March 08, 2010



Charlie graduated from Navy recruit training at Great Lakes Naval Station this past weekend. Tom and I flew up to see his graduation ceremony. It was great and Charlie looked so handsome.



I love this photo of Charlie - he looks so happy. 



Charlie enjoyed eating junk food, drinking Diet Coke and talking on the telephone.




Charlie had most of these muscles before training - that is why he was second out of about 85 young men in PT. He is now in Rolla Missouri for the next 9 weeks in training - I believe it is construction engineering. 

February 18, 2010



We spent the three day weekend in Truth or Consequences, NM. In the 1950’s they changed the name from Hot Springs – something to do with the show. Anyway, when we first arrived I was afraid I had led Tom on an unsuccessful adventure – the whole place was full of trailers – that’s all. Over 60% of the people there are retired and I guess on limited incomes. Our motel was an old one that had been remodeled and the room and bathroom were really big. We drove into town and found the use bookstore I wanted to visit and spent about an hour there – both of us finding good bargains.




Sunday morning we made our way to the county fair grounds to see the Texas Longhorn Steer contest – I think they were going from here to some place in Ft. Worth and only the winners would go. These steers were fantastic and I never knew they had such tempers. At one point the winner (the choclate cow in the photo) was charging one of the other steers and this rancher just stepped right in front of the steer and said “Whoa” and that steer nearly tumbled he stopped so fast. The horns on the steers were fantastic – what I found fascinating is that as they stormed through the gates coming and going, they knew exactly the moment to turn their heads just the right angle so as not to hit their horns on the gates. I was impressed.


Later we drove out to the SpacePort – where Richard Branigan (?)  in six months is going to send folks to space from this 2 ½ mile runway. We were really just following these little rocket like graphics on a couple of directional signs – we had no idea how far it was. After about 15 miles after driving out to the middle of nowhere we were at a dead end and had to go right or left – of course we had not seen a sign in miles. We called the owner of the bookstore we visited the night before  cause that was the only local number we had (on her book mark) and she said take a right and drive 12 more miles. So we did and that is when we saw Ted Turner’s buffalo ranch. A woman at the fairgrounds had told us to watch for them. There was another animal she told us to watch for, but we had never heard of it before…. Let me tell you they have a lot of work to do on that SpacePort place in the next six months. Tom and I had a nice long chat with the security guard.





When we got back to civilization we went down to the RiverBend Hot Springs and soaked in the springs for two hours. It was around 65 degrees and a breeze was blowing so those hot springs felt just wonderful. We enjoyed talking to the other folks there – it was sort of like a communal bathhouse.


In the late afternoon we decided we wanted to go find this ghost town which was only about 40 miles but we had to go up the mountain and through the pass and we knew we didn’t have time. We did not want to come back though those curvy roads and switchbacks in the dark. We decided to just drive to the pass and then come back. It got colder and curvier as we got higher and higher, more and more snow. By the time we got to the pass it was freezing. We got some great views from Emory Pass at 8220 ft. It was a lovely drive – so strange to be so cold when a couple of hours earlier we were in the hot springs. We saw beautiful horses, eight deer, a baby cow on the side of the road, a longhorn steer on the side of the road, goats, Shetland ponies, and a bobcat! I took this photo of the tree with microwaves stacked in it.

The next morning before heading back we checked out the museum which was wonderful – so much old stuff and hundreds of old pots. My favorite was the beautiful embossed saddles and the photos of all the Hollywood stars who had been at their annual fiesta for the last fifty years. 

January 22, 2010


Here is our apartment in the Zuni teacherage. It is the nicest housing in the area. We had about five inches of snow lat night following I don't know how many inches of rain. This place is really soaked. It isn't that cold though and I believe much of the snow has melted already. School was called off today so we are taking it easy.

A neighbor's dog attacked Roxie for the second time last night - Roxie was leashed but the black dog was not.  He is looking for a big stick to take with him when he walks Roxie now.

We got our first correspondence from Charlie. Seems to be doing okay.

January 17, 2010




Here are a few of my students in the library - 6th graders ! You can see some different parts of the library. I have finished the inventory, discarded over a thousand books, and marked over 26,000 books as lost. I deleted those titles from the database this past week. So now, the second part of the year will be dedicated to getting the records straight for the books we actually have on the shelves.


We had a nice Christmas in Georgia. Ended up having to replace gutters on the house since water was gathering underneath it.  Georgia has had an emormous amount of rain this fall. We purchased Elizabeth's airplane ticket so we could see her at Christmas, and then all the city and couty taxes were due. So the month of January we are laying low.



On the drive back Tom and I stopped in Hot Springs Village, AR to see his Uncle Dick and his wife Inge. Uncle Dick is 90 years old now. We were so pleased to find both him and Inge in wonderful shape living a a beautiful home on the lake. Inge said that Dick was an inspiration to the other older folks there. He still plays golf about three times a week, drives, does whatever he likes. I'm not quite sure if this was a retirement village or not - but it was certainly a restricted development - just houses in the woods - no signs or businesses, lots of lakes, quiet, and huge. Over 15000 people live in this gated community.



Charlie is now in Great Lakes Naval Station in basic training. We have had only one very brief phone call from him telling us he had arrived and was fine. We miss him a bunch - very quiet here without him. Roxie has slept on Charlie's bed since he left.