Family Pics

Our current house has a landing part way up the stairs. I decided to decorate the stairs with current pictures of my immediate family.  Finding pictures was a matter of searching my hard drive for the digital photos that would match what I wanted and then printing them in the size I wanted.  Using printed pictures I’m sure the quality isn’t as high resolution as previous pictures, but guilt when we want ot swap out of a set of pictures is non-existent.  Currently I have a couple pictures of the boys at their current ages and some of them as preschoolers.

I included pictures of ourselves also, and some information about our family tree!  Below the family tree of photo frames I have an antique drop leaf gate leg table that includes a chess set on a runner.  On the table top is also a lamp from my childhood.  The lamp was one found in the Illk house when we moved in after Ralph Goodrich moved on.  It is designed to look like a dancer with a lace skirt and huge lace ‘hat’ for a lap shade.
   The bottom of the lamp is a nightlight with the top being a standard lamp.  I’ve been a little nervous to use the nightlight portion of the lamp for more than a few minutes due to the fragile feel of the skirt.  I think it would be likely to be a fire risk if it is lit and heats up.

I claimed this lamp when we moved into the Illk house when I was in second grade and still have it as well as the toddler sized doll.  I’d love to know more about the type of lamp and history of the lamp!

Deer – Venison – Hunting?

Deer – Venison – Hunting?

Visiting home it’s not unusual to see deer. – Growing up we actually had deer as pets!  The deer I see on visits now are wdeer by Oakwood Illinoishite tail deer, indigenous to the state of Illinois.  (Growing up our deer were Fallow Deer) They are kind of like large rodents as far as farmers are concerned, but are also great for a beef replacement and a lot cheaper.  Deer come into fields and eat the corn when they have a chance.  Farmers can get nuisance permits to hunt in the off season on their own property to deal with deer coming to literally eat their livelihood.  That being said, deer are cute!  Speaking as someone that has several as pets, they are a little like cute farm animals that will eat from your hand when they are comfortable with you.

From past experience though deer can also be dangerous…. I’ve seen deer throw a tire in the air with their antlers and also hit the sides of their cage and knock the person standing next to it down on the ground. Deer can jump high into the air, so we kept ours with a cage made of old corn cob sides that were raised in the air enough to keep them in. The buck was dangerous with antlers, but I was always convinced he was trying to play with us like he would with other bucks in the herd.   Now though, our deer watching amounts to watching White Tail Deer from a distance.  They come into the fields todeer by Oakwood Illinois snack on corn and bean plants at the early hours of the day and just as the sun starts to set.

Pictures

I like to take pictures of the deer – I actually caught a video of a deer the other day that walked beside our car, turned to look at me as if staring me down and then just started peeing. So far the only shooting I’ve done of deer are pictures……

The deer are everywhere.  We see them crossing roads, in the fields, and even every night at the Oakwood rest stop on our last visit. Some of my pictures are quick pull out the camera there they are again, and others are thought out, they aren’t moving pictures.  When we are home for good, it will be fun to try to catch deer in all their different stages.  I’d love to catch some fawns with their spots!

Hunting

I can’t bring myself to actually hunt deer.  The last hunting I did was raccoons I think with my father.  We also hunted frogs for the legs and deer by Oakwood Illinoiscaught fish.  I’ll remember the traipsing across the field, shotgun, dogs included, and off to look for raccoons.  I also remember the sound of the raccoons squealing after they fell from the tree. The frogs I could take or leave and they went with the turtles that for us kids really just meant we got to play with heads…  Fish were something my father kept stocked in the pond.  I was horned by a catfish at a pond at the farm we called the Ranch and refused to fish anything but Sunfish and Bass after that.  Totally another story….

Now even with spiders I have a hard time killing them off myself.  I once put a spider in a container and told it, if it could get out it was free to go….  I couldn’t bring myself to kill it, but I also couldn’t LIVE with it in my house…. Don’t get me wrong! I don’t have any problem with others hunting as long as they use what they kill and don’t just shoot it and leave it.  Shooting for sport is wrong.

I remember as friends of my parents coming over to hunt over the years.  Sometimes the hunt was bow, and sometimes there was drinking.  I don’t remember seeing my dad drink much, so for me it was always a little funny to see the drunks come over and stumble around with plans to go out and hunt with fatal weapons.  I’ve seen them make plans to walk down each side of the field pointed at each other with shotguns, looking for deer to hunt.  Heading out with coolers of beer….  The time I remember most though was the friend of a my parent’s friend that came over drunk with a bow and needed string it.  He tried with an arrow in the bow!  I don’t think my parents let me see the gash, but someone had to rush him to the emergency room after that.

My dad would go out each year though and get how ever many deer he had permits for and hang them up, then my parents would spend the next few days packaging all the meat.  The kitchen table would be covered with a meat grinder, freezer paper, and parts of meat. My dad would run out to the barn and cut chunks off as they were ready for more and he would cut them up inside with big knives.  The deer were always hung up out in the machine shed.

A couple times my mother decided she wanted to cure the hides and dad took the hides off also. My brother and I had some play space set up in the basement…. Basement for us meant old concrete floor unfinished over 100 year old house where the coal furnace had been that was open to the dirt in some spots.  My mother took one room of the basement, read some books on tanning hides (the internet didn’t exist yet), and gave it a try!  I think the first step was to dry the hide out with salt, so the hides were in the basement covered in salt for months.   I don’t remember them passing that stage, or even what happened to them, but I’m sure they aren’t still in the basement of the old house with my brother living there now!

Venison

I do like venison, though the thing I like most about it is that it’s free.  To me it seems I’d be hypocritical to not be a vegetarian and say I won’t eat venison.  I’ve never really been able to tell the difference in taste.  If someone showed me two cuts of meat, I am fairly certain I could tell you which is which – deer is a lot leaner meat….  But my taste buds just aren’t that refined.   There is a difference in where the deer came from.  I know some deer come from areas that make them taste gamey.  Our area makes the deer taste the same as cows in my view. When I see deer running around in the field, my first thought isn’t that they are dinner – though I do have to admit it is in the top 10.  I’d say though I have the same thoughts about a cow.

Growing up dinner almost always amounted to my mother sending us to the freezer to pull out a type of meat.  We had huge deep freezes in the garage to store all the venison and by type of meat I don’t mean cow or venison.  Type of meat was written on each white wrapped package in black permanent marker!  There were tenderloin, beef chunks, hamburger, little steaks, deer roast, and more.  All labeled in my mother’s writing and all packed into the freezer in the white paper.  – Now my mother goes to a processing plant and gets the meat in a professional looking package.  She takes in any deer they have gotten and the butcher lets her know when it has been turned into what she has listed.  We just tried some new types of deer sticks this last visit!

Retirement

I have no idea what will happen when we retire and move home.  Will my husband decide to give hunting a try?  I can’t see my children deciding to shoot deer with anything but a camera…

deer by Oakwood Illinois
deer by Oakwood Illinois

My Thoughts for My Kids if I get Dementia in the Future

My Thoughts for My Kids if I get Dementia in the Future

I recently read an article by someone about what she would tell her children if she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.  We’ve actually lived through a few instances of both Alzheimer’s and dementia now and in the past.   Both are pretty sucky diseases! I got the impression from the article (and I could be wrong) that the person writing it was talking about the disease that you see on television.  The forgetful parent that is living in the past and is still mobile.  For Alzheimer’s disease that was a stage we did see too.  I won’t write much about it other than to say my impression was that the article was written to make caregivers feel guilty for thoughts they may be having. Thoughts that they already are probably having a hard time with.  In reality, no two people with Alzheimer’s or Dementia are the same.  When I say it’s a sucky disease I mean it becomes a disease like being locked inside your body with no way to communicate and no one has any idea if you are aware or not.  Think awake coma…. In this case though there isn’t the television hope of they are going to wake up… the hope really is that they don’t suffer too much.

My Aunt Kate – Alzheimers

My Aunt Kate was my first experience with Alzheimer’s disease.  We didn’t even have a clue what was going on at first.  Growing up I loved spending time with her.  She, my Aunt Lena Mack, and my grandmother had been the youngest girls in the family of nine kids in an immigrant family raised by my great grandmother.  The lost their father in 1918 in the flu.  My Aunt Kate had married a miner when she was young and then lost him early.  She later met my Uncle Ralph who sold insurance and took photos – lots of phots, and developed them himself!

They lived in the coolest house.  If I had been old enough when she sold that house in Danville Illinois, I would have bought it for sure!  It is still there, but has been changed beyond belief.  It’s beside DCFS and is now a hair place painted blue. It had a huge wrap around porch and at least 4 rooms upstairs.  One of the rooms was a suite and my aunt and uncle never used that part of the house – except when we visited.  One room had a huge walk in closet with a vanity also.  I would go up and check out the vanity with the mirror and old style hair brush, ten wander around.  My parents would drop us at my aunt and uncles when they wanted to go out and needed a babysitter…. My aunt always had a quilt set up in the dining room also.  I loved her quilt frame and went on to have my husband create a similar one for me.  My grandmother would piece quilts and my aunt would quilt them.  She could finish the whole quilt in a month and her stitches were amazing.

Later she moved to a condo after selling.  My grandmother sold her own house and moved nearby, and over time they moved in together.  I remember though the first signs being in the apartment where my aunt started repeating the same stories over and over again.  She had stories that we had heard a few times before, but it seemed those stories started coming up more often.  Why she didn’t have any children was a popular one.  At first though it was little things, nothing that we could really say for sure.  Over time though it started to become obvious that memory as becoming a problem.

At this point I had left for college and was just seeing everyone on visits.  On visits it still appeared my aunt was the same person but told the same stories a few too many times.  My family had started to realize though.  My grandmother and Aunt got a house together, alarms had to be put on the doors in case she wandered…. and my grandmother had to be the caregiver.  But then my grandmother got sick…  My grandmother found out she had breast cancer when my oldest was born.  We had to debate live vaccines or dead vaccines at the time because of chemo… and rearrange baptisms so that she would be healthy enough to attend.  The question though was, if the caregiver now needs care?  So my aunt had to go to a facility.

My Aunt Kate at assisted living would call home asking to be picked up.  She would try to escape, following people out. She also though would tell people stories about how she worked there and would run around making people’s beds for them.  We would bring the kids to visit, and everyone loved them.  As time went on her mind retreated and she started recognizing people as the younger version of people from her childhood.  Visiting was good, she may have thought we were someone else, but it was good for her to interact.

Near the end though Alzheimer’s patient’s become violent. They are frustrated at the fact they can’t remember and they start to just fight back against everything and everyone.  My mother dealt with that.  Patients start losing their ability to do basic things.  The toughest part is that their body in many parts is healthy, it’s only their mind that is suffering.

My Dad – Vascular Dementia

My dad on the other hand is suffering from vascular dementia.  My father had been suffering from untreated high blood pressure for quite a while without realizing it.  It apparently put little holes in parts of his brain.  Additionally he had a motor cycle accident in his late teens that causes brain damage.  The brain damage from the accident was so bad he wasn’t expected to live, but he had made it – and he recovered with just head aches.  Now though the accident makes brain scans difficult.

One morning my father had a stroke, that was really the beginning of the end.  The doctor found the high blood pressure and started treating it.  My father’s family though has a history of strokes and my dad’s strokes didn’t stop them.  My father has had trouble with clotting and each stroke the doctors wouldn’t realize what was going on until later.  I remember a call where my mother called me and said that my father couldn’t move his hand anymore, had slurred his speech but the doctor over the phone said it couldn’t be a stroke and not to bring him in…. I don’t even have a medical degree and suspected stroke….   Two days later they decided it maybe was a stroke and put him in the hospital.

After a couple years of this, a doctor decided my father needed a heart valve replacement.  My father was having issues with memory, slowly slipping.  My mother was still able to leave him for short periods of time (though he once threw away their smoke detector when cooking in the microwave).  My dad was doing a few odd things like he pushed a grain wagon in the pond by mistake, but he was puttering around the farm…  still going out and interacting sometimes.  I have a video of him sword fighting with fake swords with my youngest.  We debated the surgery though…..  without it according to the doctors, my father wouldn’t have much time left.  Ultimately we left it up to my dad, who originally was saying no, but in the end said yes.

Ultimately the surgery was the final straw.  Unknown to us at the time, surgery like this can cause a drastic decline in some older patients like this…. and my dad was one of those odds.  He went through a personality change that was a little tough to deal with, his memory quickly decreased, and physically he never fully recovered. As he declined quickly he needed a walker, but couldn’t remember to use it.  Not using a walker when you need it, leads to falls.  So we were dealing with health issues, behavior changes, and other new issues and my dad wasn’t a small man.

Moving into memory care, because of the behavior changes, caused my dad to have issues with caregivers in the facilities.  Men are much more rare in nursing homes.  My father was sent to locked wards at first to adjust his meds for behavior, then the first facility took him and just dropped him at an ER and said they wouldn’t take him back.  We were new to all this, dealing with documenting everything, but lost really.  Luckily we found a facility in the Amish community (a couple hours away) that was willing to take my father.  Due to the first facility my father had been blacklisted everywhere close.  After a while my father was able to be moved closer and is now a lot closer… but now he’s no longer in a memory care unit.

Vascular Dementia really can mean that the memory only declines each time there is new brain damage, usually in our case from a stroke.  My father’s body itself has failed him completely.  He can’t walk, doesn’t use one hand, and is pretty much locked away.  My father was always active. My dad was a farmer…  He doesn’t normally speak unless you ask him a question, and then sometimes he just stares at you.  We will continue to visit, but to me it looks like he’s being tortured.  Kind of like the people on television given paralytic drugs and set in front of a tv to watch glimpses of their families lives with no hope of ever escaping.

What I want my Kids to Know

For me I want my kids (and how we decide things) to make decisions that they can live with.   There is enough guilt no matter what you decide when dealing with these things.  Don’t ever let anyone else make you feel guilty over any choice you make. Never second guess a decision you have made, you can’t back and change something you decided in the past – so just move forward and make future plans.  I can say don’t feel guilty over anything you decide or do, but no matter what – if you have anything to do with the decision, you are going to feel some guilt over some parts of what happen.

When Alzheimer’s and Dementia patients reach the point where they no longer remember family and start becoming violent, or the point where they can longer answer questions and just stare, it’s hard to not feel like they are being tortured…. actually some even earlier will tell you that they are being held against their will.  They will call at night and ask to be picked up, taken home.

NOTE:

I don’t include normally much about what my dad and mom are going through now.  If anyone is going through Vascular Dementia and wants to talk privately though they are always welcome to contact me.

 

 

Corbly Family Bible

Corbly Family Bible

CoverI’m currently working on repairing a family Bible. The Bible itself is pretty amazing. I’ve fixed the spine already and am now working on the pages. The center of the Bible contains the family information and is readable.

Throughout the Bible are pages with beautiful pictures that appear to have had tissue paper pages on the opposing sides. All the images other than one appear to be in good shape. The image needing the most repair includes Moses with the 10 commandments.

The pages have all taken on a yellow tinge from the acid in the paper.  Supposedly paper kept out of the light and air will stay white, but this bible was stored in an attic, then a basement and over time moved to be stored in a bedroom until finally coming to stay with me.  I have the Bible now in an acid free box with small containers to absorb any moisture.  Included in the box is now acid free tissue paper.

Bible PageI’ve been taking the Bible out as needed to work on the pages. I chose a kit from Gaylord Archival that is museum quality. Gaylord has several Book Repair kits, including some new tool kits.  The kit I have includes book binding materials, binding glue, tape for the pages, and several other materials.  – I’ve finished the binding and am now working on the pages.

Filmy tape allows the page to be placed together and the tape to be placed over the tear.  The tape is almost invisible after being put over the repair.    I’ve fixed a few pages, and the tape is working perfectly when the page is whole – but has a rip in the page.   I’m at more of a loss when it comes to the repair of the pages that are missing pieces. Missing pieces along the binding edge are the most complex.  I’m still working on finding the best method to deal with those pages, but first have been working my way though the pages that are least damaged.

LATER:

Later I will need to look through the pages and find the best way to deal with the yellowing.  The yellow pages are throughout the Bible and if there would be a method of reducing the discoloration it might take some time and effort.  The Bible is definitely worth the effort though and the majority of the sections have minimal damage.

Bible Page

MosesBible PageThe Finding of MosesPageRoaz and Ruth

 

Page

Inside Page

Dog Escapee?

Dog Escapee?

Dogs visiting our house in Kentucky are pretty rare, but my mother brings hers off and on.  My son, who doesn’t normally watch dogs stayed with the dogs for the day while we went out for a while.  The beagle (who is huge) decided to try to escape!  He normally digs looking for rabbits all over our backyard, but this was a new one.   Growing up, our dogs were generally let to run around the yard and not kept in cages. When they were put in cages – the cages were made of wire from corn cribs. Apparently the wood just doesn’t stand up to a beagle.

So the question is, do we need a stronger fence or a dog sitter that knows more about dogs?  And how do I keep the dogs in?  I’ve been placing chairs over every hole in the yard to stop the dogs from escaping.