About The River

Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts

Friday, February 4, 2022

A Little of This and That

 

A friend shared this poem with me.. I would like to share it with you.

 

I can't get enough of wandering. Or the earth. 

Some of us carry an inherent need to explore.

Textures.

Fragrances.

Sounds.

Art.

Shadows.

Movement.

Patterns.

Light.

Victoria Erickson author of Edgewater 

 

Do you remember my indoor garden that I shared? Click on the below link..

Creating an Amaryliss and Narcissus Garden 

 That wee little garden has been bright and cheery for us.

 

I love the color of this Amaryllis.

My second Amaryllis did not bloom.  I will keep my bulb and try again next season.

Have you ever had that happen? I just got two big lovely green leaves from my second Amaryliss bulb.


My husband and I stopped in a fun little shop located in our little village..

Seventies Shop


 

It was a fun shop.


 We came home with a few treasures.

 

A bad photo on my part.. but a sweet little green vase.. perfect for a petite flower bouquet.


 

An amber candle holder .. to go with my other amber candle holder.


 

We are going to accent our kitchen with chickens. This little hen will have a new home in our new to us kitchen.



 ♥

Carla

 

Friday, June 21, 2013

On the Road Friday - Vintage Base Ball

We are on the road this Friday, to watch some base ball.
"Hey, Carla, don't ya know how to spell baseball?"

Fun Fact
  (Base Ball was spelled as two words prior to the 1880's)

Pioneer Village Museum hosted a Vintage Base Ball weekend. We enjoyed watching and listening to the fun.
Click here for more information about Pioneer Village Museum.

Umpires or Coaches
Another difference in the game is the lack of umpires and base coaches. Only one umpire is required, and judgments are made only when needed or requested.
The umpire may ask the players or cranks (spectator) for assistance in making the call.
Players are presumed to be gentlemen, and in addition to not swearing, scratching, betting or spitting, courteously make their own decisions about who is out. An ungentlemanly player - or crank - may be fined 25 cents by the umpire. 

 Players (sometimes called "ballists") wear period reproduction uniforms, either with early - style long trousers and long sleeved "shield" shirt, or with later - style knickers and lace-up shirt.
Teams recreate the game as it was first played, using no gloves, masks or pads.
I like the first aid basket.
 Do you see the bell by the first aid basket?
A player crossing home base must tally the "ace" with the scorekeeper, often ringing a bell to announce the run.
 The arrangement of the 1860 field is familiar to modern fans or "cranks", but varies from that of today's game.
There are typically no fences and no groomed base lines.
There is no pitcher's mound.
The pitcher called the "hurler," can position himself anywhere behind a four-yard line that runs through the pitcher's point, 45 feet from home base.
Vintage base ball equipment is definitely not high tech. Wood bats made from the 1860 rules vintage clubs are not to exceed 2.5 inches in diameter with no limit to the length of the bat.

The single piece of leather covering the ball is hand stitched, so each ball is slightly different. Being handmade, the balls tend to be softer and do not carry as far as modern wound baseballs.

"Ballists" never wear gloves or "mitts" and similarly, the catcher - styled the "behind" - has no modern safety equipment.

Games were just as likely to be played after work on a Wednesday as on a Saturday, but never on a Sunday.

The signing of the national anthem prior to a game did not occur until after World War 2.

A chorus of "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" during a seventh inning stretch could not take place until after the song was written in 1908.

 We enjoyed our Saturday of Vintage Base Ball. We loved the fellowship on the field, lots of joking with each other.

Thank you for joining me today, for on the road Friday!

Friday, January 25, 2013

Bogey's Diner - Dickinson, North Dakota

 This Friday, we are heading to North Dakota. On our trip home from Montana in 2011, my mom asked us to stop at Bogey's Diner, North Dakota and tell her all about it.
So we did. And it was wonderful.
Bogey's is full of fun things to look at from America's past.
 Bogey's also has wonderful shakes!
 YUMMY!
 Bogey's Diner - Dickinson, ND
 We enjoyed a wonderful lunch.
If you ever pass through Dickinson, North Dakota, I recommend Bogey's. Thank you for joining me today with On the Road Friday!

P.S. Have you eaten at Bogey's?

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Lite-brite

I still have a few of my toys from when I was growing up. I still have my lite-brite. I loved playing with it, designing fun pictures or making the patterns that came with. I recently helped Atticus make up one that says....

Star 
Wars



He enjoyed creating. We all enjoyed sitting in the living room admiring it. 
Did you have a lite-brite?
Do they still make lite-brite?

Have a wonderful day!

Your word is like a lamp for my feet and a light for my way.
Psalm 119:105    

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Hungry Hippo

Hungry Hippo
Do you remember Hungry Hungry Hippo? Hungry Hungry Hippo is from when Jeremy and I were little. Atticus loves this game, he laughs so hard. His laugh makes me laugh. So this becomes a big laugh attack!

Do you have any vintage games that you play with your family?