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A fond summer memory... think it was about 28 years ago this week... (semi-coin-related)

lordmarcovanlordmarcovan Posts: 43,876 ✭✭✭✭✭
I remember one year my grandfather had us all out to his farm in the mountains of North Carolina. He had seven or eight of us grandchildren, so rather than give us all birthday presents individually, he would have the Grandchildren's Birthday Party every year, around the first of June.

All the boys got one kind of present (I still have two of the knives I got- one's a custom made Randall that would be worth some $$ today), and all the girls got another.

He always had some sort of inventive party game. This one particular year, he had set up an old horse watering trough and filled it with fine white sand. He put a whole bunch of Ike dollars in the sand, probably several rolls worth, and most of the coins were Bicentennials. (This was around the time of the Bicentennial, after all- I started collecting coins later that year, on Thanksgiving day). Then he let each kid have a certain amount of time to go through the sand with a sifter. Grandaddy stood there with a stopwatch, and the littler grandkids got a longer time to sift. I was the second oldest grandchild, so I didn't get to sift as long as my younger sister. I got about eight or nine of the Ikes, but she really racked up- she got thirteen or fourteen, I think. Maybe more. But since I wasn't a serious collector yet, I spent most ofl the Ike dollars I found. I do remember saving a few of them for a while- come to think of it, maybe I'd found more than eight or nine. Anyway, I do remember looking at a Redbook some time later, and finding both Type 1 and Type 2 reverses on the coins I'd sifted out of Grandaddy's horse trough.

That was a really cool idea Grandaddy had (come to think of it, maybe the creative credit belongs to my step-grandmother, his third wife, but Grandaddy was the guy with the stopwatch). We always did fun stuff like that during the Grandchildren's Party. Then afterwards, we'd put on our bathing suits and go down to the old swimming hole in the river. It had rock cliffs you could jump off on one side, and a sandy beach on the other. The water was so cold it would take your breath away, and was so clear you could see the rainbow trout swimming at the bottom, almost thirty feet below the water. I remember one year I took one of those floating aquarium thermometers into the water with me at the swimming hole, on one of the hottest days of the year. The water temperature was 52 degrees.

My grandfather died in 1987, and my last surviving grandparent passed on in 1993. How fond are my memories of fine summer days like that, when I was freshly released from school and had not a care in the world! God bless you, Grandaddy, and all the ones who've moved on, now. We'll have another big party when I meet you on the other side!

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Comments

  • solidsolid Posts: 2,975
    Very cool story - thanks for sharing!

    Ken
  • islemanguislemangu Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭✭
    Another neat post. I spent some youthful summers trout fishing west NC mountains and your words carried me back. Thanks LordMimage
  • phutphut Posts: 1,087
    Wow, you just brought me back30 years lordmarcovan.
    Thanks
  • imageVery cool birthdays you had there. I wish the world was still the same and families took the time to get together and make those special memories that last a lifetime. I lost both my grandads when I was quite young, but I still remember a few fleeting moments, fishing and hunting. Pappy gave me swimming lessons under the guise of fishing when I was about 6. You know, little kids just can't sit still for long. I was an ornery little guy, got bored with the the fishing and started buggin the hell outta my dad. After a while I wasn't getting the reaction outta him so I figured I would start in on Pappy. Let me tell ya, it lasted about 30 seconds! I'll never forget this, he just looked at me, had this funny little grin on his face. Then he picked me up and threw me in!!! I couldn't swim a lick! Needless to say, I figured out how to dog paddle, sit still and fish, and not bug Pappy all in 1 day!! He out fished us that day, musta had something to do with the chum he was using!!! We lost him a year later, give or take. I figure I owe my ability to swim and fish to that day out there in the bypass!!imageimage
  • braddickbraddick Posts: 24,811 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Lovely story and a worthwhile read.

    It doesn't beat your "day in the park" story though! image

    peacockcoins

  • jeffnpcbjeffnpcb Posts: 1,943
    Trully a remarkable man with insight to stir the minds of children to appreciate family and values!
    Can't fool me though, kids with money are always happy and it is a memory that has lasted and will for a lifetime!
    HEAD TUCKED AND ROLLING ALONG ENJOYING THE VIEW! [Most people I know!]

    NEVER LET HIPPO MOUTH OVERLOAD HUMMINGBIRD BUTT!!!

    WORK HARDER!!!!
    Millions on WELFARE depend on you!
  • Thanks for sharing the memory!
  • FrattLawFrattLaw Posts: 3,290 ✭✭
    Can I option this into a movie?

    Great story!!!!!

    Michael
  • CaseyCasey Posts: 1,502 ✭✭
    Nice!
  • XpipedreamRXpipedreamR Posts: 8,059 ✭✭
    That's a neat memory!



    image
  • What a nice Grandaddy, (and how appropriate) to remember during this weekend, what all the Vets did for us. Yes, the price of Freedom is high, I will always respect those brave men and women for mine, ours, and all my children's sake. God Bless America.

    I too had a real children's Grandaddy, he always made items for the kids. He made handy little tools, neat woodworks, signs, and he did have a Childrens haven at the Russian River in NOCAL. We'd spend the whole summer swimming, fishing, hiking, catching frogs, snakes, and being harrassed by the bats. Fond memories---thanks for reminding me.
    Its a foul ball by a fair margin.
  • LouisLouis Posts: 3,687
    Neat story that happened in a neat part of the country, I have made many trips to the Smoky Mountains of North Carolina and love it there. image
    image

    image
  • mgoodm3mgoodm3 Posts: 17,497 ✭✭✭
    I also have fond memories of swimming in the creeks of Arkansas as a child visiting my grandparents. My grandmother is the person the started me on coin collecting. I still have a few coins that she gave me.


    nice story.
    coinimaging.com/my photography articles Check out the new macro lens testing section
  • ShamikaShamika Posts: 18,785 ✭✭✭✭
    "The water temperature was 52 degrees."

    YIKES! That hurts just thinking about it!
    Buyer and seller of vintage coin boards!
  • coinlieutenantcoinlieutenant Posts: 9,320 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Great story Robertson.

    Well written and well told.

    John
  • mrpaseomrpaseo Posts: 4,753 ✭✭✭
    Man that is great, these are the stories that I love to read.

    Thanks for sharing,
    Ray

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