Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Gleaning Facebook: Burwell Wetlands In the Flood

From CRBI:

[Click picture for video]


Join CRBI this Friday, Jan. 1, at 1 p.m. for an exploration of the Burwell Creek wetlands and floodplain, some 60-acres of city-owned property that is slated for development into a regional shopping center. Recent high water has filled the proposed building site with 1 to 12 feet for water, and the best way to explore it now is via canoe or kayak. When you've paddled this land, you'll ask yourself: "who in their right mind would build a shopping center on this property?" This trip is free and open to the public. To reserve a canoe or kayak, e-mail Joe Cook at jcook@coosa.org Meet at the Burwell Creek parking area for Ridge Ferry Park at the intersection of Turner McCall Blvd. and Riverside Parkway (behind Starbuck's).
-------------------
Virtually all of the Burwell Creek Natural Area is flooded. Today would have been a great day to film it from a kayak, and yet I, exercising a bit too much caution, foolishly discouraged that. Now that I’ve gotten out and seen it for myself, I repent.

-----------------------

Jim Ware's Post:
"Today I got the full scope of Burwell Creek Wetlands importance... as pretty as it may be down in there, regardless of the obvious educational or recreational uses...it is a tool and its main use is and should be to hold flood waters. " - Jim Ware














 

Saturday, December 26, 2015

leaning Facebook: DeSoto Falls in the flood & Lights Out

  DeSoto Falls near Mentone, AL after Flooding Rains


----------------------
As we were driving home from mMother's house off Huffacre every light in sight went iff. We didn't see anything but car lights and emergency lights till we got to Summerville Park. A pretty big outage.

David Matheny
Sounds Wide Spread...hope a Transmission Area didn't get Flooded.


Terrell Shaw
Just called Mother -- her power is back on so maybe it is not so bad.

Ruthy Countryman
Mt. Berry Sq. Mall was w/out power, too, but we're OK up here near Armuchee H.S.


Kathy Jones
It was out in Stonebridge but came back on

Dana Jordan Alexander
Was out off of warren by airport in Armuchee but came back on.


Amber Clark Ware
We live on Burnett Ferry...it was spooky how dark it went!! Thank goodness the power was only out about 20-30 minutes.


Jann Heaton Skeen
It was out around kmart also. Weird....


Austin Matthews
Was out in armuchee for a few minutes also. Sounds like Rome went dark for a little while!


Mary Nisbet Asbury
It was off in Garden Lakes for a few minutes

Charlie Hehn
I was in Garden Lakes at the time. Black as a boot.

Bitsy Burton
We were eating at Los Portales when the power went out, they said we would have to pay cash because the could not run a credit card. We were saved when the power came back on. Have you ever eaten dinner by cell phone light?


Stacy Cates
They also went off in my whole neighborhood behind GA State Patrol.


Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Gleaning Facebook: Christmas Adam

Happy Christmas Adam, everyone!

Christmas Adam always begins the Christmas shopping season for me (and most guys, I imagine). 

Comments

Claudia Kennedy
So, you savin' Christmas Eve, for what? Nothing makes an overpriced item more attractive than desperation. Remember the boxes of chocolate cover cherries at the checkout stand of the drugstore? And Evening In Paris perfume? Handkerchiefs with embroidery on the edges..My, I am telling my age...


John Paul Schulz
I love going to the mall at 4:30 on xmas eve to do my shopping. I bought a nice 350.00 leather jacket there five years ago for 75.00. Best jacket I ever owned. Another two years and it will have cost me 7.50 per year.


Sam Burnham
<---this guy is done. Wasn't until yesterday but I am today! Good luck!

Claudia Kennedy
You guys are not going to believe this. I got all Ben's gifts at Belk's and in thirty minutes--while he waited in the car. Now that's shopping Cave Woman style. Every item on sale. Still overpriced, but that's life.


David Matheny
Wha'? You mean Christmas is coming???


Jinsie Ward Preddy
My son Adam is so excited to hear this! Sad to miss you guys we will have to have a get together in the new year!!

Gleaning Facebook: Matthews Cousins

We had a great time visiting with two of Sheila's first cousins on the Matthews side. Lillian was under the weather with a cold but we had a good time anyway. This is at Dona Ward's house. Dona has many animals including this foul-mouthed parrot. The beast learned his swear words from a previous owner Dona claims.



L-R: 
Lillian Shaw
John Carlin
Brannon Shaw
, Dona Ward, Carol Dearborn, Wolf, 
Sheila Matthews Shaw
.

Dona and Wilma Matthews
Dona Matthews Ward (mother of Dona Ward) and Wilma Matthews McAfee (mother of Carol McAfee Dearborn)

Dona Matthews


Dona Matthews

Joseph Clarence Matthews and Carribell Norris Matthews.
These are Sheila's grandparents (and Brannon & Lillian's great-grandparents) Carol, the first grandchild remembers them well. Sheila doesn't remember them at all and I think was born after their deaths. Dona showed us a musket that belonged to JCM and Wolf has taken it to restore it.
Jinsie commented: I see myself , my Dad and Lillian in Clarence. Sheila and Brannon and Dona in Carriebel!


L-R: 
Sheila Matthews Shaw
. Wolf, 
Brannon Shaw
,
John Carlin
,
 
Lillian Shaw
Carol Dearborn,  Dona Ward, 

We gathered at the Village Corner (German restaurant) in Stone Mountain. Very appropriate since Wolf and John are both of German descent.


Comments

Jinsie Ward Preddy
And Wally front and center ! Love you guys!

Sheila Matthews Shaw
We missed you Jensie! Wish you and the fam could have been there!

Nora Matthews
What???? When was this...you know that there are phones out there


Brannon Shaw
It was at Christmas. We drove down to Stone Mountain for lunch with Dona and Carol and Wolf.

Nora Matthews
Last year (2015)?


Brannon Shaw
Yes. This past Xmas.


Nora Matthews
Aww we missed out

Well I told Lillian Shaw about the family reunion in April in Alabama. We are going.
Did they ask about us. I’m pretty sure they enjoyed not having a child around lol jk


Brannon Shaw
Ha. I definitely enjoyed not looking into the camera in this photo.


Lillian Shaw
Ha! I was sick on this day. I could barely open my eyes at all. It was a great time! We missed you and your crew, Nora!

Nora Matthews
Thanks cuz!!

Monday, December 21, 2015

Gleaning Facebook: Santa's My Buddy


If you need an "in" with that jolly old elf, I'm the guy to see.
I've known Kris Kringle well since 1962!
I've played poker with him.
I've camped out with St. Nick after a couple of our wonderful hootenannies --- ol' Father Christmas loves those hoots!.
I've chased his cows for him when he was out-of-town.
I've crawled under his house to help him with plumbing.
I have worked on Santa's roof and he has worked on mine.
I have cut Christmas trees with him and played chess with the old coot and hoed tomatoes and sung folk songs with him.
I've made movies with Santa, Baby!
During the off-season he always visits my house on the Fourth of July to see the fireworks and chow down on the world's greatest barbecue.
We have gotten bloody picking blackberries together.
I have celebrated births and marriages (and, sadly, also mourned) with the guy.
I've even worked as an elf in his shop for a while doing computer stuff.
I was there when he married the young and lovely Mrs. Claus.
His five children (Did you know Santa has five kids?) and his grandchildren are like nieces and nephews to me.
So, for a price, I'll do my best to influence him for my Facebook friends.
Whadya need?

Comments


Victoria Stanz Abernathy Hey! Mikey!

Ernest McDaniel Great photo!! You should frame it and hang it on your wall at home.

Laura A. Washington I love you back, too!!!!
Gola Burton Thank you Terrell Shaw for your kind words about Santa and the ones you did not share because we would not want to besmirch the image of The Jolly Ole Elf
Laurie Craw
So this is why you grew that beard! You gonna shave after Christmas?

Judy Manning Hope I'm not too late Terrell. Would you please tell Santa that all I want for Christmas is for everyone to be loved, no one hungry, cold or lonely and for it to spread like rings from drops of rain on the water. I guess what I'm asking for is Peace and Understanding world wide.

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Gleaning Facebook: Christmas at Arrowhead

 



I remember this fellow from the DNR truckbed about 2001 or so.
He was hit by a car. He didn't have the Santa hat back then.


Nice neckwear.

This guy was already wearing a Santa cap.

Gleaning Facebook: CRBI Christmas Party

We had a great time at a holiday party for the CRBI board and our families hosted by Chad Johnfroe and Christopher Lewis at their home.

Merry Christmas from the CRBI Board and Staff and their families!

 

Gleaning Facebook: Lighting Up Our Old House For Christmas

2015 Christmas Lights






It's been several years since we put up our "Joy" banner. I made that banner about 25 years ago for our front porch at Cedar Ave.












This is the big tree in the living room.

This Christmas we have added a seven foot tree in the den.








 

Monday, December 14, 2015

Gleaning Facebook: A New Photo For The Limb?

 From Carla Patterson on Facebook:

"Made this pic just for you at the lake behind GHC "


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This looks like a Sycamore seedpod. It certainly looks like a lonely one. The one I use as a sort of logo for "Alone On A Limb" is a Sweetgum seedpod. Maybe I'll work upon another "flag" for the Limb.

Gleaning Facebook: On Living in the Age of Terrorists


C.S. Lewis's message can apply to non-atomic terror as well. I refuse to be terrorized. Oh, I'll be sensible. I'll take off my shoes and belt at the airport and put up with other common sense precautions. But I won't compromise my (small-r) republican principles or renounce Jesus' direction that I love my neighbors. I will not huddle in fortress America building huge walls, rejecting all refugees, or herding other Americans into internment camps.



 

Friday, December 11, 2015

Gleaning Facebook: Ruth Shaw Remembers December 7, 1941 and ...

Cpl. Charles Shaw and Ruth Baird Shaw c. 1944

My mother, Ruth Baird Shaw, was a young wife and mother with two daughters, one only a couple of weeks old, when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. That event turned her world upside down just like it did everyone living at the time. Here is what she wrote about that time recently (taken from my sister Joan's Facebook post...

At age 92, I Remember Pearl Harbor.
I remember the early Sunday morning on December 7, 1941 when President Franklin D. Roosevelt came on the radio to announce that the Japanese had attacked a base in Hawaii called Pearl harbor!
There are really no words to describe the feelings of surviving veterans, spouses and widows of World War II. They tell me that over a thousand WWII veterans are dying daily now. Those living are in their late eighties or nineties but to me they are still young men like my grandson, Josh, who was a Captain in the Army , serving in Fort Benning after a year in Germany and over a year in Iraq.
My generation of WWII soldiers are still, to me, those idealistic, brave, vital, young soldiers who willingly went off to war believing that they were helping to assure the safety and freedom of their families. They were willing to serve in spite of great personal sacrifice. They were certainly a part of one of the greatest generations in our country’s history.
Three of my school friends were killed in WWII, James Homer Cook, An Army Airplane Pilot, killed in the South Pacific March 17, 1944; Quentin "Red " Cole, killed in Italy , March 9, 1944; Carroll Adams, killed in France , July 27, 1944 and the brother of a school classmate , a few years older than I, J.W. Rye was killed in Africa January 21, 1943. God bless their memory.
Two of my brothers were soldiers in World War Two. Tom, served in the infantry in Europe and survived the D. Day battle that took the lives of many of his fellow soldiers. My brother, Jack, was in the Army Air Force and served in the South Pacific. These who survived the rigors of war to come back home we also remember as we celebrate and honor our brave soldiers who gave " the last full measure of their devotion."
When President Roosevelt came on the radio early Sunday morning December 7, 1941 and announced that the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor, life in the towns and cities of America was forever changed. I vividly remember the terror and anxiety I felt as I listened to President Franklin Roosevelt tell of the Japanese attack. We’d never before been in war in my 18 year lifetime.No one knew what might be next, so days were filled with fear and uncertainty. We were afraid that our mainland would be bombed next.
In the days, weeks, and months that followed, the entire population rallied around the president and our national leadership. Patriotism was strong. Citizens supported whatever the president felt should be done. The immediate response of our nation to the bombing of Pearl Harbor was somewhat like the national response to the events of September 11, 2001, when everyone pulled together and supported one another. But this kind of patriotism lasted though out the long World War II.
Winning the war seemed to be the only focus of the entire population. Soon the military draft was begun. Able-bodied young men were eager to sign up. It was the right and patriotic thing to do. They felt a desire, a need, and an obligation to protect their families and their country from threat and to insure our way of life. My husband, Charles was in line early – the morning they opened the draft. Because of this he got a low draft number. However, before his number came up and he could be drafted, he, like many others, opted to volunteer instead so that he could choose his branch of service. Women were never drafted, but many volunteered to serve in the WACS and WAVES.
In 1943 Charles and three other young men from our hometown, Grover Foster, Roy Connell and Charlie Miller, were sent to Cherry Point, NC. Later they were stationed in San Diego. Charlie Miller was wounded in the battle of Iwo Jima and was never well again. These four young fathers joined countless others giving years of their lives for the good of their country, Charles first overseas assignment was in the South Pacific. He served in the Makin, Caroline and Solomon Islands.
He was a Marine, and as it is with the Marines, he remained a Marine the rest of his life. He was proud of his service to the country and at the same time humble about his contributions. As men do, he rarely if ever talked about it in any detail.
Back at home, food and gasoline were in short supply because the nation’s resources were going toward the war effort. The government issued ration books to citizens who then had to use the coupons to get supplies such as sugar and gasoline.
Some textile plants switched over to making strong canvas for tents instead of fabrics for civilian clothing, Almost all the nations factories switched from making goods for regular civilian use to making needed military supplies.
The focus of daily life was to keep abreast of what was happening “overseas.” I remember reading the newspapers from cover to cover every day (no Television or Internet) to find out what was happening and discussing the events with other adults with whom I came into contact in the course of the day. All ears were tuned to the radio anytime a report or a speech came on. There were great, inspiring, and encouraging speeches by Pres, Franklin Roosevelt her of and of Winston Churchill in England.
Every night I sat down and wrote a letter to my Marine. Citizens spent whatever “free time” they had doing whatever they could to help with the war effort. Some worked for the Red Cross. Patriotic and Christian groups frequently had rallies and services to support the troops and to encourage each other.
The lives of Children were very different with few male influences in their lives, and the constant talk of war made many of them fearful. A whole generation of children lived without the benefit of their fathers. And those fathers gave up precious early years of their child's life in order to preserve freedom for our country.

This is the picture that Charles Shaw carried during the war. L-R: Janice, Joan, and Ruth Shaw.

Finally the war was over. There were community and church celebrations throughout the country. I clearly remember the celebration service our community held. The entire community gathered at a nearby Baptist church to thank the Lord for the end of the war. It was quite a celebration!
Charles often said in the years after the war that “Buddies” in the service were more than buddies – they are brothers. They all seemed to feel a strong sense of brotherhood and connection with each other, realizing that their very lives were in each others hands.
This is what Pearl Harbor Day and every day means to me. It means recognition of the sacrifices made – and still being made by soldiers, their families, their children, and the nation as a whole.
It means appreciation for what thousands of our fellow citizens have done for me – for all of us – for their country – not just in WWII but in other wars our country. And the conflicts continue!
Our mainland was not attacked after Pearl Harbor on 12-3-1941 during World War II until it was viciously attacked on 9-11-01 by radical Islamic terrorist with nearly three thousand lives taken.
So today in 2015 we are blessed to have men and women who are willing to fight in a new kind of war with hidden enemies inside and outside the United States. So we need to also remember today's living soldiers, airmen and sailors who continue to sacrifice to protect our freedoms even in some places where they are not respected.
God grant us strength, wisdom and righteousness that our freedom may be preserved and that this great country "shall not perish from the world."

Sunday, December 06, 2015

Marlene Ransom, 1938-2015

 Marlene Ransom and her husband Jim were dear friends of my parents, especially as a young couple in the sixties as Jim began was considering beginning a career in the church. I remember visiting them with my parents at their home in West Rome. After my mother retired to Rome and especially after Jim's death, Marlene and my mother often visited together and even traveled together to pastors and pastors' spouses activities.

We lost Marlene at age 77 this week. Today I was privileged to sing "How Great Thou Art" at her memorial service. 






From the Daniel Funeral Home website

Marlene Ransom Obituary

Mrs. Marlene Mae Bush Ransom, age 77, of Rome, GA, died Friday morning, December 4, 2015 at her home.

Mrs. Ransom was born, September 24, 1938 in Arcadia, OK, daughter of the late Marvin R. and Eileen Baker Bush. In 2001, she was preceded in death by her husband, Rev. Jim R. Ransom, to whom she was married June 18, 1960.  

Mrs. Ransom graduated from Edmond High School and Central State College (University of Central Oklahoma) with a Bachelor of Science in Education degree. Mrs. Ransom lived in numerous locations in North Georgia due to being a faithful and loving wife to a United Methodist Minister. She had many employment opportunities in teaching and secretarial work. Among these jobs were Secretary for the Greene County Superintendent of Schools, bookkeeper at the Wesleyan Christian Advocate, and Administrative Assistant at Rome Urban Ministries. She held many offices among the United Methodist Church Women, taught Sunday School; and served on various church committees in all churches. She moved to Rome in 1986 after her husband's retirement and has been a member of Trinity United Methodist Church since that time. 

Survivors include a daughter, Teresa Ransom Mathis of Rome; a son, James Rodney Ransom and his wife, Kristi of Franklin, TN; grandchildren, Lesley Mathis Hatcher and husband, Adam of Rome, Stuart Mathis; Eric Ransom and wife, Courtney of Clarkesville, TN; Brooke, Kristin and Kyle Ransom; great-grandson, Carson Ransom; step-grandchildren, Quentin and Madelyn Earwood; Sister Linda Bush Dever and husband Bill of Edmond, OK; and nephew, Jeff Scott.

Mrs. Ransom's interment was held on Saturday, December 5, 2015 at 11 a.m. in Mizpah United Methodist Church Cemetery with the Reverend Andy Woodworth officiating. A memorial service was held on Sunday, December 6, 2015 at 3 p.m. at Trinity United Methodist Church with the Reverend Kenny Ott officiating. The family received friends on Sunday from 2 p.m. until 3 p.m. prior to the service.  

In lieu of flowers, please make donations to Trinity United Methodist Church, 606 Turner McCall Blvd., Rome, GA 30161. 

Daniel's Funeral Home has charge of the arrangements for Mrs. Marlene Mae Bush Ransom.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.
Published by Legacy Remembers on Dec. 4, 2015.

Gleaning Facebook: An Old Friend

I ran into an old friend on Broad Street tonght!



John Paul Schulz
which one is you? 


Jann Heaton Skeen
I hope you told him you've been good! 

Terrell Shaw
He knows. Sigh.


Trish Sullins Benefield
Hey, I know that guy - tell him I have been So good!


Sam Burnham
Tell him we want our park safe for Christmas!

David Marlin Rains
One's a seedy lookin', bearded, jovial guy with glasses; the other's Terrell Shaw

David Marlin Rains
He's probably tryin' to straighten you out after you gave Sheila a vacuum cleaner & a paid subscription to Guideposts last Christmas. Doghouse pretty cold in Jan.

Mary Nisbet Asbury
That's my favorite Santa!