For Today: We sorta consider ourselves gypsies. We
have traveled many years. Our coach is self sufficient and we have stayed
free in Alaska and on Bureau of Land Management Lands (BLM) in the
desert. We stay in the least expensive
RV parks we can find. Growing up I knew a man, Dugan, I thought he was a bum.
Most every year he came by our house and stayed a week or so. Shirley and I would give up our bed. How he found us I will never know. I once
asked my dad if Dugan was a bum? “No son he is one of the few ‘Way faring men’ left.” He went on to explain that the Great Depression
created people who were homeless, but
made their way by selling a product or working door to door and town to town.
Dugan’s product is needles and pins and some thread. Your mama always buys from him.” Your mama and I were wayfarers back
then ourselves. Your older brothers and sisters were babies and we left North
Georgia and traveled to Hollywood Florida so I could work for the WPA or CCC. Your mama and I were raised to always save something for a ‘Rainy
Day’ so we had enough money for gas but nothing else. To get to Florida we had to stop at farms
and work for food. Our tires on the A model were stuffed with rags grass and
dirt, because they were worn and would not hold air by the time the trip was
over. I cleaned barns, plowed and
chopped wood; mama would help milk
cows, clean houses and cook. We
normally slept on straw in the barns. Seldom but every once in a while we would
get a dime, quarter and once or twice
fifty cents. So when Dugan stops by, he gets the royal treatment, and it
reminds us of how good God has been to us. You can imagine how amazed and proud I
was that my family was that tough. I
was in the 2nd or 3rd grade when dad told me that. I asked a lot of questions over the years about my parents’
lives, but I know now, I never asked enough…. Nite
Shipslog AGAIN THANKS for reading the Shipslog. Life is better knowing YOU! |
1 comment:
Your parents sound like wonderful people.
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