Archive for September, 2009
Martha and Madi make gift cards
Posted by: | CommentsA few weeks ago my cousin Martha decided to share one of her favorite hobbies with her granddaughter Madi, making cards. Let’s see what happens when she teaches Madi how to do it.
First she gets out all her “cool stuff.” Notice the newspapers beneath the “cool stuff.” I’m sure you can guess why those are there.
Here’s Martha teaching Madi the ropes!
“Here are some pictures of Madi and I making cards using rubber stamps. I made sets to give as gifts and Madi made a mess… but we had fun!” says Nana Martha.
“For me, crafts are something I can do to relax and not feel guilty because I have a product when I am finished,” said Martha. ” I decided to make sets of cards for some of my friends at work, and my granddaughter Madi (who is almost 3) came over and of course she wanted to “help”. She did surprisingly well… very careful and patient (better than me at times!). I made cards and Madi stamped paper. I find that I am much more patient with my grandchildren than I was with my own girls… sorry Mandy, Kiera, and Brittany!”
Thanks Martha and Madi for sharing your project.
One more thing before I go…
This week I was feeling pretty good about not eating so many sweets. I absolutely love desserts and can never seem to get enough of them. My sweet husband knows that my absolute favorite is cheesecake. Last night he came home with….
a whole cheesecake from the Cheesecake Factory!
I would like to be able to tell you that I can resist temptation, that I won’t touch the cake and I’ll leave it for my boys to eat, but I don’t want to lie.
Perhaps it’s time I looked under my bed…
I think I remember how to use these, but I’m not sure. They’ve been under my bed collecting dust for a few months. Come to think of it, I think the last time I got them out was after I ate a huge piece of cheesecake. Oh well, I have very few vices. Anyone want to come over and eat a slice with me?
I just got back in from work and wanted to share a picture of a friend of mine.
This is Kaye, eating lunch at her consignment store, Everything Under the Sun (great place for bargains!) I walked in and she was eating lunch, but it was the WAY she was eating that tickled my funny bone. Oh to be so relaxed! Way to go Kaye, you rock!
Nana of the week-Mary Dee Carter
Posted by: | CommentsMary Dee Martin was born in February 1919. She was the youngest child, and only daughter, of Lizzie (Weaver) and Clarence Martin. At the age of 3, her mother died of a heart attack leaving Clarence with 5 kids to raise on a farm. There are stories that her dad would take her and the boys to the field with him as he worked, placing her on a quilt under a tree to sit while he and the boys worked the fields all day.
At age 8, her father remarried and proceeded to father nine more children by his second wife, Mae (Turner) Martin…lovingly referred to as “Mammie”. Mary Dee, as a young girl growing up, lived with other families in and around the Roseville community often helping take care of their children in exchange for a place to live and call home. (it is with grateful acknowledgment to one of these families for the earliest picture of Mary Dee at age 8, which is the only known picture to exist of her as a child).
Around the age of 15, she went to a local baseball game where she would remark to her friend, “That man is going to be my husband” (pointing to the catcher on the baseball team, Bernice Witty). At 19 (1938) she would indeed marry Bernice and move to the Oleoak community of Barren County where they lived with his mother, Beulah Bailey Witty. Mary Dee worked at the Kentucky Pants Factory until 1949.
In 1949, at the age of 30, she became a mother to her one and only daughter, Paulette. Four months later, she and Bernice became superintendents of the “County Farm” (Hillcrest Home…on Roseville Road). Over the course of the next 20 years, they saw to the well-being of many older citizens of Barren County, who otherwise had no homes or families to support them (this was before the days of medicare/medicaid and social security). The “county farm” was also temporary home on many occasions to runaways from other areas until they could be reclaimed by their families, and juvenile delinquents, who because of their age, could not be housed in the county jail; and sadly, on other occasions the Hillcrest Home also became temporary shelter for children who were being removed from their parents’ homes to later be placed for adoption. This latter group were the hardest for her due to their ages (some mere babies, sometimes entire families of children–6 or more; these kids were often brought upstairs into her family’s living quarters and cared for until social workers could place them elsewhere). Bernice died of a heart attack in 1969, and Mary Dee and her daughter moved to Glasgow. She remarried in 1975, but would lose that husband in 2001 to Alzheimer’s Disease.
In 1970, she started her employment with Park Avenue Pharmacy/Hatchett Home Medical where she remains employed, now only part-time, to this day. Always a believer in “working hard and earning your pay”, she sees no reason to retire…even at age 90 1/2 years “young” (please, don’t call her “old”).
Mary Dee became grandmother in 1971 to David Woodcock and in 1975 to Scott Woodcock. David, in turn, would give her three great-grandsons: Andy, Austin and Aiden. Scott would give her three great-granddaughters: Stacie, Madi, and Kennedy.
One has to laugh at the fact that she was in her late 80s when she got her FIRST “speeding” ticket…and rode a 4-wheeler (driven by her youngest brother) for the first time. Two years ago on Christmas morning, her doctor (Karen Small) called her and said, “Let’s take a ride.” That ride consisted of an aerial tour of Barren County…and one of her most prized Christmas gifts. She has often said she would love to “fly to work” (which is less than a one-fourth mile trip by car). In February 2009, her family and friends helped to celebrate her 90th birthday with an open-house held at her church, Bethel United Methodist Church, with some 100+ people in attendance.
The NanaHood Store
Posted by: | CommentsHopefully by now you’ve noticed that we’ve added a NanaHood shop to the site. If you haven’t noticed you may need to borrow my glasses (you can have the pair with only one temple piece). Because things just magically appear on the site you may not realize that a lot of thought, effort, emailing and time goes into every decision we make about NanaHood.
Getting the store going has not been easy. It’s sort of like building a house, every time you turn around there are more decisions to be made. I absolutely love writing and blogging for NanaHood is a joy, but the other stuff?????? If I didn’t have Char, Carol, Laura and my readers to bounce ideas off of, and to help me by sending me stories, recipes, pictures, etc., I would be at a loss.
So, sweet readers, nanas, moms, friends and family, thank you for visiting “the hood” as I affectionately call it, and for all your contributions. Keep them coming! Send me more stories, more recipes, more memories, more suggestions, giggles and comments.
I love hearing from you! I would especially appreciate your feedback on the NanaHood store. It’s a work in progress and I would like for it to reflect your wants and needs. Thanks!
Would you like to know fun things to do with children and grandchildren?
Posted by: | CommentsIf you’ve ever been to NanaHood on Tuesdays you know about Gratituesday. Every Tuesday I post about something I’m thankful for. This idea comes from my blogger friend, Laura. Her site is www.heavenlyhomemakers.com and she is a super-duper blogger. She is married to Matt and they have four boys. In fact, I like Laura so much and she and her friend Char have been sooo nice to me, that I’m giving Laura and Char (my web designer) the following awesome award (wish it was money guys, but hey it’s the thought that counts, right?).
So back to what I originally started to tell you about, but haven’t gotten around to yet. Not only is Laura’s site fantastic, she also has a new e-book chock full of fun and inexpensive activities for kids! And the bestest news is it’s absolutely free! Nanas and moms love free stuff!
So drop by Laura’s site, download the e-book and enjoy! And tell Laura I said “Howdy” while you are there. You’ll enjoy yourself, I promise! Click on the url below to get there.
Cloudy with a chance of meatballs….not cheesecake (sigh)
Posted by: | CommentsThe next time it’s cloudy outside look up at the sky and try to imagine it raining meatballs. Sounds messy, doesn’t it? Normally I love messy. I’m the mom of four boys and believe me, I KNOW messy! But for some reason the falling meatballs in this movie seemed to miss the target. I wanted to like it, I really did. I’ve been going to Disney movies for years but I just couldn’t get into this one.
I realize that just being a nana does not qualify me as a movie critic and you may not agree with this next statement, but in my opinion Disney movies just ain’t what they used to be.
Take for example Little Mermaid. I loved that movie so much that I saw it several times and used the songs with my high school Beta Club. We decorated a banquet room with colored fish hanging from the ceiling and fishnets. I can still see the young girl that played Ariel and the boy who played the prince in their little fake boat as the student chorus sang “Kiss the Girl” behind them. As far as I am concerned there was magic in the movie Little Mermaid and magic in movies these days is hard to come by.
Meatballs is entertaining. It’s fast paced, 3 D, loud and colorful. My granddaughter is four and a lot of the humor and the story was over her head, but she loved wearing the glasses (and insisted I wear mine). While I am a fan of the book by the same name as the movie, I can’t say that the movie moved me one way or another. I enjoyed being with my granddaughter and I love the premise of food falling from the sky (although I would prefer turtle cheesecake over meatballs).
As the mom of five who range in age from 17 to 27 I have seen my share of Disney movies. Now that I’ve started on the second generation with my granddaughter I find myself missing the magic that Mermaid other past Disney movies have captured. I loved Peter Pan and Jungle Book, but I slept through G-Force. Maybe I’m just having a nostalgia moment, one of those days where everything was more fun and looked better years ago than it does now.
I read some of the reviews from newspapers and other web sites about Meatballs after I wrote my review for NanaHood and I’m definitely in the minority. Other folks seem to like it fine. How about it readers? Two thumbs up or down? Have you taken your children or grandchildren to see it? If so post your opinion here. I’d like to know your thoughts and I would also like to know what your all time favorite Disney movie is. I think you can guess what mine is!


































