I have said this time and time again to all of you, any one
that reads my posts you need to start writing down everything that you remember
for your children your grandchildren and your great grandchildren. The reason I am saying this is because I was
too busy living my life to ask the questions I needed to two have found out where
I came from and who my family are really was.
I have traced back my family tree to the early 1600s, both sides came
from England to the United States. But
knowing the statistics is different than knowing who they were what they
did. I am a believer in the fact that
what you’re family was, is what you now are. It is so disappointing when you
have nothing to go by to try and trace your family tree. So if you have parents, aunts, uncles, grandparents, still living take the time I beg
of you take the time to ask those questions that you will need to know to pass
your heritage down to your descendants.
So once again I beg of you please start writing these things down and if
you have older relatives still living record their voices or even better video
the interview about your heritage for posterity. The picture I’m going to add is from sometime
around 1901-1902 of my grandmother who is the little baby in my great grandmother’s
lap.
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Through the Mirror to Graceland
I’ve made no secret my entire life of the fact that I liked
early rock and roll. My musical heroes were Buddy Holly and the Crickets, Bill
Haley and the Comets, Fats Domino, Chubby Checker, Jerry Lee Lewis and many others,
but there was one young man that made the largest impact of anyone in music
history on me and eventually on my life.
He came from the same area in Mississippi that my parents came from and
there were even rumblings from my late relatives that we were kin to the Smith
family on my mother’s mother’s side, just like everyone else that I grew up
with. His background was from
sharecroppers, just like my family’s background from Mississippi was. What else
can I say. I was always looking up to my greatest American dream, Elvis Aaron
Presley. He grew up in the same city
that I grew up in, Memphis, Tennessee, and when he became famous, his home was
just five miles from my house.
Being from Memphis, I had seen Elvis from time to time at
Graceland, in concert and riding Star, his horse, at Graceland. I even saw him once in his wife Priscilla’s
white Stutz Bearcat pulling in to the gates of Graceland. I know that most of
you might not understand the thrill of this poor little Memphis boy seeing his idol
up close.
When I was in my teens, around 1974, I worked for a glass company part
time and, one time, I was helping deliver mirrors that had been cut in some
strange shapes and I didn’t understand why. Most mirrors that we cut were
square or rectangular but all of these mirrors were cut at an angle on the top
and the bottom and I could not figure out why until we arrived in front of his
house on Highway 51, aka, 3734 Elvis Presley Boulevard. I was starting to get excited as I realized that,
just maybe, we would get to see him. Believe it or not, when we started to pull
the mirrors off the truck, the older gentleman with me asked someone where they
wanted the mirrors delivered and a small wiry gentleman said “wait just a
minute”, and sure enough, dressed in a sweat suit with a towel around his neck,
with his hair disheveled, he said “OK, you can just put them over there in that
building” which I knew to be his Fan Club office. Wow, Elvis had actually spoken too us! At
least that’s how I perceived it. I believe these were the mirrors that ended up
on the main staircase of Graceland.
I used to say that that was my only claim to fame, but I
have had many more encounters with greatness since that day. One of the biggest
thrills of my life was seeing a beautiful young woman on the hillside beside
the driveway, under one of those very tall trees, just up from the gates of
Graceland in August of 1979. We met because of Elvis. She was a fan and came to
see where he had lived and wanted to walk where he walked. I know that y’all may
think I’m crazy, but I think very possibly being drawn to Graceland was what
led me to meet the love of my life. So
nowadays, I am more than grateful to Elvis for his wonderful effect on my life.
If it weren’t for Elvis, I would never have met my wife. Our 35th
anniversary of the day we met is coming up this August. Thanks Elvis!
Monday, July 28, 2014
It's only Rock N Roll but I like it
I have seen on my time line here
recently a couple of comments about the fact that the music we grew up with was
the best. My wife and I totally agree. The
music from the 1960s up to the 1980s was altogether different than the music
that you hear today. The innocence that the music had and even the adult themes
were more subliminal than spoken. The
groups and the singers from the bands from our era had their own specific
individual sound, even the songs on their album’s had their own individual
sound, not like the songs of today that have all the computerized echo and
special effects mastered into them for these newer artists that can’t hold a
tune. I once saw a video of various
artists singing Happy Birthday and the absolute worst one of them all was
Justin Bieber. He couldn’t carry the tune.
I don’t mean to pick on any one individual artist of today, but very few
of them don’t use all of the enhancements that modern recording provides in
their music that our generation of artists were not able to use because it didn’t
exist. The computer age seems to have
brought forth a generation of singers that are not of the caliber of our
generation’s singers because the computer wasn’t around to make them sound good,
they sounded great on their own.
Now, you take a band like the
Beatles, every single person, John, Paul George and Ringo have all been award
winning vocalists. I can’t believe that
the kids of today think that some of these artists they listen to wrote some of
the greatest songs to ever hit the radio when it was the artists of our day
that wrote them. I have seen some pretty
good covers of songs that came from our era and a few really good songs from
today’s artists, but when you try to listen to their albums there’s only one
song on their whole albut that’s worth its weight and who’s going to pay for 10
songs when you’re only getting one that is worth listening too. Yes, I’m an old fuddy duddy, but my bands are
better than theirs. Pick up an old album
from the 1960s to the 1970s and you would be hard pressed to find only one song
that you liked. Most of the albums had 10 great songs on them.
All of these “make a star” shows that are on
television have only produced a couple of artists that can stand the test of
time and I must admit those artists are pretty good but where are the rest of
them. A group like Sawyer Brown which
was an extremely good group who won Star Search but is no longer around today. It’s
almost impossible in this day and age for a group or any individual to make it
in the industry as the Beatles and other groups did in the early sixties. They developed their craft for several years
before they hit it big and/or found the right producer to ever even get noticed. The people at the top of the music industry
are using these young people up so fast that it’s impossible for them to last.
Yes I am blaming the way the record industry is run today on the lack of great
talent and using what good talent they have up too quickly and they’re getting burned
completely up before their time. Even
country music is now so homogenized and synthesized that it’s not funny.
Like Elvis once said in Jailhouse
Rock, “I don’t sound like nobody”. I know everyone’s trying to find the next Alabama
or the next Reba McEntire, but they seem to all sound exactly the same. The female
artists sound like one another, not like in our day when you could’ve heard
Dolly Parton who sounds like no one else I’ve ever heard or Linda Ronstadt who
just received an award from the President a United States. It also has been
said that our music is good and the younger generation’s music is bad. I
personally cannot agree with that argument because the younger generation’s is
just not music, most of it. The groups
from our day played music that is still in major demand today, just listen to
Slacker, or Jango or Pandora. I wonder
where all the music of today will be 60 years from now when they really do let
the dogs out, woof, woof, woof. Not that
I really care what happens to their music, excuse me, their talking on a record.
I always thought that the music
would get better in the future but it has digressed rather than bringing a
lovely art form to a higher level. Names
like Elvis Presley, the Everly Brothers,
the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Creedence Clearwater Revival, the Monkeys, the
Lovin’ Spoonful, the Mama’s and the Papas, the Righteous Brothers, Donovan, Cat
Stevens, the Grateful Dead, Elton John, BJ Thomas, Barry Manilow and so, so
many more names will live in the annals of rock history, it is impossible to
name them all here.
I want to know who
it was that decided rap should be included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. I guess that’s what we get for allowing a
city that’s only claim to rock and roll fame was that a DJ from there
supposedly coined the phrase rock and roll which, if the truth be told, was
lifted from black artists in the 1930’s and 1940’s. This brings me to my pet peeve, even though
there can be made a substantial argument against Memphis, Tennessee being the
birthplace of rock and roll, but without the blues and rhythm and blues which
were definitely born from the Delta area that ran from Mississippi all the way
up into Memphis, Tennessee and the acceptance of a young swivel hipped white
boy from Tupelo, Mississippi recording his brand of music on the Sun label in
Memphis, Tennessee, there would have been no rock and roll as we know it. Whether you like that fact or not, it is
absolutely a fact and whoever it was that decided that Cleveland was the rock
and roll capital of the United States should be tarred and feathered and run
out of the country on a rail while they play Johnny B. Goode. I personally give the early rhythm and blues
black artists the credit for starting a style of music that was blended with
gospel and country music to become what we know as rock and roll. And yes, Memphis really is the Home of Rock
and Roll.
Saturday, July 26, 2014
The Band
We had an extremely good band at
Airways Junior High School in Memphis, Tennessee. I remember my parents buying me my alto
saxophone. I was so proud. It was golden,
shiny and made a lot of noise. I
remember the first day I sat beside this feisty little short haired girl named
Sheila. She was also an alto saxophone and she even had the same brand of
saxophone I did. We had the most
wonderful band room I had ever seen. It
had soundproof practice rooms in the back of the class just behind the band
podium. That’s right, we had a stair step podium for our band and Mr. Knapp
would stand in front of this and direct. I notice the first year he had earplugs in and
I can’t say that I blame him. We were pretty bad that first year, but by the
middle of our second year, the Airways Junior High School Boosters Club had
bought us uniforms. You couldn’t have
found a happier group of kids. We thoroughly loved to our band. It made us feel
alive and creative.
Speaking of being creative, I
loved Neil Young’s album “After the Gold Rush” and I brought it in one day for
Mr. Knapp and our French horn player to hear. There is a part in After the Gold
Rush that I thoroughly loved and I knew it had the sound of a French horn but
different somehow. Mr. Knapp explained
to us that the French horn could double as a B flat instrument as well. I think
even our French horn player (I wish I could remember everybody in the band’s
name but I just can’t) was also shocked,
but we trusted our band director and teacher and he took the album and
made an arrangement for us to play After the Gold Rush. I don’t know if everyone did but I do know
that the French horn player and I both practiced together over and over and
over again until we got this particular piece of music the way we liked it. I
won’t say it was perfect because, unfortunately, I don’t think I was that good
but I wasn’t bad and neither was our band. There were some pretty great players
in our band and we even went to a band contest sort of like Haley Mills did in “The
Trouble With Angels” (that’s a movie if you didn’t know and you really should
watch it). But back to my story, at this
band contest we didn’t finish first by any means but, if I remember correctly,
we didn’t finish last either. Before
that year ended we talked it over with Mr. Knapp and we had a band summer
school. Oh my goodness, how much better a way to spend your summer than to go
to band camp. Oh my, that sounded
extremely nerdy didn’t it? So who cares
anyway. We may not have improved a whole lot but we loved every minute of it.
Our Senior year we had improved enough that they allowed us to play at a Pep
Rally.
I have to tell you a story about
a young man named Ralph who played drums. He had to be an extremely good sport
because we would play pranks on him at band camp all summer long and he loved
it. I remember one time Mr. Knapp told
us to make the motions of playing but not to produce any sound at all and we
did it. We all pretended to be playing
and he pretended to be directing a band that was playing. At first, Ralph was
confused and Mr. Knapp was yelling “where’s the percussion, we have to have
percussion”. Ralph wasn’t playing in the beginning and after a few seconds
Ralph started playing his part but I don’t think we let it go on too long and
we let him in on the joke. We would take
a short break every day from our practicing and playing but one day Ralph was
late coming back from break so we all hid in the band director’s office and in
the soundproof practice rooms. Ralph
finally came in and he yelled “where is everybody at” and then he left for just
a few seconds and came right back. He exclaimed “no one’s here” and he left
again and was gone for a few minutes. He must have gone to the lunchroom to see
if everyone was still in there and, of course, we weren’t. Someone heard him say “I guess they decided
to call it a day, I’ll go call mom”. Oh
no, should we let him call his mom and get her all the way out here when we
still had at least some of our of band practice left. No, someone’s got to go stop him from calling
his mom. In those days no one had a cell
phone and I do mean no one. They weren’t invented yet. So a couple of the guys ran as hard as they
could to try and stop him before he could call his mom. It was too late. They could not find him so
we all started searching the whole school. We all returned to the band room and
there he was, sitting in Mr. Knapp’s chair and laughing his head off because he
had turned the tables, the joke was now on us. Then we finished the day’s
practice.
I know this is going to sound
strange to most of you but I enjoyed being in that band much more than I
enjoyed being a football player or playing baseball. I had even met my best friend sitting right
next to me playing alto saxophone. Sheila was always someone who cut through
the red tape to get down to business. If
I asked her about a problem she either had an answer or told me to grow
up. As I’ve told you before, we talked
about some of the strangest things. We
both loved early rock and roll music, and one time, our Assistant Principal Ashley
took a cassette recorder player away from me because Sheila and I were listening
to early rock and roll at a pep rally. I guess it was for basketball because
any other sport besides track, I would’ve been a participant. I guess it was kind of disrespectful to the
cheerleaders and I’m sorry. I was with
my best friend listening to the best music in the world and I still believe
that we, my best friend and I, made the best music in the world with help from
all of our band mates. I am appalled at school systems taking band out of the curriculum
of our schools. It may not prepare all of us for our jobs but it makes us
better human beings. I will always love and cherish the memories and the
friends we made in our band.
Friday, July 25, 2014
It always seemed like both my wife and I, as we were growing
up, were different than the other kids.
No one seemed to share our passions.
I was always dreaming of far off adventures in faraway lands. She was dreaming of travelling to the wonders
of the world, like cruising down the Nile as the sun sets.
We were both dreamers she and I. We took the
time to dream of what we both were passionate about. She studied to be a traveler and I studied to
be adventurous. You can call it fate or
whatever, but the more I learned about her over time, we were just meant to be
together. Between us both we have a club
of sorts, where we go on each other’s adventures and come back both loving what
we have done and whom we have met.
I
can’t help but think that my adventures would be nothing without her. She likes
to plan and keep to a tight schedule. I
know I must aggravate her so much because I can get caught up in a moment of
adventure and history and wander down a path she hadn’t picked. I do think sometimes she loves my adventures as
much as I do when I take us on these little side trips of mine. We went to see a wonderful little Disney
movie called “Up” together and I just couldn’t help but think how much this
mirrors our feelings for each other and our passions. It was the story of a young couple sharing
their love and passion of travel and adventure, when in their golden years, his
wonderful wife of all those many years passes away.
I cried so hard in the
middle of the movie when he lost his partner and love of his life. I know it’s just a cartoon, but I know
exactly how someone would feel if they lost the other have of their life. I still today say a prayer that God never
lets this happen to us. I know that it
may be somewhat of a useless prayer but I need to let God know how much she
means me.
I too would probably take that
last adventure she planned as he did in her memory, but the thought horrifies
me. The thought of going on an adventure she had planned without her is
unfathomable to me. By the Grace of God,
we will have many more adventures to enjoy with each other.
As a matter of fact, she is in the process of
planning our Roman holiday as I am writing this little tale.
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
I was talking to my best friend
from Airways Junior High School today and somehow we got to talking about our
pets and I told her about my little kitty cat that I loved dearly. My wife
found her at the Humane Society in Gatlinburg around 1993. She was in the
shelter in her own little cage when my wife saw her and told me that she sat there
so prim and proper while all the other cats looked like barn cats, all scruffy
and without any manners. Then she noticed the cat’s name on the cage and it was
Pumpkin and she knew we had to have her. There were two reasons why. One is
that for every female in my family, I will use the pet name Pumpkin and two, she
had the brightest orange colored coat when she was a young kitten. She was the most loving and cuddly kitty cat
I had ever known.
I remember one time I
had gotten Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever and was extremely sick, and I do mean
extremely sick, Pumpkin would not leave my side. She would either be in my lap
or laying on my legs the whole time I was sick. Pumpkin knew there was
something wrong and she loved me dearly and I loved her dearly too. She was a very quiet cat with a little petite
meow. One day while playing with her, I
noticed a lump and I was concerned so I took her to the vet and he confirmed my
worst fears, she had breast cancer. The doctor, of course, operated but
unfortunately did not get all of the cancer and he told me so. I knew it was only a short time before I
would lose my precious cat. I knew she
was in a lot of pain. She didn’t want to play anymore and she ate very little.
The day came that she didn’t eat or drink anything. She just wanted to lay in a
box that she had now claimed as her home.
The next morning my wife carried her to the vet and went on to
work. I was working a night shift at
that time so, as usual, my wife woke me up when she came home from work. She woke me very gently and said “it’s bad”, “what’s
bad” I replied. She said “Pumpkin” and I said “I know it’s bad”. She said “no
you don’t understand, she’s gone”.I had lost my little darling. She passed away as the doctor was preparing to put a feeding tube in her to get her strength back but it was too late. I bawled like a little baby for that wonderful little creature that had woven herself into my heart so deep. Even though I was crying all the way through it, I built her a small square Coffin and my wife took a table runner that we had bought at Big Lots that was for a prayer table. It was made of silk with flower patterns woven into the cloth and with two tassels and a sharp point at either end. She folded one end over and sewed it together and removed the tassel from that end and folded the other one down and sewed the two sides together to make a sort of sleeping bag with a pillow at the head of it for her head. I had put a pillow in the small square coffin and we laid her to rest in a small rose garden beside our house. I still miss that wonderfully sweet cat even today.
We eventually got over the
heartache of losing Pumpkin and decided we should get another cat. On our way to
Walmart in Knoxville, we saw an animal
rescue center that was a no kill animal shelter. When we were in Walmart we happened to find the
Mike Douglas interviews of John Lennon and Yoko Ono on DVD. We purchased it because my wife is a huge
Beatles fan and we had decided to stop at the animal shelter on our way back
through. When we got into the room where
all the cats were at, we saw this one frightened little kitty cat. She seemed
so very sweet and when we asked what her name was, they told us it was Yoko. So
I’m asking you, what could I do. Was this not fate that we had just found that
DVD of Yoko Ono and a cat named Yoko. Of course, we took her home. Cats being exactly like people, this one had
a completely different personality than that of Pumpkin. She doesn’t let very
many people pet her. I’m one of the only people that she allows to pet
her. I even think she’s actually mean
compared to Pumpkin but I fell in love with this cat from the first time I saw
her and always will love her. She’s not
even much like a cat and we found out why she was named Yoko. She can scream at
the top of her lungs just as if she was “singing” like Yoko Ono did. She would, as soon as we went to bed, start
screaming at us.
We finally found out that she wanted to play. We bought her
some little nerf golf balls and she plays fetch just like a little dog with a
stick. I will toss the little golf ball several times and she has to have my
wife toss the golf ball several times as well before she will let us go to
sleep. She also has woven herself into
my heart. She seems to be getting a respiratory infection and is not as much as
she used to and is not “singing” as loud anymore. She too is now getting some
age on her and I’m afraid these are probably the last few years I will have her.
It’s so hard to say goodbye to these little creatures. I love them as if they
were one of my own children. My wife has
asked me how dogs and cats became so dependent on humans, but I’m asking you
how did we become so dependent on these little lovely creatures we call our pets.
Monday, July 21, 2014
When I was nine or maybe ten years old, I can remember my
mother getting extremely mad at me when she had found out that I had mounted my
old metal strap-on roller skates to a flat piece of wood and was trying to use
it as a sidewalk surfboard.
My friends
at the time, Keith S. and Richard L., and I would go up Ketchum to where they were building duplexes and basically
steal a board and cut it into three pieces and mount our strap-on skates to the
bottom of the board. They were so
horribly balanced and the skates themselves were of metal and loose around the
bearings that made it extremely hard to skate on the sidewalk. They did a little better in the streets but our
streets were shot and chipped, which means that they were gravel and tar, so
they were lumpy as well and you couldn’t ride them for very long because you
would hit a gap in the side walk or a small pot hole in the street and you’d go
flying off your board.
I can’t remember
which one of us it was that got the first commercial skateboard, but I do
remember all of us taking turns and riding it. We thought that we had found utopia with this
new board we could stay on for longer periods of time and make turns. We
couldn’t do that with our homemade skateboards. Eventually all of us had our
own boards and we would go to Charjean Elementary School’s parking lot and ride
them in the big parking lot there, which was much smoother than our streets. Eventually,
I think we all lost interest in it because we were all starting to play
baseball and other things at that time, which would’ve been around 1965.
I think it was when the United States seemed
to lose interest in sidewalk surfing as well but, as my wife always says, if
you wait long enough what was old will be new again.
For some reason, in the 1970’s, sidewalk surfing on your
skateboards seemed to find a new popularity and grew
slowly into an actual
sport. People were actually getting paid
to ride skateboards. They had teams and everybody would go to actual skateboard
parks and watch them. That was the birth
of what is now extreme sports in the United States. Who knew that this fad that was started in
the early sixties would still be around today?
Looking online, I can see that skateboards or, as we called them,
sidewalk surfboards can cost almost as much as a car did when sidewalk surfing
was first invented. No one knows exactly
who invented it because it seemed to kind of be simultaneously springing up all
over California and covered the United States almost immediately with this
fad. They even made it a centerpiece in
the three Back to the Future movies in the 1980’s and even made a futuristic
sidewalk surfboard that could hover, AKA the hover board.
I just can’t believe that during the long hot Memphis summers,
we had so much fun with a piece of board and some strap-on roller skates and now
it has become so popular and so high tech with today’s young people. Do you remember the days that all of us were
trying to learn to skate with those horrible metal strap-on skates. Now try to remember that and picture it with
one skate fastened to the bottom of a wooden plank and try to skate with
that. Yes, you’re right, it’s almost
impossible to do it but we loved it. It was a wonder we didn’t kill ourselves
or break our necks or something. I know we had scrapes and bruises and cuts all
over us from sidewalk surfing because we were young boys that didn’t wear kneepads
or helmets. Oh OK, no one had really invented pads and helmets or anything for
roller skating in those days. I just thought it would be better if it sounded
like we were more macho than we really were.
It really was a wonderful time when we were growing up, wasn’t it. Wish
I could go back in time for real.
Mountain Home
Have you ever set on a mountain and just listened to the earth. At first you can only hear the noise of everything going about
their lives, but sit and listen and pick out the birds songs or the squirrels
fussing at each other. You will have to block out the sounds of all that lives that is still able to call the mountain home. It will take concentration and
meditation, so don't give up. It will take more time for some and less for
others. What the mountain will tell you is the echo of long ago times before man
touched the land, just after God brought forth the land and the waters. You
will hear trees growing and the wind that started blowing at the beginning of
time through the mountains. The mountain will tell you of the birth of the
first animals to walk its slopes. She tells of all the insects and how all of
the life that lived in the mountain coexisted in harmony, how they relied on
each other for their existence and nourishment. She tells of the proud Eagle
that no longer fly’s above her and screams with delight at her beauty. How the
wise owl calls to the new comers to announce who they are. She tells you how
they welcomed the first man to marvel at her with open arms and how he and his
kind respected her and the friends of the mountain. She will also ask you what
she has done to deserve what man is doing to her now and why so many of her
friends have left her and not returned as they once did? The mountain still
welcomes man to marvel at her wonders and scale her peak, but she now begs you
to listen and respect what she gives and what she needs to help the world to
continue to live so that man can still exist. I still love to sit and listen to
her tell the tales of the Cherokee people playing in her and her family's
valleys and how they foraged through her forests to find their food. I keep her
love in my heart always and now you know why I live in the foothills of The
Great Smoky Mountains.
I had to put the Bald Eagle in this picture because so few live as they once did in the Smokies.
I had to put the Bald Eagle in this picture because so few live as they once did in the Smokies.
Sunday, July 20, 2014
I have grown up in a marvelous
age. I have called it the Ed Sullivan generation but it’s much more than that. I have seen the computer age unfold before my
eyes and many marvelous things that the common man would have never had access
to become readily available. Air travel
in this day and age is affordable if one wishes to travel by air. I have enjoyed the computer age myself by
using it as a flight instructor with many flight simulation programs at my
command. I am even flown are real
airplane thanks to my lovely wife. I
have had so many dreams that I once thought unattainable come true. All I have to do is type into
my computer and
the vast world of information and entertainment is there for me to partake
in. I remember the days when
encyclopedia salespeople came knocking on our door and, to be honest, the
information that was in those books was something I desired but they were much
too expensive for common folk like us, but now with the Internet I can learn
just about anything my heart desires and I can find the answers to the most
burning questions I have. I’m old enough
to remember searching on a transistor radio or a shortwave radio trying to find
out what the rest of the world was up to.Tuning a shortwave radio in to some exotic land across the Atlantic fed my desire for adventure and mystery. I can remember listening to Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce in Sherlock Holmes on the Armed Forces Radio Network on the shortwave radio and now I watch Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman in the BBC’s production of “Sherlock”. To find out anything about someone famous or events of the day you had to read a newspaper or magazine, but today all of that information is instantly at your fingertips.
Now that I’m almost a senior citizen, I realize that change is inevitable but it doesn’t mean that I have to like it or at least like all of it. So much is happening so fast that we’re not able to keep up with all the changes. As I get older it seems like the changes are going faster and faster and there starting to slightly leave me behind. I know you’ve experienced it when one of your grandchildren mentions something that you have no clue what they’re talking about and their astonished that haven’t heard of it. It’s not that I’m upset or even concerned, it’s just that I remember being on top of everything that went on around me. I don’t know if it’s the stress of daily work getting harder or I’m just getting a little slower. This is the part of change that I’d don’t like. I have always been a fan of TV and movies because that’s the generation that grew up in.
I’m not the generation that grew up with video games, so I’m not quite as interested as the following generation naturally is, but I must say the amount of violence disturbs me now and I don’t think that it would have disturbed me as much when I was younger. I used to love watching the old Universal horror pictures and at this time I dislike calling them horror pictures as we did back then because they have no relationship to the kind of horror that one can see today on the movies. When someone was shot on television in our day, they just fell over and on today’s television when someone is shot it’s just gross and horrifying. That’s the kind of changes I don’t like. I still think that this is a marvelous time to live in and it kind of reminds me of the Carousel of Progress show that Walt Disney put on in the 1964 World’s Fair in New York and is still showing at Walt Disney World today. It’s a show that tells the story of one man’s life traveling through time and all the marvelous inventions that each era brings to his life.
It’s even becoming impossible to find a VHS machine because they came out with something better that everyone had to purchase. When all this happened I thought this was the end all and be all, but it wasn’t and it never will be, just remember that next best thing is just around the corner waiting for all of us to marvel over, so just keep enjoying this marvelous age we are living in.
Saturday, July 19, 2014
I just
have to tell you about a great movie made for the Hallmark TV movie channel,
The Good Witch. This family style movie stars Catherine Bell as a Witch, or is
she? You don't really know in this, the first installment of this 6 part movie
series of this wonderfully, delightfully told tale of a slightly different
young woman, coming back to a place that has history from her family's past.
The Good Witch, The Good Witch's Garden, The Good Witch's Gift, The Good
Witch's Family, The Good Witch's Charm, The Good Witch's Destiny are the six
delightful movies. Cassandra "Cassie" Nightingale moved in to her
ancestor's abandoned home and the town of Middleton's haunted house. Cassie
opened her shop of potions and charms, but the town's self-appointed morality dictator, the mayor's wife, tries to run her out of town after she opens her shop in downtown.
My wife and
I loved this movie so much, that when we went to celebrate our 32nd Anniversary
in her home town, we had to find the location of this movie. I had to find The Bell
Book and Candle and Grey House. My wife did some Nancy Drew work on the
internet after seeing a local store across from the Bell Book and Candle in the
movie. She also knew the area from her days there. It was in Dundas near
Hamilton. Movies and TV shows have used
many such sights in what's known as The Golden Horse Shoe in Canada.
She found
it after noticing the name of the grocery store (Picone) across the street in
the movie, so she looked it up on the Internet and there were several of the stores
in the area. Ursula knew that it had to
be Dundas, Ontario and there was only one store located there. Now that we knew how to find it, it was only
a matter of finding the time while we were there and driving along the main
street until we found that store.
Knowing that it would have to be near the grocery store but on the
opposite side of the street, we were able to find it, the Bell, Book and Candle
and, to my amazement, it is now a restaurant, I might add a rather expensive
restaurant but no matter, we were going to eat there come hell or high water.
The food
was fantastic or was it the enchantments that were left there by Cassie?
I loved being in that shop. It was so fantastic just to be there and know
we were having lunch in the Bell, Book and Candle. Of course, it is not named
the Bell Book and Candle. I think it was something like Detour or something
like that. To make sure we had the right spot, we asked our waitress how long
the restaurant had been there and she said only since 2010. That was a little
confusing but she said she’d ask some of the other people that worked
there. No one seemed to know and they were not aware of the movie either. Also,
probably a good chance that Cassie had left a charm in the building so as not
to give away its location.
After
finishing our lunch, I walked out and
took pictures of the building from the front, the back, on the side, making
sure I took pictures of the fence where Cassie first found her handyman
sleeping in a cardboard box.
I was still
a little unsure that we had found the actual, Bell, Book and Candle, but my
wife was sure of it. We went across the
street, over to the grocery store that we saw in the movie and asked the
proprietor who was the granddaughter of the couple that originally owned this
wonderful little green grocer and it had been passed down two generations to
her. She gleefully told us that, yes, it
was the Bell, Book and Candle and her store was pictured in the movie. I was so happy that we had found this spot
where they had filmed such a delightful movie that warms my heart each time I
watch it and I watch it quite often, not unlike a two year old that has to
watch your favorite cartoon over and over and over again. I was not that much of a Catherine Bell fan before
but, once I had seen The Good Witch, I can’t seem to get enough of her work. She is
an excellent actress and has a spellbinding delivery of her work.
Catherine Bell in the Picone Store |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)