Blog Archive

Monday, August 26, 2013

Daddy and Roscoe

 

My friend Mickey Jones has a little raccoon she rescued. She has been posting updates on her facebook page and I have been following the progress of the little girl.......so I thought I would copy an earlier post from Granny Lessons I made in 2010...........The 12th of August marked 5 years since we lost Daddy to congestive heart failure. I miss him so much. We all miss him......


Daddy loved coon hunting. I asked him why he loved it so much and he said he just liked hearing the dogs bark and tree the coons. He loved his dogs and he loved being in the woods. I never remember not having at least two hound dogs, usually more than two. 

When I was about four years old Daddy brought a baby raccoon home. It was a baby that his dogs  made an orphan. (He didn't tell me that.)  We fed the little fuzzy thing with a bottle and gave it vegetables and fish to eat. His name was Roscoe. Before long Roscoe grew up to be a big guy.  He was about as big as my dog Louie, who weighs about 12 lbs.

Soon Roscoe learned how to get out of his pen. His pen was on the other side of the pump house just outside the kitchen porch. The dog pens were close by on the other side of the pump house by the barn. Of course we always knew when Roscoe was out because the dogs would go crazy!
Raccoons are very smart and use their front paws the same as we use our hands. They look like they have leather gloves on. We fed Roscoe figs and corn on the cob and he washed them first and then ate, holding them in his hands. He was cute and fun to watch. I was never allowed to hold Roscoe but I could touch him while Daddy held him.


One day we were going to Granny's house for supper and when we came home we found that Roscoe had opened the back door and wrecked the kitchen. It was totally destroyed. All of the dishes were out of the cabinet and broken in the middle of the floor. Flour, sugar, potatoes, everywhere! And to make it even worse there was a bucket of syrup and a churn of butter spilled too. Wow what a mess that was. I remember Momma sitting down in the middle of the floor and crying. Daddy put me to bed and when I woke up the next morning it was all clean.

Roscoe was locked in his cage after that. And despite Momma saying he had to go and arguing with 
my Dad that he should turn him loose he stayed for a while longer. Then one day he bit Daddy's thumb really bad. After momma bandaged his hand Daddy loaded Roscoe in the dog box, which he always carried in the back of his truck, and took him to the bay and set him free. Daddy said he learned then that no matter what you do a wild animal will always be a wild animal. Roscoe wasn't able to feel remorse or gratitude or know right from wrong. He couldn't become a domestic pet.

The syrup that Roscoe spilled came from Daddy Buck's in Graceville. Really good cane syrup. Wish I had some right now! We ate syrup for breakfast mixed with peanut butter. Momma made her biscuits. I don't know if store bought biscuits even existed then. They didn't for us anyway! The homemade butter was just the very best! Daddy took a little butter and smashed it with his fork and poured some syrup over it, and stired it all together and broke off pieces of the biscuit and "sopped" it up! I loved it and still do. I just haven't ever been able to make those good biscuits the same as Momma.


Momma didn't measure anything. She took flour, which she stored in a big round plastic container inside a big silver pail, and made an indention or well in the flour and she poured in some buttermilk. Then she flipped the flour from the sides into the buttermilk. She continued to use her hands and flip the dough in the flour until it was the right consistency. Then she pinched off a little and rolled it in her hands to make a circle and placed them in a greased cast iron skillet. When the skillet was full she put a dab of cooking oil on top. She is really good at doing this. But doesn't make them anymore. I asked her why and she said that the frozen ones are just as good and alot easier! They are easier Momma, but not better!

Me, Momma and Greg
My Grandpa, Hubert Holland lost his thumb when he worked in the saw mill and he told us that he bit it off sopping syrup! He took me to see syrup being made one day. I'm not sure if we were in Gracville or Cottonwood. I was little, but old enough to remember going with him. I remember the mules pulling the arms of the grinder, and the strong smell coming from these big black cast iron pots that were outside over a fire. We took home a big five gallon pail of syrup and Grandpa filled up smaller pails for us to take home. Those pails were used for a lot of things. In an earlier blog I told you about Granny storing her Lane Cake with cut apples around it. She used one of these pails for that, and she stored flour and sugar in them also.

I spent as much time as I could with Grandpa and Granny. On Saturdays we ate breakfast and then Granny went out in the back yard to do laundry.  She had an old wringer washing machine. I loved to watch her set this thing up. She always said "Now Katie you sit right there and don't move. Granny don't want you to get your fingers caught in this old machine. Noooo why it would just pinch your little fingers right off!" She always called me Katie. And if she was looking for me she would call out "Yoo Hoo Katie Lou where are you?" I was usually in her room in the floor looking at something or plundering through her closet, trying on her shoes, or putting on her "ear bobs", as she called her earrings. Later in the afternoon Grandpa would take me to the store at Wilson Mill for a treat. I usually had an orange soda and a Moon pie or a Baby Ruth candy bar, Grandpa liked those. Then I would take a nap on a pallet in the living room with an old black oscillating fan blowing. The noise and the movement of the curtains put me to sleep every time.

On Sunday mornings after breakfast Granny read the Sunday Comics to me, "the funnies" as she called them. I liked Blondie and Dagwood and Charlie Brown and Alley Oop and Orphan Annie. Alley Oop was about a guy who lived in the jungle and there were always pairs of eyes looking out of the dark at him. That was really creepy to me. I have always had a reoccuring dream that I am walking and all of a sudden there is darkness and eyes popping out looking at me.

Ok that's enough of that I hope I didn't bore you with those memories.


Sunday, April 21, 2013

Goodbye to the Oaks in Auburn!

After the Aday game the trees were rolled for the last time! Look at that crowd!





Eagle photographed in the winter surf in Seagrove Beach, Fl.
Sunflower field in Loachapoka, Alabama
I'm a UofA girl but I LOVE AUBURN! These sunflowers were taken on my last trip up to visit LeeAnn in 2011.

2013 Holland Family Reunion


Hello Holland family. The last Sunday in April is the Sunday for the annual Holland Family Reunion. We have the park pavilion from 11-4 Westgate Park in Dothan. The pavilion is on Whatley Drive off of Honeysuckle. I will post a sign saying Holland. We have the pavillion reserved for the entire day on Sunday. Come and bring a comfortable chair if you want one.

Lena Mae Holland standing back left and Jesse Holland standing back right. Front row left to rigt Naomi Holland, Oree Holland, Hubert Holland and Bertha Holland in Madrid, Alabama.

I am making calls and if you have time to make one call and bring someone with you that will be great. Since most everyone goes to church and has commitments let's plan to have lunch around 1:00 and stay as long as we want. We have a lot to catch up on. http://grannylessons.blogspot.com/2011/01/holland-gravesites-mount-enon-and-ramer.html This is a previous post on this blog that has pictures and family information. I have not spent much time on research lately. I will bring the documents I have and if you have any bring yours. Can't wait to see everybody!

The is a picture of Aunt Bertha and my brother Steve Holland taken during a family Reunion in the early 1970's.  We were at Uncle Lucius' house near Chipley. I loved having the reunions at the homes of all of the Aunts and Uncles. They were actually my great Aunts and Uncles. Elmire, Oree, Ernest, Lucius, Naomi, Lena Mae, Ruth,and Ruby and Bertha. There were two more sisters, Lome and Louise. Lome passed away before I had any memory of her. Louise I remember but she lived near Buffalo, New York so I never was able to get to know her. She and Aunt Ruby looked so much alike they could have been twins. They were very beautiful.
I loved Aunt Ruby very much. A visit to see her and Aunt Bertha was always a big happy event! When I was a little girl they lived in a big old house in Downtown Dothan. Aunt Bertha was a great cook, and she loved to see us eat! I plan to have Aunt Bertha's fresh coconut cake made for the reunion.
Morgan and Emma McInnis Holland
Lena Mae standing back row left Jesse right
second row Naomi left Oree, Hubert and Bertha right

Ruby Holland left and Louise Holland right




These are some current pictures of my nieces and nephew and my great niece and nephews. Hope we see you Sunday the 28th between 11 and 4 Westgate Park Pavilion on Whatley Drive in Dothan.




Henley our youngest cowgirl working in the mulch
Clayton left and Michel Bass right- Keith Holland's grandson's
Gracie Holland and Henley Smith riding horse
Hudson Smith Greg's youngest grandson.
Doyle Holland Smith in his ball uniform.
Greg's girls


Brook and Gracie Holland Steve's daughters 
Brook Morgan Holland, Steve's oldest daughter named after her Great Great Grandfather Morgan Holland