Friday, February 29, 2008

Don't Buy Gas In Rodeo

I forgot to gas up the car before coming down here and they charge $3.50 a gallon. I felt like telling the clerk "excuse me I have to go hock the family farm before I can fill up." We didn't fill up, just got enough to go to another town (20 miles away) that has more than one gas station.

We made it and it is beautiful. I am listening to the coyotes howl. Awesome.

Kids, if you need to talk I have yahoo messenger open and the winds are going to be calm so I can leave the satellite up and stay connected via the internet.

Still fighting the webpage but I hope to have the kinks out of it soon.

Location:  Rodeo

Put Him In My Pocket

Have ever met someone that is so interesting that you forget to ask him his name? I had that pleasure in Silver City New Mexico. We went to their museum and I overheard him talking about maintaining his grandfather’s gravesite. Of course I had to ask him where the cemetery was located and that is what led me into this wonderful conversation about the history of Silver City.

I heard the tale of how the town founder, John Bullard was killed by an Indian. He was shot in the chest with an arrow which made him go down in a sitting position with the most surprised look on his face. Seconds later he just toppled over backwards dead.

I heard about Catherine Atrim, Billie the Kid’s mother and what a delightful person she was. She came out west for her health, she had TB and during the time she was well enough to get out of bed she proved to be a “delightful Irish lady.”

I heard about his grandfather, Tom and the family feud that led to the killing of his Uncle.

Of course the story was completed by a story of a delightful lady, Millie. She came to Silver City and started a “cat house.” Back in 1940 when he was a youngun he met her and asked her if she knew his father. Thanks to her, he had stories of his father. Like Sadie Orchard, she was generous to a fault and helped the community.

For an hour the west came to life for me and driving home I saw the country in a whole new perspective.

I was hoping to find some pictures of stories of old Tyrone New Mexico, a ghost town that I did not try to find. I found some pictures of the town but no stories. I feel the website Ghosttowns describes it better than I could so I will quote them.

Tyrone occupies a singular position in the history of New Mexico ghost towns. Nowhere else will the ghost town visitor gaze upon what once was a display of rococo mansions patterned after the imposing Mediterranean-style homes of Spain. All this was the idea of Mrs. Dodge of the giant Phelps-Dodge Corporation. It was her dream to make Tyrone into the most beautiful mining town in the world. She first engaged the services of the well-known architect Bertram Goodhue, the same Goodhue who designed the buildings of the Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Diego in 1915 and the Capitol building in Lincoln, Nebraska, to come to New Mexico. He did and the same fundamental plan was adopted for Tyrone. The town was built including a business section, a residential section, a school, a hospital and palatial residences at a cost of over one million dollars. The project was completed in 1915 and ready for occupancy. Except for the ravages of time, Tyrone today is not much different than it was in 1915. The reason? There were rumors being circulated that the rich copper deposits were not as rich as once believed and who would want to move into a failing operation. Rumors became fact in 1921when the mines closed and people moved away. Submitted by Henry Chenoweth.

One word of warning about this website…. Turn off your sound.

It is moving on day. I still can’t post my pictures because of the slow internet. Hopefully at the next park.

Location:  Silver City

Thursday, February 28, 2008

FYI

We are all set for peace and quiet! It comes at a price though, we will have no phone service. Starting tomorrow kids you will not be able to call until we leave. I don't know when that will be either so don't ask. If you do then Hannah and Robert will be spending Spring Break with us at this wonderful location.


We will be staying near Rodeo New Mexico with the Chiricahua Mountains to the west and the Peloncillo Mountains to the east. It is beautiful country and quiet. No TV or phones and hopefully, since we are close to the office, we will have Internet service. If not I can put up my satellite.


I will be posting our adventures we had yesterday soon.

Location:  Rodeo

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Its A Miracle

We have left Las Cruces. Our original plan was to leave yesterday but there were "wind warnings" which delayed us. This morning was beautiful with 10 - 15 mph winds and mom and I were packing like two crazy women. Even Surely Not seemed excited. We left the KOA and drove two hours to our destination. We are firm believers in going to places we want to see no matter how far or how close.

We are in Lordsburg New Mexico and have spent the evening figuring out where we want to go and what we want to see. There is not a lot of excitement in Lordsburg, folks and we like that. We are going to do a little ghost town hunting, see more unusual rock formations, and of course we will be stopping at every cemetery along the way. I hope to get lots of pictures. Our plan is to spend a couple of days here and then head into a very remote part of New Mexico... far far away from the people, total isolation for a week. It will be nice.

I wish I could have met you Lynilu. Next time we are in Las Cruces we will set up a time and place. I loved the KOA there. Very clean park, very nice people but it was a little expensive like all KOAs even with my discount card.

Later.

Location:  Lordsburg

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Mountains



I finally found a book that scared the devil out of me. The title is “Mountain Directory West.” When the introduction begins “There is an old saying among over-the-road truckers. “There are two kinds of drivers – those who’ve been in trouble on a mountain grade and those who will be,” you know this book is not for the faint of heart.



As I finished reading the introduction and studied the maps and the descriptions of the mountain passes it became crystal clear to me that I will not be going through them in my little house on wheels. The scare I had going into El Paso has damaged me for life. The good thing is it does show the roads that go around and if I can’t get around then I am not going. Sorry son but you are surrounded by mountains.



It is a great book to have though. If you still want to travel into the mountains then this would be a great book for your library.



What scared mom was the following passage from the book:



“Imagine yourself descending a mountain grade in your RV. You didn’t know there was such a long, steep grade on this highway. What a surprise! And things are not going well. You have a white-knuckle grip on the steering wheel. The engine is not holding back all of this weight, the brakes are smelling hot or even smoking, you’re pushing harder on the brake pedal but your speed keeps increasing. All you can see ahead is more mountains. Your mind is racing through all of the available options and none of them are good. “I’ve got to do something,” you say “or I’m not going to make it.” The options include: run into the rock wall, go over the side, hit those trees, or see if you can make the next curve and ride it out.



A highway patrol officer in Oregon told us that in the summer an average of one motorhome per week burns to the ground while trying to climb Cabbage Hill on I-84 east of Pendleton.”


On that note I am happy to say we are heading west tomorrow….



Location:  Lordsburg

Friday, February 22, 2008

Fly Me To The Moon


52%

Fly me to the moon
And let me play among the stars
Let me see what spring is like
On Jupiter and Mars
Hannah, you just need to be with your mother when you take to the stars.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

White Rabbit, For Those That Don't Know

Or those who can't remember.

Chloride New Mexico

Mom and I went exploring on the nineteenth, once again searching for ghost towns. I realize that there are many ghost towns in the US but the west holds the mystery and romance.

The links below will take you to both sites. With Chloride I got a little carried away with the history and if you don’t want to read all of it just click on the number 9 and that will take you to the pictures.

Monticello New Mexico was our favorite. The town was built in a square fashion for protection from the Indians. Also a lot of the original buildings were still there. It was just a quaint little town.

We then journey to Chloride. It was a long, windy, lonely road, 34 miles from Truth or Consequences – right in the middle of nowhere. Chloride would be a true ghost town if it wasn’t for Don and Donna. They moved there in the 1970’s with the intentions of making it come to life again. They purchased the two remaining stores with the intentions of restoring them to their former selves. One of the buildings was an assay office and the other was the store. They did a wonderful job.

The treasure in this was the store. In the 1920’s the previous owner boarded up the windows and locked the door leaving inside all of the merchandise. It was a time capsule. Of course everything was littered with guano and bird poo which required days and months and probably years to clean. The store has everything in it, from food items to an old safe. It was the most fascinating museum I have ever gone through because everything was original and not replicas.

Donna was our tour guide and my favorite story she told of the history of Chloride was the one of a wonderful woman named Cassie.

Cassie married at 16 to a worthless cowboy. She never had anything, moved constantly until they moved to Chloride. With little to no money she created a beautiful home. If she wanted the pretty carved chairs that she had seen, she made it herself. She wore beautiful crocheted boots and shoes that she created herself with nothing but scrap wood. They are beautiful shoes. She made all of her own clothes and if she wanted something pretty on it she quilted, embroidered, or painted it on. She made baskets out of coffee cans using a tin snip and made photograph frames using the same method only she made it out of cans. She was an artist who truly saw beauty in everything. Her work is amazing. When she passed her sons came down to settle her estate. They only took the shotgun and told the Edmunds to throw the rest away. Fortunately the Edmunds kept everything and it is on display at the museum. I would have loved to have met this amazing woman.

Enjoy the pictures.


Click Here For Chloride New Mexico

Click Here For Ghost Towns

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Go Ask Alice



The dental work is completed. I arrived at the office at 10:00 and left at 2:00 with a new smile. The dentist office is so nice. In each of the little cubicles where patients sits is a huge picture window. It overlooks a small yard, which is surrounded by a very tall adobe fence. In front of each window (in the yard) is a statue. The statue I sat staring at was of a little boy holding a ladder while his sister is on it. It was a large sculpture. Someone came in and lowered my chair so I was lying flat on my back. After thirty minutes of poking and prodding I was raised back into sitting position and to my amazement there was a live white rabbit in the yard.



I asked the assistant: “Excuse me, but is there a large white rabbit in the yard or am I hallucinating?”



Of course when I made a reference to the song “White Rabbit” I totally lost her. When she was leaving I said “Remember what the dormouse said.” The dentist is my age and totally understood the joke.


Location:  Las Cruces

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Like Fireflies I Always Come Back

Sheri Reynolds

Due to drinking coffee after five, I didn’t stumble off to bed until the wee hours in the morning. I curled up with a book written by Sheri Reynolds. Hannah, “Firefly Cloak” is another must read on your list. Her imagination is mind boggling and with this, as with her other books, there is a message that doesn’t get lost in the insanity. The book starts out with Travis and Tessie being left in a campground by their mother. Fortunately the mother had the sense to write her mother’s phone number on Travis’ back in black magic marker. Tessie and Travis were taken to their grandparent’s home where they were raised. From CIA bomb carrying baby birds to discovering their mother is a mermaid this book does not let you down. Brilliant, imaginative, poetic are just a few adjectives to describe this book. Like “Bitterroot Landing” and “The Rapture of Canaan” Sheri Reynolds wrote another novel to be remembered.



The Shirt

My daughter gave me a wonderful gift, a bright orange shirt that I would estimate its age at 8 years. To the human eye it shows its age sadly with worn out places and stretched out sleeves. To those that know, it carries tears, laughter, fears, and two hearts on its sleeve.



It is a magical shirt, that when you put it on it will take you back in time when life was bittersweet. It transports you back in time and if you close your eyes a slideshow of memories occurs. My memories, when I slip it on is of two brown hair teenage girls, rutted, washed out roads, beer can alley, a house by the river, and dreams of vineyards. I remember tie dying t-shirts in the basement, those crazy girls jumping in the lake in February, laughter, and the love two girls had for each other. My daughter’s memories are hers to tell.



From its beginnings of production to being taken home this shirt has traveled. It was a gift, to my daughter, along with a lock of long brown hair. It has been worn with pride to being held by a sad eyed brown hair girl. It absorbed her tears, her laughter, her memories, and when she slipped it on it felt to her that she was being hugged once again by her best friend.



Watching my daughter and her friend, I found out what friendship really means. I also found a person, a young teenager that had the ability to accept her fate, and had the ability to explain it to her friend in a way that I have never seen or witnessed. Her life was not a long good-bye, it was a daily hello.



Hannah, I love and miss you.





The Weather

We didn’t get any snow, not even a flake but enough rain fell to encourage the plants to grow. There is snow on the mountains and that is enough snow for me.






The Dream

Every once in a while my daughter, Hannah will send me one of her dreams for me to analyze. I am not an expert by any means but I have been pretty good at doing this. I have a dream for Hannah and others if they wish to try to figure this dream out. I rarely dream but when I do it is something that makes me scratch my head. This dream is a little embarrassing. I found a turd. Don’t know where it was, it was just there. I realize that this could come from Surely’s amazing abilities to poo 5 times a day. This rather innocuous turd suddenly sprouted a Furbie head but it was an angry Furbie head. Then bat wings sprouted from its side and that was enough to wake me up and make me sit up. This is not a good thing if you are sleeping in a bunk bed.
The Recipe

Crock Pot Recipe For Jolie

4 cups Chicken broth

1 can Cream of mushroom soup

1 16 ounces sauerkraut, rinse -- drain

8 ounces fresh mushrooms -- slice

1 medium Potato -- cut small cubes

3 medium Carrots -- chopped

1 medium Onion -- chopped

2 Ribs celery -- chopped

3/4 pound Smoked Polish sausage -- cube

1/2 cup Chicken; cooked -- chopped

2 tablespoons Vinegar

1 teaspoon Dried dill weed

1/2 teaspoon Pepper

Combine all ingredients in a 3 to 4-qt Crockpot. Cover and cook on low for 10 to 12 hours or until veggies are tender.

Root Canal

I thought I would never say this.... my root canal went well. Absolutely painfree and I have not experienced any pain.

I left the dentist office yesterday afternoon. The dentist worked on me for an hour so I was numb and a little swollen. There was a bookstore a few blocks down from the dentist office so we made a quick stop before I drove home. I was getting prepared to spend the rest of my day on the couch in pain but it didn't happened. I was so surprised.

The dental experience in Las Cruces has been (so far) painfree. Great place to stop over to have a root canal and a crown.

We are expecting cold weather and possible snow. I don't think it will happen. It is now 1:37 a.m. and I haven't seen a flake, just rain. Believe it or not I am disappointed. We went from 70 degrees today to 27 degrees, quite a change.

Mom and I did try the Saurkraut crockpot recipe and it was "okay" which translates to "I will eat the rest but don't cook it again." I will share the recipe in my next posting.

Until then.


Location: Las Cruces

Friday, February 15, 2008

Just Babbling

I received a call from my sister this morning, and the conversation left me feeling blue. How is my sister feeling? Overwhelmed I would say but she wouldn’t say. She is facing caring for two people who are dear to her. One of those situations where the family needs to step in and they are doing so willingly. Currently there are no plans for them to move in with Deanie but I can see it coming.

We promised dad that we would never put him in a nursing home. All of the care was provided first by mom, then by me. It was a lot of responsibility and it was a lot of work. It also required a lot of patience. To this day I don’t know what was worse – shaving dad or bathing dad.

Have you ever tried to shave an older gentleman (wrinkles and all) with cerebral palsy? One time I really thought I had a handle on him. Until I heard his muffle cry “I can’t breath.” It appears I had my hand over his mouth and nose. There are funny moments in every situation.

The time I had just finished with his bath. Wearing nothing but a towel I rolled him into his bedroom, where I strapped him in his lift. After raising him I realized how funny this situation looked with him dangling from the ceiling with nothing on but a towel and a frown. You know how warped I am; I left him there after telling him I was going to get the camera. He laughed folks and there is no photograph. Yes Hannah, it was destroyed after I put it on his computer as a wallpaper.

I just hope that when the care becomes too much for my sister and her husband they will know it would be the right thing to do. They can find a home and monitor it. Mom and I made that difficult decision with dad. There was nothing more we could do and fortunately for him he passed away. We kept our promise.




What do you see, nurses, what do you see,
what are you thinking when you're looking at me?
A crabby old woman, not very wise,
uncertain of habit, with faraway eyes.

Who dribbles her food and makes no reply
when you say in a loud voice, "I do wish you'd try!"
Who seems not to notice the things that you do,
and forever is losing a stocking or shoe.

Who, resisting or not, lets you do as you will
with bathing and feeding, the long day to fill.
Is that what you're thinking? Is that what you see?
Then open your eyes, nurse; you're not looking at me.

I'll tell you who I am as I sit here so still,
as I do at your bidding, as I eat at your will.
I'm a small child of ten with a father and mother,
brothers and sisters, who love one another.

A young girl of sixteen, with wings on her feet,
dreaming that soon now a lover she'll meet.
A bride soon at twenty - my heart gives a leap,
remembering the vows that I promised to keep.

At twenty-five now, I have young of my own
who need me to guide and a secure happy home.
A woman of thirty, my young now grown fast,
bound to each other with ties that should last.

At forty my young sons have grown and are gone,
but my man's beside me to see I don't mourn.
At fifty once more babies play round my knee,
again we know children, my loved one and me.

Dark days are upon me, my husband is dead;
I look at the future, I shudder with dread.
For my young are all rearing young of their own,
and I think of the years and the love that I've known.

I'm now an old woman and nature is cruel;
'tis jest to make old age look like a fool.
The body, it crumbles, grace and vigor depart,
there is now a stone where I once had a heart.

But inside this old carcass a young girl still dwells,
and now and again my battered heart swells.
I remember the joys, I remember the pain,
and I'm loving and living life over again.

I think of the years - all too few, gone too fast
and accept the stark fact that nothing can last.
So open your eyes, nurses, open and see,
not a crabby old woman; look closer - see ME!

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Stephen King

I have always wanted to read a Stephen King novel but I don’t want to be scared half to death. Rumor has it; he can do that to you.

Last week I found his latest book and after little thought and much impulse, I bought it. I started reading it yesterday and haven’t been able to put it down. It is not because it is the best book I have ever read; I wanted to be scared witless. I wanted to have Stephen King nightmares and this book was not producing. I am now ¾ into the book and finally ACTION! Ghost, a giant frog, twin girls being chased into the ocean, death, destruction, and I am…..bored.

Yes I am so bored with the book that I just want to pitch it out the window.

I like the characters and the way he introduced them to you. He made them a little unreal but likeable. After the first five or six chapters I knew what was going to happen. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure this one out. I already knew who was going to die and the reason for the main character’s fanatical painting sprees. I knew who was going to be resurrected and who wasn’t. I wish he would have painted Elizabeth young because she seemed like the most interesting character in the book. I bet she had stories to tell that could curl the hair on your toes.

I am going to finish the book while in the Doctor’s office. Now that is enough to scare the bejesus out of me, ROOT CANAL!


I have been trying to figure out a way to describe my feelings while I was in Mexico having a temporary filling put in. I want to keep things “nice” and not vent my opinions. If you are going to take the road to Mexico to have dental work done – stay away from Palomas Mexico. It is not a good place to go. They have the staff, the clean exam rooms and they are friendly but they are not what they say they are. If you have any medical issues stay in the US. A professional told me all I needed to know. If you are going to cross over in El Paso then there are actual dentists there that are quite good but I couldn’t get the names. As it stands now I am paying the same price for dental work as I would in Mexico and getting the same thing done with the exception of getting a partial. I am satisfied.




Location: Las Cruces

Monday, February 11, 2008

It Is Up My Alley

My dental experience in Mexico was interesting. The clinic was clean, the staff wonderful, but when it came time to pay I had to barter. I have never bartered for dental work in my life and I will chalk it up to “what an experience.” I had a temporary filling and an x-ray done. The total cost….. Drum roll please…..$240.

I could get my dental work done much cheaper in the good ole US so I started haggling. I ended up saving $100 and as soon as I could I made an appointment with a dentist in Las Cruces.

Now for the rest of the story: they would have given me a post, a crown, a root canal, and a new partial for $1500. That is a good price but I have severe allergies to pain medication. As tempted as I was, I knew it would be safer for me to have that kind of work done in the US with a hospital close by.

The appointment is set for tomorrow, which by the way is my birthday, Happy Freaking Birthday to Me. All I want for my birthday is my one back tooth.

I have found the best restaurant in Las Cruces. Forget Si Si Senor or Double Eagle, drive to the Pancake Alley, order up a Wimpy Burger and onion rings while grooving on the tunes of the sixties and seventies. I am partial to the “Hotter Than Your Mama” though. What makes a good restaurant even better is the staff. The staff at Pancake Alley is fantastic, great people, great conversation, and wonderful displays of Betty Boop, Elvis Presley and James Dean.

Ah food! Life is good! I just don’t think we will ever leave Las Cruces.



Friday, February 08, 2008

Hola

If the month of January reflects how my year is going to be I think I will dig a hole and hide. With the near daily sinus problems, the headaches, and the abdominal discomfort I am looking for relief. The final insult to injury was when I broke my tooth. Not just any tooth but the tooth that my I need in order to wear my partial. We are looking at a major problem folks not to mention costly.

I went to the office and asked if anyone knew of a good dentist. Just about everyone said “Fierro Clinic.” I am not sure of the spelling. I asked for the location and was told it was in Palomas.

I never heard of Palomas New Mexico. I asked for directions.

It is in Mexico, not New Mexico. I am sorry folks but my teeth are American made and they are going to stay that way. Vickie, my dentist would have a fit if she knew I was even contemplating going over the border. Then I heard the cost is about 1/3 of what they charge in the United States. A retired doctor said he goes there. Everyone flashed me their perfectly straight pearly whites.

We are off to Palomas Mexico tomorrow, which I find strange because I started celebrating my birthday in Central America. I couldn’t go last year and didn’t think of it this year until now. I will be out of the country perhaps a few days short of my birthday but it doesn’t matter. Maybe by my birthday I will have all of teeth back in my mouth where they belong. That would be a truly wonderful birthday present to save a few hundred dollars.

Of course I will bring my camera and take pictures but not of my dental experience. I will let you know what happens tomorrow.

Later.
Location: Las Cruces

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

In Response To Jolie's Blog

1.) I'm looking for simple (GOOD) recipes for a small 1.5 quart sized crock pot. Like maybe 1 meal and a lunch type recipes.

Broccoli soup – I don’t think you would want that one.

2.) Write a story of a favorite memory from say the age of 11 or 12.

On my 13th birthday my mom had a party for me with lots of friends and acquaintances. Of course I had to open my presents in front of everyone! One of my gifts was hose complete with stocking belt. I wanted to die.

3.) Write a plan for a dream vacation.

With the Pacific Ocean to the west, the Caribbean Sea to the east, the largest freshwater lake in Central America, volcanoes, mountain ranges, cloud forests, rainforests, abundant bird and animal life and more, Nicaragua calls to me.


4.) Write about a plan that you can do in your community to help our world get healthy. It could be a plan to feed the poor, mentor kids, help the green cause or simply help a neighbor in need. Or any other such brilliant idea that fits you and your community. Really think it out. How would you do it? Would you need to advertise? Would it involve getting donations? Etc...

After working in a state office for years, I would promote donating cars to families in need. Perhaps a couple of garages could donate some time and parts for repairs. A lack of transportation seems to be what traps people.

5.) Take these 5 words and write a poem or a story of fiction. Hero, jealous, marbles, relics and love.

This is not fiction but here it goes.

My hero is my mother, at times I find myself jealous of all her accomplishments. She considers herself a relic of times gone by but she is timeless. Yes she still has all of her marbles. Love you mom.


What Be Your Nerd Type?
Your Result: Literature Nerd

Does sitting by a nice cozy fire, with a cup of hot tea/chocolate, and a book you can read for hours even when your eyes grow red and dry and you look sort of scary sitting there with your insomniac appearance? Then you fit this category perfectly! You love the power of the written word and it's eloquence; and you may like to read/write poetry or novels. You contribute to the smart people of today's society, however you can probably be overly-critical of works.

It's okay. I understand.

Gamer/Computer Nerd
Social Nerd
Artistic Nerd
Drama Nerd
Science/Math Nerd
Musician
Anime Nerd
What Be Your Nerd Type?
Quizzes for MySpace

What Dogs See

I am now a happy person that shares her home with two dogs. Miss Sophie has moved in with us full time. She is a Miniature Pinscher, 6 years...