What’s left of Oregon

As I drove home from the pharmacy Thursday afternoon I noticed for the first time that I could look out the windshield and see Oregon. Or at least smoke from things that had burned in Oregon.

The smoke plume from the Oregon wildfires has reached all the way to the east coast, including our little town of Rome. This is a normal view from our front porch.

This is the view Thursday afternoon.

The ridge in the distance in the first image is barely visible in the smokey image.

It’s not as noticeable in the photo as it is in real life. The smoke is thick enough that there is a distinct grayish haze in the narrow valleys on the mountain.

The US government has a web site that shows the smoke plume. The location of air quality measurement sites makes the image a little hard to see, but this is a segment of the Southeast.

The blue dot in the lower left corner is our location on the mountain outside Rome. We are just outside the heaviest part of the plume. The network news said there might be a hint of the odor of smoke, but I couldn’t detect anything.

I mentioned that I was on my way home from the pharmacy. I had been to the pharmacy to pick up some prescriptions for Leah, who is finally home after her surgery. We reported as ordered to the hospital at 7 am Monday. She didn’t make it up to her room until about 5:30 that afternoon, mainly because of lack of rooms. The surgery itself lasted a couple of hours.

When the surgeon talked to us before the surgery, he said that an MRI taken the week before showed small fractures in her hip near the lumbar region. He said the fractures were the result of osteopenia, the early stages of bone density loss that can lead to osteoporosis. I suspect that the fractures were caused by her two falls when she landed hard on her rear end. I think they added to the pain she has felt for some time.

She spent the next three nights in her hospital bed, and I did something somewhat similar to sleeping in the recliner beside that bed. On the whole, she was probably more uncomfortable than me. She was in a lot of pain from the surgery, but I think at least some of the nerve pain in her legs has been lessened. She has been on pain relievers for the nerve pain so long that she has developed a tolerance for those pain medications. That makes it that much harder to get relief.

She seemed better Thursday, and said she actually felt better. But she was still hurting enough that she went to bed early Thursday night. I am hoping the pain continues to lessen and she starts feeling better. Life has been hard for her the last few months.

Cowboys and artillery

My father was drafted prior to the beginning of World War II, because everyone knew the United States was going to be in a war. He told us that he went to volunteer at the recruiting station in town, but the men who were already there were such a rough-looking bunch that he decided to wait. So he waited until he was drafted.

He ended up in the artillery, which I think he liked. Probably because of things that go boom. When he first started training in 1941, the Army still had horse-drawn artillery, so he learned to ride a horse. Here he is in uniform, probably at the Garden of the Gods in Colorado Springs. He was there at what was known as Camp Carson for a while.

His riding pants here are somewhat different from some other photos I have of him.

Here he is with a fellow soldier at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. They are wearing jodhpurs, with the baggy upper thigh.

In this case I’m sure of the location because the building behind them has a sign that says “Fort Sill Theater.” I cropped that part out.

The man on the left is wearing a dress cap. My father is wearing a garrison cap, which was also known by another less polite term. I like the old Army uniforms better than current uniforms. The boots were pretty cool, too.

Here he is in another shot. This one looks like it was also on the base, probably still at Fort Sill, which was known as the home of the field artillery.

Here he’s probably pretending to do some horsey kind of thing, like cleaning out a horse’s hoof.

They kept horse-drawn artillery long enough for my father to stop biting his fingernails, then switched to motorized artillery. My father used to talk about “high-speed tractors.” I think this is one. I’m pretty sure this photo was taken at the time of someone’s wedding on the base. I think the bride and groom might have been riding on the tractor.

He was transferred out of artillery and into infantry some time after this. He didn’t like the transfer, but it did earn him the Combat Infantryman’s Badge. Even though he was in the infantry, he still got to work with cannons, although at a distance. He was a forward observer. He told us that he was able to bring an artilleryman’s viewpoint to the infantry, which tended to use cannons as if they were mortars (he said, with some disdain).

Here is another shot of …

No, wait, that’s me at age three in 1953. I have a vague recollection of this. A man went around the neighborhood with a pony, upon which little boys and girls were placed, with cowboy hats and other cowboy accoutrements. The pony looks pretty bored. I’m pretty sure I have another photo of my brother Henry on the same horse.

As you can probably tell, I’m still going through old photos. I am collecting a batch to send to my nephews. I have one with both of them taking a bath. I haven’t decided which would be more embarrassed. I’m leaning towards Russell, who is married.

From the times before

I have been looking through old family albums again. There is a laundry basket full of albums that somehow ended up at my aunt’s. I wanted to share a few of them, not because they are particularly good, or because they have any meaning to anyone else, but because they are a window into the past.

The first is my kindergarten “graduation”.

I’m in a soldier costume second from the left of what appears to be a bride in the center of the picture. I have no recollection of a giant clown, but there he is.

I can vaguely remember this event. We put on a play at the end of the year. As I remember it, it seemed to have some elements of the Nutcracker, but probably other things as well. I seem to remember that it was at the American Legion building. I also seem to remember that the kindergarten itself was in the home of a woman who lived near downtown in a section called Between the Rivers.

The next is my first grade class photo.

I am at the left end of the back row, beside the boy with the striped shirt.

The photo was taken on the front steps of Fourth Ward School. My father lived two houses up the street and attended this same school. His mother worked in the lunchroom when I was there. The school is gone, replaced by doctors’ offices. My grandmother’s house is also gone, replaced at one time by offices, but now a vacant lot.

I can remember the face of almost every kid in the first grade photo, although I can remember only about eight names. I find the variation in how each kid looks kind of amazing. It’s funny how nature made us so distinctive.

I don’t remember anyone at all in the kindergarten photo.

The next photograph is my father’s mother and father. My father’s father died when my father was about five years old, I think, so this photograph had to be taken prior to around 1922.

Queenie Mae Carnes Paris and Grady Vaughan Paris

I was going to say that this photograph almost made me cry, but the truth is that it did make me cry. I’m not sure why. Maybe because the photo caught them in such a purely spontaneous pose. Their affection is obvious. The stiff poses in most of my family photos hide almost any hint of personality, but I can see real people in this photo. My grandmother had a life long before I was born, and a husband she loved. I regret for my father’s sake that he didn’t get the chance to really know his father, and I regret for my sake that I didn’t get to even meet my grandfather.