24hourcampfire.com
24hourcampfire.com
-->
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Hop To
Page 4 of 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Joined: May 2016
Posts: 60,341
J
Campfire Kahuna
Offline
Campfire Kahuna
J
Joined: May 2016
Posts: 60,341
Gawtdamn! What a write up!

Thanks very much for sharing that with us. Seriously.


Sorry he is gone.


I am MAGA.
GB1

Joined: Dec 2019
Posts: 3,724
O
Campfire Tracker
Offline
Campfire Tracker
O
Joined: Dec 2019
Posts: 3,724
A smilining read of of a tough, good man. RIP

Osky


A woman's heart is the hardest rock the Almighty has put on this earth and I can find no sign on it.
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 7,437
T
Campfire Tracker
Offline
Campfire Tracker
T
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 7,437
Sir, from your story, your father was quite a man. I am sorry for your loss.


μολὼν λαβέ
Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 45,019
R
Campfire 'Bwana
Offline
Campfire 'Bwana
R
Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 45,019
Sorry about your dad.
Time will help.

Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 690
1
Campfire Regular
Offline
Campfire Regular
1
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 690
That was worth reading. Sorry for your loss

IC B2

Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 16,384
M
Campfire Ranger
Offline
Campfire Ranger
M
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 16,384
Sincere condolences to you and your family.
I am afraid my father will be following yours, very soon - would be 92 if he makes it 'til March 12 - don't think he will.
Prayers sent for y'all.


I've always been a curmudgeon - now I'm an old curmudgeon.
~Molɔ̀ːn Labé Skýla~
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 28,172
Campfire Ranger
Offline
Campfire Ranger
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 28,172
Sincerest condolences.


Hunt with Class and Classics

Religion: A founder of The Church of Spray and Pray

Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”







Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 3,246
T
Campfire Tracker
Offline
Campfire Tracker
T
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 3,246
I have a.cousin that is trying to research our family history. You have 1 up on us. You have lived it. The greatest thing my sons and grandsons could say about me when I die, you have said about your father. May he rest in peace. May your memories stay with you
God speed to your father.
May your family have peace!


Molɔ̀ːn Labé
Grandpa:the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
Dad:son you have 2 choices for supper eat or don't eat.
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 25,516
A
Campfire Ranger
Offline
Campfire Ranger
A
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 25,516
Wow! What a man.

I’m sorry for your loss but it sounds like you had a good life with your dad and I’m sure that your children will cherish the time spent with such a tough and determined man.

My condolences to you and your family.


�Politicians are the lowest form of life on earth. Liberal Democrats are the lowest form of politician.� �General George S. Patton, Jr.

---------------------------------------------------------
~Molɔ̀ːn Labé Skýla~
Joined: Sep 2015
Posts: 10,208
Campfire Outfitter
Offline
Campfire Outfitter
Joined: Sep 2015
Posts: 10,208
Sorry for your loss.

IC B3

Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 38,865
Campfire 'Bwana
Online Content
Campfire 'Bwana
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 38,865
Thoughts and prayers from Iowa. Keep the memories alive.


Not a real member - just an ordinary guy who appreciates being able to hang around and say something once in awhile.

Happily Trapped In the Past (Thanks, Joe)

Not only a less than minimally educated person, but stupid and out of touch as well.
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 11,663
2
Campfire Outfitter
Offline
Campfire Outfitter
2
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 11,663
My sincere condolences. Very well written.


Broncos are officially the worst team in the nation this year.
Joined: Nov 2007
Posts: 47,136
Campfire 'Bwana
Offline
Campfire 'Bwana
Joined: Nov 2007
Posts: 47,136
Originally Posted by Idaho_Shooter
Dad was born in Perry Ok 9/1/30. His parents had a small farm with milk cows, chickens, and turkeys, which they lost in the dust bowl.

The Drs told them that Grandma was going to die if they did not get her out of Oklahoma and the dust bowl conditions. So Grandpa and Grandma loaded six kids into the model T, tied the family's mattresses to the top, and headed west. Dad was third of the six kids. He had two older sisters, two younger sisters and a younger brother.

The family ended up in Scotts Bluff Or in Harney County, just off the Nevada state line. They lived there for a few years. Dad was eight years old when his four year old brother threw a pitchfork off from the top of a haystack. The fork penetrated the knee cap and passed through the knee joint, which became infected. There were not much in the way of antibiotics in those days. Dad was layed up for most of a year before the infection cleared and he was allowed to use that leg again.

During Dad's early teen years, his parents bought 160 acres of sagebrush in a brand new irrigation project outside of Caldwell ID. It was very hilly and chopped into many small fields. But once they grubbed the sagebrush out, it could all be farmed

The knee remained rigid for the rest of Dad's life. By the time dependable knee replacements became available, that stiff knee was such a part of his identity that he refused to have surgery on it. Dad spent his young life self employed as farm labor, proving to the world and himself that he was a better man than any out there with two good legs.

When I was five years old, Dad started putting me on the tractor. Any tractor. He bucked bales locally for anyone with a field to stack. 5 cents a bale for strings, or 8 cents for wire tie. Usually the farm supplied the tractor and Dad had his own specially built two wheeled hay trailer built close to the ground so he did not have to lift the bales so high.

We would work from daylight until about 2:00 PM then go home for lunch and a rest. If the field was close enough to home we would go back out to the field for a few hours in the evening. I witnessed Dad lift 1000 bales from the ground to the trailer and then into the stack in a single day on more than one occasion. He did this with no elevator at the stack or on the wagon. Just me at five or six or seven years of age to drive the tractor through the field.

He bought a little twenty acre place and put a one room shanty on it in 1955. My sister and I were born in that shanty. The property never did have running water until I purchased it thirty years later. Water was transported in ten gallon milk cans to the home and heated on the stove for sponge baths.

In 1968 he purchased an additional 290 acres of ground, for $12,000. The property only had fifty acres of irrigable ground. The rest was cheat grass dry land which we grazed in the spring.

Over the next six years we built our Holstein herd to 100 head counting calves and replacement heifers. It was more than our property could support so we leased another 200 acres with irrigation for 80 acres. Mom, and my younger sister, younger brother, and I milked as many as 35 head each night and morning by hand. We got a vacuum pump and mechanical milkers in the summer of '74 when I was headed to College and my sister to boarding school for her last year of High School.

It was 500 acres of pheasant paradise. From start of season till the end every year my brother and I were out with our dogs and shotguns every day. Dad never hunted birds, but he reveled in the hunting my brother and I did.

Dad was a big game hunter. Everyone in the community knew how poor our family was. And the community was amazed when Dad came home in the early 60s with a new Remington 760 in 30-06 and a Bushnell 3-9x40 Scopecheif. That is still a fine optical instrument which I have mounted on a rifle and am proud to carry.

Dad went hunting, back in the '60s with five loaded mags in his various pockets, and often two more boxes of ammo in his saddle bags. I have seen him come home forty rounds shy of when he left that morning. But there would be several dead deer and perhaps a couple elk up on the mountain waiting for tags and transport.

The only thing that counted was keeping the freezer filled. Besides, it was not really poaching, he thought, as long as it all had someone's tag when it came home. And nothing ever went to waste. I remember getting many a phone call at home. "We had a flat, we need a spare tire." Or two spare tires. Mom would jump in the car and head to the hills with her tags.

The toughest thing Dad ever dealt with was the loss of my younger brother in 1980. Brother was just 20 years old. He fell asleep at the wheel and wrapped his 71 Torino around a telephone pole.

That was the beginning of the end for Dad and Mom's marriage. They got more and more distant over the next four years and were divorced shortly after my first child was born in 1983.

The divorce meant the farm had to be sold and proceeds divided. Dad and Mom each had $12,000 after all the bills were paid. Dad bought his one and only new car in his life. A 1984 Toyota Celica, because by then I had owned two Celicas and a new Toyota pickup.

Dad kept one acre of ground and the old shack from the 60s. He still had no running water and refused to let me pipe water into the house. Instead we put a frost free hydrant near his door and he had an outhouse fifty yards away below the garden. I bought the remaining portion of his original 20 acres and raised my kids beside him.

About 1995 he met my stepmom. A wonderful kind lady who adopted my kids as her own grand kids. She would slave all day in the garden and then they would usually go home to her place. My son spent days and days out in that garden with his Grandpa hoeing and hilling the sweet corn crop. Dad and Step Mom usually had all of my kids out to some pond or fishing hole somewhere when ever it was warm enough to do so.

With Dad's crippled leg and the loss of the farm he had no means of support. He went on SSI and has lived on about $300/mo since 1985, and saved considerable amounts from that.

But that leg finally got the best of him and shortly before his 82'nd birthday he started falling down in Step Mom's house and it took paramedics each time to pick him up and get him back on the couch. On 7/2/12 we moved him into a nursing home. He has not been able to stand for nearly five years. He has been wheel chair and bed bound.

Wed Jan 8 he became unconscious. Diagnosis: low blood pressure which induced kidney failure compounded by tracheal bronchial malaise (collapse) We removed life support Sat Jan 11. He never again became conscious.

His tough old body finally gave up the fight this morning. Heartbeat and respiration ceased about 9:30 AM this morning.

Dad is gone, to be no more, forever.

so sorry, this brought tears to my eyes. my dad is 80 and lives with me, first thing i do every morning is check to see if he's up.


God bless Texas-----------------------
Old 300
I will remain what i am until the day I die- A HUNTER......Sitting Bull
Its not how you pick the booger..
but where you put it !!
Roger V Hunter
Joined: Sep 2010
Posts: 19,179
J
Campfire Ranger
Offline
Campfire Ranger
J
Joined: Sep 2010
Posts: 19,179
So sorry man. He lived a long life and compared to some an
exceptionally long life.

Excellent bio, reminds me of some of my family.

Condolences.


jwall- *** 3100 guy***

A Flat Trajectory is Never a Handicap

Speed is Trajectory's Friend !!
Joined: Sep 2010
Posts: 41,419
DMc Online Content
Campfire 'Bwana
Online Content
Campfire 'Bwana
Joined: Sep 2010
Posts: 41,419
Sincere condolences...

May God give you peace...


Make Gitmo Great Again!!
Who gave the order to stop counting votes in the swing states on the night of November 3/4, 2020?
Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 8,250
673 Online Content
Campfire Outfitter
Online Content
Campfire Outfitter
Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 8,250
Your DAD sounds like a heck of a good man, sorry for your loss.

Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 25,862
I
Campfire Ranger
OP Online Happy
Campfire Ranger
I
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 25,862
Once again, Thanks for the kind words and good wishes.

The alarm will go off in eight hours for work tomorrow. I gotta hit the sack.

Then interment Thursday.

Thanks again for the sharing.


People who choose to brew up their own storms bitch loudest about the rain.
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 27,091
Campfire Ranger
Offline
Campfire Ranger
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 27,091
Sorry for you loss. Prayers for you and your family.

Joined: Oct 2012
Posts: 7,618
M
Campfire Outfitter
Offline
Campfire Outfitter
M
Joined: Oct 2012
Posts: 7,618
My condolences to you and your family, I'll say a little prayer for you tonight.

Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 10,718
2
Campfire Outfitter
Offline
Campfire Outfitter
2
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 10,718
I’m very sorry for your loss. I hope time softens the pain but strengthens your favorite memories.


Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery.
--Winston Churchill
Page 4 of 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Moderated by  RickBin 

Link Copied to Clipboard
AX24

459 members (17CalFan, 10gaugemag, 16penny, 007FJ, 12344mag, 01Foreman400, 56 invisible), 2,778 guests, and 1,317 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Forum Statistics
Forums81
Topics1,191,616
Posts18,473,958
Members73,941
Most Online11,491
Jul 7th, 2023


 


Fish & Game Departments | Solunar Tables | Mission Statement | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | DMCA
Hunting | Fishing | Camping | Backpacking | Reloading | Campfire Forums | Gear Shop
Copyright © 2000-2024 24hourcampfire.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved.



Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5
(Release build 20201027)
Responsive Width:

PHP: 7.3.33 Page Time: 0.114s Queries: 14 (0.004s) Memory: 0.9028 MB (Peak: 1.0402 MB) Data Comp: Zlib Server Time: 2024-04-28 03:56:59 UTC
Valid HTML 5 and Valid CSS