buckeyefarmer
Epic Contributor
Stantion to hold the mik cow.
Do you recall what you thought of catching a fish bigger than you were? Great and timeless photo of the people that helped build America.No monetary value can be placed on these pics.
Here's me and my Dad when I was 7 or 8.View attachment 773650.
My Dad caught that fish by hand in the river, log jam. He put me in the escape route laying on my side in shallow water. "Don't move Rich, don't move!!!" That fish would swim to me and turn away, swiping me with it's tail. I was well taught by my Dad and had complete faith in him. I didn't move. When he came out of the log jam with that fish I couldn't believe how big it was!!!!! I remember it like it was yesterday.Do you recall what you thought of catching a fish bigger than you were? Great and timeless photo of the people that helped build America.
That photo brings back memories of creek fishing in the Texas Panhandle. Grandpa cought a huge turtle about 20 inches in diameter. It looked like a monster to me.No monetary value can be placed on these pics.
Here's me and my Dad when I was 7 or 8.View attachment 773650.
I really enjoy browsing thru my childhood memories and thinking about how "big" things were.That photo brings back memories of creek fishing in the Texas Panhandle. Grandpa cought a huge turtle about 20 inches in diameter. It looked like a monster to me.
hugs, Brandi
My Mom was a great historian. She took a LOT of photos and secured them. I inherited them. Hundreds. During my childhood she took them from a "box" Kodak camera that you looked down thru the top to site.Mr. Ovrszd, are you the one on the right or the left?
(Actually great photo, and even greater is that you are the one keeping the event alive, 60 years later!)
...//Terry
My grandmother had something similar around 1910. I think it was called a kodak brownie camera. My uncle ended up with the photo albums, then my aunt. My aunt valued the photos, but her perspective was limited by the fact that the time periods the photos were taken were almost within her lifetime. For me they are very much not. My perspective is completely different. My kids and grand kids - they are in awe. When I mentioned that to her, that the pictures my grandmother took really were the first time in history that events had been recorded, in volume, and in real time, with equipment available to ordinary people, she sent them home with me. She's almost 90. They are in safe keeping.My Mom was a great historian. She took a LOT of photos and secured them. I inherited them. Hundreds. During my childhood she took them from a "box" Kodak camera that you looked down thru the top to site.
I had my Mom write on the back who the people were and a year date or event. I have a couple dozen out of hundreds that she couldn't identify.My grandmother had something similar around 1910. I think it was called a kodak brownie camera. My uncle ended up with the photo albums, then my aunt. My aunt valued the photos, but her perspective was limited by the fact that the time periods the photos were taken were almost within her lifetime. For me they are very much not. My perspective is completely different. My kids and grand kids - they are in awe. When I mentioned that to her, that the pictures my grandmother took really were the first time in history that events had been recorded, in volume, and in real time, with equipment available to ordinary people, she sent them home with me. She's almost 90. They are in safe keeping.
When I was around his age Dad let the loft door down. Told me to go up in the loft and throw out ten square bales. The loft was full clear to the peak. Mom and Dad left for town. I climbed to the top and tried to push out a bale. Could not. So I got on the outside of the stack and pulled on the bale twines to slide one out. The twine broke. I fell out of the barn backwards from the loft peak to the ground below. I lit on my shoulders. Temporarily paralyzed me. Couldn't walk or crawl. I dragged myself to the house and waited for them to come home. Was in the hospital 10 days. Was 4 days before I could stand and walk. I felt horrible for my Dad. He struggled with it all.I enjoy going thru the old pics. I run a FB picture page that deals with pictures in Ohio. A lot of old pictures get posted that I love seeing. I’ve learned a lot of history just posting and reading other posts.
Here’s my oldest climbing the old ladder in the barn. This is the shed side of the barn. This would get filled with bales also. We fed just to the left in this picture. Behind is an area we could pen up 2-3 cows to load for market. We would stack hay over this area also.
When the barn was full, we used the ladder to climb thru the top window to throw bales down to feed, once the shed was empty.
View attachment 773679
Mom's was older. No plastic. Made of wood covered with a leather looking cloth. No flash.Ouch. We would take naps in the hay loft. When Dad found out he scared us by saying a rat would bite our nose off.
I still got Mom and Dad's Kodak Brownie Hawkeye camera. View attachment 773694 One bulb one flash. I remember trying to catch the flashed bulbs as they were ejected.
hugs, Brandi
Like this?Mom's was older. No plastic. Made of wood covered with a leather looking cloth. No flash.
You have a treasure!!! Wish I had Mom's.
Very much so.Like this?
When I went back and looked at my uncle's barns after 50 years away, I was shocked at how little they were. As a little kid I remember them being much bigger and maybe a mile long and almost as wide. I think life plays those tricks on us to make sure we're paying attention.I really enjoy browsing thru my childhood memories and thinking about how "big" things were.![]()
All about perspective Six.When I went back and looked at my uncle's barns after 50 years away, I was shocked at how little they were. As a little kid I remember them being much bigger and maybe a mile long and almost as wide. I think life plays those tricks on us to make sure we're paying attention.![]()
Make sure your kids know these stories.We used to make houses, or little caves with the hay bales. We would fall asleep in the barn sometimes. On a nice cold day it was warm in the hay bales. I remember doing flips off the upper beams and landing in the hay below. My uncle used to have a video of some of us jumping out of the high window into the pile of hay below. Wished I had that video.
My favorite memory is walking back from the barn in the snow after dark, right before Christmas with the tree lights on in the house.