Sunday, July 31, 2016

Family Stories

I have been writing down some family stories, and including old family photos, for my brother Jeff.  Other members of my family have expressed interest in these stories, so I thought I would share them on this format, save some paper, and then let whoever wants to read about this do so at their leisure.

Happy reading....


Figure 1 - Dad and Mary Jean abt. 1926
Dad was born in a logging camp, Camp 5, in a chain of logging camps owned by Simpson Logging ompany in the Olympic Peninsula.  Nothing exists of this particular camp.  But at one time, early in the 20th century hordes of immigrants descended to live, work and raise their families in these work camps.  They were communities of bunk houses, cookhouses complete with camp cooks, machine shops for all their gear and outdoor latrines. 

Figure 2 – Partial Map of Simpson Logging Company Camps

 As you can see, there were many Camp 5s in the Forests – Early Camp 5 is due North of Shelton on the Skokomish.  There is another Camp 5, named “1900 Camp 5” which is due West of Shelton, near the circle marked “The Big Tree”.  But Dad was born in the Camp 5 a little to the West of that, along the dotted line that was the railroad line, on the way to the last Camp in the wilderness that Simpson built, known as “Grisdale.” 

For Dad, a rambunctious boy, the woods smelled like home.  Even later in his life, when I knew him, he was always happiest when in the middle of a fir forest.  The denser the canopy, the deeper the green, the happier my old man. 

Though happy is not an adjective I can use much with Dad.  When I was a kid, Dad would disappear into our woods in the south pasture, about a 200 acre wooded hillside where you could lose yourself in old growth forests, canyons, and creeks.  Every step in that forest crunched as your boot sunk into decades of decaying needles.  John and I would ride our ponies, sneaking behind him and follow him to wherever he was off to.  We’d see our old man pull on his rounded toe logging boots, different than the narrow-toed cowboy boots, and put on his red suspenders and metal hat, and we knew he was headed to the woods, away from the flatland of cattle, haying operations, irrigation.  He would climb into an old WWII Willy’s Jeep we had at the ranch – a Jeep so raggedy over the years that as parts fell off, they just never got replaced.  First it was the top that rusted out; then the seats.  Soon it was just a frame with four wheels and a wooden platform over the top.  He’d climb into the Willy’s Jeep, drive to a clearing at the top of a hill, then hike the rest of the way in.  He would sit down on an old rotting log or on top of one of the enormous glacial rocks and stare out into space, unaware that his two youngest children were watching his every move from atop our ponies. 

Or so we thought.  Later in my life, about junior high school, when he needed money, he had to log a part of that hillside.  One day he was working in the woods with his skidder, a crazy machine whose front two wheels moved independently of the back two wheels and is used to skid logs down hillsides.  I was hiding behind some bushes and watching him work with his machine.  He nearly backed the machine into me but turned around just in time to see me in the bushes.  He was startled, then his face turned purple and he became enraged, jumping off the machine and coming after me.  I turned and ran, high-tailing it out of his reach.  Much to my surprise he never said a word of it when we met that evening around the dinner table.  

It wasn’t until many years later, after he had died, and I was grieving his loss when I decided that I needed to know everything about him.  I started to understand what went through his mind that day when he saw me spying on him.  All I knew about Dad was that he was born in the woods, raised by unhappy parents and that he spent the second World War as a Seabee in the South Pacific before meeting my mother, moving to Oregon and beginning his life anew as a cowboy.  He never talked about his experiences in the Navy at all, and if it was brought up, he would just shake his head and walk the other way. 

The Seabees were a construction battalion that were full of skilled labor that built airstrips and supply lines on the chain of islands that we defended during the second World War.  Some of the fighting that happened on those islands were horrific.  The Japanese dug themselves into cave systems on some of the islands and had to be burned out because they would not surrender.  They were taught to fight to the death. 

From the official military website:  “In the North, Central, South and Southwest Pacific areas, the Seabees built 111 major airstrips, 441 piers, 2,558 ammunition magazines, 700 square blocks of warehouses, hospitals to serve 70,000 patients, tanks for the storage of 100,000,000 gallons of gasoline, and housing for 1,500,000 men. In construction and fighting operations, the Pacific Seabees suffered more than 200 combat deaths and earned more than 2,000 Purple Hearts. They served on four continents and on more than 300 islands.”  When you dig into the story of how these Seabees earned these sometimes posthumous awards you realize that although they’re a construction brigade, they are constructing everything in the middle of a raging war with enemy fire all around them.   One example of the kinds of tasks they would accomplish is the construction of the roads or bridges or airstrips necessary for war as the war is being fought.  For example, a brigade would land on an undeveloped atoll on the trek towards Japan and the fighting between the Marines and the Japanese would be heavy.  In the midst of this fighting, the Seabees would need to get the military wherewithal to the island.  They would off-load their caterpillar tractors in the surf and drive them up the beach and then (with the blades of the caterpillars raised) move towards enemy positions.  When they got close to the Japanese bunkers, they would lower the blades until they were scooping as much sand and earth and boulders as possible and then bury the Japanese alive in their bunkers, while the Marines with wands of fire would burn any survivors or simply shoot them.

That day, when he saw me spying on him, did he flash back to an episode of the Japanese hiding in the bunkers?  Was his rage directed toward me, or directed toward an episode earlier in life that most likely scared the hell out of him?  Or did he think, ‘god, I could have run over my child and killed her,” and he confused fear for my safety and rage at me for just being there?  Or was it my mere existence that just enraged him?  I will never know. 

Friday, May 20, 2016

Friday pm - Bathroom

So all the tile is up today - and now on Monday Brad will be back to grout - another thing we agonized over - deciding the grout color.  In the end, we went to basic old white grout.  We flirted for a moment with a light green grout that matched our wall color, but chickened out at the last minute.





Part 4

Once the painter was done with the painting, then the tiler came in - this is now Week 3 of this project.

It took five days this week to get all the tile in that small space, but the effect is well worth it.










Bathroom Remodeling Part 3

Then, after the inspections were done, the fun stuff started.  First the drywall came in (after they shoved a bit of insulation in the spaces)


And then a new cabinet was installed - we opened up the wall to the hallway (which had been closed off in the old configuration) so we can access the bathroom cabinet from either the hallway or inside of the bathroom itself


Then the painting happened - and things are starting to take shape - this is from the inside looking out - we kept the same green color on the walls, but added a nice soft white to the trim as a finish

from the outside hallway looking in, we painted the trim the same as the rest of the hallway








Bathroom Remodel Part 2

Once everything was ripped out, then the reconstruction could begin, starting with a new outside wall and a new window


The tub is gone, as you can see (no easy feat - Ben hauled it out of there by himself and I hope to golly he didn't hurt himself in the process) and then a shower had to be rebuilt where the tub was.


They used self-leveling cement to build the shower stall floor.  The "chimney" in the center is keeping the plumbing drain open and cement free.

The electrician and plumbers then came in and re-did all the wiring (old knob and tube got an upgrade) and water lines (old galvanized out and pex came in)



New Bathroom

We have finally gotten around to remodeling our bathroom.  Here's what the old bathroom looked like (in case you've never been to our house)

Notice the old tub, the stained tile, the linoleum floor.  It actually doesn't look so bad in this picture, but in reality it was kind of gross.  What you cannot see in this picture is the hundred-year-old corner-tank toilet, and a funky corner cabinet that has doors that run into everything if you try to open them.  This bathroom is small and pretty hard to function in.

Remodeling is a long process; we are doing our bathroom in the month of May 2016.  This is what it looked like after the first few days:


We had to go down to the studs to rip everything out.  Once out, we found that the outside wall was completely rotten!  the only thing holding up that side of the house was the stucco.  Further, it had been rotten for probably 50 years.  No wonder there was so much mold and mildew on the tile!


Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Fires in Oregon

I'm now reading the morning reports from the Fire Service everyday to see how the fires are doing across the West.  So many of my family are in the path of destruction that I can't ever decide which place to give my attention.

So I guess I'll focus on my brother Jeff over in Ironside.  He sent me these pictures of the Cornet/Windy Ridge fire starting near his home.  He has five fires threatening his ranch in Malheur County with no sign of relief.  The fires are coming from every direction towards his canyon.  I sure wish he'd leave, but he's kind of stubborn out there on Mussi Road. And besides, he's got cows and horses to feed.  The worst part is the air quality is horrible.  We had a little smoke blow into Portland today and it seems too much, so I couldn't imagine what he's living through right now.

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Of course fires are threatening homes and businesses in all kinds of locations, so he's not alone.  The fire service is stretched thin but I sure hope they don't forget about Malheur County.  Prayers and love go out to Jeff and Rena as they battle nature's latest blow.

Tree Planting - November 14, 2009 - Omaha Street Parkway