Sunday, May 14, 2017

Mom - A Mother's Day Tribute

            Mom’s an interesting blend.  Two days after being married in Jackson, Michigan, she and my Dad both returned to school and their classrooms to teach.  Later that spring they took their official honeymoon.  Packed into their little VW bug, they drove all around Northern Lower Michigan.  
They traveled by Charlevoix, up back roads to Mackinaw City, and then down to Gaylord and into the Pigeon River State Forest.  Who knew that after a year in Eaton Rapids, and a year in Rudyard of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula near the Kincheloe Air Force Base, that they would settle into the “Tip of the Mitt,” and call Northern Lower Michigan their home?  I was born while they lived in Cadillac.  After a few years they moved to Gaylord where my sisters Becky & Karen were born.  They had several rentals on the west side of Otsego Lake, and then they bought their first house, on ten acres, eleven miles northeast of town out past the old railroad stop of Sparr.
Mom with baby Mike
Introducing me to moving water at the Manistee River
            For being a girl raised “in town,” the country life seemed to fit my Mom perfectly.  We were a one car family, and yet we somehow made it work.  While Dad taught Jr. High math in Gaylord, my sisters and I eventually went to elementary school in Johannesburg, and Mom worked full time as a “Stay at Home Mom.”
            Soon after moving out to this first house of theirs on “Rural Route #1”, we converted part of the shed into a barn (several years later the dirt road was officially named Dipzinski Road).  The country living that we were a part of coincided with the nationwide “Back to the Basics” movement.  It was only natural that we add farm animals onto our land.  Later, we would build a small little pole barn to better house the animals we had.  When I was in second grade, Mom brought our new triplet kid goats to our elementary school.  At the time we were learning how to write the cursive letter “G”, so it went perfectly with the lesson.  It was great fun running around the playground with my classmates as the baby goats raced along right behind us.  Not too many Mom’s (or students for that matter) have the chance to be a part of something like that.
            Annual gardens were a given.  Mom used every square inch of the large drop freezer that we had, in addition to the storage shelves in the root cellar, dug into the side hill off the back of the original shed.  Looking back, the cellar was very “Hobbit-like” and fun to play near.  My sisters and I often climbed the rock walls that led into the small wooden door, dropped stones and sticks through the air vent protruding up through the top of the hill, and jumped from the top of it down into drifted snow in the winter.  Mom canned and froze the fruits and vegetables that we stored.  As kids we were often handed an old “Cool Whip” container and sent down to the valley behind our house to pick wild strawberries.  Mom used these and other berries to make jams and jellies as preserves.  Bribes to keep whiny kids at bay were promised in the form of a trip out to the Otsego Lake State Park where my Dad worked as a ranger in the summer time.  We could go swimming if we filled the container with strawberries as opposed to filling our bellies.  She also used the large crock down in the lower utility room of our house to transform cucumbers from the garden into pickles.
            Mom was always baking.  We had plenty of milk from our goats, and eggs from our chickens.  My mouth waters right now when I think of a thick slab of Mom’s freshly baked bread, slathered in butter.  She was an integral part of our areas first health food co-op.  She used the bulk food she purchased to make many different kinds of meals.  It was also through the co-op that we were introduced to dried fruit, carob, and large blocks of cheese.  Baby Swiss was my favorite and Mom knew it!  As a growing boy I often made several peanut butter and jelly sandwiches at any one time.  I’d quench my hunger from sandwiches made from natural peanut butter (you had to stir in the oil first), alongside homemade jam; all on top of the freshly baked bread.  If I wanted to change it up, I cut thick slabs of cheese and put them on the bread with a generous quantity of yellow mustard.  Meat often came from our chickens, as well as from the geese we raised.  She would also fix wild game Dad brought home from his adventures in the woods.  Throughout the various seasons we had fish, snowshoe hares, or grouse.  I can still picture the thick gravy over a drumstick from those birds.  It was dark meat, and it tasted delicious.
            On the floor in the little sun porch that jutted out on the south side of our small house, Mom often had material rolled out with the delicate tissue of a clothes pattern pinned onto it.  With special shears she would cut out the cloth to make clothes for my sisters and me.  A red and blue shirt with crabs on it is what I remember most specifically, along with a brown and white shirt that had tools on it.  What I remember most from my sister’s homemade clothes, were the pioneer dresses and bonnets that went along with our nation’s Bicentennial Celebration in 1976.
Family Picture- 1976
            After several years on Dipzinski Road, my parents purchased some property halfway back towards Gaylord.  For quite a few years it was simply known as “The Property.”  We often stopped there to hike and picnic.  My Mom’s parents went in on the deal, and together we each had forty acres.  With Grandma and Grand-dad living down state, it was really like having eighty acres; practically a wilderness with the woods and swamps surrounding us.  Eventually we built on the property; a house nestled back in the pines, surrounded by hardwoods and hills.  My sisters and I entered into the Gaylord school systems at that time.  Our barn, and farm, and garden grew in size.  We added wood burning stoves, bee keeping, and a maple sugar shack to our list of activities tying us to the land.
Christmas 1977
Mom & her friend Norean snowmobiling into Yellowstone-1980
Thanksgiving 1983
            Mom came by picnics naturally.  Grandma was a professional by anyone’s standards, and Mom simply took it from there.  It was from those stepping stones, coupled with Dad’s ingenuity, that they would often pack us up for day trips into the Pigeon River State Forest.  We would pile into our yellow Volkswagen van early in the morning, and look for elk on winding, dusty two track roads in the woods.  More often than not we stopped for breakfast along the way (cooked over an open fire or on our camp stove).  Later we would stop at the Pigeon River or Pickerel Lake to swim and play.  It just didn’t get any better than that; unless of course you take into account our camping trips.  That was like taking our picnic trips to a whole new level.  Dad’s engineering prowess was put to the test as he designed and outfitted a wooden “camp-box” that fit on top of a single snowmobile trailer that he refurbished.  Mom packed that box with the kind of thoughtfulness that a white footed mouse might use to store food prior to the first snowfall of the season.  Painted long necked beer bottle boxes were where she helped each of us kids pack the clothes needed to fit the excursion and the predicted weather.  In these sturdy boxes is also where our food and cookware was stored.  Each box slid into pre-fitted cubby holes and slots that kept them stable.  The entire operation was impressive, and one that led to many fun, and exciting adventures.
Mom and our "Big Blue Tent"
            As I grew, Mom was a listening ear when I came home from school each day.  She liked to know what was going on, and how I felt about things.  I never felt right about holding things back, so I pretty much told her everything that was happening.  That would come in handy while I was in college and gaining independence on my own.  She and Dad expected us to work hard and do our best at whatever we were involved in.  Mom also fostered spontaneity, as it was often with her blessing and a smile that I left the house with my dog, headed back into the woods, and disappeared into exploratory treks that lasted for hours at a time.  I have always appreciated how she encouraged the development of that part of my spirit.
Karen & Mom with her big bluegill
Becky & Mom after a college football game
            From Mom I have gained a love for reading.  I have also learned to be frugal in what I need, while being open and generous in what I have.  Living things of all species of plants and animals were to be respected.  Although creepy, crawling bugs, especially ones that randomly flew up beside her, she could do without.  Lovingly, Mom led by example what it meant to have a personal relationship with God.  She has good insight in how that looks and works, through personal experience.  That perception to detail also allows her to look at budgets and money amounts with more of an interest than most would have.  It’s from that personal experience too, that she has withstood two knee replacements and a back surgery; only to rebound time and again.  It’s been a lesson for me on enduring pain while trying to move forward.
Dad & Mom in 2001 before moving down to Southern Wisconsin
Todd and Jodi after helping Grandma bake some bread
Todd & Jodi with both sets of Grandparents after a XC Meet-2014
Over the years, while continuing to be my Mom, she has also moved into the role of Grandma.  It’s a different role, but one she enjoys.  From the various facets that have made her who she is, she is leaving a legacy.  These are the things that make my Mom an interesting blend.  Thanks Mom, I love you.
            See you along The Way…
Ice Cream at Meggy Moos's - Mother's Day 2017