Marching Thru History Exposition Was Awesome!

This past weekend we went out to the Marching Thru History Exposition in Chino. What a great event! Military and historical groups from ancient times until recent history were represented by fantastic camps, amazing clothing, pageantry, pomp and circumstance, and weapons displays. We saw Roman Legions, a real-live knight in shining armor, Celts, German Landsknechts, English Civil War archers, American Revolution – both sides, War of 1812, Spanish-American War, American Civil War, Great War aka WW1, both Germans and Americans, New Zealanders, British India troops, World War 2 American GIs and military hospitals, Japanese WW2 officers, Philippine troops, Korean War and Vietnam War camps and soldiers. There were also numerous American Vets who were honored throughout the weekend.

We were camped in the American Frontier town and it was great to see familiar faces – Widow Peters, the Coffeys, the Deedees – as well as make new friends with the Mule Skinners, Seventh Calvary, and the Wayward Sisters. Lisa Taylor, the organizer for our area, did a great job at making everyone feel welcome and important. It was a lot more busy for us because traffic flow was more pronounced than at past events. We spent the days piecing a quilt, tatting, and knitting, and on Sunday hosted a tea party with the Captain and Sergeant of the Seventh Calvary. Now, that was an experience!

If you missed it this time, you can see it again on the weekend after Independence Day next year at Old Fort MacArthur Days. The picture above is of Mrs Bronner of the War Horse & Militaria Heritage Foundation. Click her picture to see more pictures from Marching Through History.

Next weekend we will be visiting Calico on Saturday for Calico Days! Check our the commercial here, you can see each of us for a split second if you don’t blink! 

Ladies & gentlemen, start your ovens!

Well, I spoke to Heath’s dad tonight on the phone. What a nice guy! Heath is in Texas at one of the best burn units available for military. A family friend happened to be talking to my dad recently and shared that he had been at the same burn unit and they really saved him. I feel so good just having this referral!

For those who are signed up through BakingGALS, you should get the information in an email I sent out tonight. Heath said he doesn’t really believe that we exist and are pulling so strongly for him. I was delighted to tell him there are over 25 people eagerly preparing all sorts of cookie goodness just for him. For those of you who want to bake but haven’t signed up on the site, or who wish to just send him a get well card, let me know in the comments and I’ll send you his address.

I’m feeling so exuberant that our project is finally coming to fruition; in fact, a bit giddy, but that’s also because today I spent the day setting up our Parlour for the Marching Through History Exposition taking place at Prado Regional Park in Chino. Check out their site or Past Periods Press for more information. You could see Roman Legions, Colonial Minute Men, Pancho Villa, Doughboys, GIs and more, all in one place.

Second, Melody said the funniest thing last night, I just have to share it. My parents came over for dinner, and after dinner, as adults tend to do, we were all chatting at the table about this and that. Melody was feeling left out I suppose, and she came over to me and said very loudly “Mommy, I want these people to go home!”

We could not stop laughing!!

Have a great weekend everyone!

Now more than ever UPDATED

Friends, I have just learned that Heath K, our deserving soldier, has been injured in Afghanistan. Heath’s convoy was hit and Heath has been rushed into surgery. Both his legs are seriously injured and he is at risk of losing one to amputation. Now more than ever we must find ways to support these men and women who are so willing to risk themselves and sacrifice so much. Thank you to each and every one of you for reading and participating in any way! We are truly blessed!

I will update you as soon as I learn more and hopefully we will be able to mobilize lots of goodies to reach Heath while he is in his recovery.

UPDATE 9/25 Heath is out of surgery. He lost his right leg above the knee and the left is seriously injured but it is there! Please keep Heath and his family in your thoughts and prayers. I’m hoping to get his address where he will be in recovery and we will mobilize our group to ship to him there. For those who read this and would like to send a get well card to Heath, please let me know in the comments and I’ll be sure to send you his address off line.

UPDATED 9/27 Heath has been moved to Germany and soon will be stateside at Walter Reed Hospital. I’m planning that we will bake and send our goodies there. There is a news clip about Heath with comments from his mother at this link to the article on Fox 8 in Ohio.

UPDATED 9/30 Heath is in the US of A!! His dad is on his way to see him in Texas where there is a great burn unit at the military hospital. I hope to speak to the hospital tomorrow and find out shipping information.

I’m hosting a team of bakers!

I am honored, delighted and NERVOUS (<–triple emphasis!) to host a team of bakers in Round 13 of Operation Baking GALS! Our team will be called Melody Maker’s Bakers and I hope to see one or two of you signed up!!! To sign up, first visit bakinggals.com and create an account. Once this has been done, visit the section of the site that says “Join A Team Here” and scroll down the list until you find mine. Click on the team name, and within that page, click on “Join This Team.” Once you have joined the team, you will receive an email from me with the shipping information, including the address and the dates to ship. I really need your help in making this a great turnout for our soldier! Teams will be open for sign-ups on Tuesday September 22nd.

Now, as to who this deserving fellow is, we will be baking for PVT 3rd Class Heath Kirk,stationed with the US Army in Afghanistan. Heath has been in the Army since October 2007, and this is his first tour in Afghanistan. Recently, he signed up for an additional 4 years, which means that he has 6 years left on his current enlistment, although Heath is planning on making the military his career. As the oldest of four, he has one brother and two sisters who look up to him and are very proud of him! Heath enjoys working with his hands, mostly on on cars. He will be home around Christmas time to see his family. He is single and just celebrated his 21st birthday in September, so I hope you will also wish him a happy birthday along with our gratitude for his sacrifices.  

Heath’s dad, Tim, sent me a note about Heath, and he had this to say to us bakers: “I would like to thank you from the bottom of my heart for doing this for Heath.” Tim must worry about and miss his son very much, so let’s make this an amazing experience for Heath. I like to think of each cookie I send as a “bite of love” coming from home. Let’s shower Heath with lots and lots of love. He is very deserving of our support!
During a recent video call, Heath’s dad snapped this picture
A fine looking American soldier!!
If you would like to bake but not sign up on the site, please let me know in the comments or email me off line. 

Sweet Toast and Other Treats

Round 12 of Baking GALS has just closed, and by the skin of my teeth, I got our items shipped! With the Civil War reenectment last weekend, my baking time was curtailed this month and I finished up our goodies just yesterday. I shipped two boxes toda

y to Major Joel Heffernan today. Major Heffernan is really a remarkable individual. He was previously based in Chicago working for the US Secret Service as a special agent. Since that job wasn’t nearly challenging enough, he took a leave and reactivated with the Marines. He’s currently stationed in Afghanistan with the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit. I don’t know exactly what that job entails, but something tells me it is not a desk job.

We made a lot of goodies, but since I didn’t have a full weekend to bake, the selections were easier for me. I made 2 dozen cornbread muffins, 4 dozen sugar cookies with various treatments – some had sprinkles, some had cinnamon and sugar, some had cocoa and sugar – and a big batch of sweet toast. At least, I call it sweet toast. I don’t know what it’s supposed to be called really, I just love it! I also sent a second box with just candy, mints and gum in it.

My friend at work used to make sweet toast as a treat for us and finally she relented and gave me the recipe. Here it is, this is a treat I’ve never had before, but I think everyone should try it. It’s very easy to make and the results are delicious. You do not want to use a French bread or standard short baguette. Some Vietnamese bakeries have a delicious, light, and long baguette, nearly 30″. Since the original recipe was based on this, I suggest trying to find that or something as close as possible. You want a very light & airy bread. Orange County residents, there is a bakery on Brookhurst/McFadden that sells these baguettes for $1 each!

Sweet Toast

1 30″ long baguette

1/2 cup unsalted sweet cream butter

5 t white sugar

Preheat oven to 375. Melt the butter then add the sugar, stir until well combined. Slice the baguette into 1/2″ slices. Lay the pieces on a cookie sheet and cover one side with the butter/sugar mixture using a basting brush. Toast in the oven for 8 minutes, turn over, then toast an additional 5 minutes. Cool on paper towels. Once cooled they can be stored in ziplock bags. Toast should be crispy, kind of similar to a crouton but not as crunchy.

Click the picture to see more

Two Thousand One, Nine Eleven

I can’t believe tomorrow is September 11th.

Today, I made a donation to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, in an amount that entitles me to a cobblestone. One small brick in the building of a memorial to one of the worst tragedies in American history. In the 8 years since this happened, a lot has been said and done to distract Americans from our outrage, our hurt, our grief and our fear. Today, let us be reminded of the actions of those on Flight 93, who said “Let’s roll.” Today, let us be reminded of not only those who died, but also what they lived for. This poem touches me every year and I hope it touches you too.

Two thousand one, nine eleven (2001-911)

by Paul Spreadbury

Two thousand  one, nine eleven,
three thousand plus arrive in heaven.
As they pass through the gate,
thousands more appear in wait
A bearded man with stovepipe hat
steps forward saying, “lets sit, lets chat”

They settle down in seats of clouds,
a man named Martin shouts out proud
“I have a dream!” and once he did
the newcomer said, “your dream still lives.”

Groups of soldiers in blue and gray
others in khaki, and green then  say
“we’re from Bull Run, Yorktown, the Maine”
the newcomer said, “you died not in vain.”

From a man on sticks one could hear
“the only thing we have to fear.”
The newcomer said, “we know the rest,
trust us sir, we’ve passed that test.”

“Courage doesn’t hide in caves
you can’t  bury freedom in a grave,”
The newcomers had heard this voice before
a distinct Yankee’s twang from Hyannisport shores.

A silence fell within the mist,
somehow the  newcomer knew that this
meant time had come for her to say
what was in the hearts of the five thousand plus that  day

“Back on earth, we wrote reports,
watched our children play in sports,
worked our gardens, sang our songs,
went to church and clipped coupons,
we smiled, we laughed, we cried, we fought
unlike you, great we’re not”

The tall man in the stovepipe hat
stood and  said, “don’t talk like that!
Look at your country, look and see
you died for freedom, just like me”

Then, before them all appeared a scene
of rubbled streets and twisted  beams
death, destruction, smoke and dust
and people working  just ’cause they must

Hauling ash, lifting stones,
knee deep in hell, but not alone
“Look! Blackman, whiteman, brownman, yellowman
side by side helping their fellow man!”

So said martin, as he watched the  scene
“even from nightmares, can be born a dream.”

Down below three firemen raised
the colors high into ashen haze.
The soldiers  above had seen it before
on Iwo Jima back in ’45.

The man on sticks studied everything closely,
then shared his perceptions on what he saw mostly
“I see pain, I see tears,
I see sorrow — but I don’t see fear.”

“You left behind husbands and wives
daughters and sons, and so many lives
are suffering now because of this wrong
but look very closely. You’re not really gone.

All of those people, even those who’ve never met you,
all of their lives, they’ll never forget you.
Don’t you see what has happened?
Don’t you see what you’ve done?
You’ve brought them together, together as one.

With that the man in the stovepipe hat said
“take my hand,” and from there he led
three thousand plus heroes, newcomers to heaven
on this day, two thousand one, nine eleven

* *  ***  * *

Former President George W. Bush gave an emotional and stirring speech in the week after this terrible attack, the most memorable quote being “We will not tire, we will not falter, and we will not fail.” Whether it be militarily or emotionally, we must never forget what happened on September 11, 2001.  We must never tire of it, we must never falter in finding meaning out of the destruction, and we must never fail in our compassion for the survivors.

 

You may also be interested in learning a little about the Patriot Guard Riders, whose motto is “Standing for those who stood for us.” These riders will attend military funerals in order to preserve a respectful means for families to mourn American heroes killed in the line of duty.

Why I hate Walmart reason #372

We had to go to Walmart tonight because they were the only store that had something that we as a family wanted very much. So, we, as a family, went to Walmart in Westminster. I have never been a big fan of Walmart. The quality of the clothing is not real high, the place is like a warehouse store with linoleum, and in some areas, it doesn’t attract the finer clientele, if you catch my drift.

Some Walmarts are fine, kept up nicely, not very disgusting at all. In my unscientific opinion, based on observation of about 4 Walmarts, these nicer stores are connected to malls, such as Buena Park Mall or Orange Mall. I have come to believe it is because there are numerous other shopping choices for customers, and therefore Walmart is forced to compete on a higher level. The disgusting ones have been stand-alone stores, or occupy the largest business in a strip mall. It’s a destination store that people intend to visit. They know they’ve got you.

I should have suggested we head to the one at Buena Park Mall. The Westminster Walmart has a filthy parking lot that I didn’t even want to walk through. There was trash and even an apple just strewn all down the walkway through the parking lot. The decorative fountains in the lot were not running, the concrete was broken up and in one place there was a chunk of concrete just sitting on the walkway. A big chunk, not a pebble, but a quasi-slab. Inside it just felt icky. Fortunately what we wanted was very close to the front of the store, we hit the self checkout and left. We had to walk that gauntlet back out to the car. Both times passing the stranded fruit, Melody said “there’s an apple!”

I guess I should try to focus on the sunny attitude of my child at times like this.

 

UPDATE: here’s #373, a shopper slapped a child – not his own – because she was crying. Read the story here.

Fur babies

I have long been a pet lover. As a girl, my family got a dog, a small, wiry, terrier mix that I named Lucy. She was a 10-pounder but her power over our family was enormous. One of the few times my dad ever sent my mom flowers at work was when Lucy passed away at 12 years old.

Some people don’t have pets for various reasons, and some people don’t like them. I respect that; everyone’s different. However, I love pets. There is something wonderful about the unconditional love and affection that pets can give you. As a young woman in college, I went with a roommate down to a pet store and got a kitten. He was gray and white, the cutest little puff ball I had ever seen. We named him Robin. Really, his name was Robin Hood because the Kevin Costner movie was popular at the time, but that’s so much more corny than Robin we just didn’t have the heart to call him that. (And can you imagine the vet visits? “Uh, for Robin Hood Jones?”) Even though my friend and I split the cost of getting this pet for us, my heart was forever taken by him and when she moved out he stayed with me. My little boy, Robin.

Robin has had a few buddies over the years – Caspian, an orange and white tabby I adopted from an old boyfriend; Wylene, my black cat from my friend Samantha; Lerxt, John’s enormous and unusually named cat; Browser, our neurotic and terrible watch dog; and Nano, the most laid back Chihuahua I ever met. Some other buddies were roommate’s pets: Fred, Barney, Simone and Figaro. Everyone seemed to find their place in the petting order.

We’ve been through a lot, he and I. We moved from apartments to houses, back to apartments, and back to houses. Twice he and I moved from one house to the house next door and he acclimated better than I did. I have bought him at least 100 collars over his life, and about 98 of them lost under the bushes in Orange. Although he was intended to be a house cat and was declawed, he loved being outside. At one house we lived in, there was ivy all across the front yard, and at times I would come up the walk and all I would see was his head sticking up out of the ivy. He could watch and not be noticed.

He was “cock of the walk” when we lived in Orange. He kicked ass and took down names, more times than I can remember. There were scratches across his nose almost as frequently as there were dead creatures left on my doorstep. Robin tried to continue this when we moved to Cypress and sustained a terrible leg injury from a dog attack. My mother in law and I nursed him back to health and the ability to walk again. But, the stress from the attack brought on a heart condition, and although he was fairly healthy, he never really was the same.

Between January and August of this year he had become very thin. On the day of Melody’s birthday party, a large patch of hair had come off one of his sides and it never really grew back. He was stiff and slow, didn’t hear well and didn’t see well. His motor and his smeller worked, and he could always find the food or my lap. I think because he couldn’t hear well, he tended to meow louder than any cat I’ve ever known. In May he celebrated his 18th birthday, which in cat years is something like 97 for a human.

Last week, Robin went out front, something he rarely did since we moved to the new house. He always stayed close though so I wasn’t too worried. But by Saturday night he hadn’t come back. By Sunday I was very worried and put out fliers in the neighborhood. Monday, I checked the pound website and registered for email alerts on new inpounds. On Wednesday I accepted that I may never see my boy again. It is just not like him to be gone this long when he knows he could be getting pets and loves and air conditioning at home.

Pushka Babushka, Mr Kitty, Fur Face, Little Boy, Robin Bee-Bobbin, Mr Man Cat, I don’t know where you are, but in my heart I am hoping you are with Caspian and Lerxt, chasing bugs in the backyard, sleeping under a bush in the shade of the day, purring while you eat, and watching the dogs cower in fear of you.

One of his “lazier” days

Inside the cube of our cabinet on moving day 2005

Baking Round 12 for an Amazing Soldier!

Wow, I feel awed to join up on Team Gratitude for Round 12 of Operation Baking Gals! Captain Joel Heffernan felt that his job with the United States Secret Service in Chicago was not challenging enough so he took a leave from that to redeploy with the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit in Afghanistan.

I’m speechless and really, that just sums up the reasons I do this. A person gave up his relatively safe stateside job (albeit with the Secret Service) to go tramp around the mountains of Afghanistan to help break the Taliban. That is some serious dedication to America and democracy.

If you have the time and inclination, please visit Operation Baking GALS to join a team for Round 12. Shipping dates are September 1-12.

Give a Little Support. Bake!

Growing up OC – High School Memories

I attended high school at Los Amigos in Orange County from 1983-1987. It was, at times, an enjoyable experience. I was quite tall, taller than all the girls in my school until a freshman came along who was taller and a lot less coordinated than me, so sadly for her she garnered a lot of the teasing from that point onward. I was also quite curvaceous but didn’t have a

lot of confidence, so I slouched a lot. My friends thought I was fat – I weighed 150 pounds at 5′ 11″. Um, I was skinny, but I believed them, since they all were 5′ 2″ and 105. I was naïve, not realizing that while some girls were being friendly to my face, they were not-so-subtly making fun of me behind my back. I desperately wanted to fit in with the “in crowd” but I also wanted to be friends with, well, my friends, who were the math geeks, Key Club members and A students. I was just like so many other girls across America.

A large number of the girls who had been my peers for several grades became cheerleaders or drill team members. That was SO not my bag. I was a little bit of a sport-o. Over the course of three years, I played JV volleyball, JV and Varsity basketball, Varsity badminton, and ran Varsity cross country. I did most of this so I could get out of P.E. because I hated getting all sweaty doing whatever it was we had to do and then going back to class icky. Often times I had better conversations with my coaches than some of my teammates. It was difficult being an intellectual among the jocks.

Here I am as a sophomore Varsity center. Just look at that crazy curly hair!!

Junior Varsity vs FVHS, they killed us, but just look at my perfect form!

I liked Depeche Mode, Oingo Boingo, Duran Duran, Tears for Fears, Billy Idol and Paul Young.  I tied an old piece of muslin in my hair Madonna-style and wore my slacks rolled up at the hems with white dance shoes and no socks. MTV was my radio, and after school we literally ran home to watch General Hospital. I recall a group of my sister’s friends coming to our house, because we were the closest to school, and screaming “Ice Princess!!!” at the television during the critical moment Luke and Laura were to defeat the Cassadine’s.

For two years one of my closest friends was Cindy Wilcox, who I recently found on Facebook, and who I am so delighted to be back in contact with! We had so much fun in high school, she made me forget a lot about the awkward parts. Once we went to some school dance that was a toga theme and she wore a bed sheet with yellow flowers on it. Cindy had a way of looking at life in a very positive manner and I took on this optimism too. It’s a lot nicer to believe the best in people than to expect the worst.

I was terrible at math, failing Algebra and Geometry, excelled at English and History (no surprise there!), and of course sports, and considered becoming a teacher because of the example set by my sophomore English teacher, Mrs. Morin. I’ll never forget her coming into class and telling us our next essay was based on an idea that had come to her in the shower that morning: 1984, Should We Hope or Mope?

I went to one reunion, but don’t plan on going to others. The one I went to consisted of the same cliques, the same guy was still completely stoned, the same bully was still pushing around the same gay guy, and the same girls were still oozing out of their tight dresses. I wish them all well and I hope they are happy with their lives. My memories of high school aren’t all wonderful, but they aren’t all terrible either. Time has worn down the sharp edges and once in a while I polish up my rose colored glasses for a walk down memory lane.