Magazine Posts Table of Contents

Dalton Hunt

Posted 2012-11-29 06:40:07 | Views: 900

My grandmother Carolyn Sue Hunt

By: Dalton Hunt

My Grandmother Carolyn Sue Hunt

 

       My grandmother lived with her mom, and dad in Waco, Texas. She went to Robinson, and graduated from Robinson. She stayed in Robinson with her family. Then later on in life she met her husband, and then had a kid. When I was born I came into their family, and started to get to know them.

 

     When my grandmother was just a little kid she loved playing with her dolls all the time, and she carried one big one with her all the time. She always carried it to town when she went to town with her mom, and dad. One day she was walking with her mom, and she got tired of carrying that one big doll that she loved so much. Then she said to her mom “mom can you please carry this for me?”, and her mom always would say “yes I will, but I will not carry it again!!”  Well every time she toke it to town with them and she would ask her mom to carry it, and she was only carrying it for about an hour then she got tired of it.

 

      One day before they left the house her mom told her “you can bring the doll but I am not carrying it” Well she brought knowing that she would not want to carry it, but she toke it anyways and like always she didn’t want to carry it. Well she didn’t want to carry it so she asked her mom if she would carry it. Well she got mad and told her “now I told you that I will not carry the doll again!!!”

 

       Well like always she toke it again and carried it, and then when they got back home she was told “you will not bring it to town again” Well she never brought it again, and so she brought a smaller doll this time, but surprisingly she carried it all the time and didn’t, so she got to keep bringing that one small to town!!!


Mrs. Hoffmann

Posted 2012-11-25 08:39:18 | Views: 889

Grandpa - Jack HoLman

My Grandpa Jack Holman was bor in January of 1913 in Fountain Green, Utah.  His parents were Mormon pioneers that crossed the plains in the late 1880 with their families when the wersterward movement was at its peak.  My greatgrandparents and grandparents were sheep hearders.  Grandpa Jack loved working outdoors and being a rancher.  He raised all five of his children in the Eastern Utah and Southern colorado Mountains hearding sheep.  They would spend their winters in town, but when the summer came they spent all summer in the rugged peaks and valleys of some of the most beautiful mountains in the United States. 

 

     "Soon after the ewes lambed out on the ranch, and the lambs grew to be about 3 weeks old, we docked and branded them and then took small bands of 150 or so to the foot hills.

     During the summer, we were permitted a total of 1200 adult sheep and their lambs on Forest Service lands. So during the latter part of May and into June, we’d drive the flock up to pasture in the foothills above the ranch, taking the ewes and lambs up in the small bands as soon the lambs grew big enough to travel to prepare them to be transported upto the mountain valleys near Lake City.

     It was about a 6 mile trip up to the foothill pasture from the ranch. And it was always on a Saturday when the drive took place. Funny, that’s the day when us kids (my brother, Melvin, and I) would be home from school and could take the sheep up... We did this on foot, driving the sheep slowly along for about 4-5 hours, followed later in the day by Dad, who would meet us up there in the pick up and bring us back down to the Ranch.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The first time I went up, the sheep herder went with us. That’s how we learned the way. But the sheep pretty much knew where to go in the foothills. The old ones would teach the new ones, and they would slowly move off in the right direction, urged on by the promise of greener grass. The only challenge here was keeping the little lambs moving along. They’d get tired and want to call it quits. We used to make rattles by taking a half gallon can with a handful of rocks inside, hammer the top together, drive a nail through to make hole, thread a piece of wire thru it, and had the perfect tool for tossing behind the sheep. That rattle sound would get them up and going.

 

 


 

 

As you can imagine, with the sheep spread out and grazing along the grassy hillsides, rattle snakes would get stirred up from time to time. One day, as we were driving the sheep along, there was this snake, laying there all coiled up shaking his rattle menacingly at us. Of course us kids just had to have those rattlers. Well, we found a couple rocks and then struck the snake on his head, then we stepped on his head to be safe and cut off our prized rattle.  Funny thing was we could buy rattle snake in a can then to eat, but we were having none of that snake but its rattles."

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Keeper of Memories

Posted 2012-11-24 14:41:18 | Views: 1,143

"Memories are forever."
- Lois Lowry, The Giver, Ch. 18

“The worst part of holding the memories is not the pain. It's the loneliness of it. Memories need to be shared.”
Lois Lowry, The Giver Ch. 19


 

 

This Memory Keepers project was inspired by Lois Lowry's book The Giver.  In it she discusses the importance of memories to us as human beings.  Memories are a way to be connected to each other, even across many generations. Without this connection we lose our anchors to who we are and who we can become.  Also, without the memory of mistakes, we cannot actively make decisions about the future; memories become a source of wisdom to guide us. Finally without memories of pain, we cannot fully appreciate joyful and happy memories.

 


“ . . . I re-experience the memories again and again it is how wisdom comes and how we shape our future.”
Lois Lowry, The Giver  Ch 14

Click this llink to read an interview with Loi Lowry about The Giver.

 

http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/lois-lowry-interview-transcript