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

February 1, 2014

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This is going to take some getting used to. February 1, 1014 is different since it is above freezing for the first time in ages. The snow is still around but it might rain or is supposed to rain and that should melt the snow still here on the ground. I have not been able to get outside to use the new X100S camera yet and am still looking forward to doing that.

Friday, January 31, 2014

Autumn Eve Lincoln


Autumn Eve Lincoln
© By Abraham Lincoln 


This is how Autumn Eve spent her time when we were gone or when one or the other of us went outside for a short time period. She loved my chair because she could set like this and see out the bow window, and she liked to watch the traffic passing our house. She only barked when another dog passed.

She was, I think, the perfect dog. She had the heart-shaped ears of the Toy Fox Terrier and she was "yappy" when she saw someone or something she didn't quite understand. She did calm down when she could not longer see and her hearing began to fail her too. 


People talk about an afterlife for their pets, "The Rainbow Bridge." Cuddles, Tiger, Benji, Autumn Eve, and Puppy. Our latest is Pepper Jax, the Jack Russell Terrier.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Sunflower


The perfect flower for us. It feeds all kinds of insects and many different birds and animals like squirrels and chipmunks. It is beautiful to look at and will seed itself.

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Expressions

I often wondered where that expression comes from. Pepper Jax nailed it.

Heroine and Nicotine


Yep, that's me, back in the day when what I breathed came in through my nostrils and it was from the air around me. Nowadays, I can still breathe from the local air but have gotten to the point where most of what I breathe comes from an oxygen concentrator.

No matter how bad it might be for me, my son still smokes and knows he is looking at himself down the road when he is looking at me. I used to be that way—immortal; but I have learned that it doesn't pay to smoke—that Nicotine is harder to break than Heroine and either drug ruins your health for life.

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Baby Rabbit Eating Hibiscus


I watched this young, baby, rabbit eat this final flower on the hibiscus. He ate the entire plant and this was the last piece. I have photos of the entire process that only took about five minutes.
> also see My Bird Blogs

Friday, January 24, 2014

Young Rabbit


Young rabbit sitting amid the white Dutch clover -- they love to eat this particular clover, so I try to keep some of it in the backyard.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

The Super Bowl with Pepper Jax


Pepper Jax watched the Super Bowl last year and I was able to take a couple of pictures of him. I think we will watch it this year together too. He actually will watch television but after a few minutes he gets bored and takes a nap.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Cold Day Outside


It is -5º F in Brookville this morning. I cannot imagine how the squirrels keep warm in their leaf nests but most of them will make it as long as they get something to eat. I have put out a lot of peanuts yesterday and will today. Most are buried under the snow and hard to find but I don't know of any other solution.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Raccoons

The first time I saw the raccoon was in the Screech Owl box

I noted she has a couple of notches in her ear
I fed her dog food and cracked corn and sunflower seed without the hulls
She had four babies and when she weaned them they went over the fence and out of our lives
The raccoon family stayed here under my shop until the babies were weaned and then the mother coaxed them to go up and over the board fence. Once they did that, they never came back; and I found myself wondering if they were all OK. I sure hoped so because they were the sweetest family of wildlife we have ever had in our backyard.

Monday, January 20, 2014

Our Raccoons


We didn't know it at the time, but this was a pregnant raccoon looking for a place to give birth to her four babies. It was hard for her to squeeze her body through the 4-inch diameter hole that I had made for Screech Owls, so she eventually chose a spot under my shop building and that became her home. We fed her cheap dog food and corn and things she would eat while she nourished the youngsters. Now and then we would get to see them outside during the day and when she had weaned them, she sent them up and over our fence and she followed her brood and they were gone out of our lives forever. I still miss her but worry about more coming since we have a dog now that would be after her all the time. So far, she never returned and none of her babies came back here. They are all grown now and several generations of their kind have passed.

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Sharing the Bed


Dog and cat share the entrance bathed in sunshine. Lots of snow and cold just outside the door.

Friday, January 17, 2014

More Snow is Falling


Snow, and more snow. I have had to cancel my toe nail clipping appointment and I was going to get a chest X-ray this morning but it is pouring down snow and that makes going anywhere very treacherous.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Purple Cone Flower


One of my favorite flowers -- The Purple Cone Flower. It is an old fashioned flower that has few enemies so you can plant them and watch them grow and feed both wildlife and insects.

Some bees collect pollen from them and some take the nectar. You can see the pollen on this bee's back legs. He stuffs it into "bags" and carries it with him until he gets back home.

Birds collect and eat the seeds and standing stalks with seed heads are a source of food in the winter.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Camp Schimmelpfennig


Back in the day when I was stationed at Camp Schimmelpfennig, in Japan, we would all come up out of the camp using these stairs. I was in the 1st Cavalry Division and my regiment was the famous 5th Cavalry Regiment and this is the regimental badge I had to wear on my cap and on my shoulders. It was this size and painted or was in brass and paint.

The street, at the top of the stairs, where I was standing, looking at the stairs is littered with bars, strip joints, and nightclubs. The photo was taken in 1955 and 1956 and it might be different now.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Pepper Jax in the Snow


Not that long ago, Pepper Jax had to wade through the snow to get to a place where he could do his business. He doesn't like very cold weather when there is snow on the ground as it freezes in his feet and makes him get stiff and he limps.

Monday, January 13, 2014

The air conditioner unit stands outside, covered in snow, waiting on the summer sun to make it run again. I lived most of my life breathing regular air but now, with my lung and breathing problems, I have to have air conditioning. This is the year, 2014, that I will finally turn 80 years of age. I can't really believe that either.

Main Gate to Imperial Palace


The moat and palace gate around the Imperial Palace in Tokyo. During the war, the city of Tokyo was bombed repeatedly and the fire storms that resulted destroyed almost everything but the palace and surrounding grounds were no touched and remained in pristine condition.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Imperial Hotel in Tokyo

 

The Imperial Hotel, in Tokyo, is where I bought a string of pearls for Patty and also a ring. The pearls are worth a lot of money today as is the ring. Since I was there in 1954 and took this photograph, the hotel as you see it in this photo, was torn down and replaced by a modern, box-like, structure that the Japanese purist do not seem to like and wish this original hotel was standing there instead of the new one.

Anxious for Summer

I am very anxious for summer to get here again

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Shiogama, Japan


Shiogama and Samurai—

I began taking photographs in 1953 using a fixed focus camera that looks a lot like the new Fujifilm X100S camera that I just recently purchased. Neither Kodak or Fuj had come out with color film so we were all using black and white film in 35mm and 120mm size.

In Japan this is the character in power, Lord Date Masamune. His castle or parts of it remained on Castle Hill. All of the soldiers went up there to have a look and were disappointed that the only thing really connected to him and his past was the graveyard where one of his sons is buried. 

He was not a big man but was shorter than most Japanese of modern times. He was a hard man to deal with except when he was around his boss, the emperor at Tokyo. He was a samurai and his sword was one of the best ever made; you can see it in this photograph.