Friday, September 30, 2022

White Water Rafting

 Good morning dear friends. I thought I would relate the Tuesday's adventure before we left Gold country. 

It was a day unlike any other. It was going to be 102 and the girls wanted one adventure before we left the rapids. The morning dawned bright and the girls packed up their gear. 

Boat. Check

Fishing supplies. Check

Water and sunscreen. Check

Snacks.   Check

Towels.  Check


They piled all their gear into the truck because they were driving to the spot where all the water rapid tours departed and that's where they were putting their boat into the water.  Take the 1 1/2  hr float back to where our RV is then get the bikes and go get the truck. It seemed such a simple plan. 


The big boats left with paddlers, equipped with life vests, helmets etc and the girls put their boat in the water  when the last tour boat left. 


Immediately Wendi heard an air leak in the boat and said to Jenny, "we have a hole in the boat." Jenny said."maybe we shouldn't do it today." Wendi said, " it will be alright. 2 of the 3 chambers are holding." 


Off they went with Wendi's back to the rapids and Jenny facing the rapids. As they paddled the air was trying to empty out of the chamber with a hole. Wendi tried to keep her finger over the hole while paddling and skinned up her knuckle pretty badly. 

Meanwhile Jenny was saying, as the water got choppy, " I'm nervous.  I'm really, really nervous.: 

Wendi reassured her. "Everything is gonna be alright."  


The people that paid 119 dollars per person to have a tour guide were watching Wendi and Jenny going down the rapids with air leaking and a panicky Jenny. 

Jenny will share with you that she has anxiety. The mountains have been a challenge or any new experience, since we've been out but wendi is her opposite. Scared of nothing and taking names. They make such a great pair. 


Jenny is saying to Wendi, " why did we do this? Why did you let me make the decision to do this? We're gonna sink. We have no life vests. Wendi, why did we do this?"  Wendi was trying to reassure her, while paddling, holding her finger in the leak and flipping water out of the boat. 


At one point, they said the tour guided boat stopped and waited for them to make it through. At which time , Wendi and Jenny acted cool, like nothing was wrong. As soon as the big boat was outta sight, Wendi and Jenny were bailing water out of the boat and trying to keep the one side that was going flat out of the water.  


I wish you could have seen them tell me about it when they got home. I was laughing so hard as they unfolded the scene for me. Trying to be so cool while the big boat was watching , then trying desperately to keep it from sinking.


We all laughed until we cried. If you want to know if there are pictures. There are. There is also a video. I will have to see if I can procure that for all of us to watch. 


Lesson for white water rafting. 

Life vests

Helmets

Intact boat

Valium? Lol


Hope that everyone has a wonderful Saturday. I love you. Always, kimmee


Ps. I did a thing. 6 or 8 inches cut.i feel so much lighter.






Remembering The Escambia River

 Good morning dear friends. It's been awhile since I've floated down a lazy river but those memories are still fresh in my mind. 

When we were kids, we lived for Saturday and Sunday, cause that meant swimming. 

Oh, not Pool type swimming but water you couldn't see through, slime on the bottom and an occasional water moccasin or alligator. 

It wasn't that we were any braver than you are about going in watering holes but we had no innate fear of anything. 

I can probably blame that on youth or conditioning, as our childhoods weren't spent in the Ocean where the sand on the beach is white and the water is blue. 

Ours were spent in Cold Creek in Jay or Swimming at Munson, Morris Creek, or one of the lil streams on the way to Ebenezer Chrurch or over in Century at the Gravel pit. 

Goodness, as I think back, we probably should have been more careful than to swim in a place where sand and gravel could have caved in on us as we swam. Lol. 

We were just kids though and like I mentioned, we had no fear of the unknown. We didn't spend our days thinking, what if?

We went for every experience we could soak up. 

I'm not saying we should not have a lil caution in our lives, considering it's a wonder we made it to adulthood but I'm saying, live a lil more. Try a few more things that maybe scare us a lil. Sure, we will be afraid. Our skin may give us goosebumps from the anticipation, but do it. 

Go to Egypt like my friend Liz. Go out and watch a sunrise when it's cold. Go out and let the moonlight seep into your bones or catch the biggest fish and let it go for the next fisherman. 

Live life like today could be your last, because it may be. 


I love you guys. I hope that you all know that. Always, Kimmee


(The pictures are from my sister Donna. My favorite Aunt Catherine at Morris Creek and the Escambia River where Daddy fished and we swam with the mocassins)






My Daddy

 I was thinking of Daddy this morning and his parents. He was born on Jan 21, 1912 and he said he weighed about 2 lbs. Now I don't know if they had a scale and it was probably just a guesstamate but he was little enough to be kept in a shoe box so he couldn't have been that big. 

His Mama, the Grandma that I talk about with the long hair that she put in a braid, was tiny so it was not a far stretch that she might have a preemie or tiny child. I can't imagine trying to keep a preemie child alive in a wood house with a wood stove for heat in winter. Although I shouldn't say that as we did the same thing with my first Grandchild, born a month early at 4 lbs and 2 oz and only 3.5 when we brought him home in Nov. 

Times were different then and even in a shoebox in a dresser drawer, I know it had to be cold. I can imagine Grandma holding her tiny boy, her first boy born after two girls and willing him to live, just as I did with mine that contracted whooping cough at age two. Night after night, rocking in the chair praying for life and for God's grace and somehow Daddy made it and my child did too. 

Grandpa wasn't a wealthy man but he had managed to buy some land outside Jay City limits and Grandpa had built a house. There was nothing left but some wood pieces the last time Donna and I looked many years ago but it was the home that my daddy grew up in. Daddy had to stop schooling when he was 12 and go to work for the family. He worked sawmill and field work like his Daddy and Granddaddy before him so he wasn't rich either. 

Life in 1912 was hard. His Daddy was 27 and Mama 26 with two girls, Loree and Thelma. I know that Grandpa was excited about having a boy because men in those days equated having a son with success. What it really meant was your family name would live on and I can see the importance of that as a Historian but it also glossed over that you had two daughters that were equally as important as your son, but that was the time and thinking then and in some places now.

There was a daughter Sudie Ann born after Daddy on Oct 1913 but she only lived two years. She died on Dec 13th 1915 and is buried at Sardis Cemetery where much of the Gilmore and Creamer family are interred. I have a middle name of Ann too and wonder if it came from her. I never thought to ask when my Two Aunts were telling stories to me and  Donna.

The year Daddy was born in 1912 saw so many things happen. New Mexico became our 47th State that year in Jan, followed by Arizona in Feb. In March Roald Amundsen announced the discovery of the South Pole. That same month The Girl Scouts were formed in Savannah by Juliette Gordon Low.  In April the famous ship The Titanic sank but I doubt that Daddy's family ever heard anything about any of these things. They could not read and did not have radios and such back then. It would have been in the Newspaper but I doubt they ever saw one of those, at that time either. It was pretty much word of mouth news back then. The local Gossip and you all know who I am talking about would be on the party lines of my youth and that is how news traveled in my day but in daddy's day, you didn't visit that much and grew all your own food so there wasn't the social aspect of seeing lots of people everyday like we do now. The world has exploded in the years since Daddy was born.

That same year  Native American Jim Thorpe won Gold at the Olympics in mismatched shoes he had found, because someone threw away the ones he had. He ran and won it in loafers, not running shoes. What an amazing feat that was. I am proud reading about it years later with my bit of Native blood running strong in my veins. It is shameful that this many years later, people of color still fight to be recognized as equal in our land but it still exist and we still hear about it in the news. 

Only a few short years later The First World War happened but Grandpa didn't go to War. He had 6 children by the end of the War with 5 living and was doing everything he could to make sure they had food on the table. He grew his food and Grandma fixed it for everyone to eat.   

The land was fertile where Grandpa's house was. It was near the Escambia River and they could grow most anything they wanted to eat. I do wonder where they bought their Flour, sugar and salt but I don't have anyone old enough to ask these questions anymore. I can guess that there was a store close by that they took a buggy  or horse too and spent their hard earned 50 cents for a big bag to take home. Sugar cane was freely grown in that area too so he may have made his own sugar and syrup like some of the people did on Morristown road when I was a child. I can only surmise these things as I have no one to ask. A reminder for us to ask the things we want to know before our parents and grandparents depart leaving us with unanswered questions.

Daddy grew tall despite the conditions of this birth and was a hard working man like his Mama. I would say Grandpa was too but I only ever saw Grandpa sitting while Grandma was working so don't know if he was a hard worker. His daughter Aunt Elma thought "Papa" hung the moon so I can guess that he was a hard worker and a good man. I didn't know him much. Grandma was my hero and the one that I went to see as much as I could. She baked Snickerdoodles and let me help her with the chores and then rewarded me with porch swing tea and cookies. It was the best of times with her and I am so grateful for those. 

Life was hard in those days and many since. When WWII happened my Uncle Hardy went to War but my daddy did not. He was married with a child of his own so stayed home working in the sawmill to take care of his little family. By Wars End another child was born so he had three mouths to make sure were fed. There is one thing I can say about Daddy is that he kept us fed, clothed and Sheltered my whole childhood, even when he drank, he worked and worked hard. I love and respect him for that and am grateful. 

I guess many of these memories are coming forward because that first child he had, my sister Ruby Lee is 81  years young today.  I told her this morning how beautiful I always thought she was and that she has a beautiful heart to go with it. I will always be grateful to her for keeping me safe  growing up.  

This is going to be a series and this is the first part. I wanted to get it on paper while my memory is thinking of it. I appreciate you all letting me ramble on about my life. I love you all and wish you a beautiful Fall Day. Always, Kimmee.