Yesterday we spent hours back and forth to WalMart where we bought a shower chair for Uncle. Trouble was when Jerry got it back to the assisted living, Logan House, and attempted assembly, it had 2 left legs instead of right and left, or as per the instructions #1 and #2. return to the Heights and Wally's world and exchange only this time Jerry opened the box there! Good thing, same problem. Well likely it was the entire shipment, so we departed for another WalMart across the hills at the Mall. Same brand, same issue! Sam's next door had none but advised us to try Lowe's across the mall. However their model was quite elaborate and expensive. What to do as it was nearing time to meet friends for dinner? We stopped at Walgreen's which is right down the street from the assisted living center and there was one, better looking than the Wal Mart model. Jerry has not opened it for assembling yet as we had friends to meet but with a different model although likely made in China too, maybe it will be better. As Uncle Carl observed when the first chair could not be assembled, "brand new and pain in the a*S!" His observation cognition is back at it. His therapist had him walking yesterday for several laps. Hope those weak legs get back to just the walker although we had to purchase a back up wheel chair, which Uncle Carl pronounced a cadillac. Trouble was it was not the size that the therapist ordered. Does nothing get done correctly here? I can blame the shower chair errant packaging on the Chinese, but the wheelchair was from Blackburns here! Fortunately the therapist called immediately and it was to be replaced with an 18 x 16 instead of the 16 x 16 that they delivered, with the wrong size scratched through. Uhhhh, didn't they think someone wqould notice????
Today is our last day here and I am frantic with loose ends, getting with Uncle one last time before we depart in AM, and so it goes. A cold wind blew in yesterday and I wished I'd grabbed a heavier jacket at the motor home. The Italian food at Villa Blanca was OK, not nearly as good as Capris' but they know how to pour a glass of wine--they use water goblet and fill it! Way better than the swallows most restaurants serve! And after the road round trips and frustration I enjoyed it and my eggplant Parmesan.
Meeting Dianne today for coffee at one. Next trip, everyone can meet at one place, one time, I hope. Homeward departure in the morning. Likely cold air today,, 60 some degrees.
I created this blog to record our RV trips and ;morphed into life in our retirement lane and telling my tales of life. Now my tales of life are on widowhood, my new and probably my last phase of l I have migrated to Facebook where I communicate daily, instantly with family/friends all over. I write here sometimes. COPYWRIGHT NOTICE: All photos, stories, writings on this blog are the property of myself, Patricia Morrison and may not be used, copied, without my permission most often freely given.
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Friday, October 29, 2010
Thursday, October 28, 2010
PA and Carl Chronicles
Uncle Carl working well with the therapists although when they visit in the afternoon and I ask him later in the day if they were there he says, "no that was yesterday." He is now back to his preference of not shaving, groiwng that white stubble, "I'm not going anywhere." I remind him that he does not want to go back to the "crazy house" which is what he calls the SNF. I am just hopeful he gets back to consistent use of his walker without tumbles and stumbles and falls.
I missed a great photo op Tuesday where Carl sat in wheelchair beside "his" chair, staring at the fireplace marble and back to the entry and all activity. Lenore, an old lady who has had her eye on him for over a year had sat in his chair! Seeing this, I immediately knew he was ticked, that's where he sits and supervises all activities and comments about all the "old women who sit out here and sleep." He may be the oldest one there, but he thinks they are old. Back to the scene where I asked him "Why are you sitting there like that, how about I move you over here?" His strong clear reply, "No thank you. I am comfortable right here!" A big improvement from his weak voice at the SNF. Lenore sits there grinning. Lisa, one of his favorite aides came along and noticed and said "Darn, there's Lenore. She does that to get his attention." They moved Lenore and got Carl into his catbird seat and all was well! I really should have snapped that photo though, priceless. Evidently Lenore did not go near the chair while Carl was in the hospital and SNF. And he will not even acknowledge her! My Uncle, still a lady killer at 92! :)
Yesterday we put out 14 bags more of trash from the house, so much accumulation of stuff, never throwing anything away even Styrofoam trays! Jerry continues to scavenge the man cave tools. I found a gorgeous brocade satin short jacket from Aunt Marge, that I am bringing home, It is tiny and more like a shrug, but I could not bear to toss it, the fabric is exquisite. I have no idea what to do with it, perhaps a pillow, something altered for Blondie, one of the traveling bears to wear? Who knows, it is too tiny for me, but I so loved the fabric that into the closet it goes. Another acquisition of two matching nightstand type lamps of heavy clear cut glass. Jerry will have to fix the plugs and bulb holders and we will have to acquire shades but I could not resist these. I'll donate the one I bought at Target to Goodwill and replace with these in one guest bedroom. Jerry has lots more "equipment miscellany" and antique and small tools he's taking home and once again I will not be able to bring back all the painting supplies I want. However we will bring two of the old 1920 at least chairs; these two have been recovered and next trip I want two that have not and still sport the black leather seats. I have a photo of my mom at about 2 years old sitting in one of these chairs, which Carl had stashed in his loft. We would only get pennies for them at a sale, so since I know they are old and likely belonged to my grandparents, home they go with us.
I found more old black and white photos including several of myself as a young girl sporting pipe curls, laughing and tormenting a dog. Carl was the photographer of the family and Jerry found an old Brownie camera still looking in perfect condition, which is also going home. We are going to have to clean out somethings from our home before we become the accumulators of everyone else's treasures! I found an old, tattered paper box of Marge's photoswith several from her family that Lowell, nephew will appreciate. Last trip I found some photo painted china plates of his great grandmother of whom he had never seen a photo. I am happy to find homes for these photos. Yesterday I found a couple others from 1920 of Marge's family and I hope Lowell can identify them. His brother is in his 80's had has Alzheimer's but still knows who the photos are. I surely enjoy all my photos and cannot wait to return home and scan and share on Sepia Saturday.
I have learned something about Aunt Marge this trip; she was really studying dressmaking and sewing a skill on which she was never nearly as proficient as my grandma or Aunt Jinx who were masters. But I have found correspondence courses and lots of books and patterns which Marge accumulated and studied. Still I laugh when I find clothing she altered with uneven hems and gaps of stitches. Refer to my blog story of Margie Sway! Jinx, I've told before on this blog, would take Marge's things and "fix them." I can imagine how determined Marge was to match the perfection of her sister in law. Maybe that's why Marge related more to my mother, who was not the least interested in sewing, but who could get along. I expect too that Carl would throw a barb her way now and then about wanting his mother or sister to sew something that needed mending! Who knew what Marge was up to, awaiting to surprise them with a top skill! Never happened.
Yesterday one of the firemen came by the house when we were working. He said 30 years ago Uncle Carl had installed him as a member and he often stopped and talked with "Tux." Matt had shared the news at their Tuesday evening meeting so now the word is out around and they will stop and visit him. This man works at the municipal water company and had tears in his eyes as he spoke about conversations with "Tux" and how he is one of a kind, the WWII generation dying off. I am so thankful for that contact.
Next trip we will order a dumpster. I really wanted to have the house cleared and sold off, but not right timing. We do use the washer and dryer while here too. And I have been doing Carl's laundry and pressing his shirts. As departure approaches, I feel wistful, wishing I lived closer so I could pop in and out to see him and do laundry. One complaint of Logan House is the disarray they have of laundry--so many things missing, a jacket a set of new flannel sheets, etc. I mark all Carl's things carefully but they just are absolutely careless and further wash everything together, light, white, dark colors, an anathema to me, the queen of laundry sorting into tiny loads if necessary. Well nothing I can do, other than as I have, it's in the hands of the One who handles it all His way in His time.
Jerry has plans to stop in Detroit at General RV to look at a Discovery. I really do not want to, but am humoring him. No way are we buying this trip and after meeting Elliott in Decatur at the Fleetwood RVcomplimentary lot, I feel we should keep what we have.I do not want a new one with problems ad nauseum. Maybe next year at the Fleetwood Rally.
Temperatures falling around the area. Lots of gorgeous colors still on the trees although the winds and rain have shed leaves, there is still plenty of color around. Another day of activities ahead.
I missed a great photo op Tuesday where Carl sat in wheelchair beside "his" chair, staring at the fireplace marble and back to the entry and all activity. Lenore, an old lady who has had her eye on him for over a year had sat in his chair! Seeing this, I immediately knew he was ticked, that's where he sits and supervises all activities and comments about all the "old women who sit out here and sleep." He may be the oldest one there, but he thinks they are old. Back to the scene where I asked him "Why are you sitting there like that, how about I move you over here?" His strong clear reply, "No thank you. I am comfortable right here!" A big improvement from his weak voice at the SNF. Lenore sits there grinning. Lisa, one of his favorite aides came along and noticed and said "Darn, there's Lenore. She does that to get his attention." They moved Lenore and got Carl into his catbird seat and all was well! I really should have snapped that photo though, priceless. Evidently Lenore did not go near the chair while Carl was in the hospital and SNF. And he will not even acknowledge her! My Uncle, still a lady killer at 92! :)
Yesterday we put out 14 bags more of trash from the house, so much accumulation of stuff, never throwing anything away even Styrofoam trays! Jerry continues to scavenge the man cave tools. I found a gorgeous brocade satin short jacket from Aunt Marge, that I am bringing home, It is tiny and more like a shrug, but I could not bear to toss it, the fabric is exquisite. I have no idea what to do with it, perhaps a pillow, something altered for Blondie, one of the traveling bears to wear? Who knows, it is too tiny for me, but I so loved the fabric that into the closet it goes. Another acquisition of two matching nightstand type lamps of heavy clear cut glass. Jerry will have to fix the plugs and bulb holders and we will have to acquire shades but I could not resist these. I'll donate the one I bought at Target to Goodwill and replace with these in one guest bedroom. Jerry has lots more "equipment miscellany" and antique and small tools he's taking home and once again I will not be able to bring back all the painting supplies I want. However we will bring two of the old 1920 at least chairs; these two have been recovered and next trip I want two that have not and still sport the black leather seats. I have a photo of my mom at about 2 years old sitting in one of these chairs, which Carl had stashed in his loft. We would only get pennies for them at a sale, so since I know they are old and likely belonged to my grandparents, home they go with us.
I found more old black and white photos including several of myself as a young girl sporting pipe curls, laughing and tormenting a dog. Carl was the photographer of the family and Jerry found an old Brownie camera still looking in perfect condition, which is also going home. We are going to have to clean out somethings from our home before we become the accumulators of everyone else's treasures! I found an old, tattered paper box of Marge's photoswith several from her family that Lowell, nephew will appreciate. Last trip I found some photo painted china plates of his great grandmother of whom he had never seen a photo. I am happy to find homes for these photos. Yesterday I found a couple others from 1920 of Marge's family and I hope Lowell can identify them. His brother is in his 80's had has Alzheimer's but still knows who the photos are. I surely enjoy all my photos and cannot wait to return home and scan and share on Sepia Saturday.
I have learned something about Aunt Marge this trip; she was really studying dressmaking and sewing a skill on which she was never nearly as proficient as my grandma or Aunt Jinx who were masters. But I have found correspondence courses and lots of books and patterns which Marge accumulated and studied. Still I laugh when I find clothing she altered with uneven hems and gaps of stitches. Refer to my blog story of Margie Sway! Jinx, I've told before on this blog, would take Marge's things and "fix them." I can imagine how determined Marge was to match the perfection of her sister in law. Maybe that's why Marge related more to my mother, who was not the least interested in sewing, but who could get along. I expect too that Carl would throw a barb her way now and then about wanting his mother or sister to sew something that needed mending! Who knew what Marge was up to, awaiting to surprise them with a top skill! Never happened.
Yesterday one of the firemen came by the house when we were working. He said 30 years ago Uncle Carl had installed him as a member and he often stopped and talked with "Tux." Matt had shared the news at their Tuesday evening meeting so now the word is out around and they will stop and visit him. This man works at the municipal water company and had tears in his eyes as he spoke about conversations with "Tux" and how he is one of a kind, the WWII generation dying off. I am so thankful for that contact.
Next trip we will order a dumpster. I really wanted to have the house cleared and sold off, but not right timing. We do use the washer and dryer while here too. And I have been doing Carl's laundry and pressing his shirts. As departure approaches, I feel wistful, wishing I lived closer so I could pop in and out to see him and do laundry. One complaint of Logan House is the disarray they have of laundry--so many things missing, a jacket a set of new flannel sheets, etc. I mark all Carl's things carefully but they just are absolutely careless and further wash everything together, light, white, dark colors, an anathema to me, the queen of laundry sorting into tiny loads if necessary. Well nothing I can do, other than as I have, it's in the hands of the One who handles it all His way in His time.
Jerry has plans to stop in Detroit at General RV to look at a Discovery. I really do not want to, but am humoring him. No way are we buying this trip and after meeting Elliott in Decatur at the Fleetwood RVcomplimentary lot, I feel we should keep what we have.I do not want a new one with problems ad nauseum. Maybe next year at the Fleetwood Rally.
Temperatures falling around the area. Lots of gorgeous colors still on the trees although the winds and rain have shed leaves, there is still plenty of color around. Another day of activities ahead.
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
More Carl Chronicles and PA
Nothing like being home and seeing these longtime friends from the ago, notice I do not want to say "old" friends although we go back 60 years! WOW! Sunday we caught the last half of the Steeler's over at Dayna's house where she brought out the queso and chips! Well anything melted cheese is my favorite. She also graciously hemmed a pair of my uncle's sweat pants because she had her machine out to mend and hem things for herself. That was a welcome help. Dayna and I lived across the yard, through Ropers, from each other and I can still smell Alice, her mom, baking Syrian bread. Alice died long ago, young at only 52-53 years of ag, we are all older now and that is a strange feeling and sad too for Dayna to know she's older than her Mom lived to be, and Bud, Dayna's tiny father lived on as a widower finally living in his final days in Warren with Dayna at her home. They are both gone now and after teaching music in Warren, PA at the elementary school all grades, Dayna retired back home. She has a nice set up in her condo.
Sunday eve we had Chinese and seafood buffet at the China Lobster with Dayna and Carlie where I feasted on mussels, are they really from the Allegheny River? Such a long way from our day where no one would have stuck a toe in that river which like all was so polluted from sludge and industrial waste from the mills and plants. Now to see the boats lolling along, how different! Although the area is devastated with loss of jobs and has declined from our heyday of the early 60's, as anything there is something good, the rivers and waterways are clean, so that fishing and mussel harvesting thrive!
Yesterday we met at Eazer's in downtown NK which I must add to my Facebook and Jerry wants to return for breakfast. Syrian bread, which is my favorite and which Jerry has come to enjoy, and no it is not pita bread, holds a great home made burger of real ground beef, not the frozen mix of hamburger and fat served at many fast foods and other restaurants. Rich Hemprich joined Sammy & Kathy Zabec with us. I kind of puff up hearing as many tell me I still look the same, but after finding my graduation photo at Uncle Carl's and pronouncing it Dorky, I have to wonder, how can they think I look like that? Still it must be a compliment nearly 50 years gone by now. Kathy and I go way back to first grade from the 'hood. True to her ditziness, Kathy announced she does not like mussels, that they look like vaginas! You can imagine the remarks that followed until I cried a STOP, PLZ I am eating!! I sure wish that Kathy could get over whatever her issue is with Dayna. All three of us could visit then, but no, and I am sure this is Kathy not Dayna, they attend the same church, but Kathy has her snit over what she perceives as being "done dirt", and which we observe must be some loose screw in the head. Dayna said, "that's her loss." Takes me back to being 10 years old again when I lived in the middle and they would spat. Some don't grow past that and who knows what causes what! Meantime I can go along, because I have a used to be brother whom I do not see nor hear from even back here. That of course goes back to Mom's death and his plotting and dishonestry. Trust broken is not restored especially without any remorse. Ahh another subject fully.
Meantime, Uncle Carl has improved 300% back at Logan house. Using the walker now however yesterday he stumbled in the main bathroom off the hallway. When we arrived and I could not find him I had them check the bathroom and there he sat on the floor, alert and saying he stumbled and could not find anything to grab! Got him up and put him back in the great room in his chair, where he proceeded to be himself, confiding to me, "I thought I'd never get out of that shithouse!" I had to laugh and still am about that comment true to his 92 year old terminology. Can you imagine him sitting on the floor wondering, "how long will I be here?" He was not confused and told Jerry exactly what happened. He has perked up to his observations and is not sitting around depressed as at the nursing home. Visiting therapists will get him exercising more and build up his strength. All are fully confident he will get back to what is normal for him and already he is on the way! Looking way better, got his haircut, and as I said, back to observing folks for whom he has many comments, particularly not appreciating the women who sit in the great room and sleep, sliumped in their chairs. Some do not look comfortable to me and I wonder why they do not show them to their rooms and beds to rest. Saturday he was quite interested in the dulcimer music and the woman who came to entertain them. I focus on the good, on his progress and am thankful for his progress where last week I was sure I'd be planning a funeral imminently.
I have also made contact with his old volunteer Fire Department #1 from downtown New Kensington. Curiously, unless you believe as I do that with God there are no curiosities, Matt said they were just asking at their meeting Tuesday, "what happened with Tux?" Tux is a long time nick name of Carl's. So Matt said he would spread the word and visit Carl and when funeral time comes they will serve as pallbearers to one of their longest living members. That's the beauty of being in your home town all your life, those long time connections those memories. His time with NKFD#1 stretches back to before WWII and his enlistment in the Army. Matt siad he is either the oldest surviving member or next to. I know Carl will be tickled to see some of the guys, as I shared with him I'd talked to them, he said, "well I don't have a car, I can't go see the guys." There's the dementia, flashing around until I explained they would come visit him! Way better contact and response than the local VFW of which he is a lifetime member! Enough for now as we continue to clear out the home, next trip we will order a dumpster!
Sunday eve we had Chinese and seafood buffet at the China Lobster with Dayna and Carlie where I feasted on mussels, are they really from the Allegheny River? Such a long way from our day where no one would have stuck a toe in that river which like all was so polluted from sludge and industrial waste from the mills and plants. Now to see the boats lolling along, how different! Although the area is devastated with loss of jobs and has declined from our heyday of the early 60's, as anything there is something good, the rivers and waterways are clean, so that fishing and mussel harvesting thrive!
Yesterday we met at Eazer's in downtown NK which I must add to my Facebook and Jerry wants to return for breakfast. Syrian bread, which is my favorite and which Jerry has come to enjoy, and no it is not pita bread, holds a great home made burger of real ground beef, not the frozen mix of hamburger and fat served at many fast foods and other restaurants. Rich Hemprich joined Sammy & Kathy Zabec with us. I kind of puff up hearing as many tell me I still look the same, but after finding my graduation photo at Uncle Carl's and pronouncing it Dorky, I have to wonder, how can they think I look like that? Still it must be a compliment nearly 50 years gone by now. Kathy and I go way back to first grade from the 'hood. True to her ditziness, Kathy announced she does not like mussels, that they look like vaginas! You can imagine the remarks that followed until I cried a STOP, PLZ I am eating!! I sure wish that Kathy could get over whatever her issue is with Dayna. All three of us could visit then, but no, and I am sure this is Kathy not Dayna, they attend the same church, but Kathy has her snit over what she perceives as being "done dirt", and which we observe must be some loose screw in the head. Dayna said, "that's her loss." Takes me back to being 10 years old again when I lived in the middle and they would spat. Some don't grow past that and who knows what causes what! Meantime I can go along, because I have a used to be brother whom I do not see nor hear from even back here. That of course goes back to Mom's death and his plotting and dishonestry. Trust broken is not restored especially without any remorse. Ahh another subject fully.
Meantime, Uncle Carl has improved 300% back at Logan house. Using the walker now however yesterday he stumbled in the main bathroom off the hallway. When we arrived and I could not find him I had them check the bathroom and there he sat on the floor, alert and saying he stumbled and could not find anything to grab! Got him up and put him back in the great room in his chair, where he proceeded to be himself, confiding to me, "I thought I'd never get out of that shithouse!" I had to laugh and still am about that comment true to his 92 year old terminology. Can you imagine him sitting on the floor wondering, "how long will I be here?" He was not confused and told Jerry exactly what happened. He has perked up to his observations and is not sitting around depressed as at the nursing home. Visiting therapists will get him exercising more and build up his strength. All are fully confident he will get back to what is normal for him and already he is on the way! Looking way better, got his haircut, and as I said, back to observing folks for whom he has many comments, particularly not appreciating the women who sit in the great room and sleep, sliumped in their chairs. Some do not look comfortable to me and I wonder why they do not show them to their rooms and beds to rest. Saturday he was quite interested in the dulcimer music and the woman who came to entertain them. I focus on the good, on his progress and am thankful for his progress where last week I was sure I'd be planning a funeral imminently.
I have also made contact with his old volunteer Fire Department #1 from downtown New Kensington. Curiously, unless you believe as I do that with God there are no curiosities, Matt said they were just asking at their meeting Tuesday, "what happened with Tux?" Tux is a long time nick name of Carl's. So Matt said he would spread the word and visit Carl and when funeral time comes they will serve as pallbearers to one of their longest living members. That's the beauty of being in your home town all your life, those long time connections those memories. His time with NKFD#1 stretches back to before WWII and his enlistment in the Army. Matt siad he is either the oldest surviving member or next to. I know Carl will be tickled to see some of the guys, as I shared with him I'd talked to them, he said, "well I don't have a car, I can't go see the guys." There's the dementia, flashing around until I explained they would come visit him! Way better contact and response than the local VFW of which he is a lifetime member! Enough for now as we continue to clear out the home, next trip we will order a dumpster!
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Carl Chronicles continue
Well the focus of this trip is Uncle and that has consumed my time. I do want to have friend visits which have been avoided so far with the time spent at house and the SNF. So yesterday, Friday, Uncle Carl returned to his assisted living home at Logan House and was very happy! But then he told me he would have preferred to go home to eat, so he still has that go home attitude. We take triumphs and progress along the way. He ate very little but downed his cottage cheese and ice cream. I guess he will eat when he wants to. The other day at the SNF I asked if he was on a hunger strike and he said yes. His dementia seems to have up and down days but his humor is better.
Yesterday's event was wanting to cut his finger nails which he suddenly noticed as ragged and uneven and they were. Jerry bought some new nail clippers for him at Walgreens and that was his focus. He did cut his own nails and evened them out and was quite pleased with himself. at my insistence.
Carol, who is the beautician/barber at the Logan house fussed with him too trying to get him to eat and he kidded with her, ate two bites of sweet potato but that was all. He has turned a strange corner from the "chow hound" to looking at his food and saying, "I can't eat all that." Who knows when or if his appetite will return. Who knows what we are encountering. I suspect there is still a lingering sedative effect from the Airicept which has been discontinued only since Monday Oct. 18 at my insistence. Carol has a friend who makes she claims the best home made pierogies, which we will get and enjoy Monday. Meantime today, ST, Johns, the Slavic church hosts their food festival so we will pick up cabbage rolls and pierogies for him today and see if he is tempted to eat.
I am disappointed that there is no discount/refund from Logan house for the weeks he was not there in the hospital, SNF. After all he ate no meals and received no services from them. I will write this complaint to their corporate office. Give me a break. It cost them nothing to hold his room, they do not have a waiting list for residents. They have assured me they will be able to care for Carl and I will trust that. Today the home health agency will evaluate him for a wheel chair; he is currently using one from the facility.
Meantime, God is at work assuring me it is in His Hands. Last night in response to my voice mail message Matt, a volunteer fireman at NKFD#1 where Carl was a volunteer and member for over 60 years, called me. They have been wondering what happened to "Tux" his nickname from early adulthood. So thank God for the connection. He said they would visit him and regretted not knowing he's been there. Even more, he assured me not a worry on funeral and pallbearers, they will guard the casket and be pallbearers. Carl used to hang out at the firehall and that was a big part of his life. Matt told me he could down shots of whiskey with the best of them. It'sa timely convergence of God's plan that I made this connection this trip and I am thankful. Especially because I know they will visit him and he will be thrilled.
Indian summer weather here for several days now, welcome after yesterday's cold air. Last night's full moon was a "Hunter's Moon" something I'd never heard but Jerry had, he also said it could be called a "Sniper's Moon." The day before a black cat/kitten showed up outside our motor home and talked to me. I told it to get lost that it was bad timing for black cats with Halloween around the corner, but here it sat, demanding entrance. No way! It was a pretty cat with green eyes, but not here, where we will continue to be animalless. Cat hopped up onto step into motor home and wailed, "let me in....let's go for a broom ride" in response to my advice to it to watch out for brooms and witches. It said it knew I have a broom to ride and it wanted to go along. Now you know I have completely turned the corner but these things come to me and I am sharing them here this trip as I catch up on happenings and thoughts.
I am disappointed I will not get to see Carol, my Ball cousin this trip as they are too busy packing up to return to FL for the winter. Oh well.
I found the most gorgeous lamb winter coat that had belonged to Aunt Marge, Carl's wife. Oh I wish I knew someone petite enough to wear it--lovely black curled lamb with a black mink collar. It won't sell for much when we do have a sale at the house, so if there were someone who'd enjoy it I would give it to them. It is from Hart's a former upscale department store in the heyday of New Kensington. I was surprised to find her clothing stored upstairs in the loft. More stuff to dispose of. I found a gorgeous black box cocktail ourse which I'm taking home; don't know what I'll do with it but it is very cute and full of light coral and mint green taffeta yo yo's that Marge cut out. We will see what I do with that. More to come....
Yesterday's event was wanting to cut his finger nails which he suddenly noticed as ragged and uneven and they were. Jerry bought some new nail clippers for him at Walgreens and that was his focus. He did cut his own nails and evened them out and was quite pleased with himself. at my insistence.
Carol, who is the beautician/barber at the Logan house fussed with him too trying to get him to eat and he kidded with her, ate two bites of sweet potato but that was all. He has turned a strange corner from the "chow hound" to looking at his food and saying, "I can't eat all that." Who knows when or if his appetite will return. Who knows what we are encountering. I suspect there is still a lingering sedative effect from the Airicept which has been discontinued only since Monday Oct. 18 at my insistence. Carol has a friend who makes she claims the best home made pierogies, which we will get and enjoy Monday. Meantime today, ST, Johns, the Slavic church hosts their food festival so we will pick up cabbage rolls and pierogies for him today and see if he is tempted to eat.
I am disappointed that there is no discount/refund from Logan house for the weeks he was not there in the hospital, SNF. After all he ate no meals and received no services from them. I will write this complaint to their corporate office. Give me a break. It cost them nothing to hold his room, they do not have a waiting list for residents. They have assured me they will be able to care for Carl and I will trust that. Today the home health agency will evaluate him for a wheel chair; he is currently using one from the facility.
Meantime, God is at work assuring me it is in His Hands. Last night in response to my voice mail message Matt, a volunteer fireman at NKFD#1 where Carl was a volunteer and member for over 60 years, called me. They have been wondering what happened to "Tux" his nickname from early adulthood. So thank God for the connection. He said they would visit him and regretted not knowing he's been there. Even more, he assured me not a worry on funeral and pallbearers, they will guard the casket and be pallbearers. Carl used to hang out at the firehall and that was a big part of his life. Matt told me he could down shots of whiskey with the best of them. It'sa timely convergence of God's plan that I made this connection this trip and I am thankful. Especially because I know they will visit him and he will be thrilled.
Indian summer weather here for several days now, welcome after yesterday's cold air. Last night's full moon was a "Hunter's Moon" something I'd never heard but Jerry had, he also said it could be called a "Sniper's Moon." The day before a black cat/kitten showed up outside our motor home and talked to me. I told it to get lost that it was bad timing for black cats with Halloween around the corner, but here it sat, demanding entrance. No way! It was a pretty cat with green eyes, but not here, where we will continue to be animalless. Cat hopped up onto step into motor home and wailed, "let me in....let's go for a broom ride" in response to my advice to it to watch out for brooms and witches. It said it knew I have a broom to ride and it wanted to go along. Now you know I have completely turned the corner but these things come to me and I am sharing them here this trip as I catch up on happenings and thoughts.
I am disappointed I will not get to see Carol, my Ball cousin this trip as they are too busy packing up to return to FL for the winter. Oh well.
I found the most gorgeous lamb winter coat that had belonged to Aunt Marge, Carl's wife. Oh I wish I knew someone petite enough to wear it--lovely black curled lamb with a black mink collar. It won't sell for much when we do have a sale at the house, so if there were someone who'd enjoy it I would give it to them. It is from Hart's a former upscale department store in the heyday of New Kensington. I was surprised to find her clothing stored upstairs in the loft. More stuff to dispose of. I found a gorgeous black box cocktail ourse which I'm taking home; don't know what I'll do with it but it is very cute and full of light coral and mint green taffeta yo yo's that Marge cut out. We will see what I do with that. More to come....
Thursday, October 21, 2010
PA, Uncle, Anniversary
So here we are at where I call "home" because although I've been gone from here way longer than as the years I lived here growing up, if I did, it's home to me. Greetings from the local weather have been cooler and wetter, but the sun is shining again today. Pennsylvania and it's multicolored autumn woods are glorious right now, which you will see soon as I get a minute to post photos. Reds, golds, oranges, rusts, greens, yellows, there is not a color not on display in this autumnal landscape throughout the rolling hills.
Meantime my time has been spent back and forth and calling doctors and visiting uncle in the skilled facility where I agreed to for a brief temporary stay for "therapy" at encouragement from the hospital staff. I should not have agreed to this because while my aunt got excellent care at Highland SNF last year, they have not done nearly as well by Uncle Carl. They warehoused him with others on their 2nd floor and crammed him into a room with another man where there is no room to move. They drugged him with Aricept and when I arrived Sunday he was in bed midday and just not responsive. Monday I "attacked" the charge nurse and asked if he was being drugged because I sat with him and he would not eat. Well they set up his meal in the hallway at a table in front of the nurses station, amidst commotion and elevator opening and closing. All that stimulation was not working for him and had I not been there, they would have just let him go not eating. I made them take him to his room where he'd eat peacefully. This is not my Uncle Carl who has always been a good eater! I demanded he be taken off Aricept immediately to their chorus of "it slows the progression of dementia" and because I know about this I could challenge them and say, "slows progression, he is 92 years old, what do you mean slow it until he's 102!" It was needed for my Mom who had full blown Alzheimer's and who was agitated, it leveled out her attitude and emotions. But Uncle Carl is not like that and we made decisions long ago to not drug him!
I talked with the doctor who agreed and who was thinking they had taken him off Aricept after hospital discharge. Why didn't the doctor determine he was still on it when he did rounds at the SNF? By Wednesday Carl was improving after Tuesday's very poor day. Wednesday he was joking and giving me a bad time and up to therapy and enjoying eating his favorite Fig Newtons which I took to him. He gulped those down with milk and applesauce. And loved it!
He will be discharged Friday morning back to what's home to him, the assisted living at Logan House with therapy arranged and where the staff know and love him and he they. Highland will regret their actions as I have seen way too much to let it go. There will be letters as well as discussions with them. Obviously they are either not doing appropriate charting or their staff do not read the charts. Four times they were advised that he has not used dentures after losing them and has eaten just fine without them for a long time. Yet they asked me again. They don't know how I am checking them out, they don't know about my government background in long term care, or they have forgotten but they will learn. What has happened with Carl may not be "that bad" but to another resident it could be fatal.
Yesterday while I was there with him sitting at the window in the great room and e was enjoying his cookies and milk, a resident fell from his wheel chair! I saw it, and yelled for the charge nurse whose seat was right across the hall. Then had I not grabbed another old lady resident and moved her wheelchair, she would have run over the man on the floor who lay there yelling and hurting. OMG! They could not get him up with aides alone, so called the therapists. Uncle Carl watched this with interest and asked, ":Aren't they going to call the ambulance?" They never did. It finally took a huge device and 4 therapists to get Buddy back into his wheel chair where they left him sit! How do they know he did not fracture something? I do not believe this is standard of care at all. That man lay on that floor over 45 minutes. I stayed the entire time because I intend to document this and have their protocols investigated. I do not like that 2nd floor and God alone knows what happens on the third floor. The staff do not pay attention, busy talking to themselves. This man fell because they were not attentive; there was/is another resident in a wheel chair who was sitting in the doorway to the room. She does that all the time and he wanted her to move so he could enter. Someone should move her but they do not! Accidental was absolutely unnecessary! Buddy yelled and cussed and threatened to "sue their asses." I hope he does, he may be demented but he is there for care and they are not doing their job! I hate this and maybe that is why I am here to uncover and expose this fiasco. The nursing home administrator is the same lovely woman who was here last year, but she is not all over the facility.
Uncle Carl will be out of there Friday. The therapists told me I was doing the right thing and that perhaps he was depressed there. Well no kidding I would be! There is more to this, but all I have time to blog today.
On the bright side, talking with long time (I won't say old) friends from grade school days1 And last night we celebrated our 43rd anniversary with outstanding dinner at Longhorn SteakHouse! I must remember to add cinnamon (heavy) with light sugar and butter to my baked sweet potatoes at home, so yummy. The Caesar salad was the best, anchovies and all. And the Cosmo was right up there! My fillet melted in my mouth and came with hunks of fresh crab. Jerry stuck to traditional steak and baked potato and green salad which was so flavorful, that he said he could not have cooked it better himself.! Long horn is a chain but we have not found another on our travels. We surely enjoy this one at the Pittsburgh Mills Mall
More later keep those good thoughts for this episode as our world turns. One of the nurses at Highland said, "yes it will be better for Carl to leave. He is not happy here and needs to be in a more cheerful place."
No kidding. He has dementia but he is not ready to be warehoused. I feel so sorry for those others. Someone said that no one visits them and he was lucky to have me. I wish I lived closer now but I don't want to live in PA. Meantime Jerry is like a hog in mud clearing thourgh Carl's mancave treasures.
Meantime my time has been spent back and forth and calling doctors and visiting uncle in the skilled facility where I agreed to for a brief temporary stay for "therapy" at encouragement from the hospital staff. I should not have agreed to this because while my aunt got excellent care at Highland SNF last year, they have not done nearly as well by Uncle Carl. They warehoused him with others on their 2nd floor and crammed him into a room with another man where there is no room to move. They drugged him with Aricept and when I arrived Sunday he was in bed midday and just not responsive. Monday I "attacked" the charge nurse and asked if he was being drugged because I sat with him and he would not eat. Well they set up his meal in the hallway at a table in front of the nurses station, amidst commotion and elevator opening and closing. All that stimulation was not working for him and had I not been there, they would have just let him go not eating. I made them take him to his room where he'd eat peacefully. This is not my Uncle Carl who has always been a good eater! I demanded he be taken off Aricept immediately to their chorus of "it slows the progression of dementia" and because I know about this I could challenge them and say, "slows progression, he is 92 years old, what do you mean slow it until he's 102!" It was needed for my Mom who had full blown Alzheimer's and who was agitated, it leveled out her attitude and emotions. But Uncle Carl is not like that and we made decisions long ago to not drug him!
I talked with the doctor who agreed and who was thinking they had taken him off Aricept after hospital discharge. Why didn't the doctor determine he was still on it when he did rounds at the SNF? By Wednesday Carl was improving after Tuesday's very poor day. Wednesday he was joking and giving me a bad time and up to therapy and enjoying eating his favorite Fig Newtons which I took to him. He gulped those down with milk and applesauce. And loved it!
He will be discharged Friday morning back to what's home to him, the assisted living at Logan House with therapy arranged and where the staff know and love him and he they. Highland will regret their actions as I have seen way too much to let it go. There will be letters as well as discussions with them. Obviously they are either not doing appropriate charting or their staff do not read the charts. Four times they were advised that he has not used dentures after losing them and has eaten just fine without them for a long time. Yet they asked me again. They don't know how I am checking them out, they don't know about my government background in long term care, or they have forgotten but they will learn. What has happened with Carl may not be "that bad" but to another resident it could be fatal.
Yesterday while I was there with him sitting at the window in the great room and e was enjoying his cookies and milk, a resident fell from his wheel chair! I saw it, and yelled for the charge nurse whose seat was right across the hall. Then had I not grabbed another old lady resident and moved her wheelchair, she would have run over the man on the floor who lay there yelling and hurting. OMG! They could not get him up with aides alone, so called the therapists. Uncle Carl watched this with interest and asked, ":Aren't they going to call the ambulance?" They never did. It finally took a huge device and 4 therapists to get Buddy back into his wheel chair where they left him sit! How do they know he did not fracture something? I do not believe this is standard of care at all. That man lay on that floor over 45 minutes. I stayed the entire time because I intend to document this and have their protocols investigated. I do not like that 2nd floor and God alone knows what happens on the third floor. The staff do not pay attention, busy talking to themselves. This man fell because they were not attentive; there was/is another resident in a wheel chair who was sitting in the doorway to the room. She does that all the time and he wanted her to move so he could enter. Someone should move her but they do not! Accidental was absolutely unnecessary! Buddy yelled and cussed and threatened to "sue their asses." I hope he does, he may be demented but he is there for care and they are not doing their job! I hate this and maybe that is why I am here to uncover and expose this fiasco. The nursing home administrator is the same lovely woman who was here last year, but she is not all over the facility.
Uncle Carl will be out of there Friday. The therapists told me I was doing the right thing and that perhaps he was depressed there. Well no kidding I would be! There is more to this, but all I have time to blog today.
On the bright side, talking with long time (I won't say old) friends from grade school days1 And last night we celebrated our 43rd anniversary with outstanding dinner at Longhorn SteakHouse! I must remember to add cinnamon (heavy) with light sugar and butter to my baked sweet potatoes at home, so yummy. The Caesar salad was the best, anchovies and all. And the Cosmo was right up there! My fillet melted in my mouth and came with hunks of fresh crab. Jerry stuck to traditional steak and baked potato and green salad which was so flavorful, that he said he could not have cooked it better himself.! Long horn is a chain but we have not found another on our travels. We surely enjoy this one at the Pittsburgh Mills Mall
More later keep those good thoughts for this episode as our world turns. One of the nurses at Highland said, "yes it will be better for Carl to leave. He is not happy here and needs to be in a more cheerful place."
No kidding. He has dementia but he is not ready to be warehoused. I feel so sorry for those others. Someone said that no one visits them and he was lucky to have me. I wish I lived closer now but I don't want to live in PA. Meantime Jerry is like a hog in mud clearing thourgh Carl's mancave treasures.
Friday, October 15, 2010
Off WE Go
I don't know why the Air Force theme song comes to mind as I post of our departure tomorrow for PA where we have Uncle's home to winterize and things to do for him. Sounds like he is doing good with his therapy in the skilled facility and will be released in about a week or less to the personal care assisted facility where he has made his home for over a year now.
It's always something. And as usual I am in a tizzie here trying to select clothing and pack up the motor home. Though I am done except for tomorrow morning when it's shower and take out my toiletries and roll on down the road. Pondering what weather we might encounter over the next few weeks keeps me adding and taking more clothing than necessary. We seldom go anywhere where we "dress up" if anyone does that anymore at all, I wonder. Maybe on cruises. But I am compelled to take more than my jeans & capris, some nicer slacks and tops will suffice. I know I have loaded excessive clothes again, but it can be warm, cool and or wet. I have started to journal what I wear on these trips and always have twice what I need. I plan to use the journal to keep myself in better check in the future. It helps some as I did put back a few outfits already this trip. Which makes me wonder if I will ever get this packing lite down!
Jerry just grabs some shirts,jeans, unders and he is ready in a couple hours tops. Meantime Pat is still pondering. Which is why I worked out this morning, when I could have used the time to sort and pack. I knew the stress would creep in and I can handle that better with physical activity..
And if I need something the Pgh. Mills Mall is close with all the big stores and selections. A good excuse to shop, something I do less and less of in retirement. I, who had a personal shopper at Nordstroms and Macy's in my career days, have now descended to JCPenney, an occasional stop at Macy's, sometimes even Wal Mart but primarily just not shopping. My casual retirement wardrobe has eliminated my desire to shop. One good thing about PA is no sales tax on clothing, just like MN. Of course we shop mostly across the Mississippi in WI where a 5 3/4% sales tax is on clothing, so unless I go to Rochester or Minneapolis, I am accustomed to paying sales tax. Shoes, that's the dilemma that wrapped this evening; how many to take and which ones. I like to wear my sandals as long as I can, so we shall see.
I hope we get some all around down time enjoying my New Ken cronies and are not just in to and fro mode. We will be spending our 43 anniversary in PA so that evening may be a nice time to gather and celebrate. Our RV spot awaits us at Mt. Top RV in Tarentum. Ed and Fran, the owners have become like cousins as we have stayed there every PA trip. Nice people. And the only place in the area.
Off the keyboard now and to peruse my "to read" bookshelf for another book to take along. Right now I am in the midst of a historical novel, "Andrew Jackson" by Byrd, but I'll finish that in a few evenings and will need another book for the trip. Next post may be in PA or if I get very ambitious on the road. Mostly any interesting quirks will show up on my Facebook page.
It's always something. And as usual I am in a tizzie here trying to select clothing and pack up the motor home. Though I am done except for tomorrow morning when it's shower and take out my toiletries and roll on down the road. Pondering what weather we might encounter over the next few weeks keeps me adding and taking more clothing than necessary. We seldom go anywhere where we "dress up" if anyone does that anymore at all, I wonder. Maybe on cruises. But I am compelled to take more than my jeans & capris, some nicer slacks and tops will suffice. I know I have loaded excessive clothes again, but it can be warm, cool and or wet. I have started to journal what I wear on these trips and always have twice what I need. I plan to use the journal to keep myself in better check in the future. It helps some as I did put back a few outfits already this trip. Which makes me wonder if I will ever get this packing lite down!
Jerry just grabs some shirts,jeans, unders and he is ready in a couple hours tops. Meantime Pat is still pondering. Which is why I worked out this morning, when I could have used the time to sort and pack. I knew the stress would creep in and I can handle that better with physical activity..
And if I need something the Pgh. Mills Mall is close with all the big stores and selections. A good excuse to shop, something I do less and less of in retirement. I, who had a personal shopper at Nordstroms and Macy's in my career days, have now descended to JCPenney, an occasional stop at Macy's, sometimes even Wal Mart but primarily just not shopping. My casual retirement wardrobe has eliminated my desire to shop. One good thing about PA is no sales tax on clothing, just like MN. Of course we shop mostly across the Mississippi in WI where a 5 3/4% sales tax is on clothing, so unless I go to Rochester or Minneapolis, I am accustomed to paying sales tax. Shoes, that's the dilemma that wrapped this evening; how many to take and which ones. I like to wear my sandals as long as I can, so we shall see.
I hope we get some all around down time enjoying my New Ken cronies and are not just in to and fro mode. We will be spending our 43 anniversary in PA so that evening may be a nice time to gather and celebrate. Our RV spot awaits us at Mt. Top RV in Tarentum. Ed and Fran, the owners have become like cousins as we have stayed there every PA trip. Nice people. And the only place in the area.
Off the keyboard now and to peruse my "to read" bookshelf for another book to take along. Right now I am in the midst of a historical novel, "Andrew Jackson" by Byrd, but I'll finish that in a few evenings and will need another book for the trip. Next post may be in PA or if I get very ambitious on the road. Mostly any interesting quirks will show up on my Facebook page.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Home Again Shortly and then off again (Click here for Story tellers)
This has to be a tale of words, as I did not take photos of this episode. We just returned from our quick trip of five days west to Utah where Jerry thought he had found the upgrade diesel motor home that he has had his eye on over the Internet, on the lot of General RV in Draper. I had finally resigned myself to his "needing" a diesel for longer trips which God alone knows when we will be taking the way life seems to change our plans. Nevertheless when we got there and saw it, I had an instant dislike to the interior layout and to the colors. I guess I was expecting to be wowed as I was in November 2007 when we got our current and then new Southwind, upgrading from our old one which we'd bought used and which had many miles logged between CA and MN. Jerry had negotiated for the new Southwind over the Internet too, with an RV dealer in Arizona, but this time it just did not work. As he said, "well you can't win all the time."
We knew that we did not want the two sofas this Providence had but figured that could be easily changed out, or one sofa could be replaced with two Euro style recliners. That would turn out to be a more cumbersome and costly project than we anticipated. The coach was really more for a traveling family than two empty nesters. As I sat on one couch, I looked at the to me wasted big floor space and lamented the lack of kitchen storage although it came with a dishwasher. Now at home the dishwasher is a must have for me, but on the road in the RV not so much. The dishwasher has been the first appliance added when we remodeled kitchens in CA, preceding a stove or oven. But in the motor home, it replaced areas I now enjoy in our Southwind for storage. Besides I cook differently in the RV.
The gold tone carpet was not at all to my liking and I began to figure that would mean a visit to the factory in Decatur, IN to redo as the carpet trim is under the dashboard and up the stairs as well as along the sofas to the back bedroom. But the bedroom had the most heinous of all to me--a bedspread of a burnished drab gold taffeta like fabric with hundreds of tiny tassels hanging all along the bottom. Oh NO! That would have to go immediately! The RV salesman gasped when I remarked that it looked like it belonged in a whorehouse! He tried to tone that down with, "well maybe a casino." No, to me it was typical brothel furnishing! I've watched Miss Kitty on Gunsmoke, and old westerns, I recall the decorative bordellos!
I did not like the small step down from the bedroom to the hallway either. I figured on my multiple nightly bathroom calls, I'd forget about the step which we do no have in our current motor home, and end up falling on my kiester at best and breaking my nose at worst! I wasn't saying too much because I could not tell if I was just being too picky, finicky, ornery, or was tired from the quick two days we'd spent on the road driving the 1360 miles. While Jerry has to have been a long haul truck driver in another life, he loves the road and driving, I have never been good on the road for long miles. At least in the motor home I can get up and down but there is something about sitting confined as the miles roll by that will get to me. I read, I use my Blackberry and I work puzzles and write, still I am fidgety. So I sat on the edge of the sofa and said a quick prayer adding to those I'd had going through out this process, "well God, I don't know what to think but I don't think I like it. Now what?"
Jerry had determined a diesel is necessary for more power, towing our vehicle and climbing some of the hills and mountains and he has decided a larger motor home will have better liveability. His first reason was quite comical in that he wants a bigger bathroom shower, saying he bumps his shoulders on the shower walls! Now he is not a big guy and that made me laugh. Although when I do see the bigger Euro style showers in these bigger motor homes, I admire those too.
After he looked around and in and out he took a long look at the gold carpet and shuddered as he said to me, " I don't know about this, what do you think?" I told him I flat was not impressed with decor and layout, I prefer the kitchen dinette across from the stove/sink in the kitchen area and for sure I did not want two sofas that made into beds. We calculated it would take another $20,000 to get interior and decor changes and realized that besides the $$big bucks we were going to fork over for this one and trade ours in as well (which by the way they already had a buyer on hold for) it was just not something we wanted to do. He liked the model and the engine and does not want a 2010 as there are emission additives/standards that are not to his liking. He knows mechanics after a lifelong career. But he admitted that he did not like the interior either and said, "the carpet has to go..." So it was a no go on the 2009 Providence.
The RV dealer showed us another model , a diesel, a 2010 and with the layout we wanted. But that is not the model Jerry wants. He knows mechanical things very well and will not be sidetracked from what he wants in engines and horsepower. All that is most boring to me! Nor will he deviate from Fleetwood , as he is impressed with their service and quality. So we left, feeling a bit disappointed but relieved.
It was back home and back to square one for Jerry. We plan a couple months trip to Alaska next year, GLW%CDR. (*) We spent five days on the road, drove 2,791 miles, used 361.8 gallons of gas at $971.18, spent $41.50 for food, $49 for overnight RV fees, and $4.08 for some oil he added as it needed an oil change which he did not want to do if we were trading it in. I do love having our food available for a quick bite to eat and even in the evenings after a day on the road. As I said, I think he wanted to go for a ride! Or, maybe it was the travelin' bears who were complaining that they had been confined to quarters for a couple months. That's it, we agreed, the Bears wanted a ride!
Now we have a few days to clear up and repack to get back to PA where my 92 year old uncle Carl is failing somewhat. He no longer is walking after falling in his room in the assisted living center. Although he was checked over at the hospital and found nothing broken or damaged, he is using a wheel chair. His doctor had him admitted for tests and found no physical reason for him not to walk. However the nurse & hospital social worker told me he may not walk again. His doctor wants him to get intense therapy at the Skilled facility and they have classified him as risk of falling. I am blessed to know the doctor, nursing facility as well as the folks at the assisted living center where he has been. We've spent so much time in PA last year that I have a handle on all of that. But this is the next step. We'd been planning a PA trip to winterize his home which I could not get cleared and sold yet this year. It's always something, as RoseAnneAnnaDanna said! At least I have friends to see in PA.
If you wondered (*) GLW&CDR= Good Lord Willing and Creek Don't Rise, which waters in many rivers out west and Midwest are quite high now from rains! And that's my true life story, life as we are living it for this week. Click here to go to the Story teller site and read others. Or click above on my title to this post which will direct you there.
We knew that we did not want the two sofas this Providence had but figured that could be easily changed out, or one sofa could be replaced with two Euro style recliners. That would turn out to be a more cumbersome and costly project than we anticipated. The coach was really more for a traveling family than two empty nesters. As I sat on one couch, I looked at the to me wasted big floor space and lamented the lack of kitchen storage although it came with a dishwasher. Now at home the dishwasher is a must have for me, but on the road in the RV not so much. The dishwasher has been the first appliance added when we remodeled kitchens in CA, preceding a stove or oven. But in the motor home, it replaced areas I now enjoy in our Southwind for storage. Besides I cook differently in the RV.
The gold tone carpet was not at all to my liking and I began to figure that would mean a visit to the factory in Decatur, IN to redo as the carpet trim is under the dashboard and up the stairs as well as along the sofas to the back bedroom. But the bedroom had the most heinous of all to me--a bedspread of a burnished drab gold taffeta like fabric with hundreds of tiny tassels hanging all along the bottom. Oh NO! That would have to go immediately! The RV salesman gasped when I remarked that it looked like it belonged in a whorehouse! He tried to tone that down with, "well maybe a casino." No, to me it was typical brothel furnishing! I've watched Miss Kitty on Gunsmoke, and old westerns, I recall the decorative bordellos!
I did not like the small step down from the bedroom to the hallway either. I figured on my multiple nightly bathroom calls, I'd forget about the step which we do no have in our current motor home, and end up falling on my kiester at best and breaking my nose at worst! I wasn't saying too much because I could not tell if I was just being too picky, finicky, ornery, or was tired from the quick two days we'd spent on the road driving the 1360 miles. While Jerry has to have been a long haul truck driver in another life, he loves the road and driving, I have never been good on the road for long miles. At least in the motor home I can get up and down but there is something about sitting confined as the miles roll by that will get to me. I read, I use my Blackberry and I work puzzles and write, still I am fidgety. So I sat on the edge of the sofa and said a quick prayer adding to those I'd had going through out this process, "well God, I don't know what to think but I don't think I like it. Now what?"
Jerry had determined a diesel is necessary for more power, towing our vehicle and climbing some of the hills and mountains and he has decided a larger motor home will have better liveability. His first reason was quite comical in that he wants a bigger bathroom shower, saying he bumps his shoulders on the shower walls! Now he is not a big guy and that made me laugh. Although when I do see the bigger Euro style showers in these bigger motor homes, I admire those too.
After he looked around and in and out he took a long look at the gold carpet and shuddered as he said to me, " I don't know about this, what do you think?" I told him I flat was not impressed with decor and layout, I prefer the kitchen dinette across from the stove/sink in the kitchen area and for sure I did not want two sofas that made into beds. We calculated it would take another $20,000 to get interior and decor changes and realized that besides the $$big bucks we were going to fork over for this one and trade ours in as well (which by the way they already had a buyer on hold for) it was just not something we wanted to do. He liked the model and the engine and does not want a 2010 as there are emission additives/standards that are not to his liking. He knows mechanics after a lifelong career. But he admitted that he did not like the interior either and said, "the carpet has to go..." So it was a no go on the 2009 Providence.
The RV dealer showed us another model , a diesel, a 2010 and with the layout we wanted. But that is not the model Jerry wants. He knows mechanical things very well and will not be sidetracked from what he wants in engines and horsepower. All that is most boring to me! Nor will he deviate from Fleetwood , as he is impressed with their service and quality. So we left, feeling a bit disappointed but relieved.
It was back home and back to square one for Jerry. We plan a couple months trip to Alaska next year, GLW%CDR. (*) We spent five days on the road, drove 2,791 miles, used 361.8 gallons of gas at $971.18, spent $41.50 for food, $49 for overnight RV fees, and $4.08 for some oil he added as it needed an oil change which he did not want to do if we were trading it in. I do love having our food available for a quick bite to eat and even in the evenings after a day on the road. As I said, I think he wanted to go for a ride! Or, maybe it was the travelin' bears who were complaining that they had been confined to quarters for a couple months. That's it, we agreed, the Bears wanted a ride!
Now we have a few days to clear up and repack to get back to PA where my 92 year old uncle Carl is failing somewhat. He no longer is walking after falling in his room in the assisted living center. Although he was checked over at the hospital and found nothing broken or damaged, he is using a wheel chair. His doctor had him admitted for tests and found no physical reason for him not to walk. However the nurse & hospital social worker told me he may not walk again. His doctor wants him to get intense therapy at the Skilled facility and they have classified him as risk of falling. I am blessed to know the doctor, nursing facility as well as the folks at the assisted living center where he has been. We've spent so much time in PA last year that I have a handle on all of that. But this is the next step. We'd been planning a PA trip to winterize his home which I could not get cleared and sold yet this year. It's always something, as RoseAnneAnnaDanna said! At least I have friends to see in PA.
If you wondered (*) GLW&CDR= Good Lord Willing and Creek Don't Rise, which waters in many rivers out west and Midwest are quite high now from rains! And that's my true life story, life as we are living it for this week. Click here to go to the Story teller site and read others. Or click above on my title to this post which will direct you there.
Books catch up
Time to log the books piling up here that I've read, so I can donate them to the annual Curves book sale to support our local library. There are a couple more, but for tonight here are four.
"The Collectors" by David Baldacci published in 2006, was my latest Baldacci read, completed on our RV trip west. How Baldacci twists and melds divergent plots so that the interwoven interesting characters keep me on the edge of the pages, always amazes me. In this dual different tales, the first centered on deaths in the Library of Congress' antique book section involving librarians and collectors of famous old antique books and the second a very upscale con artist, Amanda Conroy and her troupe of merry men who avenge her con-father's death on one of Atlantic cities top dogs by bilking him out of more than $40 million. It's a fascinating read how these two settings with unique characters meet and become responsible for unraveling a plot of selling top US secrets to unfriendlies. Oliver Stone, alias of a man who has been with special forces and intrigue services internationally for America but who now works as a caretaker in a cemetery although still maintaining his skills in security and resolution and who with Milton Farb, Reuben Rhodes and Caleb Shaw forms the Camel club, an informal watchdog organization to keep the US government accountable to the people. When Caleb, who's a librarian at the Library of Congress discovers his mentor dead and is named by the will to assess and oversee sale of the dead man's antique priceless book collection, the Camel Club becomes involved. It's a must read for those who like mystery, intrigue and characters, all Baldacci traits. This novel though has one of those endings that assure purchase of the next novel, as the wronged Atlantic city mobster is left coming after Amanda who has now partnered with the Camels. Gotta see what happens in that novel which is likely already published by this prolific author. Baldacci books never disappoint me.
"Chill Factor" by Sandra Brown is another typical Brown with good twists. Women are missing in the way back mountain town of Cleary, North Carolina. Lily Martin has divorced Dutch Burton, now sheriff of the sleepy town and returned to clear all her belongings from their cabin. On her way down the mountain pass, in a violent snow ice storm, her car skids and strikes a man, Ben Tierney as he comes out from the woods. They end up returning to her cabin together to wait until the blizzard subsides. She begins to suspect that Ben may be involved int he murders of the missing women. Meantime the roads are closed and Dutch, her ex-husband tries desperately to reach her as they fear that she is about to become the next victim. Another good one by Sandra Brown.
"The Coffin Quilt" by Ann Rinaldi is an unlikely little book I picked up in Paducah, KY at the quilt museum. It fascinated me because of the title and that it was about the Hatfields and McCoys, of Appalachian feudin' fame. Told mostly through the memories of Fanny McCoy whose sister Roseanna runs off with young Johnse Hatfield, the book introduces the family members, their trials over the years of hatred between these two clans from 1878 through 1889 and the terrible destruction of families. It's a historical novel and one I'd not have picked up if not for the setting. The Coffin quilt is made by women as a genealogy with names of the family members moved into coffins as they die. It's an ok little quick read, nothing to rave about.
"The Prometheus Deception" by Robert Ludlum had been on my to read shelf a long time, the paperback published in 2000 and I am glad I finally read it. I have never been disappointed in Ludlum when it comes to spy, thrillers. This one is no exception. After a long successful career as a spy, Nick Bryson is living an anonymous ordinary life as a college professor in western Pennsylvania until he is lured back into the spy world of intrigue. The twist is, was the Directorate, where he had been employed, an agency superior to the CIA, or was it a Russian front, and is it now an international conspiracy agent? This kept me reading until late hours. Where does the deception end? He is led to a mighty undercover operation, Prometheus, that will reveal the truth to his past and possible terror for the future. A great intrigue!
"The Collectors" by David Baldacci published in 2006, was my latest Baldacci read, completed on our RV trip west. How Baldacci twists and melds divergent plots so that the interwoven interesting characters keep me on the edge of the pages, always amazes me. In this dual different tales, the first centered on deaths in the Library of Congress' antique book section involving librarians and collectors of famous old antique books and the second a very upscale con artist, Amanda Conroy and her troupe of merry men who avenge her con-father's death on one of Atlantic cities top dogs by bilking him out of more than $40 million. It's a fascinating read how these two settings with unique characters meet and become responsible for unraveling a plot of selling top US secrets to unfriendlies. Oliver Stone, alias of a man who has been with special forces and intrigue services internationally for America but who now works as a caretaker in a cemetery although still maintaining his skills in security and resolution and who with Milton Farb, Reuben Rhodes and Caleb Shaw forms the Camel club, an informal watchdog organization to keep the US government accountable to the people. When Caleb, who's a librarian at the Library of Congress discovers his mentor dead and is named by the will to assess and oversee sale of the dead man's antique priceless book collection, the Camel Club becomes involved. It's a must read for those who like mystery, intrigue and characters, all Baldacci traits. This novel though has one of those endings that assure purchase of the next novel, as the wronged Atlantic city mobster is left coming after Amanda who has now partnered with the Camels. Gotta see what happens in that novel which is likely already published by this prolific author. Baldacci books never disappoint me.
"Chill Factor" by Sandra Brown is another typical Brown with good twists. Women are missing in the way back mountain town of Cleary, North Carolina. Lily Martin has divorced Dutch Burton, now sheriff of the sleepy town and returned to clear all her belongings from their cabin. On her way down the mountain pass, in a violent snow ice storm, her car skids and strikes a man, Ben Tierney as he comes out from the woods. They end up returning to her cabin together to wait until the blizzard subsides. She begins to suspect that Ben may be involved int he murders of the missing women. Meantime the roads are closed and Dutch, her ex-husband tries desperately to reach her as they fear that she is about to become the next victim. Another good one by Sandra Brown.
"The Coffin Quilt" by Ann Rinaldi is an unlikely little book I picked up in Paducah, KY at the quilt museum. It fascinated me because of the title and that it was about the Hatfields and McCoys, of Appalachian feudin' fame. Told mostly through the memories of Fanny McCoy whose sister Roseanna runs off with young Johnse Hatfield, the book introduces the family members, their trials over the years of hatred between these two clans from 1878 through 1889 and the terrible destruction of families. It's a historical novel and one I'd not have picked up if not for the setting. The Coffin quilt is made by women as a genealogy with names of the family members moved into coffins as they die. It's an ok little quick read, nothing to rave about.
"The Prometheus Deception" by Robert Ludlum had been on my to read shelf a long time, the paperback published in 2000 and I am glad I finally read it. I have never been disappointed in Ludlum when it comes to spy, thrillers. This one is no exception. After a long successful career as a spy, Nick Bryson is living an anonymous ordinary life as a college professor in western Pennsylvania until he is lured back into the spy world of intrigue. The twist is, was the Directorate, where he had been employed, an agency superior to the CIA, or was it a Russian front, and is it now an international conspiracy agent? This kept me reading until late hours. Where does the deception end? He is led to a mighty undercover operation, Prometheus, that will reveal the truth to his past and possible terror for the future. A great intrigue!
Labels:
Baldacci,
Book Reviews,
Coffin Quilt,
LUdlum,
Sandra Brown
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