Friday, April 22, 2011

A Quick Trip To East Texas

Pam decided that for our 35th anniversary she wanted to go to East Texas.  Specifically to Nacogdoches.  Not finding reservations in a hotel that I felt comfortable staying at we ended up expanding it to Lufkin and Nacogdoches.  We left on Friday at noon.  Pam took half a day off and we headed out.  Nice drive and by the time we got to Corrsicana we were heading into the Piney Woods.

Most people don't associate Texas with forest but we have a number of state forests and four national forests and a large lumber industry.  It was a pleasant trip for the most part but we did have one moment of un- wished for excitement.  Coming through Alto just outside of Lufkin a large (very large) tree fell right in front of us.  Just missing the car in front of us (he was on the other side of the falling tree and us.  We have had a lot of wind lately and this was a windy day 30-40 MPH gusts.  It was kind of strange to watch it fall in what seemed like slow motion.  When we were able to get around it we notice the driver ahead of us had pulled over.  Seemed like he was waiting for his nerves to return to normal before moving on.  My copilot was amazing calm though it did merit stopping at the Dairy Queen a few blocks away and getting a rare treat.  We both got small Blizzards.  Something that has not been seen in our diets for years.

The rest of the trip was uneventful and the Marriott we stayed at was new and very nice.  We tried an award winning bar b que place that night.  Not sure why they had won all the awards.  The food was average at best.  Saturday morning we headed out for Nacogdoches and their trades day.  Small but Pam bought a few plants and I bought a few knives.  We then went to Stephen F. Austin University where they were having an Earth Day event and a native plant sale.  Very interesting.  We left with an unusual Greek Thyme plant.  Then it was off to downtown where we visited a few stores and found lunch again highly recommended but nothing special as far as we were concerned.  Lufkin was having their hoedown days downtown as well on Saturday so we headed back to see what that was about.  I don't know that I could tell you even after attending.  They did have one very energetic Elvis impersonator.  We spent the rest of the afternoon looking through some antique stores and driving through the countryside.

We decided that on our return home we would go through Tyler and see about finding some Tyler roses.  We made our way back and stopped at several places to look for roses.  We ended up with about 6 mostly one gallon roses.  Three from an Nursery that specializes in roses and three from a roadside vendor.  About half are now planted.  I am still working on the last three.  After a stop in Canton for lunch we arrived back home and our cats were excited to see us after properly showing their disdain that we would leave them for two nights.

Below are some pictures that were taken outside of Jacksonville which is north on 69 from Lufkin.  Most people also don't realize that Texas has hills.  This was at a scenic overlook.





All in all a good trip.  Now we just have to figure out where we will go for our 40th.

More Later

Bruce

Sunday, April 10, 2011

It Seems Like Yesterday

Saturday April 16, 2011.  Not a necessarily auspicious date to most.  The day after the normal tax filing deadline., the 106th day of the year and on some years Good Friday. Here is a link to a site with all the other stuff that has happened on April 16th http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/April_16.  However as you might guess, none of that has to do with today's musings. 

On April 16, 1976 Pam and I were married.  A small ceremony at her mother's home in Poteet Texas attended by family only.  This particular year was one in which April 16th was good Friday.  The story of the wedding is an interesting one.  At the time Pam was working for CPL (Central Power and Light) as a home economist.  I was finishing my student teaching and working part time at the local Rexall drug store. This all took place in the rural southwest Texas ranching town of Uvalde.

Pam and I had met in a college class, she was beginning to work on her masters degree and I was finishing up my  bachelors.  It was right before Christmas 1975 and for those of you who know Pam, this will make sense (actually it was very unlike her but apparently I had made an impression), she asked me to attend her company Christmas party.  She thought I was older than her when the truth was I was two years younger.  The date was December 6th. We still celebrate this anniversary.  By Feb 14th of 1976 I had asked her to marry me and we picked out her ring in San Antonio at Joskes.  Most will probably not recognize that name but at one time it was a very popular store in Texas similar to Macy's and Neimans.  We would regret that ring purchase for a long time.  Not for the reason you would assume but as we bought a Marquee diamond and it had two sharp points it on more than one occasion scratched me, the car, furniture, Pam, the kids and God knows what else.  I was not employed full time yet and was going to school on the GI bill and working part time but we wanted to get her a distinctive(different) ring.  The marquee cut fit the bill. When I look at what we paid for this ring then and what wedding rings cost now I always get a bit tickled, but that is getting off track.

My parents had been married on Good Friday (Interestingly enough also after a short period of time,  a fact that immensely tickled my mother) and we had decided to do the same.  I did not realize at the time that Good Friday moves all around the month of April.  Though it should have been obvious, I was just thinking OK, first date easy to remember (Dec 6th the day before Pearl Harbor Day). Engagement easy to remember, Feb 14th Valentines day.  Therefore the wedding date should be easy to remember, Good Friday April 16th.  Pam's father was deceased and her mother worked at the drug store in Poteet.  We never considered anything other than paying for the wedding ourselves.  After an initial run at a guest list proved to be far too long, we decided to make the wedding family only (affordable).  As Alva insisted on helping, we decided to have it at her house in Poteet rather than at the Church. 

Alva had a small home sitting on a number of acres just outside of Poteet (just south of San Antonio).  It would be a simple ceremony with cake and refreshments afterward.  My parents, my sister and my brother and his wife and children were there from my side and Pam's sister and brothers and their respective families as well as several of her aunts and uncles were present.  My brother was my best man and Pam's sister her maid(matron) of honor.  We were married by the local Methodist minister. Besides the minister the only non family members present was the man who sang the Lords Prayer at the service and Pam's College roommate.  Now the story gets interesting.  This was 1976 so don't judge us harshly.  I wore a light lime green suit (yes, it was a popular color at the time) and Pam wore a matching gown made from a soft polyester and oh yes, my suit was polyester.  Both the suit and the gown are long gone.  Polyester does not store well.  It may not ever break down in the land fill but it does turn strange colors after being stored for a while.  You might also find it interesting that my car at the time was a lime green Pinto Station wagon.  Our family so enthusiastically sent us off that there was still rice in the car when we traded it in several months later.

We were to honeymoon (if you could call it that) in San Antonio and the Texas Hill Country.  Both of us had to be back at work on Monday.  We spent Friday night at the Palacios Dell Rio in San Antonio and Saturday night in Fredricksburg at the Inn of the Hills.  We returned Sunday afternoon to the small apartment we had rented to begin our lives as a married couple.  Blissfully ignorant of all that would transpire in the years to come.


Wedding Announcement



Our Engagement Picture - I wore my hair a little longer then.  We did make an effort to coordinate.  Though I am not sure why we chose the raspberry color.


No, I was not kidding about the light lime green suit.  Color on this old photo is not the best but it did coordinate with Pam's Dress.  You can tell the tie was green.  Also the cut was the popular square cut of the day.  Thank you John Travolta.  Hard to believe I was ever that thin.


From left to right - Pam's oldest brother Lonnie, Pam's mother Alva, Pam, me, my mother Rose and my father Peter.  His leisure suit was really close to a burnt orange.  Look at the size of the lapels on that shirt.

Wasn't kidding about the Pinto Wagon either.  Complete with fake wood trim.  I even bought it new.  Oh well, you would have had to have been there.  Both Pam and I had owned a Pinto before.  It was my second car and my first new car and it was her first new car as well as first car so we had a history.  So when we decided to get married I traded in my small pickup for the Pinto wagon.  That car would redefine the meaning of the word lemon and we would not have it long.


 Our Wedding Service.  For the younger set this was not done on a computer but typed on a typewriter.  Pam and I wrote our own vows.  Just click on the page and it will enlarge.







Wedding as reported in the Pleasanton Express I am not sure who wrote the article but they made it sound pretty fancy.  Pleasanton is also south of San Antonio.



So as thirty five years approaches it is interesting to sit and reflect.  I personally would not change a thing.  Marrying Pam was probably the best decision that I have made. I certainly can not imagine what life would have been like without her and our two children.  I think the only change she would have made was to pick a different color dress.  Though the story of shopping for that dress is interesting in itself and yes, I did see her in the dress before the wedding~ I helped pick it out.  Though it doesn't seem to have caused any cosmic problems to this point.

As to why my mother found my announcement that I was getting married so amusing, it is actually pretty simple.  My father had asked her to marry him after only two weeks.  She had grown up on a farm and was the youngest of five children.  I asked Pam to marry me after only two weeks.  She had grown up on a farm and was the youngest of five children.  The similarities don't end there but you get the point.  My mother used to swear that I was my father all over again.  In hindsight not a bad thing.  If my math is correct my parents would have been married 67 years on April 14th.  She and my father had three children all of who are still married to the same person.  My brother to his wife for 46 years and my sister to her husband for 31 years and Pam and I for 35.


My Parents Wedding Picture April 14, 1944


Note found on the back of my parents wedding picture.  Something I think is throughly cool.


My mother with her parents on her wedding day.  I am not sure how they got my grandfather in a suit.  Though my grandmother could make him do amazing things with just a look.


The church that they were married at in Harlingen Texas.  I took this about 1996 when I took them to the Valley to visit my Grandparent's graves.  They were married in a Presbyterian Church even though my mother was Catholic as the local catholic priest did not want to encourage service men to marry local women believing that the wartime marriages would not last.  I guess they proved him wrong. 


More Later

Bruce and Pam

Friday, April 1, 2011

Its Been A Busy Month

Sorry for the lack of posts in March.  It has been a busy month.  I went to Kansas to help my son Charles and his wife Heather move.  Their house sold quicker than expected (never a bad thing) and they made a quick move into a rented townhouse.

We also made a quick trip to Austin early in the month and then visited Pam's sister in San Antonio.  Why Austin you asked.  Well Pam had an appointment with the Texas Teacher Retirement System to sign her paperwork to retire.  While they do group meetings around the state you get more time and personal attention if you schedule an appointment in their offices in Austin.  To cut to the chase this is Pam's last year to teach she has decided to retire.  With thirty years in this was a good year to do so.  All the particulars have been arranged and she notified her principal yesterday.  So we both are now ready to figure out the next chapter in our lives.

I have been helping a friend who bought a house closer to her children do some remodeling (well a lot of remodeling).  I mostly have been doing the design work and helping her shop for materials but have also helped the handyman doing the work with a few items he had not done before.

Then there is our own house.  There have been a lot of get ready for spring tasks to be done.  I rebuilt a section of fence yesterday.  Several more sections need work but I am working with neighbors on getting those done.

And there has been the required time for play.  I carved a few bowls ( I have always turned them in the past) and carved and turned several other projects.  Those projects are on my other blog.  I think I have come up with the final name for it and my woodworking hobby.  When you go to that site you will note it is now called Natural Reverence Woodcraft.  I am still working on figuring out how to put in a gallery of my projects.  So check in from time to time and see if I make any headway.

Of course I have spent quite a bit of time fighting through our Taxes.  Always such fun.  I am not sure how with all the paperwork reduction acts and simplification that supposedly has been done that they seem to become more convoluted every year.  I printed out a draft and was appalled to see it was 102 pages.  Sheeesh.

We have continued our run of freakish weather with unusual highs being followed by unusual lows.  We had the second driest March on record. 7 100ths of an inch.  I am afraid this year is going to begin a drought.  The rain seems to be stopping in California and never getting here.  What doesn't fall as rain has fallen as snow in the Rockies.

Hope all is well in your world

More Later

Bruce