Saturday, August 16, 2008

Photo Hunt 123 - Colorful - Post 57


Colorful Stained Glass


This is my first Photo Hunt post. I've been enjoying this weekly meme for some time, and decided to play along. This stained glass window is one of eight in the nave of my church. The designs in the windows represent the Sacramental Rites of our denomination. This one represents the Sacramental Rite of Ordination.
Edited 8/18/08 - I'm crazy as a betsy-bug! I counted the windows in the nave this morning, and there are only six (6). There are seven Sacramental Rites in our denomination; Baptism, Holy Eucharist, Confirmation, Ordination, Marriage, Reconciliation of a Penitent, and Unction. Five of these are represented singularly in separate windows. The sixth and seventh, Reconciliation of a Penitent and Unction, are combined in the sixth window. One of these days, I'll post photos of the other ones.

Photo Hunt is brought to you by tnchick. If you'd like to play, too, give her site a visit.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Sky Watch - Post 56

Just another pretty sky

I haven't been out and about this week to photograph anything particularly "interesting," so I just stood in my front yard and snapped a photo of the evening sky. This is just as it came from the camera; Mother Nature has an always changing and amazing palette.


Sky Watch is brought to you by our friends Imac, Klaus, Sandy and Tom. Visit the Sky Watch Friday home page anytime after 7:30 p.m. Greenwich Mean Time on Thursday (that's 1:30 p.m. Central Daylight Time here in the U.S. -- if you're in the U.S.A. you can figure it out from there.) You'll be amazed at all the wonderful photos from around the world. And, if you have time, it's nice to leave a comment on their blog site to let them know you enjoyed their Sky Watch photo.
Happy Sky Watching!

Monday, August 11, 2008

TODAY'S FLOWERS: Not Quite Ripe - Post 55



Hydrangea



The hydrangea bush bearing this not-quite-ready bloom was planted in my yard in 1965. The original plant was a gift from one of our church friends at the time of my father's funeral, in January, 1965. It was a beautiful pot-plant that we nurtured through the cold months inside the house. We planted it when the ground was warmed, late in the spring of that year. The bush is now about 6 feet wide and about 5 feet tall, and bears at least a hundred blooms each year. When fully matured, the blooms are a beautiful, slightly blue-violet all over.

Today's Flowers is a new weekly Meme, posted each Monday, which was created by Luiz Santilli, Jr. and may be found here. Please visit to see others' lovely flower photos and, if you have a flower photo of your own to share, please join us.




Saturday, August 9, 2008

Camera Critters - Post 54



I knew this small green critter had recently been walking on the pollen-covered anthers of my day lily because it left little yellow footprints behind on the petal. There seems to be a bit of pollen clinging to its legs, also.


Camera Critters is the creation of Misty Dawn. To see other photos from this week's participants, visit Camera Critters here.

Friday, August 8, 2008

My Mother - Part One - Post 53

Photo - Circa 1921
Today would have been my mother’s 107th birthday. She was born on August 8, 1901, in Temple, Texas, 2nd child and first daughter of her parents. There were nine more children born into this family, but two died in childhood, one in a tragic accident -- a subject for another post, someday. The youngest, and last surviving, of my mother's siblings, my uncle Truett, died only a few months ago at the age of 85.

I don't know how old my mother was when the family moved from Temple to Victoria County, in South Texas – that’s South with a Capital S! Not the farthest south one can go in Texas, but only 20 miles or so from the Gulf of Mexico. Mama's father bought a farm in a place called Crescent Valley. There they raised cotton, chickens, and the children, six boys and five girls.

Mama graduated from high school in Victoria, a nearby town, and then attended Baylor Female College in Belton, Texas (now Mary Hardin-Baylor University) for a year. Mama always called it "Baylor-Belton." It was while she was in college that she learned to play Bridge, a card game she continued to enjoy for years. She also became 'modish' to the point that she, and most of the other young ladies, bound their breasts so as to appear flat-chested -- which was all the rage in 'flapper days.' She said it was quite painful, and absolutely forbid her younger sisters to do it. In all my memory, Mama never had a 'bosom.' Her breasts were droopy and as flat as pancakes, while her younger sisters all had nice figures.

I don't know if it was a matter of funding but, as mentioned above, Mama completed only one year at Baylor-Belton, then taught school in a small town for a term (one could do that in those days; a college degree was not required). I think she discovered that teaching was not what she wanted to do for the long term and went to work in the accounting department of the Woolworth store in San Antonio. Somewhere along the line, she had completed some secretarial courses and I remember well her trying to teach me Gregg Shorthand (I learned to write my first name, Pat, and the word "dray," not a word I ever heard used in anyone's conversation.)

Mama's father died in, I believe, 1924. Mama left San Antonio and went back home to Crescent Valley and to work in nearby Victoria. As the eldest daughter, when not at work she helped her newly-widowed mother with the younger children, and her wages also helped to support the family. The youngest child was only about 1 year old when Grandpa died, and there would have been several more young children still at home. One of Mama’s brothers, my uncle Talley, quit school when his daddy died, and became the “man of the house” -- at age 14.

Mama told me that she bought a small car (she called it a “koo-pay”) with part of her earnings, and drove over the country dirt roads into Victoria to work as a secretary/bookkeeper for the Gross-Parish Company, where she was still working when she met my father. (I wrote about that in Post 20 - My Father.)

Mama was almost 32 years old when she and Daddy married, on July 24, 1933. They moved around quite a bit to wherever employment opportunities for my father arose. The Great Depression was still in full swing, and jobs were hard to come by. I was the first-born of four children, arriving on this earth in Yorktown, Texas; my sister Meg was born in Kingsville (home of the famous and h.u.g.e. King Ranch); and the youngest daughter, my sister Carol, was born in El Paso. Mama's last child, and only son, my brother Eddie, was born in Las Vegas, NM. I wrote about the day of his birth in Post 6, April 10,1941 . Mama told me in much later years that she was horrified to learn that she was pregnant and worried a great deal about how she and Daddy were going to provide for themselves and four children.

Then -- World War II


End of Part One




Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Sky Watch Friday - Post 52



The heavens declare the glory of God;

and the firmament sheweth his handywork.


The Holy Bible - Psalms 19:1 (KJV)


Photograph by my daughter, O.J. Moser





Sky Watch Friday was originally created by Dot, and is currently brought to you by Tom, Sandy, Imac and Klaus. Check the new home of Sky Watch Friday here and view hundreds of sky photos from around the world.

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Sunday, August 3, 2008

How Much Are Those Doggies in the Window? - Post 51


Camera Critters #1
While waiting in line at a local drive-in eatery yesterday afternoon, I noticed some movement in the driver's side window of the vehicle in front of me. I'm a sucker for little dogs, and these were just too cute. Since the line was moving very slowly (that is, not at all), I grabbed my camera, approached the vehicle and asked if I might photograph them. Not only did the male driver say "Sure!" but the woman in the passenger seat got out, came around to where I was snapping pictures and said "Listen to this!" She started crooning, and both dogs began to "sing" for me, which is what they are doing in this photo. The lady grinned big time -- and I did, too! Those folks are really fond of their dogs, and I can see why!
This is my first "Camera Critters" post. I've been lurking and looking for a while and decided to join the fun! Thanks for looking.

For more weekly Camera Critters, please visit here.