Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Buchanan Garden, Art & Antique Festival

We headed out to Buchanan Saturday afternoon for a little visit to a local festival.

There were about 30 vendors, food, and music.

The newspaper editor, Ed McCoy, & my husband
(the guy in pink) have a chat.

My husband and Virginia House of Delegates
Representative Terry Austin.

The event featured plants and art.

Yummy food up this way!

Interesting items for sale.

An old friend, Pam Wiegandt, at her booth
for the area community garden.

The Beekeepers Association

My mother's old friend, Lynn Miller.

More things for sale.
 
I don't know what the overall attendance was. We were there during the hottest part of the day and there were not many people. Hopefully when the weather was cooler more folks were out.

It was a nice little event. Buchanan is a great asset to Botetourt County.

Monday, May 18, 2015

Yellow Iris




Sunday, May 17, 2015

Sunday Stealing: Random

From Sunday Stealing

RaNdOm Meme


1. If you were to attend a costume party tonight, what or whom would you go as?

A. I'd put my camera around my neck, take a pad and a pen, and go as a reporter.

2. What are your choice of toppings on a hamburger?

A. Cheese, catsup, mayonnaise, lettuce.

3. You are chosen to have lunch with the President. The condition is you only get to ask one question. What do you ask?

A. How do you feel about the two-party system, and what steps would you take to rectify the problems it has created and bring back true democracy to the people?

4. It’s your first day of vacation, what are you doing?

A. Driving somewhere.

5. What is your concession stand must-have at the movies?

A. A bottle of water.

6. Which do you dislike most: pop-up ads or spam email?

A. Pop-up ads.

7. What do you think Captain Hook’s name was before he had a hook for a hand?

A. Captain Two-Hands. Or maybe just George.

8. Rock, paper, or scissors?

A. Rock, paper, scissors, lizard, Spock!

9. Let's say a brick fell on your foot, and your kid is standing right next to you, what is your 'cleaned up’ swear word?

A. I don't clean up my damn swear words when I say them. I don't give a f*ck who the hell is listening. Especially if there is a bitch of a brick on my foot. (However, I very seldom actually *write* swear words.)

10. Which is worse, being in a place that is too loud, or too quiet?

A. Too loud.

11. What is one quality that you really appreciate in a person?

A. Good manners.

12. At the good old general store, what particular kind of candy would you expect to be in the big jar at the counter?

A. Smarties or Fireballs.

13. What is the most distinguishing landmark in your city?

A. My nearest city is the Star City of the South. We have a huge neon star on top of Mill Mountain (a mountain in the city). It glows in the dark. It called the Roanoke Star but the locals call it the Mill Mountain Star.



 
Here's a link to a nice shot of it in the dark, all aglow.

14. Everyone hears discussions that they consider boring. What topic can put you to sleep quicker than any other?

A. Who has what disease.

15. How many times did it take you to pass your drivers test?

A. Once. If it takes you many more than that, maybe you should use the bus system.

16. If you had to have the same topping on your vanilla ice cream for the rest of your life, what topping would you choose?

A. Chocolate.

17. What food item would need to be removed from the market altogether in order for you to live a healthier, longer life?

A. Chocolate.

18. You are offered an envelope that you know contains $50. You are then told that you may either keep it or exchange it for another envelope that may contain $500 or may be empty. Do you keep the first envelope, or do you take your chances with the second?

A. Take my chances with the second. I started out with nothing anyway.

19. If you had to choose, which would you give up: cable TV, or DSL/cable internet?

A. Cable TV.

20. What is your highest level of education?

A. I have a masters degree.

21. How much is a gallon of gas in your city? What was the highest it’s been?

A. Right now it's about $2.35. It's getting close to Memorial Day and the prices always go up then (gouge gouge gouge). I think the highest it hit was about $4 a gallon, around the end of George Bush's presidency. I can't really remember how high it was. Only that it was high.

22. What kind of lunch box did you have as a kid?

A. I had a Partridge Family lunch box. You can see a picture of it at this link.

23. What would you rather have, a nanny, a housekeeper, a cook, or a chauffeur?

A. I'd be really happy with a combination housekeeper and cook. I don't need a nanny or a chauffeur.

24. Would you rather be trapped in an elevator, or stuck in traffic?

A. Stuck in traffic. I have an elevator phobia as it is.

Saturday, May 16, 2015

Saturday 9: No Myth

Saturday 9: No Myth (1989)

Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.

1) The girl in this song is "just looking for someone to dance with." Who was your most recent dance partner?

A. My momma don't dance and my daddy don't rock and roll. My husband don't dance and neither does anyone I know. So I guess my most recent dance partner was the broom.

2) Michael Penn wonders if he'd do better with the ladies if he was Romeo or Heathcliff. What fictional character represents your romantic ideal?

A. Aragon, King of Gondor, from Lord of the Rings, as portrayed in the movies. I like that long hair, bad boy look, and brooding eyes.


3) The lyrics refer to "knots I have yet to untie." Do the shoes you're wearing have laces?

A. I'm wearing sneakers with laces.

4) Name a character from mythology.

Cassandra, who received the gift of true prophecy from the gods only no one believed anything she said. (Most married women can probably relate to that, as their husbands seldom listen but the lady is almost always right.)

5) Michael Penn is the brother of Oscar winner Sean Penn. Give us the title of a Sean Penn movie.

A. Um. I would have to research it, which is dishonest. So I must honestly answer that I do not know the title of any Sean Penn movies. I'm not sure I would recognize Sean Penn if I saw him. 

6) Their father, Leo Penn, was a busy TV director from the 1960s through the 1990s. He specialized in detective shows (Magnum PI and Cannon) and medical shows (Trapper John and Marcus Welby, MD). Are you more likely to watch a program with lots of car chases, or one that's set in a hospital?

A. I like fantasies or sit coms. I don't like hospitals at all. I am not more likely to watch either, and generally don't. Sorry. Of the four shows mentioned, I have seen Magnum PI, but only sporadically.

7) 1989, the year "No Myth" was popular, is the year of the first HDTV broadcast. Do you watch many shows in "high def?"

A. I don't watch any shows in "high def."

8) 1989 was also the year The Simpsons premiered. Who is your all-time favorite animated character?

A. Bugs Bunny. He was quick-witted, smart, and cuddly, all at the same time. If he looked like Aragon he'd be the perfect man.

9) Random fill-in the blank: If I never had to ______________ again, it would be too soon.

A. If I never had to clean a toilet again, it would be too soon. (But I am pretty sure I will do it again this weekend.)



Click the link above to play along. Whee!



Friday, May 15, 2015

Locust Trees

The locust trees are hanging full of blossoms this year. It has been some time since I've seen the trees this full of bloom.




Redbird!



Thursday, May 14, 2015

Thursday Thirteen #395


1. I am in a filipendulous state of mind.

2. My visceral decisions about my health care make me feel as if I am doing the right thing, even if I'm not.

3. I am generally pensive, though not for reality. I am frequently reminiscing about a quixotic time that never was.

4. Acupuncture sometimes has the unfortunate tendency to make me pugnacious.

5. I'm afraid my Thursday Thirteen today is a bit esoteric.

6. Ominous dreams last night have me looking at my day in a different light. I dreamt of baby birds on the window sill - Rose Eagles, my husband called them. My grandmother's nickname was Rosie and she also featured in my dreams last night. I think she was paying a visit.

7. My efforts to write are nebulous these days. I can't take control of the substance.

8. My last article was not diminutive; it was a laborious project, about 1,700 words, and quite involved. I wrote about water.

9. I drink copious amounts of water during the day, at least six glasses, but still have dry skin.

10. Our austere spending has kept us relatively debt-free, but it also means I still use an ancient flip-phone and do not text.

11. The ostensible purpose of both political parties is to govern, but it really is about capitalism and money. Governing has little to do with it.

12. The duplicitous nature of some of my husband's customers makes me wonder if what he does is worth the effort.

13. This anomalous Thursday Thirteen is brought to you by a few visits to various Words of the Day websites and the words proffered on them.




Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while and this is my 395th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

New Baby

I love it when they give birth in front of the house and I can watch the whole process. Always a miracle.













Tuesday, May 12, 2015

My Mother's Day Visitor

Mother's Day can be difficult for those who have lost their mothers, or those who wanted to be mothers but never were. I have a double whammy with that, so tend to hide like a turtle on that particular Hallmark Holiday.

Mother Nature, though, knew I needed some company. So she sent along this lovely creature to bring a highlight to my day.

Okay, who is interrupting my romp?

I see you, you big lumbering camera-welding human!

I've got my eye on you!

What, you think moving around for a side view will help?

Yes, I have a tail!

Look at the claws on that critter!

Apparently even turtles get flies.


I think this is what we commonly call a box turtle (terrapene carolina). There is a small pond down over the hill and the turtle was sprinting up toward my red flowers from that direction.

As turtles go, it moved quite quickly across the driveway. It stopped in its tracks the moment I opened the back door, though. That piercing red eye never moved from me as I walked around it, taking pictures.

Finally, after I gently placed a hoe beneath the turtle and turned it around in the direction from whence it came (for I did not want it to eat my flowers), it ducked its head into its shell. When I next looked out, the turtle was gone (and the flowers were safe).

For a day, I think, this turtle was my animal totem. The turtle totem symbolizes a person's peaceful walk on this earth. It represents the path one takes as she embarks on her journey through life. 

In contrast to emotional or spiritual development occurring in bursts, the way of the turtle anchors one's personal unfolding in a slow, more grounded series of steps and longer cycles of transformation.

The turtle is associated with one's physical and embodied evolution on the earthly plane. People call on this spirit animal for help to be more grounded. One can also get help with slowing down and pacing, so the next step may be taken with more confidence.
My overall animal totem is a doe, but I think other animals sometimes pop up to guide you. I've been visited by a black bear, a black swan, and by turkeys. I think they all have something to say.

Monday, May 11, 2015

Books: Factory Man

Factory Man: How One Furniture Maker Battled Offshoring, Stayed Local - and Helped Save an American Town
By Beth Macy
451 pages (including footnotes & index)
Copyright 2014

First, I have to make several disclaimers.

I went to college with the author. I consider us friendly acquaintances and rivals, as we are both journalists in the Roanoke Valley. She wrote for a different newspaper before turning to books. We are Facebook friends. She once wrote an article about my efforts to write a book about author Mary Johnston (efforts which ultimately came to naught).

We don't have lunch together, hang out, or talk trash. We greet each other kindly and professionally. I think I've spoken to her maybe 10 times in the last 20 years, to be honest.

My edition of Factory Man is autographed.

My bedroom suite was made by Virginia House, which ultimately Bassett bought out. I was grateful that my furniture was built before that happened because by then Bassett was making junk. The bed I sleep in is solid cherry wood and the drawers in the dresser are dove-tailed and not stapled together. It's solid, good furniture, and Bassett ruined Virginia House when they bought them out (the purchase is mentioned in the book).

Having said all of that, I debated a long time about reviewing the book publicly. I suspect anything I say can be misconstrued in any number of ways. If I praise too much, someone will say it is because we know one another. If I say anything negative, it will be construed as professional jealousy. I am sure I cannot win this one, but I will write a review anyway.

First, I am not sure how to classify this book. Amazon and others have it listed as a business book, and I suppose that fits best. It is a not a biography, nor is it really a history. It's more of an assessment of a certain industry, an analysis of its rise and fall.

I personally see it as an indictment of capitalism and globalization, a microcosm of the macrocosm of our society, but others may not. I know there are people who think this is the way things should be. I am not one of them.

The industry under discussion in the book is the American furniture industry. At one time, furniture was king in Southwestern Virginia. When you watched The Price is Right in the 1970s, they gave away Bassett furniture. I can remember my grandmother watching the show and saying, "That was made just down the road."

Bassett had a good name up until the late 1980s.

Factory Man tells how furniture making came to the area, and how the Bassets brought it here. They created a bank and then basically set up a town. The family experienced infighting; expansion proved exasperating, and marriages were made not only for love (if ever for love) but for what the spouse could bring to the industry table.

Thousands of people around here worked on these furniture lines. Then along came China and other importers. They brought cheaper furniture, some of it exact replicas of the Bassett brand.

Then, as has happened in so many other industries, local factories began importing the cheaper items.

Jobs went asunder like trailers turned to twigs in a tornado. Soon the area's best employers were laying folks off, not just a few at a time, but by the hundreds. Portions of Virginia have never recovered from the economic devastation of this loss of jobs.

That part of the story, the effect that globalization has had on "the little people," is the story that Macy tells in her book.

She also explains how John Bassett, III, fought to keep his factories going by finding trade-agreement loopholes. He is her hero, the old rich guy who wants to keep his people employed.

The two stories merge, of course, because they are bound up in the same issue of globalization.

Macy's research is evident on every page. She is thorough and meticulous. Her writing is personable and flowing. But she was dealing with tough subject matter.

For one thing, these people were not the most likeable bunch. They were men smoking cigars who were plotting how to make the most money they could, and they wanted to do it on the backs of their workers. Macy glides over this fact somewhat, showing the better side of the owners, generally. They did some nice things for their employees, certainly. But they also became rich off of the sweat of others.

In the end, this is a story of capitalism at work, and capitalism takes no prisoners and has no room for niceties. It rises and falls, and humanity be damned. I wanted to read stories from factory workers who hated the Bassetts, but there were few in there (I don't recall any at all, but perhaps there was one or two I am forgetting). I suspect Macy had a hard time finding people willing to publicly speak out about the furniture industry owners. One never knows what form retribution may take, after all.

The book reads like a newspaper article - a very long newspaper article. That's to be expected, as Macy is a journalist. However, the book bogs down in the middle and I confess I put it down for several months before picking it back up to finish it.

It suffers, too, because so many people have similar names. There is a chart of the family in the back of the book, but I did not find it until it was too late. By that time I was thoroughly confused as to which Bassett or Spilman did what to which factory. I have heard that this chart has been moved to the front of the book in the paperback edition, and I applaud that change if it is true. I wish I had known of the chart in the back sooner.

Macy set out to tell the story of the demise of the furniture industry and the loss of jobs. She does this admirably. She also wants to tell the story of John Bassett, III. She does this, too, but the tale feels incomplete. Perhaps it will feel incomplete until the gentleman retires or dies, I don't know.

The writer also offers no resolutions or ways to bring back these jobs backs, or how to create a new economy. She simply offers up what happened, fact by fact. The reader must draw her own conclusion from this. My conclusion is that American manufacturing has lost this fight. Even if a manufacturer remains over here, corners are cut so that the product suffers.

We are stuck with poorly made, low-quality items for a while. Eventually, I think, American made that is of quality will make a come-back, but it will be rather like the local food movement. Slow, steady, and a long time coming.

My book club read this book and it generated interesting discussion about our area. We read it not long after Norfolk Southern Railroad announced it was moving 500 jobs out of Roanoke. Roanoke has long been known as a railroad town, so for Roanoke this was a little like the furniture factories closing in Basset. The biggest difference is the railroad has been sending jobs out of Roanoke slowly for about long as I've been alive, so the impact was lessened.

I think Macy did an excellent job in her reporting of this important story. She has earned many accolades for this book and there is even talk of a mini-series or something with Tom Hanks (no real details available there). She deserves everything she can get and I would like to see her go on Bill Maher on HBO and discuss her book, because Beth is as impressive in person as she is on the page. That's an interview I would not miss.

I applaud my colleague on her hard work and brilliant effort. If you have an interest in globalization and would like to know why your neighbors no longer have a job, then this is must-read. I am not aware of many other writings that attempt to tackle this issue from the bottom up, instead of the top down.

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Sunday Stealing: A Person Not Yet Born

From Sunday Stealing

CAPS LOCK Meme


1. YOU HAVE 10 BUCKS AND NEED TO BUY SNACKS AT A GAS STATION. WHAT DO YOU GET?

A. A bottle of water, a bag of Baked Lays Potato Chips, and a banana, if there is one. I think that's about all $10 will purchase in a convenience store or gas station.
 
2. IF YOU WERE REINCARNATED, WHAT DO YOU THINK YOU WOULD BE?

A. A person not yet born.
 
3. WHO’S YOUR FAVORITE REDHEAD?

A. I will say my massage therapist. Or Lucille Ball.
 
4. WHAT DO YOU ORDER WHEN YOU’RE AT AN I.H.O.P. OR BREAKFAST PLACE?

A. Scrambled eggs, bacon, grits, biscuits and gravy.
 
5. LAST BOOK YOU READ?

A. I listened to King and Maxwell, by David Baldacci. The last book I actually read was Factory Man, by Beth Macy.
 
6. LAST MOVIE YOU WATCHED?

A. I currently watching The Return of the King as I attempt to exercise. So I am watching it in 15 minute chunks.
 
7. DESCRIBE YOUR FAVORITE PAIR OF UNDERWEAR.

A. They're underwear. I don't have a favorite pair. So long as they don't have holes in them, I wear them.
 
8. DESCRIBE THE LAST TIME YOU WERE INJURED.

A. Apparently I injure myself every time I open my eyes. At the moment I have a bruise on my arm and one on my back, neither of which I know how I obtained.
 
9. IF YOU COULD INVENT ONE THING, WHAT WOULD IT BE?

A. One of those instant healing tricorder things from Star Trek.
 
10. ROCK CONCERT OR SYMPHONY?

A. Rock concert. Well, more like a pop music concert. I am not into hard rock.
 
11. WHAT IS THE WALLPAPER ON YOUR CELLPHONE?

A. I have an old flip phone. I don't think it has wallpaper.
 
12. FAVORITE SODA?

A. I like a root beer every now and then.
 
13. FLAVOR OF PUDDING?

A. Chocolate. 

14. WOULD YOU RATHER HAVE A PEDICURE OR A MANICURE?

A. Neither. My nails are thin and brittle. I tried a manicure once and it hurt so much that I vowed to never try it again.
 
15. ANY BUTTONS OR BLINKIES IN YOUR SIDEBAR?

A. I have an advertisement for my husband's septic tank business.
 
16. HOW MANY PEOPLE ARE ON YOUR BLOGROLL?

A. I don't know. I have a fair number listed in my sidebar but I also have a long list in a folder in my Favorites on my browser.
 
17. WHAT’S THE LAST PIECE OF CLOTHING YOU BOUGHT?

A. Socks.

Saturday, May 09, 2015

Saturday 9: Harper Valley PTA

Saturday 9: Harper Valley PTA (1968)
Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.

I remember this song from childhood. I have always thought it was a fun song - even more so when I was old enough to actually understand it.


1) This week's featured artist uses her middle initial (C. for Carolyn) all the time. Do you use your middle initial very often?
 
A. I use it in my official signature. I used to use it in my byline but at some point I stopped that.

2) In this song, a mother tells off the local PTA. What's the most recent school event you attended -- whether as a parent, a teacher or a student?

A. Um. I have no idea. The only thing I can remember is going to see my niece dance on a Saturday at the elementary school, and that was probably two years ago.

3) The lyrics reference the mom's miniskirts, which were trendy in the 1960s. The website Popsugar reports that gingham checks are trendy for 2015. Tell us about the most recent addition to your wardrobe.

A. My most recent addition to my wardrobe was white Nurse Mate compression socks that my physical therapist urged me to try in hopes of helping the swelling in my right ankle. How's that for sounding old, eh?

4) Thinking of moms, Access Hollywood named Carol Brady of The Brady Bunch TV's #1 mom. Who is your favorite TV mom?

A. Shirley Partridge on the Partridge Family. She sang and played keyboards and had beautiful children.

5) Mother Winters always gave Sam peppermint tea to calm her stomach. Do you have any tried-and-true home remedies to share?

A. I sometimes eat candied ginger for an upset stomach, or drink ginger tea, for the same. Ice helps swelling, but I'm sure everyone knows that.

6) Sam's mother always tips 15% in restaurants. Sam has worked in food service and is more judgmental, tipping between 10% and 25%, depending on the quality of the service. What's your tipping policy? Are you more like Sam or her mother?

A. I generally tip 20%, unless the service was terrible.

7) When the tip of her shoelace becomes frayed, Sam's mother snips off the end and then paints the tip with clear nail polish. Good as new! Sam thinks that's crazy because you can just buy new laces for less than $2. Are you more frugal like mother or spendthrift like daughter?

A. I'd buy new shoelaces in that particular scenario. I'd probably save the laces to use for something else, though. You never know when you need a string.

8) Mother Winters loves how french vanilla smells and burns her Yankee Candles all year around. Do you use scented candles or air fresheners?

A. I have asthma and allergies and react strongly to most fragrances. So, no.

9) Sam is celebrating Mother's Day with her mother's favorite, Hershey Bars. Would you prefer classic milk chocolate, dark chocolate or chocolate with almonds?
A. I am partial to dark chocolate but lately it seems to upset my stomach, so I suppose milk chocolate this time around.
 
 
 
Join in the fun at Saturday 9 by clicking the link above. Whee!