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Showing posts with label New Year's Eve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Year's Eve. Show all posts

Monday, December 31, 2018

New Year's Eve

We started the day slow, and late for us. Up at 8:30 instead of the usual 7 am. I made blueberry pancakes for breakfast while Larry loaded the van, because today we went to Marietta to restock our booths.

The rain fell in buckets, steadily all morning. Everything is soggy. As one friend said, thank goodness it rained because the mud was getting dehydrated. It has been a wet, wet year, and ending on the same note.

We went to town first, to meet up with a young man from whom I was buying some glass to re-sell. Turns out he's an avid and well-known collector of Viking glass (made in New Martinsville, WV) and is writing a book about the many colors Viking produced over the years. We had a fascinating conversation (for glassaholics, anyway) right there in the grocery store parking lot, in between rain showers.

Next stop was the bank to get some cash. I know I am superstitious but I did not want to go into the new year with no cash in my pocket. But the ATM didn't work. No problem, we thought, we'd just go to our other bank. Oddly, same problem there! So I ended up walking into the bank to get cash. It was an odd coincidence that both banks had ATMs that did not work, and perhaps an apt wrap to a year where money was tight and not as easily come by?

Another stop at our Ravenswood booths to pick up a teapot a friend wants. We were pleased to find that sales had been good and there were many "holes" in our spaces there.

We took the river road north instead of the interstate, and as usual the drive was beautiful and fast. There is not much traffic along this two-lane that borders the Ohio River, making it one of our favorite drives.

We restocked our booths at Marietta--the antique mall was fairly busy when we got there but things slowed down after 3pm. I made some good changes and we took out a small dropleaf table and two chairs that our granddaugher Grace needs for her apartment at college. We had sold a barrister's bookcase this week so we had some space to add new items. I rearranged a lot of stuff to be more visible, added a few new things, and we did some much-needed dusting.

When we were finished, we stopped at the Lafayette Hotel's bar & grill. It's often our "treat" when we work at our Marietta booths--the ambience is so welcoming and comfortable, and the view of the river is just perfect. The food and service are excellent too. The place was full of people celebrating the new year's arrival. A couple who were just married were taking pictures in the lobby and later came into the grill. We bought them their first drinks--who wouldn't?

Next stop was the grocery store--mundane, I know, but I needed cabbage and black-eyed peas for our New Year's dinner! The store was full of happy people buying last-minute supplies for their New Year's celebrations too.

Then it was home. I took care of a few things--finishing up laundry so we didn't start the new year with dirty clothes, sweeping the floors so that would not be done on New Year's (because that would sweep our good luck out the door), cleaning up the kitchen so we start the year on the right foot, etc.

We lit the fire in the fireplace and put in our last DVDs of Mrs' Brown's Boys. The DVDs are hilarious! Quite bawdy and profane, but so funny! The fire gave us fits--the wind is strange this evening, blowing from two directions at once it seems so there were many downdrafts that poofed smoke into the room. We don't ever have this problem as Larry built the fireplace and it draws beautifully--but tonight, it was wild. I had the oddest feeling that it was my son Jon, coming home to this place where he was raised. Jon has been gone for 8 years, but that feeling was so strong...

Now it is nearly midnight. I've thought about my goals for the year, and Larry and I both discussed what we wanted to accomplish in 2019. We will burn our troubles in the fire as we have done for so many years, and welcome in the new year with open arms and lights blazing throughout the house. The doors will be open to let out the old year and let in the new.  The wind, I think, is the wind of change and I am sure the change it brings will be for the good.

Happy New Year, everyone!

Addendum: Midnight. All across this long ridge, guns and firecrackers announced the new year--the way we do things here. We may not be able to see our neighbors' homes, or see their lights, but they, like us, are awake and celebrating. Larry called one of our neighbors, who recalled a New Year's night when a relative thought it would be a good idea to toss some .22 rounds into the fire. People were diving under tables and beds, shots went through the ceiling and roof...well, we don't get quite that crazy here, but Larry did bring out the shotgun and fire off a few rounds, and the firecrackers I bought that would not go off outside made some nice popping noise in the fireplace! My bubbly is almost empty, so it will soon be time to say good night and good morning to the dawning of another year. Sleep well, friends!

Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Sunday, December 31, 2017

And So The Year Ends

A few little flowers to brighten the day
 Last New Year's Eve and New Year's Day were warmer than normal--so warm we worked outside almost all day on New Year's. This year it is the exact opposite, very cold and the ground covered in snow.

Last year we went out on New Year's Eve for the first time in years, taking in the music for First Night in Charleston, WV. We had a great time and were home in time for a fire to see the new year in.

This year? We will not be budging from the house. With predicted temperatures near zero and about 3 inches or more of snow on the ground, the better part of valor is to stay put.
We're all set to celebrate though, with eggnog and a good fire in the fireplace, and the pets inside too. Dinner is all planned: ham, blackeye peas for luck, cabbage with money in it for riches, and sweet potatoes for health (I made that one up, but it's not a bad idea!).

I will miss being out with people though. Usually we have a bonfire with family, and burn our troubles in the fire. But not this year--this year I think everyone will be doing much the same as we are. There's always the phone to keep us connected.

What are your plans? Are you going out? Staying in? Cooking? Sleeping? Do tell!

Here are some links to past posts I wrote about New Year's traditions, in case you need some ideas.

Folktales, Legends, and Superstitions for New Year's Day

Starting the New Year Right--more folkore!

Tradition Bound--thinking about family traditions.

And a whole compendium of New Year's stuff!

Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Quiet Eve

Usually at this time on New Year's Eve we are lighting up the bonfire in preparation for greeting the new year. It would be cold, maybe muddy or snowy; there would be much noise, lots of food, and laughter.

This year is a change of pace. Our son who usually has the fire at his house is working midnight shift tonight (that's 11pm-7am) and we decided to have a quiet New Year's Eve for a change. Just the two of us, a fire in the fireplace, a movie, some wine. It's been long years since we saw the year in like this, but it feels fine. I just hope I can stay awake!

We've had visitors this week: our son Aaron and his two children came and took our old dining table and chairs to his house. I am happy to see them go; the kitchen feels huge! And I know that Aaron and his family will enjoy and use this furniture that stood us in good stead for the past 15 years or so. I cooked dinner while they were here--turkey pot pie, salad, rolls. Simple food, simply satisfying.

Cadyn can carry her little brother pretty well! I didn't manage
to get a photo of Jace, who was on the move!
Tonight our granddaughter Jordan and her husband and children came over for dinner. Again it was simple, homey food--homemade macaroni and cheese since I knew her two 5 year-olds would probably eat that, ham, broccoli, applesauce and warm bread. We ate and talked, they opened their Christmas gifts, then we all took a big cabinet we recently renovated and that she bought over to her new house. It was so nice to see her and have time to talk! Her new house is perfect for their growing family, with plenty of space and a floor plan that invites entertaining and casual living.

Little Jaxon, now almost 10 months old.
My house feels much emptier without those big furniture pieces and that's okay--it was getting pretty cramped in here with so much furniture in one stage or another or re-do. And after those happy little children voices, it's a lot quieter too.

I've prepared for the new year by getting all my laundry done, all the dishes washed and floors swept. The bills are all paid. Cabbage is in the fridge for tomorrow's dinner, and champagne is chilling for the midnight hour. I'm ready.

Tomorrow will bring more visitors, I think, and cooking. For now, I am going to put on my slippers and go in by the fire. Happy New Year to everyone, and may your year be as peaceful and prosperous as you wish it to be.


Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

The Brasstown Possum Drop and Clay's Corner

Driving into Brasstown, NC last weekend, this was what we saw:
Possum Network? Wait, something was beginning too surface in my memory. Something about possums...

and something about Clay's Corner...

While we were looking at the Model T, Mack told us his father was the Clay of Clay's Corner, and to be sure to stop in and say hello.  So we did just that. Clay Logan came out to meet us, and invited us into his store.

Possums were everywhere! On the walls, in photos, on t-shirts...and in this back room where there is a weekly music jam on Friday nights. We missed that, sadly. But notice that sign board on the left: "Possum Drop Sponsors." 

Yes, this is the home of the annual New Year's Eve Possum Drop! According to the website, "If New York can drop a "Ball", Georgia can drop a "Peach", then we can lower the Opossum."


I will haste to say that the possum is caught and kept in a cage and fed well until the event. He is lowered in the cage, and let back into wild afterward. You can read more about the event here.

We spent a little time talking with Clay and enjoying his eclectic store. You can find pretty much anything at Clay's Corner, from milk and bread to gasoline, candy, t-shirts (this one glows in the dark), bottled Possum Water and canned possum.

My Brasstown souvenirs
 And a warning to all:

I don't know if I will ever be there to witness the Possum Drop but I can now say I have visited the place where it happens. It's about as small as a place can get, I have to admit, but once a year Brasstown polishes itself up for for this event, and thousands come to watch and enjoy the bands, singing, and contests. 

After it's over, the possum will waddle off into the night, his hour of glory over and his mind full of wonder at the silly antics these humans will get themselves up to, all in the name of fun.

And Brasstown will return to a sleepy junction of two roads and to its usual place of fame as the home of the John C. Campbell Folk School.

Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.
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