Showing posts with label Happy Thanksgiving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Happy Thanksgiving. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Way Down South In The Land of Cotton



We left home at 7:30 this morning heading for Okaloosa Island, Florida for our annual Thanksgiving getaway.  As we began the drive through South Georgia and on into Alabama, we passed field after field of cotton ripe for harvest, being harvested, and in HUGE compressed bales waiting to be loaded onto trucks to be sent to the local gin.

I couldn't help but think of how simple the process is now in comparison to the hand picking which used to be done by slaves and sharecroppers.  If you have never touched the spiky pod which holds the bloom of cotton, you can't imagine how sharp those points are.  I can visualize the bloodied hands of those who had to pick the soft cotton from the prickly pod.  It must have taken hundreds of people hundreds of hours to pick it and their backs had to ache as their hands became bloodied.  I can imagine that many of those bloodied hands even became infected.

How different things are now.  The fields are harvested by huge machinery and the cotton in dumped into the back of the equipment where it is compressed into huge bales which are then covered with plastic before being loaded onto trucks to go to the gin.  The machines are certainly faster, but not necessarily more efficient, as you see a lot of the cotton left behind by the harvesters.  Surely those who picked it by hand, and were paid by the pound if they were paid at all, didn't leave behind as much as the harvesters.  There is a lot of waste with the cotton that is left behind...but the time consumed in harvesting is certainly much less...so I guess it all balances out.

It was not difficult to picture how important this crop was to early Southerners and how much has changed since the days when cotton was first grown as a cash crop in this Country.  Now most of the cotton grown here is shipped elsewhere to be turned into clothing, towels and other items.  Most of the mills which dotted the South have moved overseas and left empty hulks of buildings behind and thousands of lost jobs. 

Our Country was built on the backs of hardworking farmers and laborers who helped create and maintain the growing cotton.  Times have certainly changed, and we have lost something in the process.  We need to grow more jobs in this Country and soon.  We need to start small businesses and revitalize the American Dream before it is lost forever.  It is going to take ALL of us to do this.  We can not count on Congress or the Senate or any Committee to do this...we must all take part in the process.

This year I encourage you to shop locally.  Buy products made by local companies, give gifts of a hairstyle from the local beauty salon, oil changes or tires from a local garage, groceries from your local store...and on and on.  Let's all start working toward rebuilding the American we grew up with so that our children and grandchildren can share in the American Dream.

Happy Thanksgiving ...

Monday, November 21, 2011

Okaloosa Tomorrow



We are leaving for Okaloosa Island at eight tomorrow morning.  I am anxious to see the beautiful sugar sand and the emerald water.  We are leaving Lucy here with a sitter, as things with her have deteriorated.  At first I felt quite guilty about leaving her behind, but I have discovered that when you are a full time caregiver, you do need to take a break once in a while, and this is mine.

I am so excited because Melanie, Aaron and Liv and Ashlyn will be joining us.  The children are excited about going too.  We plan to have lots of fun while we are there.  The girls would like to see Arthur's Christmas, so we will be taking one afternoon to do that.  I love to hear them giggle, and all too soon they will be grown and those little giggles will be gone.

We are planning a very alternative Thanksgiving again this year.  This will be the third year we have not celebrated Thanksgiving in the "traditional" sense of the word.  We are returning to Okaloosa for the second time and we will be having a Low Country Boil using some of that fantastic, fresh Gulf shrimp.
Oh, I bought a turkey but I won't be having it until December. 

We are taking my little Buddy with us this year as we finally located a "pet friendly" condo where we can feel comfortable having him.  The girls are excited about him coming along, they just love him and he is such fun!  One of the things that I am thankful for is the time I have to spend with my wonderful grandchildren.  I have been blessed with wonderful children and grandchildren and I am so thankful that everyone is healthy and that we have jobs.  There are so many people in this country right now who are suffering from the woes of the sad economy. 

We all need to say thank you for all the blessings we have had in this Country, and now we need to all pray to work together and return this Country to the greatness it once knew.  We must learn to SHARE with others.  Not just money, but time.  We have become selfish and self-centered.  We have forgotten the days of "barn raising" and helping your neighbor.  Let's all pray that this season will restore some of the kindness and generosity in the hearts of the American people.

Happy Thanksgiving!