Category Archives: Just Me – AmeliaJake

Kendallville to Kingman – Geranium Road Trip

Well, I started off in a rainstorm, drove in so-so skies for a while, then had rain come down in a torrent and finally got steamy hot all on the way to put flowers on my dad’s grave. The pot rode on the floor behind my seat down there and now sits at the Kingman Fraternal Cemetery.

But in between reaching Fountain County and actually arriving in Kingman, I linked up with my three cousins and we ate and then decorated my dad’s, our grandparents’ and their parents graves. The flowers are lovely; I don’t know why I didn’t take any pictures. Maybe it was because it was the first day of being hot and really humid; I guess that would make me a hothouse flower, which seems to be an oxymoronic reference to the situation, but I do not care.

It was humid and close and sticky . . . BECAUSE IT WAS GOING TO STORM LIKE THE DICKENS. We had a downpour of rain and hail and wind and spend about a half hour watching big blotches of RED move across the TV screen as they talked of what was happening in a line that cut through Indianapolis . . . and us.

This is maybe the third time I have gone down for Memorial Day and we have had heavy storms and, once, a tornado siren going off while we were at the cemetery. It may be a paranormal phenomenon; we’re going to have to experiment next year with the timing.

Google’s really good new GPS directions got me down there easily, but perhaps due to the storms, the service was out until I got through Lafayette, the home of Purdue, by aiming north and east – and there was a little guess-work about the north and east.

This is just the bare bones account of the past two days; I’m leaving details for later. Oh, things such as my cousins and I possibly being as kooky as our grandmother, who was once referred to as “A real piece of work.”

I guess I should give them aliases . . . Larry, Curly and Moe? Okay, I’m joking, but I’ll think of something so no one will suspect they are Ann, Glenda and Susie.

**********

And because this IS Indiana and basketball is a big thing, I just have to mention that my dad’s sister Mary married Glen Woodrow and their great-grandson got his name in the paper in a big, memorable way.

From the Lafayette Journal & Courier:
Woodrow carries Fountain Central to sectional championship
Barry Lewis 10:23 p.m. EST March 8, 2014

VEEDERSBURG – Fountain Central junior Ethan Woodrow was a man on a mission Saturday night to make sure his basketball season end did not this weekend.

Mission accomplished.

Woodrow scored 21 of the Mustangs’ 26 points in the first half and ended with a game-high 30 points in Fountain Central’s 53-47 win over Southmont in the Class 2A Fountain Central Sectional championship game.

“Ethan pretty much put us on his shoulders and carried us, especially in the first half,” said Fountain Central coach Jason Good, who celebrated a sectional title and his 100th areer victory. “He was a bit disappointed in his play on Tuesday and he played better last night — and tonight, he played like someone who was not going to let his team lose. He played like a senior, and he is not a senior.”

We are a little chilly here

The furnace is on and I have a space heater aimed at my legs, because it is 38 degrees here. May 16th and it is 38. I am quite possibly going to go out and get flowers and greenery to pot for my father’s grave today, but I think I’ll wait until it warms up . . . to the predicted 53.

After the winter we have had, I really can’t complain about 53 degrees, or even 38; I will remark, however, that the temperature is making it difficult to get into the swing of late spring and early summer. I am beginning to think that rare day in June may turn out to be a raw day this year.

I just finished reading Out Stealing Horses by an author with a very Norwegian names – so Norwegian it escapes me at the moment. Of course, I have just sighed and will go look. Hold on.

Ah, yes, I have information:
Out Stealing Horses: A Novel Paperback
by Per Petterson (Author), Anne Born (Translator)

and from the NY Times Sunday Book Review.

The review has a good number of literary references; it is a “learned” review. I am always amazed that sometimes the ruminations of a mind can be so dissected and analyzed. It was the type of book that is a “come along with me while I think about my life” endeavor. And the book, like life, went along step by step and left questions unanswered in the end.

Often, when I read, I prefer my introspective essays to be fairly short; when I sit down to delve into something, I like to come away with more than the narrator’s thoughts – I like the treat of answers slipped in when the character is not looking. He may suspect, but I, by virtue of being outside the novel, know.

The reviewer of this book writes that the character makes peace with something in his past; well, when you get to be a certain age and have retired to a cabin in the woods seeking solitude, I would assume that one way or another, you have come to terms with what has been your life. The lead character does not ask someone sitting across the table from him who knows what happened to tell him; he remains silent. Maybe he feels it is better not to know. However, since this fellow has himself left questions for his own family, perhaps he feels if he had no answers for them, maybe he should have no answer to his question.

As I turned the page, only to find out it had been the last one, I almost said aloud, “What!?” Perhaps the curiosity in me is the AmeliaJake in me, or maybe it is the American in me, or maybe the generic busybody in me. More than likely, it is the low-brow that nestles in me.

Mirror, Mirror on the Wal-Mart Wall

As I pushed my cart around Wal-Mart, it seemed as if people were looking at me oddly; usually, I don’t notice such things. They all looked sour and totally unapproving. As I was passing the aisle where the restrooms are, I thought, “Oh, why not?” and went inside. As I walked to the sinks to wash my hands, I looked in the mirror.

WHOA!

My Dorfman Pacific hat (outdoor design – crushable with mesh in the crown) was sitting half way down my head with the brim going straight out around my head. My hair had responded by flaring out and drawing attention to my mouth which is on the large size. I actually uttered “Oh!” and stepped back from the mirror. I reminded myself of some traditionally crazy little old lady.

I suppose I should be glad no one had a camera and I will not see my picture on People of Wal-Mart. Heck, I should have taken my own picture – maybe it would have gone viral and wound up on T-shirts. Now, would that be public domain or would I get royalties?

The original PBC & Roadhouse

Actually, this was written and published yesterday; it just didn’t “take”

I am phone now in LaGrange County pretty much for the purpose of being here. I can’t mow because it is raining on and off today, but that’s okay. The grass will be mowed sometime.

The mosquitoes are going to be bad this year; we’ve had other years like that. I drove the oil-burning Volvo up here because of the window on the Buick, dontchaknow. Unfortunately, the guy is coming to fix that tomorrow afternoon so we will have to be back by then. Actually, I don’t really mean unfortunately; I’m just thinking that the timing could have been better, but it’s better than a sharp stick in the tire.

It’s really Cameron’s Volvo and this little week of Grandma in driver’s may spur him on to get his license. We had it out on I-69 this morning and I think the engine appreciated it. Cameron May have been more worried–like maybe the engine might go KABOOM. Well, that’s why I got this sturdy old Volvo body for him.

It is becoming very dark in the west and that grass is just going to be encouraged to grow more. I’m not arguing with Mother Nature; I am just glad for the metal roof over my head.

Ack. It is getting very dark and ominous here . . . And it is RAINING. Gosh darn, that grass is lush.

Aha! Safe from sheriff’s sale . . . for now

Property taxes have been paid on the LaGrange House, painful, but necessary. What makes it a pain in the neck, besides coughing up the chunk of money, is the fact that this one smallish piece of property is cut up into seven parcels. It’s not a big deal, but if I miss one, I don’t want it to be the one that the house is on . . . but, then I would probably notice the much lower cash outflow.

I was afraid there would be a long line, but it appears few are as tight-fisted with tax money as I am. A couple of Amish fellows ambled in, along with about three other people but I didn’t have to wait a bit. They had three windows: Checks, Checks and Cash, and Checks and Credit Cards. They were picky about it – one Amishman was told he couldn’t pay “here”. The staff has been beefed up for the past week and while I watched the clerk tally up my bill, I also looked over her shoulder to a lady cha-chinging one check after another into the county’s account.

There’s nothing noteworthy about that and I don’t know why I mentioned it, unless I was just fascinated to see tax dollars going off to work – and they weren’t whistling.

A wheel is on the mower

Okay, fellow former snow shovellers, yesterday we mowed the dandelion-infested overgrown yard, trailing 200 feet of cord behind us. Going around trees is so much fun . . . And then the dog biting at the wheels. Hey, I haven’t run over a Wubba in I don’t know how long. The yard was overgrown because when I went out to mow a week ago, a wheel fell off.

I sweat through my underwear, didn’t realize it and then sat inside wondering why I felt chilled. The day was okay – I was a little less so, not thinking really wisely. I read a book, rather than showering, which would have warmed me up and, gee, made me less smelly. The book was okay, just a 99 cent baby written a long time ago and revived for epublishing. I imagine the author could have edited the TV and movie references to some time later than the “70’s, but, hey, maybe it’s his estate that is publishing it. Yes, it made me feel old, but if the truth requires sensible shoes, so be it.

I mentioned dandelions; I have been going on about them for years. I understand that they have many uses and, yes, yellow is cheerful, but it’s become a tradition and that means I must at least refer to the rants of the past.