Sunday, July 27, 2008

Hot August Blues Festival


Who in their right mind would ever dream of throwing a blues festival during the hottest part of summer? Why, the folks in Hardin Kentucky, of course! This year marks the 19th anniversary of the Hot August Blues Festival on the banks of Kentucky Lake at the KenLake amphitheater. The festival features many regional favorites as well as performers from all across the US and beyond. Last year, the bluesfest was selected as one of the state's top ten summer events by the Kentucky Tourism Council. If you're a blues fan, mark your calendar for the weekend of August 22nd and 23rd for a boogie style roadtrip to western Kentucky.

Prices are quite reasonable at 12 bucks for Friday, 17 for Saturday and a special combo price of $25 for both days. Gates open at 4PM on Friday and 10AM on Saturday. This year's headliners include the hot-to-trot Shawn Kellerman on Saturday evening and crowd favorite Lew Jetton and 61 South on Friday night. Tickets are available online but going fast.

Hot August Blues Festival

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Just another Day at the Funny Farm


Greetings from the World of a Geriatric Caregiver
No. 5 in a series

Had the character in the acclaimed movie "Rainman" been rainwoman she could have been played to perfection by Mom. Our late night exposure to Mom's diminishing mental state, via the wondrous baby monitor, is evident nightly with a constantly exploding repetition of numbers and names. For several nights she called her brother Roscoe over and over again. Another night was reserved for her brother Thurman and then came the chanting for senior brother, Lincoln. Recently, her mantra was 110, 110, 110, etc. The following night she had digressed to a sing-song eleven. eleven, eleven, eleven and twice we were lulled back to sleep by the loud, defiant broadcast of 119, 119, 119 during a fifteen minute period in the dead of night. Could it be that Mom is a former frustrated NY Stock Exchange bidder, a train conductor, or possibly a reincarnated auctioneer? The majority of her rants and screams end with bone chilling pleas of help me, help me, help me! Sadly, day and night, light and dark mean nothing to her fragmented mind.

How true that, as a caregiver, if you can't laugh… you can't survive.
We strive, in our daily desperation to survive, to rejoice and focus with laughter on the tumultuous, yet often comedic aspects of our everyday existence. Otherwise, we would be engulfed in a cascading waterfall of never ending tears and frustration.

Yesterday, after numerous requests from Mom as to what she could do and resisting every suggestion I offered, I decided to invite one of her old friends over for Mom's diversion and my own self preservation.

When I spoke with Thelma she kindly declined the invitation, due to a recent cold, which she didn't want to share with Mom. I understood, appreciated her thinking and said that perhaps another day they could get together. Five minutes later she called back to say that she had changed her mind. It was then 10 AM and we could expect her shortly.

As the morning dragged on and I attempted to keep Mom occupied, as one would do with a two year old toddler, I began to wonder if I had misunderstood what Thelma had said. Finally, at 2 PM, a hot, sweaty, frazzled and agitated Thelma knocked rapidly at the backdoor with a crudely scribbled map to our home in her hand, that some kind soul, along her three mile trek of being lost, had penned on the back of a hastily retrieved church bulletin.

At this point of Mom's dementia she is not a very easy person to converse with and poor Thelma, in an attempt to fill the void, chattered away like a metronome on super high speed as she repeatedly requested and downed tall glasses of refreshing ice water. All the while Mom sat, ramrod straight and "yepped" and "noped" at occasional intervals.

Thelma rose to leave at 4 PM and listened, with a confused look on her face, as I gave explicit verbal directions for her drive home. The backside of her church bulletin came to mind, but I resisted, since there were only a total of two turns the entire way, surely she could comprehend and recall such sparse directions. Telling Mom that I was going to walk Thelma to her car and would return momentarily, the two of us stepped out the front door . I should have known better. Anyone dealing with a dementia patient knows that the passage of time has no significance in their brain. If Mom is not sleeping or eating, she is constantly calling my name, as one would summon a dog, to loyally sit by their side. As Thelma and I chatted and strolled to her car in the front drive I suggested that , rather than attempting to back out of our rather long country driveway, she would probably find it easier to follow the drive around the barn, make a circle and be headed back to the main road. I smiled, waved good- bye and as I hurriedly headed back to Mom I could hear her frantically screaming my name through the open front door. Glancing back, to check on Thelma's progress, and sincerely wishing that she had GPS, I viewed a little frizzy gray head straining to peek over the large steering wheel of her long, black Pontiac, which was weaving and circling through the vast back yard as she precariously dodged two barns, a hog parlor, the potato house, pump house and corn crib. Poor Thelma was in the frightful clutches of a maze and for the second time today… was totally lost!

At this point I suddenly erupted with laugher while recalling the story of the wise, biblical king who had the difficult task of choosing which mother should get the child that the two women both claimed as their own. As I scurried in the king's "moccasins" I was mentally torn between assisting Thelma and answering Mom's repeated urgent calls for help. Since Thelma seemed oblivious to her dilemma and Mom's calls were growing louder by the moment, I chose to assist Mom and wished the best for poor meandering Thelma. As I hurriedly darted through the front door I glimpsed Thelma's brake lights at the end of the driveway and hoped she would follow my instructions to turn left… not right and eventually, before nightfall, discover herself at home or at least close enough that some good Samaritan would take pity and lend a helping hand to her driveway . After getting Mom calmed and settled I considered calling Thelma to inquire if she had gotten home safely, but instead, just sighed, shook my head and chuckled, while rewinding a mental image of our comical afternoon.

In early evening, when husband, Ray, returned from the hay patch he cheerily said to Mom, "Well, I understand you had a nice visit with Thelma today." Mom glanced up from her chair on the patio with a vacant stare and replied, "Thelma who?"

So goes it in the daily life of a geriatric caregiver.
J.A. Heitmueller

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Turtles


Turtles
By Jan Melara

We moved out to the lake a couple of years ago. At first I missed the hustle and bustle of city life terribly. I even found myself looking back fondly on the construction workers’ wolf whistles that had once so annoyed me as I ran their gauntlet on my way to and from modeling jobs in the city.

But that is all behind me. Now I am satisfied to just stay home and feed turtles from our dock. The yellow bellied sliders who paddle slowly up to me for their daily ration of stale bread have become my most treasured companions as I wait for my husband’s return from his increasingly lengthy trips into the city.

That is why I was so upset a month or so ago when I began to notice my little reptilian friends acting differently. Where before they would always be waiting under our dock ready to paddle out enthusiastically at the first sound of my steps on the rough wooden planks above their heads, they began to come instead from deeper water and hung back fearfully until I retreated onto dry land no matter how much I coaxed them to come and eat. I couldn’t understand their sudden fearfulness until one afternoon when I happened to look out my kitchen window and saw our grey and grizzled old neighbor, Bert, standing on his dock with a pellet gun in one hand and a bag of catfish nuggets in the other. He was tossing the nuggets into the water to entice my darlings. Then when the innocent little dears came in to try to eat he would shoot at them with the pellet gun.

“My God,” I thought as I ran out the door and down our gently sloping lawn to the lake. “He’s been a little off ever since his wife died last year, but this is going too far. I’ve got to stop him.” Bert looked back over his shoulder when he heard me screaming, “Stop that! What are you doing? Stop right this instant!” but he managed to squeeze off one more round before I could get close enough to try to pull the gun out of his hand. It was that round that killed Ole Dave, one of my favorite turtles and the father (or maybe mother-I couldn’t tell) of Pipsqueak, the newest addition to my lunch bunch.

I lunged for the glistening gun in Bert’s hand, but he deftly stepped aside just as I reached him so that my momentum carried me straight off the dock and into the lake. When I came up, spluttering, Bert was already lowering the swim ladder and apologizing like crazy. He really hadn’t meant for that to happen, he said, but I had surprised him. “What were you trying to do, anyway?” he asked as I hauled myself back onto the dock.

I crossed my arms over my chest to protect myself from Bert’s hungry stare, and said, “I was trying to get that gun away from you. You killed Ole Dave and now Pipsqueak will probably die, too, since he doesn’t have his dad anymore.” Bert looked around, bewildered.

“Dave? Pipsqueak?” he said, as if he had no idea what he’d just done.

“That turtle you just murdered for the sport of it, Bert,” I said. The water in my shoes was beginning to make it feel as if someone had replaced the insoles with slices of ham. I needed to get back to the house so I could change into some dry clothes.

“Oh, you’re upset because I’m shooting turtles! I thought I’d hit somebody across on the other shore or something the way you were carrying on. I shoot them things because they’re nuisances, honey. They’re taking over the lake,” he said, looking me up and down. I might as well have been naked for all the good my soaking wet clothes were doing me.

“Well I wish you’d stop your senseless killing, Bert. I feed those babies. They’re my pets.”

Bert drug his eyes back up to my face. It looked like it was a big effort for him. I hugged my arms tighter across my chest. “Aw, I’m just restoring the balance of nature. You feeding ‘em like you do makes ‘em overpopulate. I probably couldn’t shoot enough of the things to even knock a dent in ‘em, anyway. They sure ain’t about to be extinct, are they?”

I had to concede that there did seem to be plenty of turtles in the lake, but I told the old widower in no uncertain terms just what I thought of his cruelty. “I’m calling the game warden soon as I get dried off, Bert,” I yelled over my shoulder as I walked back up the hill toward my house.

“Go ahead, he’ll tell you the same thing I just did,” the old coot shot back.

To my dismay, that was exactly what the park ranger did say when I called him after toweling off. There were plenty of turtles in the lake, their population probably could stand a little thinning out, it really wasn’t in their best interests to hand feed them, yadda, yadda.

“Just wait until my husband gets home, you old Nazi,” I whispered as I glared at the side of Bert’s house through my bathroom window.

But when my spouse got home, he was no more help than the park ranger had been. “Honey, you’re alone out here in the sticks all day and I think it’s kind of gotten to you a little. These are turtles we’re talking about here, not people. They’re not even mammals, for goodness sakes! Maybe we could get you a puppy.” I didn’t want a puppy, though. I wanted Bert to stop his wholesale murder of the pets I already had.

Over the next few days, I continued to fume inwardly, although outwardly I was the same polite, efficient, pleasant housewife I’d become since my marriage and our move to the country. Inside, though, the old Samantha, the one who’d clawed herself a nice comfortable niche in the brutal world of photographic modeling, began to surface again. I thought of ways to pay Bert back for what he’d done. “If those were people he killed, he’d be heading for the electric chair right now,” I thought, but never said aloud even to my husband.

I fantasized about ways to exact retribution from Bert for his killing spree even as I tried unsuccessfully to coax my poor terrorized little friends back to my dock. Poison was out-I had no idea how to go about getting any without having it traced right back to me. I obviously couldn’t get the shotgun from its rack in the garage and just walk next door and shoot the unrepentant killer with it, however satisfying that would be. Strangling seemed like it might take too much strength on my part; although Bert was pretty old and frail he was probably stronger than he looked.

I still hadn’t come across anything that seemed doable when the phone rang one Friday afternoon just as I came in from the dock. It was Bert, calling from the hospital in town. He wanted to know if I could give him a ride home because his doctor didn’t want him driving. I told him of course I could and got my car keys.

When I arrived at the Hickory Regional Medical Center, Bert was still in one of those awful gowns with the open backs. While he changed into his own clothes, I stepped into the hallway and talked with his doctor. It seemed Bert had gone in the day before for a cardiac catheterization, which showed that he needed open heart surgery. The operation was scheduled for the following Monday. “I really wanted him to stay here where we can watch him until we can get this thing done, but he insists on going home for the weekend,” the handsome cardiologist told me.

“Say, you look awfully familiar. Have I met you before?” he added. I said that he’d probably seen me in a magazine, since I used to model for a living.

“Oh, that’s it! You were Miss January a few years back, weren’t you?” he said, with a lovely red tone starting to creep up his neck.

I smiled and nodded. “I was quite taken with you…I mean, there were some interesting stories in that issue,” he said and blushed even more deeply.

“Do you have any instructions for me about old Bert?” I asked in order to try and get him off a subject which was obviously making him uncomfortable.

The red started to subside from his face as he got back onto a more professional keel. “Oh, yes. Like I said, he should really be here in the hospital over the weekend. But since he won’t stay, he definitely should not do anything strenuous while he’s awaiting surgery there at home. I don’t want him doing anything at all that would put a strain on his heart. For instance, this is not the weekend to pull out your old Miss January photos and go over them with him, if you get my drift.” He was blushing again even as he chuckled at his own words. I said I understood and eventually, after a nurse finally wheeled Bert out to my car, I drove the old murderer home.

“Well, I’ll come over and check on you again later, Bert,” I said sweetly as I closed his front door. Then I went home and had a late lunch before taking a nice shower and brushing out my long blonde curls into an abandoned looking mane. As soon as I had toweled off, I slipped on a short cotton housedress and some flip flops. Then I ran back over to Bert’s house. “What was his wife’s name?” I wondered during the short trip across the lawn. It came to me just as I let myself into Bert’s back door. “Fran! That’s it. She was named Fran,” I said to myself.

Bert was sitting in his recliner in the den gazing out over the lake when I arrived, but he looked up as soon as he heard the door open. There seemed to be no point in wasting any time, so I immediately went forward with my hastily formed plan.

“Bert, you know I’m awfully lonely over there with my husband gone into the city so much,” I said and kicked my flip flops off before adding, “Maybe you could, you know, help me out,” just to make sure he understood what I was getting at. When I was positive I had his full attention, I pulled the thin cotton housedress off my shoulders and let it fall to the floor, so that I was standing there completely naked in front of the old reprobate. He shot up from his recliner and started pulling his plaid shirt open without even trying to undo the buttons. It wasn’t easy, but I waited until he was actually in my arms before looking up as if I’d seen a ghost and crying out, “Oh my God, Fran! What in the world are you doing here?”

It was all, as I had hoped, just too much for the old geezer’s heart. As soon as I said the name Fran, he started clutching his chest and turning all purple. I eased him gently to the floor and then slowly got dressed again, talking all the while about how wrong it had been for him to shoot Ole Dave and the others. When I was sure Bert was dead, I picked up the phone by his recliner and dialed 911. “I need an ambulance. I just came over to check on my neighbor and I think he’s had a heart attack,” I said into the old fashioned receiver.

No one has found out what part I played in Bert’s death. Most people seem to think it was just time for the old man to go - simply a part of the natural order of things, which is exactly what I think.


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Written by: Jan Melara
janmelara@prtcnet.com

Monday, July 14, 2008

The Closer on TNT

Well, ya'll know that when a Big TV Network sends little ol' me an email - I'm not one to ignore it! So I'm letting you read what I received today and I think I'll just set down tonight and give the show a try - I have to admit I watch very little t.v. (I'm not a t.v. snob, I have no time!) so I've missed this show, but if it's good I'll make up for it now.

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Hey-

I know you're a big proponent of all things Southern, so I wanted to let you know about some special content on the website of the TNT show The Closer, which is all about celebrating Southern style.

The show,which premieres its fourth season tonight (Monday) at 9/8c, stars Kyra Sedgwick as Brenda Leigh Johnson, a police detective from Atlanta who moves to LA and tries to retain her Southern style while making it in the LAPD. As such, The Closer website has a special section called Brenda's Corner which includes a Southern Slang Dictionary (I'm sure you recognize lots of terms here!), Comfort Food recipes, and some of Brenda's favorite music:
http://www.tnt.tv/series/closer/brendascorner_sc/

I thought you'd enjoy telling your readers about this quirky side of The Closer which celebrates Southern culture, and I hope your readers will all tune in to the shows premiere tonight at 9/8c.

If you’d like to share a preview video of tonight’s episode with your readers, you can find it here, and embed it directly on your site: http://www.tnt.tv/dramavision/?oid=40499&eref=sharethisUrl


There’s also a widget that’s got the show schedule as well as episode videos – it’ll refresh weekly, so you get previews of each episode each week before they air! --- http://www.tnt.tv/series/closer/widgets/?contentId=39793

Thanks, and let me know if you have any questions!

Turner Broadcasting

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Quality Time


Me and Bubba had our Wednesday afternoon date out in Daddy's truck today, lookin' the farm over. Last night's rain helped out with the corn and beans and the cows enjoyed a break from the heat too. The sweet corn probably won't make it 'cuz there's all sorts of squirrels and coons helping themselves over there by the tree line. What they didn't eat, Daddy ran over while he was chasing the horses back to the barn for the umpteenth time. Never a dull moment around here, I tell you.

We grew up here with our parents and the baby boy who lives in the country too, just a couple of states away from Tennessee. His lovely wife Annetta is knocked up as a goose with the sole next generation male. Harold has big plans for forts and treehouses with his blessed offspring. Us kids had a great house out in the big persimmon tree, right out there up front of the homestead, that Daddy made when we were little. I climbed up in it a whole lot but only spent one night, with some girls from school who weren't near as scared as I was. If I was a bettin' gal, I'd say that momma was just glad to have my hard headed self out of the house for a night while she hovered over the boys. More likely than not, she was dead out exhausted from working at the employment office during the day, raising three brats and being a farmer's wife with all that involves in the manual labor department. Bless her heart.

While we were driving around today, I realized something very important and that is this.....My experience has been unique in an agriculturally smartass sort of way and many people don't have a clue what I'm talking about sometimes unless I explain things word for word. I reckon that's why I write stories about things I remember. Somebody's gotta tell it, you know?

Benny Bo


Benny Bo seen another ghost last night. Told everyone in town. He sat in the diner tellin waitresses and cops, eyes watered down and his hands a shakin, but he’d stop bout halfway in the story, reach into his coat pocket for a pack of Marlboros and head outside for a smoke. His chin was doubled and his brow was crumbled and his sentences were chopped with sharp coughin noises while his crazed eyes wandered all around the room. Soon as his eyes hit yours, it was like he was staring straight at your soul.

People thought Benny Bo gone dumb. All that liquor runnin round under his skin, and he looked half dead, weathered like an old garbage can. But when he said he saw somethin, whatever it be, kids would stop in wonder, women would get all shook up, lookin to the old man like he had some kind of a sense. Somethin he could find below the chatter of local folk. Like a prophesy to tell.

Truth was, he never told much anything of value. Never said what might come to pass, rather was somethin that had passed the night before. Somethin no one saw but him. Always the same damn thing he seen.

He’d said last night, he was sittin at his home, scratchin his head and workin a bit on a carvin he’s been makin. He made carvins out of oakwood, and the owners of the diner agreed to let him sell em. Last night, he was makin a carvin of an owl, when he heard a woman talk in the other room where his bedroom sat. He got all still and quiet, put the owl on the table and went creepin into the room. There was only a clock tickin and the moon was shinin in from the only window in the house.

When he got in the room, the ghost was a young woman runnin round the room naked, talkin about the end of this and the beginnin of that and some kind of other talk Benny Bo never heard. She looked at Benny Bo and stopped and dropped on the floor and grabbed Benny Bo’s ankle and started screamin loud. On her back was some tattoo in another language. Bout that time, he got so scared he was bout to jump out the window but then right there she was gone already. And when he got back in the kitchen, he couldn’t keep carvin his owl, cause his hands were all shaky.

Next morning when he woke up, said he’d found scratches on the floor like some wild animal been there. No one been to his house, so they didn’t quite believe him much. But they still listened cause he always had somethin to tell. Said he saw that girl every night, like it was the first time. You think there’d be a house full of scratches by the number of times he said that story, but it was always the same.

Folk come in the diner though, look in that glass box and see all his animal carvins and sometimes even buy one. He only did animals he’d seen in the town like coyotes and deer.

What locals knew, after sheriff gone to his home a number of years ago, was Benny Bo got no wood floor for scratches in his home. He lived in a trailer over by the church. He got his carvin wood from the trees in those backwoods near there.

What no one knew cause Benny ain’t lived here long was who that woman was. You seen it in his eyes, like she’s real, or she was real, some passerby, some love dropped from his life like a swat fly. He got that sense that he’s lived — and without talking, he’ll make you feel like we all got ghosts somewhere waiting to say something, waiting to scratch at the floors.

He sits in that kitchen each night carvin a mallard or a squirrel and sooner or later a ghost gonna be in the other room and you can bet your life he’s gonna tell you all about it.

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Written by: James Smith, Delaware
smithjamesa@yahoo.com


James Adams Smith is a student of English literature at the University of Delaware, where he is an editor for the UD Review. He grew up in Texas and Louisiana, where most of his fiction takes place. He is currently working on an anthology of literary nonfiction and memoirs.


Monday, July 7, 2008

Wanted... Southern Items of Interest


In the past I have happily advertised for Southern companies that have interesting items for sale.

No, I don't mean Coca-Cola or Dixie Outfitters.

In the past I have placed small advertisements on the sidebar for a Mississippi maker of Southern Scenery t-shirts. Another company on the Coast that specialized in Kudzu Gel Candles. Also Kudzu Kayakers - the name is too good to pass up. I have one now for Southern miscellany.

I mainly find them by me stumbling across their site and contacting them.

I do not charge a fee for this advertising, but do have to think it's a good product.

If you know of any small companies trying to get noticed, or have one yourself, feel free to contact me about a spot on the Dew.

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Additionally, I need some more fair listings - the season is upon us. Big fairs and festivals that people might travel to.

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Angel Food Ministries

Thanks, Mahala, for bringing this to everyone's attention.

With locations all over the country, you can preorder boxes of their very low priced groceries ($30, for around $65 worth of food,) then pick it up on the designated delivery day. There is no "eligibility"requirement, nothing to fill out. Income has nothing to do with the program at all. Roll up in your Beemer or ride your bicycle.. everyone is welcome.

For more information, click the link and check the menu for participating locations in your area. You can buy as many $30 boxes as you want and they also have "bonus" boxes of veggies, cookout stuff and meat for anywhere from $16-$20.

I happened to be in the library yesterday and saw a flyer for Angel Food. I have it below. The food choice is actually quite well rounded out.

In today's economy, we can all use a little help at times and this organization will help many family put full meals on their dinner table and send their kids off to bed with full tummies.

Angel Food Ministries

http://angelfoodministries.com/

Friday, July 4, 2008

Wednesday, July 2, 2008



The Sea

Water and salt, I drink the rivers.
They evaporate and then it rains.
I am an endless sea
That glimmers in the sun
And wells up in my eyes,
But mostly
You can feel my humidity,
As you walk along my sandy tongue.


The Pear Tree

The teardrops are sweet
Good and ripe
By the bushel loads
As gently tugging, or rather
Tapping on the heart
Because Autumn is here
With yellow leaves upon the tree
That are dancing in the breeze
And falling just as quickly it seems.

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Danny P. Barbare lives and grew up in Greenville SC. He started writing in 1981. He has been published in Sojourn, Foliate Oaks, Stray Light, and many other magazines and journals.