Monday, December 25, 2006

Ho Ho Ho ! and Merry Christams



Ho Ho Ho! It is Christmas day -- Merry Christmas to everyone.
We received about another 4 inches of snow during the night. Jim is out "snow-blowing" and I shoveled a little bit...walkways here and there. Blazed a trail down to our river/creek -- it is a very small river, so we call it a creek most of the time. Everything is so beautiful, but it is warming up so the snow is getting really wet and heavy... gets stuck in the snowblower and Jim has a heck of a time.
Hope everyone is having a great Christmas.

The tree photo is looking out towards our river from my sewing studio deck. And of course our cabin.

Hope you are having a great Christmas.

Luv, Bunny

Monday, December 18, 2006

Fruit Salad

Here is Sally St. Clair's Fruit Salad from Bunny

I don't have amounts...this is just in my head.
Chopped unpeeled apples
Sliced Bananas
Chopped Walnuts
Raisins
Miricle Whip (yup... not cool whip)
Mix altogether
I added a can of mandarin oranges for our Thanksgiving salad; and you can add grapes or ??
Thanks for the Blueberry recipe from Aunt Marian. I have frozen huckleberrys... should be really good with them as well.
I would love to have the time to play with geneology. I have also talked to Aunt Marian and she has given me lots of information. But I just have not had time to work with it. I have a friend that does a lot with her family geneology and really enjoys her research. Would be great if you could keep us posted on what you find Shirley. I even have or had a geneology program for my computer, but have never even loaded it onto the computer.
Not enough hours in the day, days in the week, weeks in the month, etc. !!
Have a Merry Christmas and wonderful 2007 everyone.

Saturday, December 16, 2006

Greetings From Shirley St.Clair

Hi from Shirley (daughter of Oba & Dorothy): Want to get this to all you St. Clair cousins galore before the end of the year so I can at least feel a wee bit timely!

In July, I visited Aunt Marian in Reedsport to talk St. Clair Genealogy. She made and served a fantastically delicious Blueberry Torte and shared her recipe which I have written down for any of you who might want to try it. You can see her holding the finished product next to the recipe below.

In August, hot on the trail of St. Clair Genealogy, I went to the Scottish Festival in Winston. Being so near Tenmile, I stopped by to see Uncle Harold and Laveta. As you can see from these pictures, our rough & tough eldest St. Clair guy was looking fit and feeling good. He most definitely looks 20 years younger than his 81 years!

Since September I have been taking weekly genealogy classes to learn methods. One of the many things I have learned is how challenging and time-consuming it is to track down information even with the many sources available on the internet. I am so in awe of how Aunt Marian traced the St. Clairs back to Alexander in 1698. She did all this by regular mail, following leads and dead-ends, and once completed she gave us each our personalized heritage histories. She did all this (a really monumental task) without the benefit of a computer or the internet. Thank you, Aunt Marian, for your foresight and diligence and for caring.

My goal is to track our heritage back to Scotland; to see if I can figure out what part of Scotland bonny Alexander hailed from and actually go there eventually.

Shirley

PS: Dear Bunny - Will you please share your Mom's (my Aunt Sally's) recipe for fruit salad that you fixed for Thanksgiving.

PS: Dear Nancy - I was so pleased to see the pictures you posted of your Mom (my other Aunt Marian - Bud's Marian). Please tell her "Hi" for me.



Aunt Marian's Blueberry Torte

Crust: 1 stick oleo
1 cup flour
1 cup chopped pecans or walnuts

Mix well with pastry blender & press into 9 x 13 pan. (Aunt Marian used a pie pan. Worked great!)
Bake 25 minutes at 350 degrees.
Cool completely.


Filling:
1 pkg cream cheese (8 oz, room temperature)
1 cup powdered sugar
1 tsp vanilla

Whip until creamy, fold into:
2 cups Cool Whip

Spread onto crust. Top with:
2 cans blueberry pie filling

Chill and serve with Cool Whip on top.
* * * * *

When Aunt Marian made this for me, she cooked up frozen blueberries instead of using canned filling and used real whipped cream instead of Cool Whip. It was absolutely, positively wonderful!
...... Shirley

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Greetings From Marian Sanders

Marian sent me the following note to post for you all. Carol

I loved hearing about all the Thanksgiving doings (on the blog). We had quite a crowd here. I made the turkey, dressing, and a large shrimp salad. The rest brought all sorts of side dishes. Enough for several days eating. Jason made 10 - 12 pies from scratch plus many other things. Great eating and gathering. Seventeen in all came.
Love,
Marian

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Season's Greetings From Clair

Hey St Clair clan,
Since this is my first blog entry ever – I will give a short history of C & B (Clair and Beverly). Clair born 1951, Beverly 1940, Married in 1976, daughter and son, 6 grandchildren, 2 sisters-in-laws and brother-in-laws, lots of eclectic friends.

Beverly worked in education of all types from juvenile corrections to Jr. Hi to adult nutrition – retired OSU extension. I worked conservation education – outdoor school for kids and presently Soil and Water Conservation District for adults. Put in 12 years of full-time farming (Blueberries, Raspberries, Marions and Boysens) during that time and another 14 yrs of part-time farming .

Beverly likes to garden and visit a number of older folks that need visitors. She writes a bit and paints a lot since retirement. She travels to Tennessee to see our daughter and grandkids twice a year. I like work because the jobs are so diverse. Chocolate is an essential food group for me and tea for Beverly. I have a 3rd part-time job as naturalist on a small cruise ship (60 guests) in Alaska, Baja and on the Columbia River(Lindblad Expeditions). The company offers staff space available on trips all over the world and we take as much advantage of it as possible. I am headed for Ecuador and Galapagos Islands next Wednesday and return Christmas eve. We have been to Antarctica, Europe, Central America. Beverly isn’t going on this trip and is holding out for Europe and Scandinavia. Would travel more but the only thing holding us back in having to work for a living and available cash. Sound familiar?

Come visit - we would love to hear what makes life exciting for you. We can fill in the details on our short history !

Life is fine – Everyday is a Great Day - just that some are Greater than others!

Love to all, Clair and Beverly

You can click on either image to enlarge.

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Christmas Jigsaw Puzzle

Click below: Santa's Jigsaw - animated flash ecard by Jaquie Lawson www.jacquielawson.com/viewcard.asp?code=ER13610552

Enjoy!
Karla St.Clair
(Rod's wife)

Friday, November 24, 2006

Thanksgiving

We had anther couple for a great TG dinner, in our cozy little cabin... had the camera ready on the cupboard next to the table. Forgot to take any photos. Geeezzzzz ##@@!##$!!###
I actually cooked two turkeys.... I only have a microwave/convection oven in the cabin so cooked a small one in it and another one in the BBQ. At 28 cents a pound... I could not pass up buying two turkeys. Like to freeze the leftovers for enchiladas, etc. Have a great enchilada recipe from sister-in- law, Candy. I sent half of everything home with our friends and still have lots of food left. Of course I spent 2+ days cooking so don't plan on cooking for awhile....like maybe a month! Jim says I went overboard... I don't usually entertain in our small cabin so I decided to go for it. Even had shrimp and crab coctails along with a fancy tossed salad -- then the main course with all the traditional foods and a fruit salad like my Mom used to make. Had made a Huckleberry pie and the friends brought a pumpkin pie. Took us several hours before we were ready to tackle the pies.... but we managed to put a big dent in them.
The Microwave/Convection oven is great for large roasts, turkeys, etc. You can cook them on half and half... half convection and half microwave and it takes about half the time to cook them. The oven does it all automatically if you punch the right buttons. Turns out really great.
We played UNO Attack the rest of the evening after dinner. Great fun!
Sounds like you each had a great day and great foodCarol & Nanc.
I can't believe that 2006 is almost over. Where did the year go??
We are expecting some really cold weather in the next week or so. Down around the zero degrees mark at night and highs in the teens. Don't have much snow yet to keep things (plants) covered and partially protected from the cold. So I hope they make it. But, it really does not matter as the deer eat everything anyway.
Hope everyone had a great Thanksgiving...
Love, Bunny

AK Thanksgiving


We had a very small gathering; My brother-Myron, son-Cooper, Mom-Marion, hubby-Rob. We ate early, at 2 PM rather than at the dinner hour. Then we just had leftovers for dinner too. We had the bird of course, dressing, mashed potatoes, gravy, green beans, 6-cup Fruit Salad, cranberry sauce and rolls. Mom made the rolls and brought them and of course I'd made a couple of pumpkin pies the previous day. Mom was going to make a strawberry-cream cheese pie, but the strawberries she'd purchased were freezer burnt.

I'd planned on making a chocolate cream pie from a new recipe, but decided not to because of Mom's planned pie. The pumpkin were plenty... only Myron and I could eat a piece right after dinner. It was a pretty quiet Thanksgiving, no kids to perk it up, but it was good food and conversation with family together. We visited Rob's folks in the evening with his brother and wife. The snow has stopped and it is clear and cold... only 15 degrees here this AM so will have to force myself to go for our daily walk. Enjoy your weekend all of you. I am so thankful to have such a great extended family.
Nanc

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Max & Carol's Thanksgiving 2006


Here is a picture of our 16-pound bird... and the motley crew who consumed it.

Dinner consisted of turkey, dressing, mashed potatoes, gravy, sweet potato casserole, 2-berry salad, and rolls. I forgot to put the cranberries on the table. Drats. That happens sometimes when you're rushing around to get everything on the table at once. Oh well, they'll still be good tomorrow.




In the picture from left to right:
Amy & Troy Greenhalgh (our friends), Max Jr., Max Sr., Jeremy, Jeff, Calvin I, of course, was being the photographer.

I sold Amy & Troy a house last year, when they moved from Reno, and we've been friends ever since.

Max Jr., Jeremy & Jeff are all Max's sons. Calvin is Max Jr's grandson. Calvin's mother, Sarah, was working today and couldn't come. They all live in Selah, Washington (a suburb of Yakima).

Max Sr. also has two daughters. Lisa and her family live in Spokane and Lana and her family live in southern California.

Click on images to enlarge

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

News from the North


Hello everyone,
Here's a great picture of Mom.

I worked on the ferries this summer for my new job for the AK Marine Hwy. System. Found it isn’t exactly my cup of tea. I prefer to have my feet on land the majority of the time as does my tummy when it gets rough on the water.

Actually, it is the big swells that do me in, which happen with regularity every time we are in open waters. Usually if I am busy it doesn’t bother me, but I had a couple of bad experiences that made me wonder what in the world I was doing out there. I do have to admit that I loved the ever changing view , when I had time to look at it. Got to see whales bubble feeding for the first time. I enjoyed talking with the passengers and getting to know the crew too, so it wasn’t all bad. My favorite job was Officer’s Messman. For that you take the officer’s orders and serve them. Many interesting and varied subjects popped up during conversations at mealtime. They were a nice bunch of people to work with.

The money was great, starting at nearly $20 pr hr. and ending at over that. I miss being home with my plants and my dog though and being able to get out and walk on solid ground. Those steel decks don’t agree with my feet . They could probably handle 8 hr. days, but not the 12 I do out there. I am looking for a land job again while I am laid off due to several boats being down for maintenance.

Rob and his friend Jack Sisson got in a 10 day hunting trip over on Zarembo Is., a 15 minute boat ride from Wrangell. They enjoyed each other’s company and finally got two deer the last two days.
*
Mom and I have been doing a daily walk on the days I don’t run. She has only bailed out on me one day so far. This day was a rough walk as there wasn’t much of a track broken through the snow and Mom only had her walking shoes with Yak Tracks on them. I have had them on my shoes ever since the snow started, Nov. 7th.
*
We haven’t had clear sidewalks since, except in front of the hospital, schools and a few businesses. It has been a very unusual Nov. for us, as the majority of snow usually hits in Jan. and Feb.
Now it has switched to clear skies and cooler temps in the 20s and dipping down into the teens for the next several days. There was a brisk north wind today, and Mom was a real trouper, even though she hates the wind. We’ve agreed that we always feel better getting out in the fresh air even when it is nasty out.

The rest of my days have been spent being lazy, working crosswords and my new interest, the Sodoku puzzles. I thought they were silly at first, but am hooked now. I found a difficult one that took me several tries, but I finally conquered it today.

Now I’ve got to get started with my scrapbooking. I’ve been away from it for so long that I feel I’ve lost my touch. Maybe the photos of Mom will be the inspiration I need to spark my creativity again. I am also getting the urge to bake gooey, delicious treats. I’ve been wanting to tone it down to healthier fare as most of us these days don’t need the extra calories. But then many say that Christmas is the one time of the year that they splurge on those comfort foods. So what do all of you think... should I stick with traditional sweets or try to remake the recipes to be healthier?

Nanc of the North

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Grandma Pansy's Deep Dish Apple Pie

Shirley St.Clair sent me an e-mail earlier in the week that she plans to post Aunt Marians blueberry pie recipe (when she finds it). But, that got me to looking for one of my favorite recipes:

Grandma Pansy's Deep Dish Apple Pie

TOPPING: Mix to crumble
1 cube butter
1 cub flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 cup sugar
pinch of salt
add 1 egg

* * * * *

Peel, core and slice apples as for pie.
Put in oblong pan (8 x 11)
Shake 1/2 cup sugar (with some cinamon) over the apples.
Spread topping over the apple mixture
Bake at 350 degrees until apples are done and topping is brown... about 25 minutes.

YUM-O

Have a great Thanksgiving all!
Carol

Monday, November 13, 2006

Winter Arrives in Wrangell, Alaska


Nancy sends the following message and pictures from Alaska: "Mom and I took a walk on the new extension to the nature trail today"




Carol says: Looks like Fall is over and winter setting in.

Max & Carol's Blog

Here is a link to Max & Carol's blog, with pictures of a Fall excusion we took not long ago. But, now winter is setting in and we put away the tank tops and pulled out the winter coats.
www.TreeDoctor.blogspot.com

-Carol Williams

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

9/11 Memorial Ride


Hi Everyone,
We are so pleased.... Jim and I planned and arranged a 9/11 Memorial Ride on Monday --9/11.
We had it in the paper and on the local radio. ...invited motorcyclists and classic car owners and anyone else who wanted to participate to attach their flags and memorial signs. But had no idea how many, if any would show up.
The radio called me earlier in the day to see how many and I told them could be 5, could be 40 -- I really had no idea. Had only had about 3 phone calls about it.
Well we arrived at the place we were starting about 15 minutes early and there were already about 10 bikes and 6 or 7 classic cars. And.... they just kept rolling in. We were totally blown away. We had about 50 bikes and 25 to 30 classic cars. We rode thru Colville and over to Kettle Falls...next town over, about 8 miles away; and then back to and through Colville again. It was so awesome. We were not supposed to have a police escort, because we did not plan it in time to get permission from the Mayor for that, but one of the guys called them and they sent a police car to escort us since there were so many. We got to ride through the lights and stop signs, etc.
He escorted us clear to Kettle Falls and had called ahead to have a KF officer escort us thru KF. It was just way cool.
We were in the lead... that is Jim with the big flag and me with the red leather jacket and two smaller flags on the back of my bike. It was so cool to look in our mirrors and see nothing but motorcycles behind us. And the sound was of course great!

If the photo is blurry, right click on it and click on "show original image". You can also go to the local newspaper site and see it and what they wrote... http://www.statesmanexaminer.com/ Or try this if that site moves the articles... http://www.statesmanexaminer.com/images/stories/September11Ride.jpg They had our advertisment for the run on the front page last week and this week... we are on the front page again. Can you tell ... we are very pleased about how well it all turned out. Everyone involved wants us to do it again... they kept saying this is the "first annual run". At this point we are planning on doing just that. We feel that people are forgetting that awful day and want to remind them of all who were lost.

Anyway..... just wanted to share with you guys.

Bunny & Jim

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Max's Mexican Birthday Week


Thursday was Max's 76th birthday. In our family we celebrate "birthday weeks" and we had an interesting week, including a full blown homemade Mexican fiesta on Tuesday AND dinner at one of our favorite local Mexican restaurants on Thursday. For pictures and commentary of both events, visit our Max & Carol's Life blog. There is "smut" talk, so don't miss it!

-Carol

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Back from Seattle

Hi everyone,
I got back from Seattle on Monday night... quilting girlfriend went with me. We had a great time and the weather was absolutely wonderful in Seattle. Went to the awards night, the Gala Auction night and 3 to 4 seminars each day. Also shopped at all the vendors, but were fairly "good" -- only bought a couple books and some thread but no fabric. Well..... since neither of us bought any fabric at the show, we did stop to check out a new quilt shop on the way home and managed to find some fabric we could not live without there.

The quilt show was awsome... very overwhelming. It is a juried show... you have to be juried into the show by three jurors. Then it is judged by 3 judges. The Best of Show was an outstanding quilt with a huge cat on it. The whole show was awsome.
My quilt (wall hanging) that was auctioned off brought $500.00 which was one of the top ones that sold. Made me feel really good.

Anyway... it was a great weekend. This week at work has been very busy - trying to catch up, and I was only gone from work on Thursday, Friday and Monday..... and I don't work Fridays anyway. I have an assistant now and she works Fridays, and when I am gone on vacation and conference, etc. That helps a lot.

I am hoping to STAY HOME this weekend... seems like we have been gone someplace every weekend since summer got here. Our summers (good weather) are so short that we cram everything into a very short time period.

Hope everyone is having a great summer.
Bunny

Sunday, August 06, 2006

More photos & misc. comments from Bunny



Great photo f Aunt Marian and good looking pie as well. Waiting for the recipe...

Thanks for the comments Shirley... would have loved to gone to the quilt show.

We had a great reunion... lots of old people there!!! ;o) It was lots of fun seeing many of my classmates and two of my best friends from high school were there -- so that was great. Had a nice visit with my Dad and Laveta as well, but the best part was visiting with Rian and Gina on the way down and on the way back. Will try to put a couple photos in here.

What kind of help does Aunt Marian need for the genealogy thing? I am very interested... maybe could do some stuff in my spare time -- HA! HA! Really I am very interested in all our family history.

Had company all this weekend... some of Jim's family and then other friends spent the night after family left.... busy weekend.

This next weekend I am off to Seattle for the Pacific Northwest Quilt Fest. My quilt (wall hanging) that is in the invitational quilt show and has been traveling around the country for two years will be auctioned off. Here is the link if you want to see the quilts. http://www.apnq.org/
Go to the "Wish You Were Here" link for the traveling invitational quilts. Mine is a fairy on dark blue background.
Will let everyone know how it goes when I return.
Love, Bunny

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Aunt Marian's Blueberry Pie



Shirley checking in - This is a picture of Aunt Marian I took when I was visiting her in mid-July. The special pie she made is an absolutely scrumptious blueberry sour cream with a buttery crust. I hope she posts the recipe for everyone to try. The picture on the wall is of Grandma & Grandpa Reeve. It is a treasure, as were they.

Marian needs someone to help her with genealogy research of the Reeve side of the family. Any helpers out there?

Message for Bunny: You are one incredible Biker-Babe! One minute you're practicing in parking lots and the next thing you know you are out there on the highways and biways, hair blowing in the wind, stripped down to your skivvies! Way to go!!

Too bad your reunion isn't this weekend. There is a big quilt show in Coburg, right on your way to Roseburg.
-Shirley

Friday, July 28, 2006

St.Clair Men - 1955



Here is the, long anticipated, picture of the St.Clair men taken at the same time as the (previouly posted) St.Clair women. September 1955. You can enlarge it some more by clicking on the image. The picture is thanks to Shirley.

I need some help here with identification. I know Grandpa and my Dad (with Clair), Charley, and Wes... but that's about all I'm absolutely sure of. I think Mike is in front of Grandpa, and probably Rian in front of Wes. Is that Dell between Grandpa & my Dad? Is that Oba to the right of my Dad? Any helpers out there?
-Carol

From Shirley:
This is how I see the line-up: Big Guys (l to r) Ralph (Shirley's husband), Grandpa, Harold, Bruce, Oba, Charlie, Bud, Dell, Wes.

Little Guys (l to r) Mike w/Grandpa, Clair w/Bruce, Myron or Scott w/Charlie, Lucky standing w/Bud, Myron or Scott on Bud's shoulders, Lance w/Dell, Rian w/Wes.

From Peggi in the comments section:
From the left, unkown guy (now identfied as Ralph - Shirley's ex), Grandpa Frank w/Mike in front, Uncle Harold, Bruce w/Clair in front, Uncle Obe, Uncle Charley w/Myron in front, Uncle Bud w/Scott on shoulders and Lucky (Frank) in front, Uncle Dell w/Lance, Dad(Wes) w/Rian.

The St. Clair Women - 1955

I've moved this picture up in the blog, to be with the (recently acquired) man clan photo.

Does anyone know when this photo was taken? It's a very cool picture of the St. Clair women. I think I have a St. Clair men photo somewhere.
You can click on the image to enlarge.

I think I can identify most of these women, but not sure about who is on the far left. Is that Shirley on the far right?

From left to right: Janice (Nita), Jessie, Sally (Bunny), Marian (Sharon & Peggi), Grandma Pansy, Amy (Carol), Bud's Marion (Nancy), Dottie, Shirley. Marian (with an "a") is Frank & Pansy's daughter. Marion (with an "o") is Bud's wife. The blended family was always very confusing to me... but I'm getting it sorted out as time goes by. My adult brain seems to be able to grasp it better than the kid brain did.

How did I do? Can anyone help me with this? (Thanks Nancy... I've made the corrections!)

Carol

Monday, July 24, 2006

Bike Run to Montana



Hi everyone.
Just a note to tell you about our second camping trip on our bikes. Went to a Hawgs & Paws fundraiser bike run in Troy Montana this past weekend.... yes in all that heat. Think we fried a few brain cells -- it was a hot one. Well over 100 degrees in Libby -- near where we were.
The photo is of a run we went on on Saturday up into the boondocks above Troy. Up the Yaak River and around and back into Libby and into Troy. Fun old fashioned saloon in Yaak.
The bike on the far right is mine and the next one is Jim's.
The scenery was beautiful. But we almost cooked ourselves before we got back into Troy and what is called the Home Bar where they had BBQ dinner for us. The camp was at a ranch above Troy... with free dinners, breakfast and drinks, including beer. Had live music both Friday night and Saturday night. We had a great time, but could have used cooler weather.
Rode over 500 miles in the 3 days-- which is a huge amount for me. I even stripped off all my leathers and even the helmet cause it was so hot. Did wear a long sleeve shirt that I soaked with water every chance I got.
The second photo is of Jim and our friend Tony who we rode to and from the run with... Tony and Catherine Salamone -- crazy peeps.

Now, this next weekend we are off to Roseburg Oregon for my 40th class reunion. Stopping to see Rian and Gina on the way. Hope to take our 65 Mustang, but if it is still this hot, we may take my Explorer with air conditioning.

Two week ends later, I am off to Seattle for the BIG Pacific Northwest Quilt Fest where I will have a small quilt auctioned off, that has been traveling around the country for two years. One of my quilting buddies is going with me -- we should have fun.

Busy summer!!!

Hope everyone is having a great summer.

Bunny

Sunday, July 09, 2006

reunion / fuzzy photos

I vote for some time in 2007 for a reunion... this year is way too booked for us already.

Jim told me how to get the photos to turn out nice... without the fuzzy... after you double click on it to make it larger you then right click on it and tell it to "show original image"... takes the fuzzy away.

By the way Rian, you have not written on this blog -- you told Jim you don't have much to say. Well how come the two of you can spend over an hour on the phone talking if you don't have much to say... ;o) Looking forward to seeing you guys on our way to the reunion.
Love, Bunny
Send us a photo of your new toy... the shovelhead.

Saturday, July 08, 2006

Marian Sanders & Clan


Click on the image to enlarge!

Here is a photo of the family in the middle of June of this year. I have another one almost like it, I think the only difference is that Robyn's dad Bob Kelly is in it. Rian and Gina were at their camp during this photo unfortunately but I will send one of them at Nikki and Rays camp when they stopped by for a visit. Kevin is fairly camera shy but I have one of him also and will send it.........

The three guys in back from left to right are:

Jason, Sharon's son-in-law
Keldon Seeber, Sharons oldest child
Ernie, Lace's father

Below them starting on left :

Lori, my oldest daughter
Shawn, Lori's oldest son
Nikki, my daughter
Ray, Nikki's husband
Robyn, Sharons oldest daughter
Lace, Sharons youngest daughter
Sharon
Stasy, Sharons middle daughter

In front of Lori
Peggi, and Lindsay in front of me, Lori's youngest
Zachary, Lori's middle son
Sierra, Stasy's daughter

Kneeling below Robyn is her daughter Aun Marie
Mom, the queen of our tribe!
Larissa, Kelly's wife
Mychy, Stasy's son
Job is sitting in the chair, he is Kelly and Larissa's youngest and only one of their kids at the gathering

Down in front is :

Adrian (we call him Chui) he is Nikki and Ray's youngest
Avery, Lori's youngest son
Emily, Lori's oldest girl
Darian, Nikki's oldest

Will get more posted as time permits.

Post from: Peggi

Hanging Out In Camp


Click on image to enlarge

Rian and Gina at the table, Ray standing and Lori, Zach and myself on the right.
-Peggi

Kevin in the 18-Wheeler


Kevin works for Bob Kelly and was in the area already when he stopped in for our visit.
-Peggi

Saturday, June 03, 2006

My new ride




Hi all,

Here are a couple photos of my new ride.

It is a 1995 Heritage Softail Nostalgia model. Rides like Lincoln Continental compared to my Sportster. But getting used to the heavier weight when I stop, start out, back into a parking spot, etc... is the fun part!!! I love it though. We hope to go for a ride this afternoon. Someone here right now looking at one of our classic cars that needs total restoration.

We have decided that we will never get these cars all done so are going to sell a few. We have a really cool fastback Mustang that Jim completely restored and another Mustang coupe about 1/2 done. That will probably be about it. I do have a 69 Cougar that I would love to have done, but we shall see. The bikes are taking up so much of our free time now.

Still hoping to see photos and/or posts from the rest of you. Peggi asked for a photo of our cabin. I will try to get that posted soon.

Love, Bunny

P.S. Anyone want to buy a really cool Sportster?

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Marian Sanders Wants Us To Know...

Here is a note I received from Aunt Marian, asking me to post for you. She has done a lot of genealogy work and I appreciate her willingness to share. She has been very gracious with me in sharing her pictures and memories of my parents:

"Wanted to tell you and the others that I am trying to get the Reeve information out to those interested. Peggi is planning a trip down here to the coast and will make some copies ,then help me get them available for you. I assure you I'm not trying to sit on the stuff I've accumulated. Just a BIT frustrating at my age.

Lyle Lynn, I remember when you and your folks came to Oregon in 1943 You were about a year old. How did the reunion you organized a few years ago turn out and how much geneology have you gathered? So sorry that I never got back to you. Would be glad to hear from you."
-Marian Sanders

* Marian's direct e-mail address is: marians@harborside.com

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Bunny's Family



Hi everyone. Here is a photo of all of our family at our Son's wedding -- hmmm was it last summer or the summer before. Geezzz my mind is going -- getting old is not for sissys.

Back row... Mike and Candy in the middle with their boys and wives.... Brett and Jennifer on left, Kery and Beth on right.

Middle row... me in front of my husband Jim, our granddaughter Monique, our daughter Michelle (Shelly) her husband Doug and my ex -- the kids dad John Doolittle or "Doc" as we call him now.

Front row... the bride and groom -- our Son John and his wife Brenda.

The wedding was held at our daughter and son-in-laws home and was really nice. Brenda is a bit older than John and has a grown daughter with a husband and babies. So John became a grandpa upon marriage. He loves it. He has always loved little kids. We don't talk about what his marriage to a grandma made me!! After all she is a "young" grandma!!!!! @##@@

Would love to see photos of the rest of you and your families!! Come on everyone -- please share.

Love, Bunny

Friday, May 12, 2006

This is a good thing

This blog is a great thing-- and I applaud Carol for setting it up and putting so much work into it. I hope all of us start using it more.
Welcome Aunt Marian and also Lyle Reeve. Don't know if I ever met that side of our family -- the Reeves, but would love to. Of course I don't remember a lot of things from my growing up years, so who knows. And would love to hear more about all of you -- the Reeves, the St.Clairs, and whoever. WRITE MORE!!
Cousin Rian and my hubby have struck up a friendship after the mini reunion at Aunt Dotties a couple years ago -- classic car stuff you know! Jim and Ryan talk on the phone now and then as well as e-mail.
Am off to my "mini" quilt group meeting today. We meet once a month and are sorta doing more artsy things with our quilting. We call ourselves "The Catastrophies" or "CATS" for short, as we started the mini group working on an intricate cat applique wall hanging.... each of us doing the same quilt but with our own background fabrics and cat fabrics. I only know of one of us that has completed a wall hanging -- but she only did two of the cat blocks and there are about 9. Most of us have gotten side tracked with other things and the cats went on the back burner. Quilters are nortorious for having many UFOs (unfinished objects). My current obsession is beading on fabric. Oh dear -- must now purchase beads as well as fabric -- what a shame!! ;o)
Nope... I don't work on Fridays -- only work 4 days a week and love it.
Thinking about riding my motorcycle to the meeting but it is not warming up very fast and the wind seems to be picking up, so probably not this time. It is also a pot-luck so a bit difficult to haul a salad or ? on the bike -- as well as my quilting project. But managable, if I put my mind to it.
I remember the clock that Aunt Marian has and I also remember a beautiful glass paper weight that was on Grandpa's desk. I think it had a red flower in it. I loved that paperweight. I also remember one time Peggi and I were helping Grandpa in the barn... or at least following him to the barn and we were both wearing his plaid coat... Peggi's left arm in one arm hole and my right arm in the other. Yup... we were small enough and skinny enough back then to do that!!
Later, Bunny

Thursday, May 11, 2006

The Clock

Hi all,
I just had to get in on all this fun. Have been enjoying all the comments and Bios, so glad you started this Carol.

You mentioned the clock at the Lorane house I believe it is the one that I still have, though it doesn't work anymore. It is an Ingraham Eight day mantle clock. The folks acquired it about the time we came to Oregon in 1930. I loved hearing it in the night when I was sick or just couldn't sleep. It was very comforting. I still move the hands occasionly just to hear the sound of it striking the hours and half hours. Takes me back. I liked to watch on Sunday mornings when Dad would go thru the little ritual of taking down the key and wind the clock for another week.

I hope you all keep this going
Marian Sanders

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Updated Contact Info

Here is the updated contact list, as I have it so far. If anyone knows of others, please pass them along to me and I will post them. Does anyone on this list have kids, grandkids (or other relatives) who have e-mail addresses?

Shirley St. Clair smstclair@msn.com
Bunny St. Clair (& Jim) cruize@theofficenet.com
Rod (& Karla) St. Clair StClairs1983@msn.com
Nancy (St. Clair) & Rob Seimears robnnanc@aptalaska.net
Peggi (Hickman) moonlitedaze@comcast.net
Rian (& Gina) Hickman rhickman@centurytel.net
Mike (& Candy) St. Clair csaintly@yahoo.com
Wes (&Velda) St. Clair velda@rubensteins.com
Clair (& Beverly) Klock cbklock@cascadeaccess.com
Carol (Klock) and Max Williams Carol@TopPropertiesWenatchee.com
Lyle Reeve Papa4NnC@aol.com
Sharon (Hickman): Blackwitch@charter.net
Robyn Taylor (Sharon's daughter) Robyn@infinitebubble.com

Lyle Reeve checked in

Here's a message from Lyle Reeve, taken from the comment section of the invitation to the family. Didn't want you all to miss it:

Hi,
I'm Lyle Reeve the oldest son of Lyle & Hilda Reeve my father
was the youngest brother of Aunt Pansy. My family and I live at
4718 Pitts Road
Katy, TX. 77493
281-392-2530
Papa4NnC@aol.com

Monday, May 08, 2006

A Fitting Tribute To Dottie

My little tribute to Dottie hardly did her justice, so I am pasting in the entire text of the obituary printed in the Springdale News. --Carol

Dottie Saint-Clair: 1914-2006

Dorothy Margaret Saint-Clair came into this world on September 26, 1914, bringing a zest for life that infected everyone she knew. She left us with grace and dignity on April 26, 2006. She was 91 years young.

Dottie was born to Lewis and Edith Miller in Gresham, Oregon, and was raised a farm girl six miles east of town. At Lusted Grade School, she received a trophy in the eighth grade for most popular student in school. In high school, she competed in track events, winning numerous medals, and danced and sang in school musicals. She graduated from Gresham High but learned the most from "The School of Hard Knocks," as she was fond of saying.

She married the neighbor boy, Oba St. Clair, on November 13, 1935, in Portland. (Oba’s the one who got her hooked on motorcycles!) The next summer, they had their only child, Shirley Margaret St. Clair. No daughter was ever more loved. They first lived in logging camps around the state and even in a tent in the tall timber country of Idaho (on a remote hillside with a deck and marauding bears). They moved to Brownsville in 1940 and then to Eugene in 1946. Dottie moved to Springfield in the 1980s.

She loved to tell of the logging camp years with no electricity or running water. One favorite story was of how she would make many trips daily to haul water in buckets up the long, very steep path from Panther Creek to camp. Water to drink, to bathe (once a week in a tin wash tub), to cook, to wash and so forth. That’s a lot of water. It took a lot of stamina and strength. And Dottie had it, from her days on the farm helping her Dad in the fields and playing baseball with him. Hardball, not softball, she was always quick to point out! A great sorrow in her life was losing her Dad when she was only 19.

Outdoor work was Dottie’s specialty. Digging ditches, building rocks walls, pushing a heavy wheelbarrow. She reveled in it. Housework was a duty, cooking a pain. But, boy, you’d never know it from the yummy food she fixed. Her pies were legendary. Lemon meringue, chocolate cream, banana cream, Bing cherry and on and on. Her pie crust was perfection. A neighbor once said, "I know how you do it. You only use your hands to mix the dough, don’t you?" That was her secret. Plus, knowing just when to stop mixing and start rolling.

Dottie was very shy at heart, very modest, and very, very talented. The move to Brownsville brought a dream-come-true. She got a piano. With only three months of lessons as a girl, her natural gifts came through as she and that piano became one. The results? Dottie, the red-hot piano player. She favored upbeat swinging styles, such as Frankie Carle's complicated jazz arrangements, but also loved and displayed an incredibly sensitive touch with classics like Prelude in C# Minor.

And oh, how Dottie loved to dance to that swing music. She could outlast anyone on the dance floor and be ready for more. Dottie was born to move to the beat!

Another item in the talent department, Dottie also had a great eye for design and color. Whether it was putting together the perfect color-coordinated outfit; decorating and furnishing the tent, the mill shack or the house; or being drawn to the sleek, curvy shape of a certain 1957 car - she knew style. She also upholstered her own furniture and was a top-notch seamstress, bar none.

In contrast, as a proud member of the National Rifle Association, Dottie liked to target practice, using rifles and handguns. She modestly said she couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn, but she still loved the sport.

"Dot-Dot," as her great-grandkids called her, had a varied work history. In Brownsville she was a plane spotter for the Civilian Air Patrol during World War II; she was a waitress in Burbank for 3 months while Oba was going to Watchmaking School (she fibbed & told them she had experience); and in Eugene, she was the Custom Drapery Consultant/Coordinator for Sears and then went into real estate until she retired in 1994.

But work was only a sideline. In addition to music, Dottie’s real passion was for Harley-Davidson motorcycles and Corvette sports cars; the faster, the better. Her red and white 1957 Corvette, nicknamed "Hot Dot," won many honors at car shows and was a crowd pleaser. She didn’t trailer "Hot Dot" to the shows. She drove, loving every minute of being on the road with her "Baby." Portland; Park City, Utah; Port Ludlow, Washington; and Victoria, B.C. (twice). Dottie and "Hot Dot" were even featured in the national magazine, "Classic Chevy World."

As for Harleys, Dottie never lost her love of that special Harley sound, look and feel and was always on the lookout for the model that was just her size. She still dreamed of climbing on, kick-starting a blue and chrome beauty, revving the motor and hitting the road again soon.

It is impossible to do Dottie justice with words. But here are a few to start: fun-loving; incredible sense of humor; music in her soul; talent galore; looking out for others; loving and gentle; sweet and rough ‘n’ ready; shy, yet feisty; sensitive and a dreamer; AND ahead of her time - riding motorcycles before gals did that; feeling badly for the Native American Indians and thinking the pollution of the Willamette River was a terrible thing - all before they became popular causes; and making sure she was referred to as a homemaker. She never, ever considered herself a housewife, and thought "smart citizen" was a much more fitting name than "senior citizen," thank you very much!

Dottie was forever young and girlish at heart, referring to herself as "Big Kid" and her daughter, Shirley, as "Little Kid."

Always a good sport, looking for the silver lining, Dottie made us laugh and find joy in simple things. Like hanging a wash on the clothesline, or noticing the shape and color of a rock, or climbing a tree, or wading in the ocean. But we found the most and best joy in her.

Dottie leaves behind her treasured family - her daughter, Shirley, of Eugene; two grandsons, Randy Myers of Portland and Steve Myers of Denver; and two great-grandkids, Ben and Jessica Myers of Denver.

We all love and miss her.

A celebration of life was at 1 p.m., Sunday, April 30, at Major Family Funeral Home. The graveside ceremony was May 1 at the Miller Family Gravesite in Pleasant Home, Ore. Remembrances for Dottie Saint-Clair can be made to the American Lung Association of Oregon, 7420 SW Bridgeport Rd. No. 200, Tigard, Ore. 97224. Specify for pulmonary fibrosis research. Major Family Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

In Memory of Dottie St.Clair


Here is a picture of me and my dear Aunt Dottie St.Clair in 2004, taken during a small family reunion held at her house. Many of you were there for this event.

Sadly, Dottie passed away last week at the age of 91. Appropriately, the day of Dottie's memorial service and the following day for the church yard gravesite service were beautiful sunny days. These days were declared "Dottie days" by her grandson, Steve. This is particularly meaningful because western Oregon is not known for it's reliable supply of sunshine. But, for these two "Dottie days", it was on cue.

Doing justice to the life of my Aunt Dottie involves mentioning at least four things... her zest for life, her devotion to her beloved 1957 Chevy Corvette (license plate "Hot Dot"), her lifelong fascination with Harley Davidson motorcycles and her love for her family... especially her daughter, Shirley. Dottie, although quite a responsible woman in life, never quite grew up and liked to refer to herself as the "big kid" and her daughter Shirley as the "little kid". Shirley devoted the last several years to taking care of her Mother, allowing Dottie to stay in her own home where she wanted to be. Although she couldn't actually drive her Corvette or ride a Harley any more, she loved being surrounded by her substantial collection of Corvette & Harley memorabalia (including several trophies from car shows where she showed off her beautiful red and white Corvette). If you click on the image to enlarge it, you will be able to see a picture of her Corvette on the mantle behind me.

* * * In the program from Dotties memorial was the following appropriate poem:

AFTERGLOW
I'd like the memory of me
To be a happy one
I'd like to leave an afterglow
Of smiles when life is done

I'd like to leave an echo
Whispering softly down the ways
Of happy times and laughing times
And bright and sunny days

I'd like the tears of those who grieve
To dry before the sun
Of happy memories that I leave
When this life is done
* * *

Aunt Dottie was born Dorothy Margaret Miller on September 26, 1914. On November 13, 1935 she married Oba St. Clair who was (literally) the boy next door. They had one child, Shirley Margaret St. Clair, born in 1936. Dottie has two grandchildren: Steve Myers (living in Denver) and Randy Myers (living in Portland). Steve and his wife have two children, Ben and Jessica.

She is loved and missed!

Sunday, April 23, 2006

ID's Needed

















Here is a photo that needs some identification. It was taken in front of Bruce & Amy's house on Ash St. in Portland. Click on the photo to enlarge.

Peggi has given me some clarification, so I've made the corrections below, but still not sure about the lady next to Amy.

From left to right:
Amy, Great Grandma St.Clair (Frank's Mom Mary Rose), Wes Hickman, Marian Hickman, Grandma Pansy (holding Carol?), Grandpa Frank (holding Clair?). Peggi & Sharon Hickman are standing in front of Grandma Pansy.

Bruce & Amy (St.Clair) Klock


I posted this picture on our personal blog, but Peggi asked me to post it here too. This is my favorite photo of my Mom & Dad (Amy & Bruce).

Bruce & Amy had two children:
Clair Normond Klock, born March 29, 1951
Carol Renee Klock, born April 7, 1952

Amy died in 1959 and Bruce died in 1964. After Bruce's death, Clair & Carol were raised by Bruce's brother and his wife (Orval & Dorothy Klock) in Corbett, Oregon.
Submitted by: Carol

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Bunny's history

I tend to get wordy, but will try to keep it brief.
I got married within a year after graduating. Had two children and then divorced after10 years. Lived in Oak Harbor on Whidbey Island at the time. Husband was in the Navy stationed at the air base there. I kept our home and stayed there to raise the kids and let them finish school there. After working at several jobs...including waitressing, bartending, etc. I put myself through a community college and got an ATA degree. Was fun raising two kids, going to school and working part time!!
After graduating from college, I went to work in social services for several years. Mostly worked with the Big Brother/Big Sister program, but was also the program director for the Armed Services YMCA for a few years as well.
Liked being single, so when I met my current husband it scared me to think about giving up my freedom. But it was meant to be... we are definitely soul mates or knew each other in another life or ? I did keep my maiden name (which I had gone back to upon the divorce) when Jim and I got married.

After awhile we moved to Anacortes on Fidalgo Island and lived there for 5 years before moving across the state to Colville. I worked at the Arts Foundation Director and then as a real estate agent in Anacortes... also became a "quilter" about that time as well.
After we moved to Colville, I taught quilting in local area quilt shop/fabric stores for a few years, but then had to get a "real job". I am the Executive Officer for the local Association of REALTORS®. Having been in the real estate business was a plus. I am still very much involved in quilting and fabric art... my studio is larger than the cabin we live in. But I don't teach as often anymore
.
We bought almost 6 acres in the woods and built a "temporary" cabin and a huge shop with my studio above the shop on one end. My windows look out over the Little Pend Oreille River...which is more like a creek than a river. After building the shop, we ran out of money and we are still living in the temporary cabin (which by the way is really nice, but small) 12 years later.

My kids, Michelle (Shelly) and John (JP) are now 36 & 35. They both live in the Puyallup area near Tacoma in a suberb named Sumner. Shelly and her husband have a daughter -- Monique. She is 16 already. I just spent a night with them after a conference in Tacoma. We all went out to dinner and Monique drove me to dinner in her little red car. I lived through it and managed to stay calm and act like I was pleased with here driving.!!@##@@ Actually she is a great kid and it was not all that bad. She spends a week with us every summer and we really enjoy her. Going to do the grandkid thing FIRST next time... to heck with having the kids... just go straight to having grandkids. Speaking of straight to grandkids. That is exactly what our son did. He married a lady a little older than himself and she has a grown daughter with two little ones. So JP is a granddad at age 35. JP has Addisons Disease and cannot have children so this was perfect for him. He loves being a grandpa. And... NO that does not make me a "great grandma"... well sorta I guess. I did make them each a quilt.
My husband, Jim, is a classic car nut and is currently doing body work and such for a living. He has done many things in his life though and seems to be great at whatever he does.... he is an artist (Sculptures) and it shows in whatever he does. But... neither of us has a retirement so will have to work until the day we drop dead.

Anyway.... we have a really cool fastback Mustang that he completely redid. And...several other automobiles in different stages of being redone... or not -- some are just sitting. The biggest problem with getting them done is we have a new addiction that takes up most of our good weather free time.
That is we both have Harley motorcycles. Jim used to ride years ago and we decided a couple years ago that if we were going to ride, we had better do it while we are still fairly healthy. Jim is 10 years older than me (calls himself "The Old Fart"). So he got his bike. I really did not like riding on the back and one day when we went to the HOG shop to get him a new rear wheel for his bike we walked out having bought me a bike. He never did get that wheel. So then I had to practice a lot and get my license. This will be my second summer of riding. We hope to venture a little further away from home this year.

Anyway... thats the basics of my life.
Hope to hear from other cousins.
Bunny

Sunday, April 16, 2006

Peggi Checks In

Here is a post from Peggi, submitted last fall. I extracted it from the comments section of the "St.Clair Men & Women" picture post. Didn't want anyone to miss it. Plus, now I've saved all of the posts in a PDF file and we can print it in a book. The book only prints original posts (not comments), so wanted it to have it's own page. I'm thinking if we collect all the posts, I can get them printed out for a reunion... whenever that happens! --Carol

Hi Cousins and relatives.
I'm Peggi Hickman, daughter of Marian St Clair born to Frank and Pansy. I was born in 1948, grew up and lived in Drain Oregon for my first 18 years. Married at age 18, had three children then divorced after 17 years. Left the Eugene area in 1985. Two of my children Lori(37) and Nikki(32) live here in the Portland area near me. My son Martin who also lived nearby passed away two years ago (at age 32). Lori has 5 children and Nikki has 2. I've lived and worked in this area about 20 years now and like it except for the traffic. Hopefully more cousins and relatives will be writing in soon, I'd love to hear about everyone. Loved seeing the pictures Carol, you've done a great job starting up this blog.

Friday, April 14, 2006

Family reunion

I would be very interested in a family reunion. But.... our spring/summer/fall is so busy not sure we could make it but would do our best.
Maybe we need to plan this like a year ahead or something.
I would be very willing to help as well.
Let me know what you guys decide and what dates you are looking at.

I can't believe it... but my 40th year class reunion is this summer. Whew..!!! where did my life go?
Bunny

I think I did it...


Hi everyone.
This is much better than adding comments to Carol's posts... less windows to open up and we don't miss each others comments.
I am going to try to post a photo that I found... one that I carried around with me in my billfold for years when I was younger and we carried photos of our friends, boy friends, cousins, etc.
Guess who they are.
Bunny

The Legend of Uncle Oba St. Clair




Here is a picture of Uncle Oba (we just called him Obie). Remember his fascination with in-line flying? Did you know our very own Uncle Oba is a member of the Model Aviation Hall of Fame? He was truly a pioneer and is quite famous in that industry, recognized as the inventor of the first control line model airplane. I found this link to the Model Aircraft Museum in Muncie, Indiana. The January 2003 issue of "Feedback" published online by Northern Virginia Radio Control, Inc., referenced the "legend of Oba St. Clair". I'm sure Oba's daughter, Shirley, would be happy to fill us in on the details of his life as an avid inventor!

Do you remember that great flying field behind Obie & Dottie's house? Shirley lives in the house now and it's a wonderful refuge among the tall timbers.

Oh... and you can click on the pictures to enlarge them. My brother, Clair, took these great pictures. The first is a picture of a picture and the second is a picture of Oba's plaque into the Hall of Fame.

Isn't that so cool?

Submitted by: Carol



Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Grandpa Frank & Grandma Pansy

Look what I found! This is Grandpa Frank, Grandma Pansy, Clair and me (Carol). You can click on the image to enlarge it some.

Clair & I must have been about 5 & 6 years old, meaning this photo was taken about 1957.

I'm going to dig some more photos out and post them too!

Carol

Sunday, April 09, 2006

Instructions For Making Posts

Here I will give step-by-step instructions for making posts. I will e-mail the username and password to those requesting it.... for obvious reasons don't want to post it here.

1) Go to: www.blogger.com (click on "Old Blogger")
2) Type in username and password (I will send this to you via e-mail)

3) Click on "Sign In"

This brings you into what we call the "Dashboard"
4) Click on "New Post" (next to the + sign)

This brings up the posting page
5) Type in a Title and hit the tab button to get into the body of the text
6) Type the text of your entry
7) Be sure to sign your name so we know who made the post
8) Click on the orange "Publish Post" button below the text screen

9) Click on "Republish Entire Blog"
Let the system work until it says 100%. The post should now show when you refresh the page in your browzer.

10) Click on the "Sign Out" button in the upper right of the page

For putting in pictures, this system is easy but is a little tricky for placement. The system automatically places them ahead of text so just post the pictures and write the text afterwards. With some manipulation they can be placed, but don't worry about that right now.

To post a picture:
* Click on the square picture button on the tool bar (above text box). This is next to the "abc" box. From there you will need to follow the instructions for downloading the picture from wherever it is located (on your computer, disk, camera, etc).

Let me know if you have any trouble with these instructions. I'm glad to help. As I said before, if you e-mail me content I can post... or I can post from the "comments" section but it would be really nice for you to make your own posts.

Carol

Some Family Contact Information

Here are some e-mail addresses that I do have and know work. I have others, but have not been able to confirm they are operational. Will post more when I know more.

Shirley St. Clair smstclair@msn.com
Bunny St. Clair (& Jim) cruize@theofficenet.com
Rod (& Karla) St. Clair StClairs1983@msn.com
Nancy (St. Clair) & Rob Seimears robnnanc@aptalaska.net
Peggi (Hickman) & Rick Lippincott moonlitedaze@comcast.net
Rian (& Gina) Hickman rhickman@centurytel.net
Mike (& Candy) St. Clair csaintly@yahoo.com
Wes (&Velda) St. Clair velda@rubensteins.com
Clair (& Beverly) Klock cbklock@cascadeaccess.com
Carol (Klock) and Max Williams Carol@TopPropertiesWenatchee.com
Lyle Reeve Papa4NnC@aol.com
Sharon (Hickman): blackwitch@charter.com

Do I have everyone's name and address correct? Hope I got the spouses right too.

Cheers!
Carol

Saturday, April 08, 2006

Hi From Nancy In Alaska

This came in through comments, but wanted to be sure everyone found it, so I'm making a separate post. Carol

Hi, This is Nanc, Bud and Marian's daughter. I'd love to add this. I live in Wrangell, AK. I don't have a camera now for recent photos, but would love to post. I think I must have gotten an email about this, but only saw Carol's website, maybe I clicked on the wrong link? We are back to drizzly days after a good week or so of sunny/mostly sunny weather, so it seems really dreary now, but we need the water or we could run short at our reservoir. My daffodils are just beginning to bloom. Last year they were in full bloom when we had our April Fool's snow. I'm hoping we are done with that for this year. I just got all of my paperwork done and am going to Ketchikan to start classes for working on the ferry this summer, at the end of this month. I will begin then as soon as I get my Z-card which should take 4-6 wks. from now. Son, Cooper is hired too, but hasn't started his paperwork, so don't know if he'll make it in time. He is working at the cannery for now. I am working at the high school/middle school as an aide in the Special Ed dept. for now. I can't say that it is exactly my cup of tea. I originally was thinking of grade school when I applied. My age group preference for working with kids is preschool. The ferry offers good benefits and pay without a college education, is it's appeal. Can't figure how to do pictures here without having my own blog. Maybe Carol can fill me in? Hello to all the family out there. Love, Nanc