We do have a living tree this year, in a very heavy pot, and Suzy, whose story is told below in a two-year-old post, is enshrined at its top. This year marks her sixtieth anniversary.
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May all be well with all of you.
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We are doing without a tree this year, choosing to make a "tree" of the mantelpiece over the bricked-up fireplace by scattering fir twigs, baubles and such from one end to another, with a string of white lights. This actually has been a bit of a hit, and no one seems to think any the less of us for having decorations that can be completely cleared away in less than three minutes.
The baubles have been with us for decades, and chief among them is Suzy Snowflake, loosely based on the hit 1951 song by Rosemary Clooney -- I know I mentioned her a few weeks ago, but I've finally had a moment, between outside chores and some breadmaking, to go take a picture of her.
My mom originally made Suzy during the great railroad strikes of the early 1950s, when no money was coming into the house, and we ate black-eyed peas for supper every night. Suzy's body is a stiff, relatively heavy thread-spool cone left over from the industrial textile industries that were strong in the American South in those days.It's covered with a layer of golden foil. She has several feet of lace wrapped round her for petticoats and a dress, with a bodice formed by a length of narrow golden ribbon tied round her waist and criss-crossing her breast. She has butterfly-style wings of wire, filled in with lace tied on with more ribbon, and her whole outfit is spangled with tiny gold stars.
Suzy's original head was made by stuffing a ball of cotton in bit of cotton cloth from an old hankie or something, with eyes and a mouth stiched on in embroidery thread. I think Suzy 's current head is a bit of a come-down for her, a repair made in the early 70s I think, using a cheap Barbie knockoff's head from a dollmaking store. A pipe-cleaner halo sits a bit low between her shoulders in back. Suzy holds a wand in her left hand on which there should be two larger gummed gold stars, but I don't have any for her right now. There may have been something in her right hand, but none of us remember what.
So she's a little the worse for wear, but she's totally the household goddess/angel/totemic thingie, reverently laid away in a labeled shoebox in the first week of January every year, then, found and carefully lifted out for holiday service usually about the second week of December. There have been family trees -- first at my childhood home, then here -- and she has topped each one for fifty-eight years. This year she's making do with the mantel, but she doesn't seem to mind.
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Greetings risa bear! This note comes to you from jim & cindy. We live over here in crabtree area. We have been watching enenews almost from the start..I don't have a home computer so I can't communicate like most folks.I just have this droid phone that doesn't have complete innernet..anyway I'm almost ready to buy a rad monitor & am trying to decicde what type ..are you satisfied with your monitor? The way things r going its seeming to feel like a nessisity to get one. Id like to go to newport & walk on the beach tomorrow, but with everything floating up, does that mean the bad water is here already too? Prople think I'm OFF if I mention being careful because of radiation.(we have children to think about..anyway,if you would like to communicate,we would appreciate that! Thanks again, jim & cindy willhite...503.754.9108
ReplyDeleteI'm very deaf and will post here in reply -- I have a little SOEKS, it cost about three hundred and is made in Russia. It tells me things are a little better here than I thought -- ranging from .10 to .15 mcSv in summer and .15 to .20 in winter, with some vegetables and fruits at .25. I think this is consistent with what i'm seeing on Radnet, so I don't think it is too inaccurate. My main concern with the stuff that will be coming onto the beaches (which went into the water before the cesium and strontium really got going) would be "normal" industrial pollution -- heave metals and chemicals in the mix. Bad enough ... Readings people are sometimes getting inland -- from Spokane over to Chicago, and across southern Canada, seem much higher to me. Of course what this measures is meaningless if one inhales hot particles, so Your Mileage May Vary, as they say. Have you thought about moving? We probably won't, unless something even more spectacular happens over there.
ReplyDeleteMore info from a Coos Bay observer: if anything, the coast currently has lower reading than here in the foothills -- encouraging. http://webpages.charter.net/123goto/map.htm
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