July
13, 2008:
It’s
been a nice summer day, except for some light rain and thunder late in the
afternoon.
We
spent the week at Greenwater. We went there on Monday, with stops at
Grimson’s and at Jenny’s place, on the way. It never stopped raining,
and our motor home developed leaks where there weren’t any before. Russ
Feairs and family were out there at the same time we were; Russ told me
there was four and a half inches of rain during the week. Almost two
inches of that came Thursday evening and night, with some marble-sized
hail thrown in. It was so deafening in the motor home that we couldn’t
hear each other.
Wednesday
was a beautiful day, though, and the beach was crowded. The bad weather
didn’t really affect us; we aren’t much for sitting around outside and
we can have coffee, visit people, and read just as well in the rain as in
sunshine. We managed visits to the Chase’s, Miller’s, and Dunlop’s
homes, and with many more people around the Park and at the Beach Café
for coffee. There always seemed to be a lot of people at coffee, just like
the old days. We had a ball.
There
seemed to be a lot of kids around the Park; both of us noticed it. Could
it be that the Park is again becoming a family destination? Or is it just
a natural cycle?
Some
of the changes we noticed: Rose and Jim Steadman have added a full-length
lean-to to the south side of the Park Store, which gave a great increase
in the amount of product display space. I asked Rose if it gave her any
problems with shop-lifting, but she said they monitor it with
closed-circuit TV and also don’t stock items out there that would appeal
to the light-fingered set.
And
Connie and Gary Schmidt added to the west side of the Beach Café, giving
them more kitchen space as well as Take-Out and Ice Cream space. Connie
says it makes a big difference to the convenience of working in the
kitchen.
All
the Park RV sites in Hilltop are electrified, and about half those in
Cranberry. Still, when we got there Monday evening, we got the last
electrified site and that was only because someone had just cancelled.
At
the entry gate, both gates were open with a sign telling those with valid
permits to use the right-hand gate. At last! We agitated for that for
years. There is nothing more frustrating than having to wait in a long
line-up when one already has a permit.
The
geese were rounded up and hauled away on the 2nd, but a few
escaped. We saw them sunning themselves in the rain out on the
Peninsula
. Eight or ten are a lot easier to take than seventy or eighty. Someone, I
can’t remember who, said a similar problem was solved at another Park by
letting a dog run loose when there were no people around. The dog hazed
the geese until they got discouraged and nested elsewhere.
We
met our newest great-grandchild on the way home Friday. We stopped at
Tisdale and visited Aaron, Nicole and Logan, who is just over one month
old. He was born on June 7th in
Saskatoon
, while we were away on our
Dakotas
trip. He really is a fine looking lad.
Mike
was there, too, so of course we had to take some four-generation pictures,
with
Logan
lying in the old family cradle. It was originally bought by my
great-grandparents, the Woodhulls, and my grandmother was the first child
rocked in it. She was born in 1877, making the cradle 131 years old. The
cradle left the family for a few years, but was bought back and has stayed
in the family ever since. It came to us in 1961, in bad shape and heavily
coated with black varnish. I refinished it and repaired it for Mike and
Jenny. Many of our grandchildren, including Aaron, have been rocked in it
since, and now it is serving the sixth generation.
Being
quite shallow, it can only be used until the kid starts rolling around,
but in my grandmother’s time kids were kept so swaddled up that they
couldn’t move, so the cradle would be useful for longer.
Logan
is now sleeping in a beautiful crib that his grandfather Mike made for
him. It will do him for years, or until a newcomer bumps him out of it.