I was rummaging around in the basement out at the farm the other day, looking for painting supplies, when I saw the old stove in this great light and had to stop and capture it. I’m not sure why my Grandma did most of her canning down in the basement. I know this past summer the basement was so humid mold was growing on everything. I had to buy a dehumidifier to put down there to keep the humidity below 50%. When she got this baby cranked up with a canner full of boiling water (not to mention the wringer washer) the condensation literally ran down the walls.
There is a good-sized triangular patch of ground across the creek from the house that was the truck garden. This was where most of the vegetables for the table were grown. The canning vegetables, as well as the strawberries for the farmer’s market, were grown back up on the hill. There was a footbridge that crossed the creek to the garden. My uncle ran an electric fence around the garden to keep the deer out. Grandma grew a ton of green beans, corn, cabbage, cucumbers, onions, and tomatoes in that little patch of ground. The potatoes were grown on a similar, though much smaller, triangular patch along the end of the driveway. I spent many hours stringing beans and shucking corn, scalding and peeling tomatoes, and helping any way I could on canning days.
One year we drove all the way to Virginia to buy peaches. I remember they were as big as softballs. Mom was helping Grandma can them and neither one knew the other had stirred sugar into the syrup to pour over them in the jars. When they opened the first jar later on, they were sickeningly sweet. Mom felt so bad…she thought she had ruined Grandma’s beautiful peaches. But Grandma said, “Sis, don’t you worry about a thing. We’ll just make us some peach butter and not have to add any sugar.” They cooked them down and that was the best peach butter ever!
Now, this old stove stands silently in a back corner of the basement…rusted and resting on cinder blocks for legs. This appliance was from a time of resourceful ingenuity… a time when you never threw anything away. You made do. You “recycled” by reusing. You reduced waste simply by being too poor to buy something better. The Baby Boomers were on the tail end of that generation. Ours was a disposable generation. Cheaply made plastic and paper products have filled countless landfills. Grandma didn’t even have trash service till very late in life. You burned what little paper you threw away. You fed table scraps to the cats or hogs. You reused the glass jars that you canned your food in. I’m glad this stove is still here…even though it doesn’t work…it would never be safe enough to use. But it’s like going into the museum of my youth when I go downstairs. And it’s one of the the things that makes me smile. ❤️
“So then, brothers, stand firm and hold to the traditions that you were taught by us, either by our spoken word or by our letter.”
2 Thessalonians 2:15 ESV
Of canning and buring the trash in barrel out back by the alley…I remember those days! Smelling the vines of tomatoes…isn’t that strange, that smell, one that’s not a pretty smell, brings it all back to me-one of my favorite memories of my Mom!
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What a treasure! I wish I had my Mama’s old wood cook stove & wringer washing machine. I’d love to know what happened to them. She was still using them in 1966 when I graduated high school. I also remember all those other things….gardens, truck patches, cotton fields. That was how we lived back then….no running water except in the creek!! We were dirt poor but I didn’t realize it because I played in gullies, creeks, barns with my neighbor friends. Oh how I’d love to go back to those days…sometimes…no worries. This generation has no clue.???
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I am reading a book about an elderly female, who has moved in with a nephew and his wife, and they are going to care for her in their home, and receive her inheritance when she is gone. It is recording her references and peculiarities over her long life, and each chapter is also about the life habits of birds she observes out her window. Her world is reduced to one window in one room, and a TV. The book is Winter Birds by Jamie Thompson. As I also am aging rapidly, I find it interesting. And also have discovered Birds. This year I am redesigning my Christmas Tree around Red Cardinals, I regret letting go of so many things from my last year’s, but I also knew I needed to purge and not hold on. The day will come when I will be reduced to one room. So, yes, I will reread this book, and reread it again, for it,s perspective and lessons to glean. Thank you for allowing me to share.
Thank you for sharing, dear one. We will all be reduced to one room eventually. May we learn to enjoy the view long before we get there. ❤️