Monday, February 24, 2014

Remembering Clothes Lines




Julie Lochner Riber recently sent around a delightful email: ‘Remembering Mom’s Clothesline’. Some of the 'Basic Rules for Clotheslines' were (with Aunt CB’s thoughts on each):

1. Hang the socks by the toes, not the top. Yup.

2. Hang pants by the bottom/cuffs…..not the waistbands. Only time I hung pants by bottom was when I lined them up to be pressed with creases. Otherwise, I hung by waist and all shorts were.

3. Wash the clotheslines before hanging any clothes by walking the entire length of each line with a damp cloth. Yes—first time I used lines each year I wiped each line.

4. Always hang a shirt by the tail never by the shoulders. What would the neighbors think?  No—used to really bother me that Grandma Kinsella used to hang baby shirts and knit tops by bottoms and they dried all stretched out! I hung them by shoulders!

5. If the weather is sub-zero….clothes would “freeze dry”. Frozen were taken in and laid over bars near the stove.

6. For efficiency, line the clothes up so that two items can share a middle clothespin rather than using two clothespins for each item. Definitely—with eight children and towels and washcloths, we did not have enough clothespins!

Mom ends with: Clothes Poles were a necessity—before hanging, lines had to be tightened and then poles used.

Her nephew Chuck forgot this rule, but you can read about that further down this story!

WILL we be the last generation that remembers what a clothes line is? I hope not. But here are some thoughts from various cousins on the subject:

From Julie in Colorado--Since I do still hang my clothes outside, this really hits the spot!  My mother had two old tree branches with a split in the end she would push up to clothes line so sheets wouldn’t hang on the ground.  I avoided that by using stiff, stiff wire instead of rope which tends to sag.  Our next door neighbors hang clothes out too.  I love that about our town.

My brother Tim in Syracuse sent this missive-- 'Men's Weekend and the Dangers of the Clothes line':
In the early days of Men's Weekend we had our annual hockey game in the front yard at the old cottage.  That was before the screen porch was built and before we moved the game to the new cottage (probably in the late 70's). 

We'd finish our 12 hours of scrubbing the cottage floors and if we still had time before heading off to church in town we'd get everyone together and play a game of hockey.  In those primitive days the "skaters" used a tennis ball and hockey sticks but the goalie often used a fishing net and canoe paddle for equipment.  The southern goal was on the far side of the clothes line area where Mom had hung several strings of clotheslines between the trees.  

We never bothered to take the clotheslines down; it was part of the game that you had to keep your head down when heading toward that goal.  More than once a new Men's Weekend participant would forget and look up just as he came in to shoot on goal.  Inevitably he was then "clotheslined" and went down in a heap with a nasty bruise on his neck. 

We all felt it was part of the survival of the fittest and if you weren't smart enough to keep your head down while running around the clothesline you got what you deserved. 

From Chuck Lochner also in Syracuse, New York--I bought my house in about 1978 and was so proud as it was my first house.  I was thrilled to have made such a major purchase on my own.  I wanted to savor all aspects of home owning.  There were a couple of clothes line posts and 3 lines in the back of the house.  I had fond memories of my mother working the wringer washer and hanging clothes in the back yard, chatting with the neighbors and sharing the gossip at supper.  I was busy working professionally and going to school at night, so it was fall before I ever got a chance to experience the "wash day thing".
 

Chuck's House


One Saturday I decided to go for it.  I went to the Laundromat and washed laundry and bed sheets.  Surprising how heavy wet clothes are.  I dragged them home with the vision of hanging them out back to dry.  Not being too smart at the time, I dragged everything out back to hang them, but discovered I didn't have clothes pins.  Back to the car to go out to buy clothes pins.  It took 3 stores and an hour and a half to find them.  Then, back to the backyard.  The first shirt went on fine along with the bed sheets.  The pants were next.  They were heavy.  The line broke.  Everything went in the dirt.  Everything was wet so dirt turned into mud.  OK, I'm a tough guy, I can deal with it.  I shook them out and tried one of the other lines.  They all broke; they were all rotted.

Back to the store to buy new clothes line.  An hour later, I spent another hour stringing the lines.  Started to hang the clothes again, but the wooded clothes pins would occasionally split ... I ran out of clothes pins.  Out to the store again.  By the time I got back, the weight of the wet clothes had stretched out the new clothes line and everything was dragging on the dirt again.  Then, I remembered the poles mom used to prop up the lines.  I used my new step ladder to hold up at least one of the lines and put the short stuff on the other lines.  Almost 9 hours to do a load of laundry.

Before bed I went out to get my bed sheets.  They were still wet and it was getting chilly.  Slept on the couch that night ... lumpy.  Got up for church the next morning and discovered I had no underwear.  Went out back to get them and found everything was frozen.

God and I had a little chat that morning.

From my sister Beth in Japan:
Everyone dries their clothes outside here. We do, too, of course, but I have to keep the clothes inside for months during hay fever season because the pollen would get all over the clothes, otherwise. (Learned that the hard way.)

Japanese don't use a clothesline, they use metal poles. We had so much snow a few days ago that when it melted enough that I could pull the pole out of the mountain of snow on the veranda, I saw to my shock that it had snapped in half!

Most people have two poles (parallel to each other) and all verandas are set up to 'hold' them in place. People put things on hangers and hang them from the poles, and use a sort of handy dandy contraption that has about two dozen pegs hanging from it and you pin your smaller things (the small towels Japanese use for the bath, underwear, socks) to those pegs (keeping the underwear to the 'inside' pegs, hidden by the towels on the 'outside pegs'!), and hang the whole thing outside on the pole. 

The futons, too, are not what Americans use, but are lightweight so people can hang them over the side of the veranda to air them out on sunny days.

Some foreigners living here complain about the inconvenience of hanging the clothes outside, but I don't mind, and I love the fresh scent of things when you pull them in. (We also don't have dishwashers, so you can see, I live a 'slower' life ;-).


I don’t know if it is a slower life, but life with a clothesline out back does bring back memories of our mothers and grandmothers, and I don’t think that’s a bad thing—we are all the richer for it. And, the richer for each of these memories shared. Thank you!

Monday, February 17, 2014

Ode to Ralph, By Julie Lochner Riber



Julie Lochner Riber sent this poem around a few days ago. Those of us who knew Ralph will miss his friendliness and energy, and at times, his utter craziness:



 

 
Ralph Riber
(June 12, 2003 – February 13, 2014)

I’m big, black and beautiful.  My heart is full of love.
Now I’ve gone to heaven with the other dogs above.

God whispered to me “Come, Ralph!” and I had no choice but go.
I could not say, “Not ready, God!” that journey I dreaded so.

It was very hard to leave my home, mom, dad and sister, Dolly.
They’re awfully broken-hearted now, not feeling the least bit jolly.

God must have had a purpose though, ‘cause I’m hopping cloud to cloud.
No one yells at me “shut up, Ralph” just because I bark too loud.

I’m up here chasing Frisbees, tennis balls, sticks, even chickens!
Eternally looking down on you, and sending turbo lickins.

I’ll love you and I’ll miss you, but I’m guarding you even still.
‘Cause that’s my job, I’m serious, death does not change my will.

I’ll visit in your dreams and all those memories we share…
Take care of sister, Dolly-girl, and tell her that I care.

And one day when she’s called up here, I wait until she comes.
We can run around together, free at last and chewing bones.

So weep for me a while and then start moving on.
But don’t forget the love we’ve shared since that lucky day one.

 Ralph and Dolly


I knew Ralph and Dolly were a team, so I asked Julie how Dolly was doing. Here is her reply:

“Dolly is pretty confused.  Keeps looking around all over the house and when she can’t find him she follows us everywhere.  I suspect she’ll be with us a lot from now on.  We’re all pretty “lost” right now."


One of Julie and Wes’ friends on facebook commented: ‘I hope he runs into my Tippy, our Plama and our Foxy. They are all attractive females.


Love this thought!

Thank you for letting us share this ‘Ode to Ralph’. As I read it, I was reminded of the Celtic Bards of old as they wove stories to remember the fallen in battle. Julie in a past life?
 

Thinking of Julie, Wes, Dolly, and Ralph.