Ah Spring.....! Flowers, green grass...... the birds and the bees.
Andy and I look forward to spring and a chance to welcome new calves to our little herd of Black Angus cattle. We only have a few cows, but we enjoy watching them as they live their lives in our pastures. They are smart. They are good parents. They are protective too which means we can't get very close to our newest addition of only one week.
We THINK the new calf is a female. We KNOW she/he is super fast on her/his little hooves. And, we know the little girl/guy loves her mama. They don't get very far apart, at least for now.
Friday, June 14, 2013
Cherries, Cherries For Everyone!
It is cherry picking time again. We have two trees and they are both loaded with tart cherries! The birds love them and so do the deer. We even caught a naughty little raccoon raiding the tree. I hope there are enough cherries to go around.
Get out the supplies: clean jars, ladle, lids and screw bands, canning pot, and jar lifter. Sterilize all.
The hardest part of making cherry jam is preparing the fruit. You must wash, pit and chop the cherries before cooking them according to your recipe, and the insert in the Serta package. Fill jars and water bath for 15 minutes. It is really easy. Time consuming, but easy.
This is the yield from the first batch plus a little more to eat now. Sweet and tart, cherry jam is yummy.
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Dorothy: (to Toto) "Oh, but anyway, Toto, we're home. HOME!
Anyone who knows me, or reads my blog, knows how much I love Kansas. I was raised there, as were my parents. My grandparents were Midwesterners who chose Wichita as their home. Even though I left Wichita in 1970, and have lived all over the country; Wichita is still home.
My brother from L.A. meets me once or twice a year in our former hometown. Our sister, her husband, my granddaughter, our step-father still live there as do former neighbors, classmates and old friends. We try to see them all but this year we also had two reunions on our "to do" list.
On Sunday, May 19th, we drove to our first reunion in Kansas City. Our cousin Kim had invited 2nd and 3rd cousins, their spouses, children and people we hadn't seen for decades. We shared stories, genealogy and photos, ate a wonderful lunch, drank wine and laughed a lot. Time spent apart seemed to melt away as the Kirkpatricks, Stuarts, and Kennedys names in our history, linked us together in a way only family can.
The Great Wizard of Oz said: "A heart is not judged by how much you love; but by how much you are loved by others."
Our reunion next spring, we vow, will be bigger than this year. We will contact more cousins and gather more genealogy on our family. The links in the chain.......go on and on.
As the afternoon flew by, we became increasingly aware of an approaching storm. As the clouds gathered we said our goodbyes and headed south.
We took a different route to Wichita, avoiding the high wind and heavy rains as best we could, but, as the pictures show, this is what we drove into.
My brother from L.A. meets me once or twice a year in our former hometown. Our sister, her husband, my granddaughter, our step-father still live there as do former neighbors, classmates and old friends. We try to see them all but this year we also had two reunions on our "to do" list.
On Sunday, May 19th, we drove to our first reunion in Kansas City. Our cousin Kim had invited 2nd and 3rd cousins, their spouses, children and people we hadn't seen for decades. We shared stories, genealogy and photos, ate a wonderful lunch, drank wine and laughed a lot. Time spent apart seemed to melt away as the Kirkpatricks, Stuarts, and Kennedys names in our history, linked us together in a way only family can.
The Great Wizard of Oz said: "A heart is not judged by how much you love; but by how much you are loved by others."
Our reunion next spring, we vow, will be bigger than this year. We will contact more cousins and gather more genealogy on our family. The links in the chain.......go on and on.
As the afternoon flew by, we became increasingly aware of an approaching storm. As the clouds gathered we said our goodbyes and headed south.
We took a different route to Wichita, avoiding the high wind and heavy rains as best we could, but, as the pictures show, this is what we drove into.
This was the day before the Moore, Oklahoma tornado.
The next week was busy meeting with friends and family over meals and shopping. We talked and laughed as siblings do; sharing old family jokes and stories and remembering loved ones who are no longer with us. We decorated their graves on Memorial Day, filling the bronze urns with fresh iris and peonies from our sister's garden.
Just as our Mother and Grandmother did before us.
The Historic Broadview Hotel
The Broadview Hotel opened its doors in 1922 and the premier hotel was a favorite stop along the Chisholm Trial. You can still see the original checkered floors in the lobby and admire the vintage chandeliers, ceiling and original stairwells.
In 1929. the North Wing was added. In 1948, the Crystal Ballroom was added. The famous Native American Blackbear Bosin, designed the exquisite mosaic in the ballroom. Bosin's famous "Keeper of the Plains" sculpture stands tall at the side of the Arkansas River in Wichita. For more information on the Keeper of the Plains, go to April 14, 2010 in the archives of this blog.
During the 1920s, during prohibition, there was a speakeasy in the basement of the Broadview Hotel. Those must have been exciting times.
The Broadview now operates as The Drury Plaza Hotel.
Carrie Nation and The Eaton Hotel
In 1874, twenty eight year old Carrie, married David Nation, an attorney and minister.
December 27, 1900: prohibitionist Carrie Nation destroyed the massive mirror behind the bar at the Eaton Hotel in downtown Wichita, Kansas. She smashed bottles of whiskey and tried to ruin the nude painting "Cleopatra at the bath" by Wichita artist: John Noble.
The Eaton was one of the most elegant hotels in the Midwest but after decades of neglect and decay, the property has been redeveloped and, with an aggressive campaign to save it, the Eaton Hotel has been restored to its former grandeur.
After the raid on the Eaton Hotel, Carrie Nation's husband joked that she should have used a hatchet for "maximum damage." The couple divorced in 1901.
Carrie Nation's tombstone reads:
"Faithful to the Cause of prohibition. She Hath Done What She Could."
Carrie Nation
December 27, 1900: prohibitionist Carrie Nation destroyed the massive mirror behind the bar at the Eaton Hotel in downtown Wichita, Kansas. She smashed bottles of whiskey and tried to ruin the nude painting "Cleopatra at the bath" by Wichita artist: John Noble.
The Eaton was one of the most elegant hotels in the Midwest but after decades of neglect and decay, the property has been redeveloped and, with an aggressive campaign to save it, the Eaton Hotel has been restored to its former grandeur.
After the raid on the Eaton Hotel, Carrie Nation's husband joked that she should have used a hatchet for "maximum damage." The couple divorced in 1901.
Carrie Nation's tombstone reads:
"Faithful to the Cause of prohibition. She Hath Done What She Could."
Carrie Nation
Stearman Field and Pilot Lounge
If you live in Stearman Estates in Benton, Kansas, you have access to your own personal runway. The runway is connected to your driveway which goes into the hanger that is connected to your house. This is where you park your airplane. It must be nice to own the house in the picture below. And....the airplane parked in the garage, er....hanger.
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Stearman Estates residents meet and have a drink with neighbors at the Pilot Lounge which is open to the public. My sister and her husband live in Benton and we went there one night and enjoyed the restaurant and bar. The theme is, of course, all about airplanes; from the large model planes hanging from the ceiling to the "propeller" ceiling fan.
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Stearman Estates residents meet and have a drink with neighbors at the Pilot Lounge which is open to the public. My sister and her husband live in Benton and we went there one night and enjoyed the restaurant and bar. The theme is, of course, all about airplanes; from the large model planes hanging from the ceiling to the "propeller" ceiling fan.
The food was good. My brother-in-law chose good old Kansas Chicken Fried beef steak covered with gravy. My sister, brother and I had eaten this meal a few days before. I eat Chicken fried steak once or twice a year. It is a treat.
Happy Birthday To Us!
To celebrate the May birthdays, of which there are many, we headed to Abuelos Mexican Restaurant to met my 19 year old granddaughter for an evening of wonderful Mexican food, Margaritas (not for my granddaughter) and our favorite Tres Leches: Three Milk Cake.
Tres Leches is a very moist, rich cake soaked in three milks: evaporated, condensed and heavy cream. The whipped cream icing and strawberries combine to make it so rich, we split it. Bet you can't eat a whole one!
Eating Our Way Through Wichita
There are several restaurants that are now a tradition for us. Some date back to our childhood, some are new favorites, all are good. Most are not on our normal diet. They are always on our list of "must go" places.
Nu Way is always on the list! With its crumbly meat sandwiches, good French fries or onion rings and famous chocolate malts OR....homemade root beer, Nu Way is a treat.
Nu Way is always on the list! With its crumbly meat sandwiches, good French fries or onion rings and famous chocolate malts OR....homemade root beer, Nu Way is a treat.
Another good place is Dog and Shake. This is a super hot dog in a U shaped piece of bread that is made into a bun. The bun is toasted in butter. The hot dog has sweet relish, mustard, chopped onions and sprinkled with celery salt (the secret ingredient.) Add fries and a limeade and you are good to go.
Freddy's Hamburgers is new to me, although it has been in Wichita for a long time. The hamburger is a favorite with my sister. The meat in the burger is very thin and crispy on the edges. The thin French fries were good and the chocolate shake yummy. Freddys is now on the "Go To List."
And.....the list is growing!
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
The Elpyco Street Gang
I grew up on a street full of brand new smallish ranch houses. The tiny oak trees in each front yard were planted in the late 1940 or early 1950s when the houses were built. Our street was named Elpyco for the three partners who developed the neighborhood: Mr. Elder, Mr. Pyles, and Mr. Comer. Combine the first two letters and you get: Elpyco.
Because most of the households were first time homeowners, the street was full of young families with children. Elpyco seemed to have a jillon kids.
All the kids on our block went to Henry J. Allen Elementary School and we all walked the one block to get there. Crossing guards took us safely across the street. After school our Mothers took us to various scout meeting, dance class or we watched TV. There were only a few channels at that time but we thrilled to Roy Rogers, Your Hit Parade and Winky Dink.
When school let out for summer vacation, girls jumped rope, rode bicycles, played hopscotch and jacks. Boys played ball, Red Rover and we all got wet in the sprinkler or little rubber pools that one of the dads blew up with a tire pump. At night grown ups would gather in yard chairs in front yards while kids spread out blankets to gaze at the stars and tell ghost stories.
Most of the little girls on our block, including yours truly, took tap, ballet, jazz, and acrobatics from The Claudia Mundy School of Dance. We would put on shows in the front yard on long, hot summer evenings. The shows were free of charge because the audience was made up of parents and siblings. Still, we thought we were pretty good and we have the home movies to prove it! We had wonderful costumes; my two favorites were a top hat and tails complete with a cane, and a brightly colored rumba outfit with ruffles down the long train.
There is only one mom left from the old neighborhood, she, like all the rest of the neighbors moved away years ago. Jane is now 80 years old but you would never know it. She looks much, much younger and acts young too. My brother, sister and I see her or one or more of her children when we come to town and we were delighted when she said she would host a little "Elpyco reunion." There were eight of us "Kids," tons of good food, and lots of old pictures to prove we were really "that young" once.
My family brought a CD full of our old home movies. They were from old 8 mm reels and were out of order, grainy at times and, since our dad wasn't best camera man, they were also jerky. The quality of the CD didn't really matter, though, as we watched ourselves as small children playing, laughing or crying, funny and energetic. We lived in a more innocent time. We were typical kids doing typical things and we looked very happy back then. As adults, we had a great time recalling fun times we had so long ago. For a few hours we were a little closer to these carefree days of Mother-May-I and piling in the car (all of us) to go for an ice cream cone. We knew nothing of computers, i-phones or video games. Weren't we lucky!!!!
Older people or newly weds just starting out live in the little ranch houses now. None of the first homeowners live there anymore. No kids ride bikes down the sidewalks or walk to Henry J. Allen Elementary School. Parents drive them a block or two now. The neighborhood has lost the luster of the years past and looks a little lonely.
And, those tiny newly planted trees from 1950? They have grown into giant oaks and their branches touch in the center of the street. That makes me smile.
Some of the Elpyco children. I am the tall skinny one in the back. My little sister is hugging our little brother.
Some of the "Elpyco Gang" from the tallest to shortest.
Because most of the households were first time homeowners, the street was full of young families with children. Elpyco seemed to have a jillon kids.
All the kids on our block went to Henry J. Allen Elementary School and we all walked the one block to get there. Crossing guards took us safely across the street. After school our Mothers took us to various scout meeting, dance class or we watched TV. There were only a few channels at that time but we thrilled to Roy Rogers, Your Hit Parade and Winky Dink.
When school let out for summer vacation, girls jumped rope, rode bicycles, played hopscotch and jacks. Boys played ball, Red Rover and we all got wet in the sprinkler or little rubber pools that one of the dads blew up with a tire pump. At night grown ups would gather in yard chairs in front yards while kids spread out blankets to gaze at the stars and tell ghost stories.
Most of the little girls on our block, including yours truly, took tap, ballet, jazz, and acrobatics from The Claudia Mundy School of Dance. We would put on shows in the front yard on long, hot summer evenings. The shows were free of charge because the audience was made up of parents and siblings. Still, we thought we were pretty good and we have the home movies to prove it! We had wonderful costumes; my two favorites were a top hat and tails complete with a cane, and a brightly colored rumba outfit with ruffles down the long train.
There is only one mom left from the old neighborhood, she, like all the rest of the neighbors moved away years ago. Jane is now 80 years old but you would never know it. She looks much, much younger and acts young too. My brother, sister and I see her or one or more of her children when we come to town and we were delighted when she said she would host a little "Elpyco reunion." There were eight of us "Kids," tons of good food, and lots of old pictures to prove we were really "that young" once.
My family brought a CD full of our old home movies. They were from old 8 mm reels and were out of order, grainy at times and, since our dad wasn't best camera man, they were also jerky. The quality of the CD didn't really matter, though, as we watched ourselves as small children playing, laughing or crying, funny and energetic. We lived in a more innocent time. We were typical kids doing typical things and we looked very happy back then. As adults, we had a great time recalling fun times we had so long ago. For a few hours we were a little closer to these carefree days of Mother-May-I and piling in the car (all of us) to go for an ice cream cone. We knew nothing of computers, i-phones or video games. Weren't we lucky!!!!
Older people or newly weds just starting out live in the little ranch houses now. None of the first homeowners live there anymore. No kids ride bikes down the sidewalks or walk to Henry J. Allen Elementary School. Parents drive them a block or two now. The neighborhood has lost the luster of the years past and looks a little lonely.
And, those tiny newly planted trees from 1950? They have grown into giant oaks and their branches touch in the center of the street. That makes me smile.
Some of the Elpyco children. I am the tall skinny one in the back. My little sister is hugging our little brother.
Some of the "Elpyco Gang" from the tallest to shortest.
Sunday, June 2, 2013
Historic Ellinwood Kansas
Every year I visit my sister and brother in law in Wichita, and every year we take a road trip.
This year we explored Ellinwood, Kansas; a quirky little place that turned out to be very interesting.
This year we explored Ellinwood, Kansas; a quirky little place that turned out to be very interesting.
This is the Dick building. The tower remains but its twin at the other end of the street is gone. Directly below the Dick building are underground tunnels.
On every light pole in Ellinwood there is a beautiful sculpture of a cluster of wheat. After all, plenty of wheat grows in Kansas.
Ellinwood, Kansas: Half above and Half Below
Ellinwood, Kansas is on the Sante Fe Trail. The resourceful German immigrants who settled here, in the 1870's "Wild West," dug an underground town beneath the one mile square Ellinwood.
The underground world was a series of tunnels connecting the business' above to the business' below. In the tunnels, cowboys and town's men could drink in the many saloons, buy shoes and harness' for horses, store meat, visit the blacksmith, barber shop or display wares. This was a man's world. No women allowed, except for a prostitute here and there.
The good townspeople, ladies, gentlemen, and children could shop and walk the streets above without being bothered by drunken cowboys.
The tunnels were in use for several decades until, due to safety concerns, the town voted to fill in the tunnels in the 1930s and 40s. Three sections were saved in 1979 due to the persistence and finances of a woman named Adrianna Dierolf who owned the Dick Building. Since then, ownership has changed hands but the tunnels remain a tourist attraction. For $6.00 you can see them too!
The underground world was a series of tunnels connecting the business' above to the business' below. In the tunnels, cowboys and town's men could drink in the many saloons, buy shoes and harness' for horses, store meat, visit the blacksmith, barber shop or display wares. This was a man's world. No women allowed, except for a prostitute here and there.
The good townspeople, ladies, gentlemen, and children could shop and walk the streets above without being bothered by drunken cowboys.
The tunnels were in use for several decades until, due to safety concerns, the town voted to fill in the tunnels in the 1930s and 40s. Three sections were saved in 1979 due to the persistence and finances of a woman named Adrianna Dierolf who owned the Dick Building. Since then, ownership has changed hands but the tunnels remain a tourist attraction. For $6.00 you can see them too!
Harness Shop
Light coming through the manhole covers above.
Doorway construction leading from one business to another.
Blacksmith's Shop
Jung's Barber Shop/ Surgery Center
In the underground world of Ellinwood, there were services provided to the cattlemen and cowboys making their way through town. Jung's Barber Shop was such a place and the barber would perform surgeries as well as drawing a hot bath (15 cents for hot, clean water and 10 cents for dirty, lukewarm "second" water) or laundering clothes.
A common complaint was tonsillitis. The barber would insert an instrument, scoop out the offending tonsil, cauterize it, and, when the cowboy passed out from pain and shock, plop him into a wheelchair and let him sleep it off. The barber cut hair and shaved beards, of course, and when necessary, pulled teeth and let blood. The furnishings below are original to the underground tunnels of Ellinwood.
A common complaint was tonsillitis. The barber would insert an instrument, scoop out the offending tonsil, cauterize it, and, when the cowboy passed out from pain and shock, plop him into a wheelchair and let him sleep it off. The barber cut hair and shaved beards, of course, and when necessary, pulled teeth and let blood. The furnishings below are original to the underground tunnels of Ellinwood.
How about game of cards while you wait for your blood letting?
To the far left of this picture is a half wall. On the other side of the wall is a bed where a man could sleep off a drunk, recover from surgery or be joined by a local "Soiled Dove" who would provide a little comfort to a poor old cowboy. Soiled Doves or "Ladies of the Evening" weren't seen above ground in Ellinwood much where the ladies and children from town lived and shopped.
Of course, in the wild west, things could get out of hand. There are bullet holes in the ceiling of the barber shop to prove it!
Dear Readers, aren't we glad we live in 2013?
If I Click My HeelsTogether Will I Get Back To Virginia?
It is always an experience to fly these days. Thirty, even twenty years ago, it was almost fun to fly. The food was pretty good, at least you got a choice of meals. At least there WERE meals. I didn't pay an arm and a leg for a ticket and those same arms and legs, as well as the rest of me, didn't have to be x-rayed and scanned. Not that I object to the added security in light of how dangerous our country seems to have become. Still, sometimes I miss the good ol' days when someone could meet me at my gate and I could take a large shampoo bottle in a carry on bag.
Boarding the plane in Wichita, I was already a little bit tense knowing I had only a forty-five minute layover in Atlanta and there was surely a tram in my future, but I got a bad feeling looking ahead to row 19 and seeing someone in my seat. Slowly, creeping with baby steps behind the passengers ahead of me, I spied a tiny, ancient woman in the window seat.
"Excuse me, Mam, I think you are in my seat."
"NO I AM NOT!!!!"
Uh oh.
"Mam, according to my boarding pass, I have that seat."
"NO YOU DON'T. THIS IS MY SEAT. I AM NOT MOVING."
I looked at the flight attendant who actually seemed sympathetic. She took over and told the little woman that, yes, it was true, she was sitting in my assigned seat.
"I AM NOT MOVING FROM THIS SEAT. NOT EVEN IF YOU ARE JACKIE KENNEDY!"
Passengers giggled and I looked at Miss Flight Attendant who was busy calling security but then had a better idea. She said. "OK then, since you won't move, I will take this lady (meaning me) to your assigned seat on the 6th row."
We didn't need Jackie Kennedy after all.
I never saw the little woman again. I happily deplaned several minutes ahead of her. Karma is sometimes a very good thing.
Boarding the plane in Wichita, I was already a little bit tense knowing I had only a forty-five minute layover in Atlanta and there was surely a tram in my future, but I got a bad feeling looking ahead to row 19 and seeing someone in my seat. Slowly, creeping with baby steps behind the passengers ahead of me, I spied a tiny, ancient woman in the window seat.
"Excuse me, Mam, I think you are in my seat."
"NO I AM NOT!!!!"
Uh oh.
"Mam, according to my boarding pass, I have that seat."
"NO YOU DON'T. THIS IS MY SEAT. I AM NOT MOVING."
I looked at the flight attendant who actually seemed sympathetic. She took over and told the little woman that, yes, it was true, she was sitting in my assigned seat.
"I AM NOT MOVING FROM THIS SEAT. NOT EVEN IF YOU ARE JACKIE KENNEDY!"
Passengers giggled and I looked at Miss Flight Attendant who was busy calling security but then had a better idea. She said. "OK then, since you won't move, I will take this lady (meaning me) to your assigned seat on the 6th row."
We didn't need Jackie Kennedy after all.
I never saw the little woman again. I happily deplaned several minutes ahead of her. Karma is sometimes a very good thing.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
May 30th: Day Trip On The Blue Ridge Parkway
Andy and I just wanted to take a drive so we got up early, always a challenge for me, and drove to Stuart, Virginia for breakfast. Denny Alley owns and operates The Coffee Break in Stuart, a cozy little cafe' where locals gather for good food and conversation.
After a great, and filling, breakfast of strawberry pancakes with bacon for me and county ham, eggs and hash brown potatoes for Andy, we waddled back to the car.
The Blue Ridge Music Center, on The Blue Ridge Parkway, has free music for museum visitors. Willard Gayheart (pencil artist) and Scott Freeman are local musicians who have been playing at the music center every Thursday for years. They are good. Willard and Scott, who plays multiple instruments, play old and new bluegrass songs with a few country tunes just to mix it up a bit. We listened for around an hour, visited with them on their break and headed down the parkway toward Mount Airy, N.C.
Mount Airy, N.C. is the home town of Andy Griffith and a pretty little place with small town feel even if the business folks have capitalized on the Mayberry theme. Andy (my Andy, that is) and I visit Mount Airy a couple of times a year. There is a very good museum dedicated to Andy Griffith's movie and TV career. There are shops featuring Andy, Barney, Opie and the Darings in the form of CDs, photographs, candy, tea towels, books, and most anything else you can imagine.
You may dine at Aunt Bea's restaurant or the Barney (Fife) Café, but we like the Blue Bird.
The Blue Bird Diner and Ice Cream Parlor has been around for years. You may sit at one of two U shaped counters or one of many booths lined up against the wall. We sit in a booth, write a little note giving our names and where we are from, and slip it under the glass table top along with hundreds of other little slips of paper. And....we always order the Blue Bird's famous pork chop sandwich. Yum.
After a great, and filling, breakfast of strawberry pancakes with bacon for me and county ham, eggs and hash brown potatoes for Andy, we waddled back to the car.
The Blue Ridge Music Center, on The Blue Ridge Parkway, has free music for museum visitors. Willard Gayheart (pencil artist) and Scott Freeman are local musicians who have been playing at the music center every Thursday for years. They are good. Willard and Scott, who plays multiple instruments, play old and new bluegrass songs with a few country tunes just to mix it up a bit. We listened for around an hour, visited with them on their break and headed down the parkway toward Mount Airy, N.C.
Mount Airy, N.C. is the home town of Andy Griffith and a pretty little place with small town feel even if the business folks have capitalized on the Mayberry theme. Andy (my Andy, that is) and I visit Mount Airy a couple of times a year. There is a very good museum dedicated to Andy Griffith's movie and TV career. There are shops featuring Andy, Barney, Opie and the Darings in the form of CDs, photographs, candy, tea towels, books, and most anything else you can imagine.
You may dine at Aunt Bea's restaurant or the Barney (Fife) Café, but we like the Blue Bird.
The Blue Bird Diner and Ice Cream Parlor has been around for years. You may sit at one of two U shaped counters or one of many booths lined up against the wall. We sit in a booth, write a little note giving our names and where we are from, and slip it under the glass table top along with hundreds of other little slips of paper. And....we always order the Blue Bird's famous pork chop sandwich. Yum.
If you look closely at the last picture, you may see a little bite mark. After I had take that bite, I thought to snap the picture. Opps!
It was a fun little day trip but all those calories called for a low cal dinner. Some days are like that, yeah, they are!
Saturday, April 27, 2013
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