Mike
and I have found the best...
No.
Wait a
minute. Let me start again...
Mike and
I have found the BEST brisket EVER!
Old
School Barbecue opened last November and last week we went down to Homet's
Ferry for the special, which was ribs.
The man who owns it is Jim MacDonald and
he proudly showed off his smoker, which was custom made for him. Jim told us
how he smokes his meat for a long time, something like 15 hours for ribs, how
he got into business, and all the jobs he's had before this. He was very
personable.
Jim
bought the old school a few years ago. "It was built in the late 1800's
and my buddies helped me remodel it."
"And
you live there now?" I asked.
"Yep."
"And
you have chickens and bees," I stated. I saw the hives inside a fenced
garden-type area and the chickens were running around in the yard.
"Yes
I do," was all he said, not elaborating.
Jim
started his business in a food truck and ran it out of parking lots until he
moved it into its present location.
"But
I'm known best for my brisket," Jim said as he got our ribs, free pulled pork
sandwich, and two sides around. "I'll give you a sample."
As Mike
and I watched, Jim pulled an aluminum wrapped brisket from the warming oven,
put it on the cutting board, sliced it, and continued talking the whole time.
"With brisket you can't go by time, you have to test it to see if it's
done just right." He held a piece of freshly sliced brisket in the air
over the cutting board. "It should hold together when you pick it up,
but," Jim reached up with his other hand, grasped the bottom of the
brisket and barely pulled, "it should pull apart easily." And you
could tell it did.
Although
there were a couple of picnic tables outside, Jim had no indoor seating. We
paid for the rib special, took it and our brisket sample, thanked Jim, and
headed for home. We were barely on the road when I opened the container with
the brisket, gave Mike a piece, and picked up another for myself.
And
that's where this story began.
It was
the best brisket we've ever had!
All week
long Mike dreamed of going back to Old School BBQ just for the brisket. All
week long, brisket was the only thing Mike talked about.
"Why
didn't you just go and buy that poor man more brisket?" you ask.
Old
School BBQ is only open Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, and we did go back — on
Thursday. Since this is just the third time I've been on this road, I took more
pictures for you.
An
old pumpkin stand. I have no idea if they still sell pumpkins or not. Maybe
this fall I'll find out since I'll be on this road more often from now on. Mike
is talking about buying a whole brisket!
These
orange poppies blooming beside the road were an eye-catcher. Mike stopped and
let me take some pictures. These are called Prince Of Orange Poppies. Funny,
though. I thought they might be California Poppies since they are the same
color as the walls of my girlhood bedroom and that color was called California
Poppy.
Another
bathtub turned water trough.
I walked all the time when we lived in Missouri but I haven't done much of that since we've been here. Mostly because I haven't taken the time to, and because the cats follow.
So this past week I had Mike take me out on the golf cart
until we were just past our place then he turned around and went home while I
went on down the road. I took a bunch of pictures for you. This is Sweet Purple
Clover.
Look how beautiful the little flowers are!
The
hunters cabin at the bottom of the hill allow walk-ins to the creek for
fishing, so I thought that meant it would be okay for picture taking too.
A still
pool in our creek.
A
fungus on a tree. I know you can't tell by the picture but it was huge, which
is why I saw it!
This,
my dears, is a fern before it unfurls.
Someone
threw an old box spring out on our road.
I
know what you're going to say and I agree with you. Shame on them!
"No,
Peg. I was going to say that you take pictures of weird stuff!"
I know,
right! I agree with you there too.
Pennsylvania has many of the same wildflowers and trees as Missouri so I already knew the name of this one. It's Black Medic.
I
don't know this one, but it's interesting. It looks to me like the lower
flowers have a huge seed coming out the middle of them.
I
don't know this one either. It's a tree here on our property that develops a
dark blue berry on it in the fall.
Speaking
of trees, the maple we had cut down has been bleeding.
Sigh.
Okay,
that's all the pictures from that walk-about. I have others from another time
I'll show you later.
Mike has
been working hard on rebedding the yard we dug up a week ago. His tractor was a
big help in getting the new soil down to that area but getting it spread around
is a tedious, backbreaking job.
"I
wish I had an old steel bed spring," Mike said to the Kipp's during one of
their morning visits. "That's what my father used to smooth out the ground."
"I
have one," Lamar said.
"Really?"
I asked.
"Yep.
You can have it if you want it."
After
the Kipp's left that day, Mike and I talked about it and we weren't sure if
Lamar was serious or not.
The very
next day Mike is like, "I wonder where I can get a cheap drag to pull
behind the golf cart."
I
stopped what I was doing and we Googled Craig's
List on the internet. That's a classified advertising website with sections
on jobs, housing, for sale, etc. Most everything we found on there was for a
tractor and the tractor is too heavy for the soft ground Mike wanted to use it on.
"The
Kipp's said you could have theirs," I reminded him.
"Let's
go see the Kipp's," Mike said.
We got
on the golf cart and rode down to the Kipp's house.
"Lamar,
were you serious about that bed spring?" I asked.
"Yep.
It's in the attic. If you help me get it out you can have it."
I
helped Lamar get it out of their attic and he and Mike loaded it on the top of
the golf cart.
"Rosie,
what's that pretty purple flower out by the road?" I asked before we left.
"I
believe it's called allium."
"Is
it a wildflower?"
"No,
it's something we planted years ago."
It is
allium and its pretty, isn't it.
At
home Mike could hardly wait to use his new "toy" and get his yard
back in order. Driving the golf cart around in circles is the easy part, but
every once in a while he had to stop and toss the rocks out. He was almost done
when he asked me to come and help him. It looks great now and will be even better
when the grass grows back in.
Wanna
see what crafts I've been working on this week?
I bent a
cross out of copper, drilled a small hole in a glass gob and with a dab of
glue, stuck them together. I gave it to Miss Rosie and she gave it a home in
her shadow-box.
Our
week turned rainy and cool so it was a good couple of days for me to sit in our
warm, dry, apartment and paint these things.
"What
are they?" you ask.
These,
my dears, are called Butt Snuffers. You set them in your ashtray and put your
cigarette out in them. That way your cigarette doesn't sit in the ashtray and
smolder if you don't get it all the way out.
"I
didn't think anyone smoked anymore," Momma said when I told her what they
were.
Plenty
of people still smoke. But if you don't smoke these little cuties will hold a
pencil or paint brush, as I found out when I was painting them.
I first
made these things 20 years ago and at the time you could buy one,
mass-produced, for ninety-nine cents. I worked hard on these and I don't want
to sell them for ninety-nine cents. I'm thinking the artwork alone or the
cuteness factor oughta be worth at least two bucks. What do you think?
I even painted some of them the whole way around!
I even painted some of them the whole way around!
By the
way, that beautiful, feisty, redheaded neighbor of mine collects chickens.
Guess which one made it into her shadow-box.
Ready
for a few more pictures from another walk-about with my girls Itsy and Ginger?
Buttercup.
Dead Nettle.
We had these in Missouri too, although I don't know what kind of tree it is. The leaves come out in this almost flower-looking form then open up.
Speaking of opening up, look what happened
to the fungus on the tree in the two or three days between my visits.
A berry blossom.
We had a
TV.
We had a
big TV.
We had a
seventy-three inch, rear projection, Mitsubishi TV with top of the line
electronics in it. This was one of the first TVs with high definition and at
the time there was only one station that broadcast in HD and then only for a
couple of hours in the evening. This TV could do everything except make your
morning coffee.
When we
decided to go RVing full time and rent out our house in Missouri, we moved
everything here, to our Mountain Home in Pennsylvania, including the TV. Now
that we are here full time, we dug the TV out, cleaned it up a little, and
plugged it in. It came on — and clicked off. It came on — and clicked off. It
came on — and clicked off. It came on — and clicked off. It came on — and
clicked off. It came on... Well, you get the idea. No matter what we did, all
it did was come on — and click off.
Finding
anyone to come and look at it has been a challenge. A TV repair guy in Towanda
told Mike he didn't even want to come out and look at it. "Throw it away
and get a new one," he said.
We
paid a lot...
No.
Wait a
minute. Let me start again...
We paid
A LOT of money for this TV. "It's probably something simple," Mike
mused.
Browsing
the internet one day, Mike found a business in Dallas, a town down near Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.
"Sure.
I'll come look at it. But if I can't fix it you have to pay me for the service
call anyway," he told Mike, making it clear up front.
"Not
a problem," Mike told him.
Bill
showed up when he said he would. He carried his toolbox in, set it down, got
down on his knees and he got busy. I felt sorry for him.
"Bill,
can I get you something to put under your knees? That concrete floor would kill
me!"
We got an
old blanket and handed it off to Bill who thanked us kindly and tucked it under
his knees.
We chatted
as Bill worked. He took the back from the TV and after poking around for a few
minutes he reaches for his pliers and pulls these from the cabinet.
"What's
this?" Bill asks.
"Kentucky
Coffee Tree seeds! I make rosaries from them," I reached for the seed and
Bill handed it to me.
"It's
okay, it just dropped down in there," Bill commented.
"Oh
no! It didn't just drop in there! Someone took it in there!" I turned to
Mike. "I guess those cats weren't doing their job!" I turned back to
Bill, "We gave them one job to do — just one job!"
Bill
laughed. "I gave you one job and you couldn't do it." He reached for
his electric screwdriver and started taking out screws; making a nice neat
little pile of them off to the side. That's when he found a nest made from
cotton balls.
"That's
where all my cotton balls went! I use those to polish the seeds," I
explained. The last time I went to polish seeds to make Momma some rosaries, I
opened the door of my tumbler and there was not one single cotton ball in there!
No! Not one! My tumbler, by the way, is an old clothes dryer that would no
longer heat up.
More
screws removed and Bill finds more seeds and more evidence of mice. "Can I see?" I asked and came up
behind Bill to get a better look.
"They're
way up in the very front there," Bill said and pointed.
I
squatted down, but I couldn't see up into the dark recesses of the TV. Mike's
little scootie chair was behind me so I sat down. "I'll stay out of your
way."
Bill
laughed a little.
"Say,
'Get outta here!" Mike said in a mock stern voice.
"I
can't help it!" I jumped to my own defense. Mike laughed again. "I
can't help it! I just gotta know this stuff!"
"Just
boot her out of your way, Bill."
Bill
ignored our light banter and continued working as I watched intently his every
move.
"You
want to learn to be a TV repairman?" Mike asked. "Is that what you
want?"
"I
betcha it's a dying breed," I answered.
"Not
very many people wanna do it anymore," Mike guessed.
"It's
not worth it when TV's are made to be thrown away," I said.
At this
point Bill jumped in. "Really they're not. It's just the sales industry
that are telling you they're made to be thrown away."
"Yeah,
they want you to buy a new one," Mike stated flatly.
"It's
just the salesmen that are saying that. The new sets right now... for the most
part there's no reason why they shouldn't be around at least fifteen — twenty
years and there's no reason why most of your problems aren't relatively easy to
fix and relatively inexpensive." He paused, thinking about it. "Most
of them are inexpensive."
More screws
came out and Bill started pulling out circuit boards, checking connections.
This is my current desktop picture and thanks to the movie Tron, it reminds me
of a miniature city.
I asked
Bill how he got into the TV repair business, and as you can guess, it's what
his father did.
"Do
you have any kids interested in taking over the family business?" I asked.
"Nope!"
he was quick to answer. "I wouldn't let them!"
"Go
to college and get a real job?" Sincerely, I meant no disrespect to the TV
repair profession when I said that. Bill didn't seem to be offended.
"That's
what they did! All three of them."
"That's
wonderful!" I exclaimed. "What do they do now?"
"One's
a financial planner, one's a chemical engineer, one's a uh... insurance
adjuster."
"Oh
my gosh, you must be so proud."
"They
all have good jobs, they all married lovely girls..." Bill trailed off and
laughed a little.
Our
conversation went on to grandchildren and how wonderful they are. "We just
had the little granddaughter for the whole day Saturday and boy she tires you
out! She's nonstop...a two and a half year old and she is into
everything."
"But
they are so much fun at two and a half," I said.
"Oh,
she's absolutely adorable, and she's a charmer. You take her out and she's the
mayor."
Mike and
I laughed catching the implication. "She probably has grandpa wrapped
around her finger," I said.
"Oh
yes she does! No question there," Bill said and we both laughed. "No
question there," he affirmed. "But you take her out and she's the
mayor. She talks to everybody... doesn't matter who you are she's going to stop
and talk to ya. She's gonna wave, she's gonna say hello, she's gonna say
goodbye.
In my
mind's eye, I could see a cute little blond, curly haired girl with pigtails
and a pink frilly dress, white ankle socks and patent leather Mary Jane's (Is
my age showing here?) holding the hand of a proud and beaming grandpa as they
walked down the street. It melted my heart. "How sweet."
It was
then, after talking about her for fifteen minutes that Bill mentions this... "She's just under two and a half years
old.... uh... with Down's Syndrome..."
"Ohh..."
I interjected.
"But
she is an absolute whiz...she is so smart...incredibly
smart!"
"Uh-huh,"
I was hanging on every word.
"She
has that ability to just wrap you around her finger. She just gives you that
little smile, that little, 'Hi! Hello!'" Bill imitated the cadence, the
rhythm of her speech. "We had her in church on Saturday and she had
everybody around her all wrapped up!"
You
could tell he really loved that little girl, and the first thing he thought of when
he thought of her wasn't Down's.
Every
time Bill made an adjustment to the TV or cleaned something he would see if the
problem was fixed. It wasn't.
"Everything
points to this part of the circuit board," Bill mused. Out came more
screws and he pulled the board. "There's the problem," he said.
"It has mouse urine on it." He tried cleaning it but he'd seen enough
of this kind of stuff to know it wasn't going to work. "Mouse urine is
highly corrosive," he told us."
"Can
you get a new board?" Mike asked.
"I
doubt it, and even if you could, you couldn't afford it."
"Well
then don't even bother putting it back together," Mike told him.
Bill
picked up and packed up his tools, then he wrote up a ticket. Despite spending
a little more than an hour with us, he only charged the service call. I got a
kick out of what Bill wrote under the REMARKS OR SERVICE PERFORMED section of
the ticket.
It said
D-E-A-D dead.
"Mike,
here's the death certificate for your TV."
Mike
was confused, "What?"
And I
showed him the ticket.
Mike let
me keep a big piece of heavy plastic from the front of the TV and the lenses
from the projectors, but the rest of it went to live on the burn pile.
Mike was
sad.
More
pictures, you say?
Boy! You
guys are so demanding!
I
saw these broad-leafed things growing. If you look at the fallen log in the background,
you'll see there are more of them there. I have no idea what they are or even
how to search for them on the internet. I'll be interested to see if they
produce a flower.
I know
this one! It's Wild Geranium, sometimes called Crane's Bill.
This
one is another one we have in common with Missouri and I know what it is. It's
Blue-eyed Grass.
This
one is tiny, another grass, but I don't know what it is.
Uh-oh!
I
recognize this one! Do you? If you said, "Poison Ivy!" you'd be
right!
Daisy
Fleabane! Did
you know: Daisy fleabane, like other
fleabane wildflowers, derives its common name from
the superstition that dried clusters of these plants could be used to rid a
dwelling of fleas?
"Look
at all the phlox!" I cried as Mike and I drive the roads around here.
"That's
a lot of phloxin phlox!" Someone feeling a little punny?
I
got him, you guys! I got him! The internet was right, he couldn't resist
cantaloupe!
I set
the trap in the yard and Hansel and Grettled him into the live trap. Yeah. That
means I left a trail of cantaloupe crumbs on the outside of the trap leading to
a nice big piece on the inside.
And boy!
Was he mad! He hissed at me — do they hiss? He chattered his teeth at me. I
didn't pay him no never mind and talked as soothingly to him as I could.
"What
did you do with him?" you ask.
I can't
tell you that we took him across the river and down a country road and turned
him loose because that would be illegal. It's better to just shoot them rather
than relocate them.
Crazy
laws.
But
they have that law so rabies isn't transferred from one area to another, so I
understand it, I just don't like it.
With
rainy days, like we'd been having, it's better not to take pictures of some
flowers because the petals get all droopy or plastered together. So you take
pictures of raindrops on the grass.
I
wouldn't let Mike mow under my clothesline because I had a whole bunch of Cat's
Paw growing there. That is, that's what I thought was growing there. Then they
bloomed. What I actually have there is a whole herd of Yellow or Meadow
Hawkweed. I don't care. I still think it's pretty. He can mow there again after
it's gone.
The
pond lilies are blooming. This particular variety is called Spatterdock.
Another
one we have in common with Missouri! You're going to get tired of hearing me say
that, so I'm not going to say it anymore. This is Crimson Clover!
Well my loves,
all good things must end. And I think it's high time we ended this one. And I can't
think of a better way to end it than with another beautiful sunset photo.
This
time I watched all alone. I'd been sitting at the table when I saw the colors through
the window. I jumped up, grabbed my camera, ran out, and took a few photos— just
for you.
You are all
in my heart.
Let's call
this one done!
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