Woodrow the Wood Duck

Friday, August 9, 2013

Fear the Frogs

The Cottles were a part of the Windsor Forest Swim team this year--a great way to get 'em in the water--every day!  It was fun and they learned a lot.  Even Becca was a tadpole and loved the diving board.  The meets were competitive enough to be challenging and low key enough to be fun. Their t-shirts say Fear the Frogs--the team mascot--they won their division this year and will move up to the higher division next year.  Go Frogs!
 
The Frogmen--Spence looking pensive and Tig looking jaunty
 
That's Tig gliding in the water at the number one block--farthest from the camera
 
Those are Travis's feet!
 
 
The man with fast hands--Spencer Cottle
 
This was a Tig splash!
 
 
 
The cutest tadpole in the pool
 
 
Travis at Rest--not a sight often witnessed
 
 
 
Tig getting ready--getting set--getting gone!  Spence getting ready next!
 
FEAR THE FROGS
 
 
 

Football Fever

This is the season for football!  And Pike has the fever--these are pictures from his first practice where he wowed them with his speed skills while his adoring fans looked on (his siblings, parents, g-parents, dog, cousins etc.,etc.,).  He really seems to like it and that's good cause his coaches are SERIOUS about this game. He plays for the Green Hornets--their t-shirts say "We bleed green and gold!" I think the kid's gonna be good.....go Pike!

 
 
Did you see that?  Awesome Catch!
 
 
 
Look at the sun catch that red head...1 and 2 and 3 and...
 
pushing the tackle dummy
 
 
Show me your mean face!
 
 
Mom and Lanian watching the show
 
 
Jordan, his most loyal fan and cutest critic!
 
 
I need six more water bottles--and I can do this!
 
Aidan can relax anywhere --he is the laid back one for sure
 
The Hornets play each other in the William and Mary stadium in September.  The Green play the Gold --We're excited to see 'em take the field...
 
WE BLEED GREEN AND GOLD
 

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Spring and Summer have moved swiftly this year--summer is half gone and school is looming in the future..here are some pics that show some of the happenings.  Erin relaxing in the yard with Lanian playing ball in the background, Lauren being pregnant with Josh Jr., Jared graduating elementary--so did Pike but my camera was broken so no picture :( , Josh in repose after a hot day at work,  May, Trav and Spencer circus dreaming, Robyn and her cat sticking her tongue out at me after her cancer surgery, which she and her family handled bravely and well, Amanda and Jetta the new lab owned and loved by all the little Jones'es, Kendall, Jordan and May on my piano (chopsticks forever!), Robert and me and Michael at the temple, Michael took the picture.  We did some family work together--wonderful day! Spencer in fife and drum, Riley's Birthday--joyful bedlam!  Another picture of the kids at Riley's, no Matthew is not sucking his thumb--just waiting patiently for me to hurry up! The Charming Clara with her hero--DA-DA, whom she calls all the time especially when she's in trouble, Riley with her friend Otis (Spencer's bird.) Otis is hiding in terror but she doesn't care--she still likes him!


This is just a sample of some of the things in our lives these last few months--and certainly only a fraction of the family photos---I'll update with more later!!

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Spencer's First March in The Colonial Williamsburg Fife and Drum Corps
He performed on stage on market Square on his Grandpa's birthday, July 4th.  On the sixth of July he had his first march on DOG street!  He was awesome and because this is the time of the alumni gathering they also marched and then the Junior Corps, the Alumni Squad, and then the Senior Corps all performed together--it was awesome!  I was so proud and looking forward to Tig and Pike joining the ranks.  Fife and Drums forever!

Thursday, July 18, 2013


dunes


salty sands piled high at ocean's edge
blown by fierce winds from faraway places
into deposits of gold touched by sunset light...
then kissed by evening stars.

bmj-6/2013
(missing the beach)

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Things I Like II
 
new pictures of the children--would love to have one of all of the adult children together someday--if    anyone is reading--great idea for Christmas !

the sound of Midget snoring at night

visiting my Mama early in the morning after I feed the goats

watching Spencer, Jordan, and May and Kendall create stories on my computer, they are very inventive--and VERY serious

Clara Grace's smile :)

letters in the mail--sweetest surprise!

ice cream in a glass with Almond milk poured over it

my reading corner in my room

watching Robert laugh at Riley saying "Ohhh, boy!"

jonquils coming up

Vickie still greeting me every morning with a "chir-r-rp" when I wake up

to be continued...

 
 
 
 
     


Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Pretending

I am waiting for the piano kids to come--I give lessons to Erin's and Amanda's kids.  Yes, it's a strange thing to contemplate since I really can't play very well.  I hark back to the old saying:  Those who can't do--teach!  And that's me!  I enjoy them coming and I have a learned a great deal from them all.  I even practice now!

They will all have a good understanding of the basics and if they choose to go on--they can.  If they don't they may use their knowledge to play a band instrument or just to enjoy music and know what they are listening to. Most studies show that children who read music do better in school--I firmly believe that.  It's like learning another language.  I am amazed at how fast they catch on--some are shy and would rather not play in front of anyone--but that's okay.  I play best for Robert at night  when no one is here and he is in the other room.  It's peaceful for me.  I hope it will be for them. I love learning with them.

As I was waiting I was flipping around on the computer and happened on famous atheists.  I clicked on--thinking maybe famous in the sense of Neil Armstrong or Mozart or Queen Elizabeth.  But no, it was Angelina Jolie and Paul Somebody and the flavor of the month in the showbiz world.  I couldn't help but remember an old poem by Carol Lynn Pearson :

"To An Atheist:

God must have a huge sense of humor

So righteously to resist

The temptation of turning the tables

On your pretending He doesn't exist."



Anyway, that sure set the tone for me this evening.  I don't know much but I'm glad that unbelief in my Heavenly Father is not one of my particular challenges.  I have plenty of others.
                                                                                 
                                                                                 
                                                                                  





Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Memories of Maurine


When I do something that is particularly puzzling to my mother she often says I am acting like Maurine.  I am like her in many ways; even I notice things I do that remind me of her. Sometimes those thngs are good--sometimes those things grate on my mother's nerves--bless her heart!

Maurine Drucilla Harris Moon died in Texas at the age of 83 on December 7, 2012.  Born in North Carolina on June 26, 1929 she was my mother's older sister and one of my best friends.  I did not always agree with her and she had a mouth that was salty, to say the least--but she was also easy to talk to, thoughtful, loved to read and not just books--she read people.  And was fascinated by the ins and outs of their lives.  She was, in a word, interesting.  Always.

When you are a teenager--and not feeling all that confident as you wend your way through all the changes that go with that age--it's nice to be told that your hair is not light brown  (when all your siblings are blonde, blonde, blonde) but is the color of a lion's mane--or dark honey. Maurine provided me with that happy thought long ago on her front porch. It's a thought I've kept with me for years.  Maurine had a knack for boosting people up.  She described people in glowing terms rather than plain ones.  Even when the plain ones may have been more accurate.  Beauty is, indeed, in the eye of the beholder.  I loved that about her.

Cooking was one of her passions.  She made her own jellies and jams and even once made homemade mincemeat.  She grew her own grapes and let us pick them sometimes when it was jelly making time.  As a scratch baker she never had much truck with new fangled mixes, preferring to do it herself.  Even eggs had to be made just so--partly because Tump, her husband, had an ulcer and a touchy stomach and was the pickiest eater in the free world.  Everything tasted good at her house. 
I loved to sit in her kitchen and eat toast--I don't think we had a toaster back then, but she did-- and I thought it was so good because it didn't come out of the oven.  Once I remember I ate six pieces and she raised her eyebrows at my Mom who told her to stop putting jelly on it and I'd stop eating all the bread.  I think I was 9 at the time. 

She sewed beautifully.  I can remember patterns being laid on the floor as she planned a new dress for her oldest daughter Allison to wear to the prom or the Sadie Hawkins dance.  I remember a blue one in particular--I cannot sew and have little desire to learn--but I always thought it a minor miracle that someone could make clothes like the ones in stores for the people they love--and they fit!  I did learn the basics when I was a teenager--but if it fit anyone it was happenstance--not design.  My talents do not lie in that direction.  Maurine's definitely did.

 Fearless about many things, she was quite the extrovert; never afraid of people. We live in a town where the oldest mental hospital in the U.S. is located.  It was an open hospital, which means patients who were able to navigate on their own were often visiting or working outside the hospital in the town.  Sometimes people like my mother-in-law were frightened by the possibility of someone wandering around who may not be all there in their mind.  That thought never bothered Maurine.  Once, when she was up reading late one night with only her kids at home--a man opened her front door and walked in her house.  She stopped reading, took her glasses off her nose and said "Didn't you forget something?  He stared at her a moment--she stared right back--then he turned, went back out the door and knocked.  She got up and answered the door just like it was the normal thing to do.  He asked to make a call and sure enough, he was lost and not sure how to get back to the hospital. Did she lock her door after that? No she did not--she said it would be unlikely to happen again.

I miss her and the way she talked about anything and everything.  I miss her making us welcome--people always felt welcome in her home.  Not just welcome--but eagerly awaited.  She liked to stay up late at night and read--(so do I)--and wear nightgowns rather than pajamas--(so do I).  She had a tendency to romanticize life--(so do I) and was never too busy to visit.  I hope people feel as welcome in my home as I felt in hers.

Maurine lost a baby daughter, Kelly Maurine, years ago and I don't think she ever fully recovered from that loss.  I'm not sure anyone ever really does.  Kelly had an enlarged heart and the family was aware for some time that she couldn't live long with her condition. She was a beautiful baby with the prettiest little face. She was nine months old when she died.  Maurine woke during the night and rubbed her little feet because they were cold.  That morning she was gone.  I still remember Allison driving over to see us that morning and how upset she was.  I think I was ten. Maurine had Kelly buried on her tummy because that was the way she liked to sleep.  She never really accepted Tump's death either, according to my cousin Allison and my Mom.  I am always puzzled by that word--"accepted".  In the dictionary that means to "receive willingly or with approval".  Do we ever receive willingly or with approval--a death of someone we love?  Maybe, when they are so sick as to need release. Maurine thought of Tump as invincible---as did we all.  She is with them both now.

Tonight when I put on my muu-muu that Maylon picked out for me for Christmas and get out my latest book--(A Southern Woman's Story,  by Phoebe Yates Pember,a true story about her experiences in a Richmond Civil War Hospital as a matron)---I will think of her fondly and remember that my hair is the color of a lion's mane--or dark honey. And know that she is happy to see her Mom and Dad and Tump and especially Kelly (46 years?) once again..and is comforted.


Monday, January 21, 2013

Dream Big

                                             taken by me--2010
                                   My blog background design is of books.  Rows and rows of books.   I love it because books are important to me.  Books are tools for learning, books are the road to escape, books are friends you can pick up and visit with when you have a moment to call your own.  Someone once told me at church that she liked to read but didn't have time to indulge herself.  My reply (in my head, not out loud) was that she didn't like to read she just thought she should.  I have read with a book in one hand while rocking a fussy baby. I have propped books on my kitchen windowsill while washing dishes. I have read while the house around me imploded.  I have read when my eyes were too tired to focus because I knew that the next morning was already full of duties to fulfil and if I didn't finish that chapter I would die of curiosity.  I carry a book in my purse always--you never know when you have to wait in line at a garage or wait for your husband to find a certain screwdriver at Ace hardware.

I try to be diverse in what I read--and careful what I put into my head.  Once in, it's impossible to get it out.  That was something my mother told me years ago.  It's been a good guide to go by.  I love a good romance.  I love biographys.  I love history.  Especially history--it's so thrilling to hear the other side of the story.  History is usually written by the winners, the survivors of whatever conflict is going on. I love having someone tell the story from the other point of view.  How anyone could be bored by that has always been beyond my ken.  I love to read the historical markers on the roadways.  Robert is very patient about that and has learned to pull over without making a fuss. I love coffee table books, they are very direct and have beautiful pictures.  I love poetry-- I love the music in it and the way it is succinct and yet full of thought.

I have several grandchildren that love to read ---I hope they learn to read wisely and with passion for the craft.  Here are SOME of my favorite books for their future reference--if they ever ask. Along with my best wishes for a lifetime of good reading--of good books.

Wuthering Heights

To Kill a Mockingbird

The Bronze Bow

Little Women, Little Men, Jo's Boys, Eight Cousins, Rose in Bloom, Polly- an Old-Fashioned Girl
all by Louisa May Alcott  and yes, even now, at my age!

The Witch of Blackbird Pond

A Team of Rivals

Killer Angels

Christy, by Catherine Marshall

anything by Louis L'Amour--don't laugh, they are terrific! Ask Maurine--she loved 'em too!

The Robe

Poems by Carol Lynn Pearson

Life's Little Instruction Book

The Scriptures--though I have no talent for remembering chapters and verses

The Foxfire Books

Pride and Prejudice

The Help

Borrowed Black

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee

Bambi--the book, not the movie, by Felix Salten''

Mrs. Mike--The Story of Katherine Mary Flannigan

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Thoughts on Change

I'm not fond of change.
Things that stay the same comfort me, calm me,
give me a sense of continuity and peace.

I do not welcome change.
Unfamiliar scenes framed by window sills with new colors
interrupt the day to day flow of movement my eyes are used to.

I am afraid of change.
Afraid of losing a scent, a whisper, a likeness, a memory
Lost in the  transformation of my surroundings.

I am embracing change.
I may as well since it chases me and often catches me without warning,
making me lose my breath with dread and foreboding.

I am learning from change.
Once accepted and approved, I am amazed at my ability to learn
and increase: to adapt with grace to whatever new adventure awaits.

                                                               BMJ
                                                               September 18, 2012


Friday, September 14, 2012

Things I Like

I love how everyone is doing a  "things I like" post--it is informative AND entertaining so I thought I would jump on the bandwagon---here are some things I like!

Twilight at my house--sounds of crickets and frogs included

Early morning on the compound when there's a ground cloud over the field--especially when we have forgotten to turn off the tree lights--they glow in the foggy air and I love it.

The kids laughing.

The kids getting excited over something.

Hearing--I wish Robert could hear the night sounds out here--and how it's possible to tell that they are winding down--in another month or two it will be quiet out here at night.

The smell when they cut the grass.

Piano lessons

the new film app the kids have learned to use--they're pretty good!

Hot pudding

watching the deer creep out in the early afternoon all over the yard--when no one is here, of course

a good book

to be continued...........

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

9-11

This is the 11th anniversary of the 9-11 attacks on the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and the Flight 93 crash in PA.  If, indeed , any of my family reads this when I am no longer here I wanted them to know that the day was remembered.  I will always remember watching and praying for those caught in the towers as I watched that morning--How inspiring to hear the stories of heroism and selflessness on that day as people tried to help each other.  And particularly moving to hear the messages of those who would never be rescued as they left calls and texts to their loved ones.

May we all be aware that any day could be our last and that we should treasure every minute we have with each other while we are here. And I hope we would be as brave and thoughtful and selfless as we imagine we would be given horrendous circumstances.

I am  reminded of the quote by Joseph Smith from the Wentworth letter:
              "The standard of truth has been erected; no
              unhallowed hand can stop the work from
              progressing; persecutions may rage, mobs may
              combine, armies amy assemble, calumny may
             defame, but the truth of God will go forth boldly,
             nobly and independent, till it has penetrated
             every country and sounded in every ear, till the
             purposes of God shall be accomplished, and the
             Great Jehovah shall say the work is done."

Our family prayers should be with the families of all of those who lost their lives on September 11th 2001--be they friend or foe. May the work go forward and families be sealed together in the gospel as current events make us more aware of the need for peace--and strength---simultaneously.

Evening Boat Rides

                                                                                
                                                                   The Rain River
                                                                            
When it rains here it often creates a lovely river for the kids to play in. Weekend before last we had a great time watching the races in the front yard. Grandpa Jones brought up the canoe and it was so deep that even with all the kids piled in they could still push it and it flew by!  They had a blast and were filthy and wet by the end of the evening--which of course makes it more fun.  They went a little fast to suit me--but, as Tig says, I'm a scaredy-cat.  It was flying by pretty fast--they hit one of the persimmon trees a pretty good lick!

This is the type of river that Robert taught Woodrow the Wood Duck to swim in and where Joshua caught crawdads as they swam through the yard--he's the only one that ever caught them though they all spent many an hour trying to fish them out of holes with cheese and hot dogs on a string. He waited till it rained and scooped 'em up with a bucket.

We got so tickled at the weather reports which kept intoning the gloom and doom of storms over and over the past few weeks--every night.  As though that were something new and threatening.  This is Virginia.  It is hotter than the hubs of hell.  Every twilight brings the threat of thunderstorms--and thank goodness cause it's the only thing that cools us off!  We look forward to it! Let the river rise-- lightening flash through the clouds---the rains come---and play on!

Friday, August 10, 2012

Hammy Lives!!!

Hammy is the squirrel that Jordan Hockaday and Joshua found on the side of the road near a dead mama squirrel. They brought it home and managed through some miracle to get it to live. He was so tiny I didn't know if he would make it. He made it all right--and became a fixture on Joshua's head! Hammy (the squirrel) lived in the gray house with him and had the run of it for a while till he got too rambunctious and had to be caged while Josh was gone. Once he got his tail caught in a door and it pulled half of it off--Robert said he helped in the pulling of that tail accidently while he and Josh were trying to introduce Hammy to his new cage---it never grew back. Robert and Josh built him a tree house and nailed it to the walnut tree out back--he had a porch and would come out to let you hand him nuts and seeds. He lived there most of the winter and then come Spring one day he just journeyed forth! We often wondered if he was living nearby as we never saw him--well, just the other day we saw a tail-less squirrel down at the shop--Josh is sure it must be Hammy---He lives!


Sunday, August 5, 2012

Happy Birthday to Me


Yesterday was my Birthday! And no, we are not 58 and 63 in this picture---but I found this pic the other week and used it in an album I made for Robert on his Birthday!  He's my movie star man in this shot--I love it!

Also, it reminded me of the Kohl's, who visited us in a surprise appearance this past week.  This was taken at their house while our kids played on a homemade slip and slide.  Belinda and Ray Kohl are always fun and we love when they just show up--in fact, some of our fondest memories are of when they just "show up"---these are legendary events in the Jones chronicles.  Once, when Robert was at the stake center at a youth activity he peeped into the kitchen to see what was being served to the youth for dinner and there was Raymond Earl, helping in the assembly line while his wife and kids played at my house--(last we talked to them they had been living in New Zealand)---he did a  double-take and Ray just grinned and said "one scoop of potatoes or two?"

I took my Mom to breakfast at Panera Bread yesterday and then we visited Josh and Lauren and Riley to see the new house--Mama hadn't been yet--and I figured my birthday was a big event to her --way back when!  Then I journeyed with Robert to Once In a Blue Moon --a little estate sale place we visit a lot--- where we found a lovely curio cabinet that we thought Carol Nixon would like--they did--picked it up and we helped 'em get it in the house.  I also visited the book store next door and picked up two more westerns for my collection...(Maurine would be proud! she loves westerns too) Visited Erin to show her a picture we had gotten with her in mind--wasn't quite the thing she was looking for--visited Michael's family to see Jordan's new bed--a thing of beauty--a loft bed made to look like a forest with twinkle lights everywhere--so cute and so Jordan.  Laura left a lemonade dispenser with Boston Baked Beans (one of my favorites!) on my kitchen table--among the cards and candy AND I got sang to numerous times--my honey left a lovely card on my bed with a surprise in it just for me.  Overall, not a bad day --kind of peaceful but not...plus Michael Phelps won his final gold medal on my birthday--Olympic history!  Happy Birthday to me! 

This is the us that is now--with Josh last year


 Tomorrow Laura and the kids are coming to our house after church for her Birthday dinner--Tom is in Utah visiting his family and helping his Dad on the farm a bit--sometimes it's nice just to visit home without the hullabaloo which usually accompanies a large family--though I know they miss the little Cottles--they are all going in the fall.  How nice for Tom to have some one on one time with his parents.

Birthdays always make me a bit nostalgic--and thankful!  My sister asked me how it felt to get old yesterday--I thought of Zeke Jones, an old friend of Robert's, when he said years ago--"It's terrible to get old--and it's terrible not to get old".  I figure I'm covered either way...Robert's birthday is on the 4th of July so he always has fireworks and the Fife and Drum at CW (which we never miss)--but mine are peaceful and slower which is good too.

Thursday, July 19, 2012




This is a picture of the grands at Chickahominy Park about 18 months ago, the kids look so small!  Now Matthew is 3 years old, Riley is 1 year old and Clara Grace is 3 months old--they are unstoppable, these little spirits that come to join our family!

Today I thought of this picture while I was moving through a hectic day  and how they are all growing. 

Mom had an appointment at the pharmacy to be fitted for some special stockings to help ease the swelling and discomfort in her legs--they actually look pretty sporty--Mom has pretty legs.  Then she needed to make a run to Target--her favorite place--the woman should do a commercial--she loves that store.

I came home. cleaned up a bit, and then did five piano lessons--I love doing them but sometimes feel a little stressed between the phone and smaller ones running in and out of the house while I am trying to explain triads or harmonic intervals. then my kids all look at me like "what on earth is the matter with you?" Believe it or not, I look forward to them coming--it's kind of my one on one time with 'em.

After the kids left, Mom called to tell me the goats and chickens were out of the pen--code for "get these animals away from my flowers before I get a gun and shoot them all".  So I corraled 'em all back in the fence and they looked so betrayed--they like wandering about in the yard eating everything we plant--especially my geraniums and Mama's lilies.  The kids pried the fence open to get the eggs which I had not done today and didn't shut it quite tight enough--It's okay--Annabel and GoatBelle--I didn't name them--enjoyed their foray into the wilds with the deer.  Tom C. says they are overfed--they are round as butterballs.

The girls and Robert and I went to return a basket to the Wardells who brought some of his cracked wheat bread over for Robert's birthday--we were going to get some ice cream but he forgot his wallet so we headed home where the insect invasion from H began...

I ended my day with Maylon and Hallie and Jordan keeping me company while their Dads worked on a bike with Pike and Lan and Aidan and Jack and Henley at the shop.  Maylon spied one of those huge wolf spiders sauntering in my kitchen door like it lived here--which it would have had she not seen it.  Of course, I screamed , May screamed, Jordan screamed, Hallie went ballistic and we finally got Robert to come kill it and found a bunch of tiny hatchlings under the buffet where it ran to hide--I don't know if they were this spiders young or not but I do know that they no longer exist--and Michael had better not tell me not to kill them ----I do not hunt spiders but if they come in my house I will kill them. Instantly. With no remorse.  Ever.  Maybe I was attacked by a spider as a child or something because I have always been terrified of them.  I'm so glad  Robert got to see one before I killed it.  He always says "it's just a little spider"-- sure it is after I kill it and it shrivels up --this thing could eat a small cat...even he was impressed.

Anyway, that was a typical day here for me and I am tired and am going to bed to read and think about something that doesn't have eight legs---eeeek!

Good Night, chickadees


Sunday, July 15, 2012


Afterwhiles

This is a picture of my Grandmother Tazzie Lee's birth sons.  They were large at birth and large in life--or so it seemed to those of us who love them.  Amazing how ordinary men and women become more than ordinary when they are remembered through the proverbial rose colored glasses we all wear. Thank goodness for that. 
My grandmother gave birth at home to these babies who weighed 8 and a half,  11 and a half and 12 pounds.  I can't even imagine.  Their size  (and problems she had later in life leading to treatment at Duke University Hospital) lead us to believe she may have suffered from gestational diabetes which may have led to Type II diabetes in her later years.
Miss Tazzie Lee died when I was 5 so I do not remember her well--in my mind she was always "Miss" because that is what my mother called her.  Her sons called her Pet--never Mama.  They called their father Son, something I found very endearing. 
Miss Tazzie Lee also raised three other children--her sister Gaynelle died very young and left three children of her own.  Tazzie brought home the two girls, Margorie and Esther.  The youngest, Eddie, went to stay with his father's family.  I cannot remember what happened exactly but on one of their visits to see Eddie, Miss Tazzie Lee brought him home. There were whispers and accusations of neglect--and of course there were no inquiries or arguments back then--Grandma simply gathered his little things and brought him  home.  From things my mother told me there wouldn't have been any use to argue with her anyway. What Pet wanted to do she usually did.  My father was the youngest so Daddy couldn't remember life without Eddie and spoke of him often when I was a child.  So the family of three strapping boys became a family with four boys and two girls and Daddy thought of his cousins as siblings , which says a lot for the way Pet and Son handled their family. I admire that.
They also had two maiden aunts that lived with them for many years. Aunt Hallie, who never married and was everyone's favorite and Aunt Sug (Alice) who did eventually marry and was not as well-liked as she wished to be. 
Pet was lively and funny and a wonderful cook--her house was the gathering place for the family on Sundays.  Daddy said she would often have three or four pies made by the time he got up on Sunday morning.  I remember her front porch well, with people dressed in Sunday clothes lounging and the swing always occupied and gently swaying back and forth while people visited.  Mama was a little afraid of Miss Tazzie Lee but grew to love her in time.  She said Pet had gumption and a great sense of humor and was the busiest person she knew--bar none.  Pet could write her name and that was about all-- which puzzled me because all of her siblings could read and write and Aunt Hallie also read music ---she played the piano in church for years. 
Son was a deacon in the church, played the organ, the piano, the violin and the guitar well and was a carpenter for the mill in town.  He had a garden always and when I remember him at 94 years old he still worked --he swept up a shoeshop down the street in Durham every morning and when we visited he always baked a pie.
Thomas, was their oldest son (light jacket), then Theodore (dapper in the bow tie) and then Bennie Hugh, (with the flower on his lapel).  Daddy preferred  to be called "Ben". 
I love that they were a blended family.  I love that they were a church going family--that they sang together and that the boys adored their mother and father even when they were older.  I love that two maiden aunts were taken care of and accepted.  In fact, they were close enough to name the children. Aunt Hallie named Theodore.  Aunt Sug almost named Daddy Elihu like the prophet in the Bible but Grandpa Moss said no--that sounded too much like a girl.  Elihu became Bennie Hugh, which is certainly original--- and pacified Aunt Sug.
I loved visiting North Carolina when I was a child and still get a tingle up my backbone when I see the Oxford sign on the highway.  I remember rides with Thomas and Lynette through town in the summer and Theodore's garden and his penchant for bursting into song.
I wish I had listened better to stories I heard when I was a child--I wish I remembered how Son and Pet met, what made them tickled, what their favorite color was or their favorite song. 
Oddly enough, I do still remember that front porch--I wish I could remember the people on it.

                                       Margorie, Esther, Thomas, Theodore (Thedo) and Ben
Daddy (Ben), Theodore, Eddie, and Thomas