11 July, 2010

In Georgia

Hello from my hometown of Elberton, Georgia. I am visiting my mother this week. She is the only one of my family that still lives in the town where my father, who was career army, was last stationed. This was basically where my younger brother and I grew up and where my older sisters finished high school. Before moving here, my family lived on Okinawa, in Texas, and in Oklahoma. I consider Elberton my hometown since I lived here from ages 5 through 17, when I moved a whopping 35 miles away to go to college in Athens, Georgia.


Elberton bills itself as “The Granite Capital of the World”, which is only a bit of hyperbole. Elberton actually does produce more granite monuments (mostly tombstones) than any other place in the world, as you can see proudly proclaimed on the sign in the photo below.


That is not a cemetary in the photo above; it is a display of fine monuments that have been commitioned for future use in cemetaries or as examples of fine sculpting and engraving.

The Georgia Guidestones are the biggest granite display from Elberton. The Guidestones (click here to get to Wikipedia's entry) are Elberton’s answer to Stonehenge. ;-) This site  has a very detailed accounting of the history of the Guidestones with many photos and drawings. They are actually pretty cool, I think. Some folks got very upset about them, believing that they were satanic. Go figure.

It was too hot today to spend much time outside, but I did take a couple of photos around my mother’s house. Not too many plants in bloom in this heat, but I did find a pretty light pink Rose of Sharon.

And this scraggly climbing fern (for Bill in Louisiana).



And this pretty kalanchoe in bloom inside her house.


This is not the house I grew up in. She sold that house 10 years ago to rent this smaller house just down the street. It is almost adjacent to the elementary school my brother and I attended. Here is one of the famous Elberton granite monuments (non-tombstone) for the school. ;-)

I also found the pear tree that bore the juiciest pears way back when I went to this school. During recess in the autumn months, we school kids would pick the ripe pears from the branches that hung over onto the school playground. I can’t believe that it is still alive, much less that it is loaded with fruit that will ripen in months to come.



The pear tree outlasted the school. Maybe that monument is a tombstone afterall.  The school buildings and grounds are still present, but they are now a private residence.

I will close with a photo of my favorite tree. It is a big old oak on the playground of the school. During summers when I was a child, I would take whatever book I was reading and climb the tree to read in peace and quiet. I would need a ladder to get up that tree (or any tree!) these days …



10 comments:

  1. Hi Wilma,
    Beautiful post and very interesting. I did not know all these things about Elberton! Thanks for sharing all these info and these nice pictures!

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  2. I can just imagine all those memories flooding back, while you were there Wilma.
    Fascinating link about The Guidestones too.

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  3. Great memories, Wilma, and a nice-looking place to grow up.

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  4. Lovely memories Wilma. Read the link about the Guidestones..very intriguing.
    BTW I used to go apple 'scumping' on my way to and from school AND got caught a few times..lol. FAB.

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  5. A very nostalgic visit for you, Wilma. So nice that the Pear Tree is still there!

    Love the old Oak Tree too, I was always too much of a wimp to climb trees :)

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  6. Its nice to visit like that Wilma. I bet everything looks smaller than it did. I find that it does when I visit like that.
    You climbing a tree, I will have to think about that one a bit. {:)

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  7. Hello to all,

    it has been a great visit with my Mom in my old hometown. It was a fine place to grow up in, although I couldn't wait to leave it at the time. And Roy - I was quite the tom boy as a child, and still am to a certain extent. :-)

    cheers,
    Wilma

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  8. Hello Wilma, I did not realize how far behind I have gotten with blogs until I started scrolling through your Belize birds photos - what a wonderful variety, incl friends from the north like the baltimore & orchard orioles - or perhaps regular visitors to the north! And your break-in! We've had one of those around, but it hasn't become quite so bold - plus a couple of skunks that clean up beneath the feeders at night. Guess we need to do more than just take things inside ... thieves are lurking! Thanks for the intro to Belize birds - hope to see them next year.

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  9. Hi Chris - thanks for visiting and commenting. I have a few more birds of Belize that I will probably do as a group posting because the quality of the photos is not very good, but I still want to mention them. We used to have skunks and woodchucks around, but haven't seen them in recent years. We had lovely skunk around for a couple of years that had a sort of inverse coloration and extraordinarily long hair. The hair on its tail was short toward the tip and then the very tip had a long white sort of "ponytail". But, alas, the area around us has begun to shift from farm to suburb and we don't have the skunks ro woodchucks around now.

    cheers,
    Wilma

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  10. Thanks for the fern photo !!

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