Thursday, May 4, 2017

Boasting


Today I am going to try to deviate from what I consider to be my normal blogging style. I normally try to relate things that have happened to or around me (which many I am sure consider to be tales) I try to be humble, humorous and honest with whatever I describe. But today I am going to boast a little bit which is something I try my darndest to avoid. I have always found braggarts to be obnoxious and usually full of shit, even if in this day and age a lot of them are riding a wave of popularity. So at the risk of joining their ranks I am I am going to shed my modesty and brag about my son.

Every day I see on the news a parent standing behind their son or daughter no matter what heinous act or crime they have committed and I think what is wrong with these people.  Every day I think of how lucky I am to have four children and a grandson that I am proud of. I also have a great son-in-law and a future son-in-law who shows promise. But that scary thought looms in the back of my mind how would I handle a social stigma? I hope I would be as strong as the people I see on the news everyday who stand by their own even though they are ashamed and heartbroken.  So with that being said I realize how fortunate I am to be able to relate to you a little something about my son Joe. Everywhere I go with him in public he is the personification of a gentleman, pleasant, courteous and respectful. This has always pleased me and I credit his mother for that.  For if there is such a thing as a gentlewoman it is she.  I am sure he will not be too pleased that I relate the following incident. At home he is a convivial person but in public he is a much more laid back private person and will frown on me blogging this. Members of the family had gathered at a restaurant in Newburyport to observe Diana’s 30th birthday and to wish her bon voyage as she was leaving the next day to fulfill her wish to spend the actual May 7 birthday in Paris. After the festivities were over Joe graciously picked up the check and said he was treating.  After perusing the bill he summoned the waitress and pointed out the fact she had .made a mistake.  As it turns out she had received cash from a different table and had inadvertently credited our table. The manager was summoned and a new bill was made. Joe did not tell anyone what transpired but as I was setting right next to him I took it all in. What he did added eighty dollars to his bill but saved the waitress the embarrassment of coming up short at the end of her shift. This was all done in a low key quiet manner. I could not have been more proud of him. So I feel justified about praising him.  

 

Sunday, March 5, 2017

Just Bitching


It’s that time of the year when I regret living where I do. The beginning of March, The weeping willows branches have turned yellow and from a distance on a sunny day seem to have a golden glow. The day light hours are getting longer. The Juncos are long gone and I get my yearly longing to put an order in to Murray McMurray hatchery for a batch of baby chicks. I got my interest in chickens back in the late forties when I would sneak into Parker Davis’s coop to get in out of the wind and cold. I would set there and watch them for hours. For some reason they fascinated me, and they still do. I am sure the other kids thought that it was eccentric behavior at best.   But oddball is probably a better term, as I had a lot of different interests than my peers. The old adage “rich people are eccentric, poor people are crazy” proves that I am not eccentric.

When I first moved to Virginia Avenue the Thibedeau’s had chickens, Rhode Island Reds roosters and on Sundays one would end up in the pot. We were real young then and it seemed like a one year thing as the roosters and the two sheds soon disappeared.  I do recall searching for bugs and worms for them and Victor claiming the dominate one as his own and sagaciously named him Big Red. I also recall chasing a rooster around the back yard and having David Burke come over later and tell me his mother and father where listening to Beethoven and having a big laugh about how my scrambling around was in time with the music.   So maybe my interest started sooner than I think. I often wonder how I can recall things like that which happened more than sixty-five years ago but cannot remember someone’s name fifteen minutes later.

The first birds I raised were Rhode Island Reds that I got from Hardy’s Hatchery which use to be on route 133 in Essex Mass.  I had made a coop out of scrap wood and old doors. It was ugly as hell but it served its purpose for a few years. The first batch was definitely a learning experience. Trial and error was how I learned. If any of you remember or have heard of Don Buddin who had recently finished a mediocre career as the Red Sox’s shortstop you would have seen that I made many more errors raising my chicks then he did playing shortstop. In fact compared to me he was a gold glover. Priscilla please feel free to correct my selective memory.

The first batch started out in a Scott toilet paper box in the backroom of the house. A drop cord with a 100 watt bulb for heat, a couple of saucers for food and water and eight chicks all females.    I actually picked them up at Hardy’s Hatchery the day they were sexing or culling the chicks. The method they were using was vent checking as these were purebred. They would gently put the pullets into small cartons and flip the cockerels over their shoulders into large tissue boxes. I never went back to Hardy Hatchery, mainly because I wanted to move on to Barred Rock hens, and other sex-linked types that Hardy’s did not breed. And I was not real happy with what I thought was a little inhumane treatment of the cockerels. As you can guess vent checking could be somewhat hit or miss according to the expertise of the sexer, and many customers would end up with a rooster or two when they thought they were getting all pullets.  After a couple of days it was plain to see that just a big box with no bedding and half assed feed and water stations was not very practical. So in all of my infinite wisdom I decided to move them to the basement. The reason I did not put them in the pit to begin with was that most springs it became somewhat fen like down there. On top of some First National wooden tonic cases and some scrap wood I put into another toilet paper box some wood shavings, a small water font and feeder that I purchased at the Agway on Wenham Street in Danvers. So back to the infinite wisdom part, I picked up the Scoot toilet paper box and headed for the cellar door. Needless to say with the soggy bottom the chicks and the dishes the bottom fell out as I was half way there. All the wet newspapers, mushy feed pellets, water and chicken shit on the living room floor. Chicks running everywhere and me slipping and sliding in hot pursuit thrilled Priscilla to no end. The chicks eventually made it out to their coop in the back yard and started laying eggs towards the end of August and were very productive until December when the winter weather slowed them down. They were pretty productive that spring and summer. One morning in the fall I found them all dead with their heads and crops missing. People said it was probably a dog.  I did not believe it than nor do I believe it now. It’s true that there was no leash law back then and it was not out of the ordinary to see dogs roaming around. In this day you see one and you think that somebody is having a fit wondering where it is. Back then I knew most of the neighborhood dogs and they knew me and for one of them to get into the coop with no visible means of entrance make no sense to me. But some kind of a weasel or raccoon could somehow do it. I still have the two rock eggs I bought to induce those girls to start laying and I think of those times when ever I see them. They looked realistic at the time. However for some odd reason a couple of years ago I decide to spray paint them a Greek blue as the orthodox and traditional Easters fell on the same day that year and (traditional is probably the wrong term, theology is not one of my strong suits) tuck them into an Easter basket. However they dried a very pretty robin’s egg blue. I am sure if I ever stuck them into a robin’s nest the poor mama robin would swoon.

The next batch of chickens were Plymouth Barred Rocks and to this day are my favorite breed. They are very docile, good looking stout birds and prolific layers. Their molting season seems to be shorter than other breeds. Their wattles and combs stand up well in the winter cold and the pecking order seems almost nonexistent, they appeared to be broody but were never put to the test because Brewster was not a resident of this flock. Somewhere tucked away are a bunch of blue ribbons these birds won at the Topsfield Fair. I have mixed emotions about entering my birds into the fair.  The second year, somebody had entered some sick birds needless to say all of the entrants were affected. When I brought my bird’s home they were soon all sick. I managed to get them through it but they were never as vibrant and as robust as they were prior to the fair. That plus the fact it was plain to see that the judging in all of the barns at the fair was odd to say the least. In the poultry barn it would not matter to the judge if the chicken they were testing quaked like a duck. The only thing that mattered to them was the name of the entrant as ribbons were secondary to best of show. So with the health of my birds a priority I decided to never enter a bird into any poultry show. But maybe someday I might submit a posy in a horticultural barn. The most outstanding memory of the fair was the last day of the show. I went there with my daughter Lisa who was about eight years old at the time. As I was loading the hens into the poultry carrying cages, one got nervous and jumped out of my hands and started to scamper all around the barn. The bystanders for some strange reason were as scared as that poor little hen and started acting just like her. The little hen going one way clucking like crazy, the people going in the other direction audibly scared, you would think the Tasmanian devil was running loose. Lisa three foot tall at most darted under the tables and deftly upended the hen and calmly carried the now docile bird back to its cage. The embarrassed sighs and sheepish looks of that throng were priceless. To this day I rue the fact that I do not have that little escapade on film.

I did not raise any chickens for quite awhile after that until I landed in Gilford New Hampshire. As an employee of Triple Trouble Farm I had as my residence a beautiful big house two acres of pasture and a perfect little barn. Triple Trouble Farm a rich man’s dabbling consisted of a beautifully landscaped estate. A picture perfect for show only nonworking farm about a mile away and a pick your own Blueberry and Raspberry operation on the side of a mountain next to the Gunstock ski area. And the previously mentioned caretaker’s house. Idyllic sounding indeed, but Triple Trouble turned out to be just what its name implied.  But for a few years doing the things I loved outweighed the bad. I managed to raise chickens, Turkey’s sheep a steer and do some gardening while I was there.  The barn was perfect for me as it was built for horses and had perfect chain link separated stalls.  In the summer George the steer stayed out in the pasture which I fenced off half for him, the other half for the sheep. In the barn I kept the chickens in one stall the turkeys in another.  The two empty stalls would be cleaned and waiting. Every two weeks I would rotate the birds into the empty stalls and then clean the other two. This way the birds were always in clean conditions. When winter came the lamb and turkeys went into the freezer and George went into the barn and became part of the two week rotation. I have pictures of Joe down in the barn dressed just like his Father. He loved going down there with me. In the photos he looked like he was going to grow up to be a shit kicker just like me.  Sadly the house and acreage was the only good thing about my Triple Trouble experience. I miss that barn and life style more and more every day.

My last aborted attempt to raise a few hens was in a little shed that I had under the elevated deck at my house in Salisbury Mass. I did not keep them for much more than a year because it was just too close to the house.  I was working as a dispatcher for Rayproof industries at that time. They had made a shed like structure for testing equipment for the stealth bomber. They decided it was not adequate for their purpose and were in the process of disposing of it when I rescued it to be my last chicken coop. I talked the owner of the truck company that we used to transport it for me. After putting on a new roof and door it was semi adequate for the hens. I ended up giving those chickens to a hippy like family in Amesbury Mass.

Finally after my tedious and wordy lament about my love affair with poultry, I get to the gist of this whole sad tale.  I said I regret living where I do. The house itself a humble mobile home suits me just fine. It is the yard and the shed that bother me when spring arrives. There are so many trees that it is really difficult to grow things that I really enjoy. I have become semi proficient at growing shade gardens. But it is not the same as all the wonderful things you can grow in the sun. But I figured I could adjust to that because with that beautiful two sectioned shed I can finally raise some chickens again. So with that trade off I made the move. Much to my dismay I found out to late that raising chicken in a utopia like Seabrook New Hampshire was a no no.  But in New Hampshire it is legal to carry a loaded concealed handgun. There are no laws on bulk purchases, ammunition regulations or magazine sizes. Background checks are not required nor administered when purchasing a firearm. Fingerprints, ballistic filing, and even safety provisions for children are neglected. But you want to raise six hens? What are you some kind of a deviant. So my neighbors can have snakes. Rats and attack dogs but I must refrain from raising socially unacceptable dangerous fowl. So every spring I give myself a mental kick in the ass for not checking this out beforehand. So I have to be content with my growing conditions and learn to live with the type of plants that like the shade. I refer to them as shady ladies. In retrospect that’s what I probably need, a shady lady!

 

 

 

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Vale cemetery revisited


           In the summer of 2013 my son and I went on for me what was a long anticipated pilgrimage to Cooperstown N.Y. to visit the Hall of Fame. I had been to upper state New York many times in the past but purposely avoided the Schenectady area for remorseful reasons. On our return trip home my son purposely steered me in that direction. In route we came upon the Cooperstown farmers Museum on one side of the road and the Cooperstown Art Museum on the other side.   Now other than sports and beer my son and I have very little in common. So as we were somewhat short of time we were faced with this dilemma. On one side was the famous Farmers Museum where I easily could have spent a couple of days blissfully wandering around. On the other side was the famous Fenimore Art Museum with a sign promoting an exhibition “The Wyeth's: A Family Legacy” And the fact that Andrew Wyeth’s painting “Christiana’s World” is a personal favorite of mine which I have a large framed reproduction hanging in my front room. So as Joe tersely informed me we could spend one hour there, I opted for the Farmers museum as I knew Joe would consider that the lesser of the two evils. That hour seemed like five minutes and I do hope to return there someday with someone who will have similar interests.

Joe shortly urged me to get going as he was firmly committed to see that I did not find an excuse to avoid doing something that I often said my conscience wanted me to do. So we left Cooperstown and headed for Schenectady and the historical Vale cemetery the final resting place for a number of Lemp’s.   I owe a debt of gratitude to my son for making me do what I should have done may years earlier. I feel as though the visit enlightened me and I now look at things much differently than I did for many years.

My father Herman, his brother James and Grandfather Harry have headstones or plaques there in their remembrance. James and Harry’s wives are marked there also. But I do believe that Harry’s remains are actually in Arlington National Cemetery. Vale cemetery today is in a sad state of neglect and only gives a hint of what a beautiful and historic place it was and is. I know I am rehashing some of the things that I put in a previous blog call “semi-sentimental journey”

Below are a few videos and items that better state the message I am trying to broach, better than my clumsy attempt to make a point. The last one is the article that triggered my need to revisit this subject.




Saturday, August 2, 2014

Rainy Day Rant

I have always have had a keen interest in the history of the area that I grew up in. That of course all started when I was living in Ryal Side in Beverly from there it expanded to just about all of New England. As a student in the Beverly school system I was mediocre at best. I was always that inept student who was daydreaming or looking out the window. The only class that would pique my interest was history, and those classes had absolutely no feel at all for local history. I am sure the only reason I graduated from Beverly High school was the school systems philosophy of keep them moving, to make room for the next crop of dullards. My history teachers introduced me to many country and world events, but I could have taught them a thing or two about Beverly and the surrounding area. This knowledge I acquired by hounding the old timers of the community with my persistent questions of why things where named the way they were and what things were like when they were young.
To this day it amazes me how many people know very little about the area they live in. When Bill Nesbitt one of my childhood friends posted on Facebook a utube video that was resplendent with local history, I thought everyone would love it as much as I. However much to my dismay it hardly created a ripple. The way I see it, other people must know all this history and therefore it is old hat to them or it is more than likely just apathy. I should have known better, this educational video is lengthy and most FB users use the media with strategic sorties of rumor innuendos and doctored videos to push their personal agendas. That may be a bit harsh as there is a lot of good and interesting postings and photos, but Facebooks cover photo could very well be the Pied Piper. The utube I am referring to is titled “No Country for Old Buildings” This is a television show on the Beverly Community Access Media which highlights historic preservation. As I stated before I am a little on the slow side so entering the right key word of praise when using a search engine escapes me and makes my historical searches difficult and almost to the point of nonexistence. But as I watch different episodes of this show I find myself constantly scribbling down notes that I will use on future Google searches.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

A shaky soap box

My original intent as anyone who has read any of my inane blogs knows was to impart to my children events that occurred in my life, also perhaps a little wisdom. The reason of course as a father I was inept in that regard. I have tried to be truthful with the actual events As far as wisdom goes they are all a hell of a lot sharper them me. So I am sure they take my meandering thoughts with a grain of salt. In each tale I tried to inject a little humor. Knowing full well that my sense of humor is somewhat warped. But in this blog I am going to climb up on a soap box and take a somewhat different approach. As I try to get philosophical about some things that are discouraging to me. Respect is what seems to me is the word, I am searching for. It also may be courtesy or just common sense. All of which seems to be missing in this electronic age we live in. The gist of my problem is I am an alien in cyber space. The different devices and the keeping up with the Joneses mentality are frustrating in many respects. The fact that I am inept at everything that evolves electronic devises, compounds my dilemma. My first bitch will be facebook. When I first signed on as a member of this site, I was enthused. I thought what a great concept. A chance to interact with distant relatives, old school mates and other interesting people I have known over the years. A place to post photos, relate family news and express an opinion on something that might interest or alarm you.
Now my enthusiasm for this site has waned considerably. When I sign off now I wonder why I bother to return. What I express next is not a shot at all my facebook acquaintances (friends) about forty percent of them post interesting respectful insights. The other sixty percent reflect society as it is today in my opinion. Disrespectful to the point of malice. When I was a kid we were taught to be respectful to our elders and people of authority. When I went into military service I was trained to salute officers. Not the individual, but for what their commission stood for. I am absolutely appalled by the slanderous disrespect my so called facebook friends so gleefully post about their commander-in-chief. I am all for people posting their feelings on all subjects. But I feel it can be done respectfully. Most of the things people so spitefully infer would d get you kicked off of their friend list if you posted something viciously untrue about them or one of their own. I feel like everywhere I turn people are only happy if something bad happens to the president or the country. I am not tub thumping for Obama. I feel that he has probably made as many mistakes as the man who preceded him. But he does deserve the respect of his office.
The facebook friends I am talking about rarely pass on a thought that is their own. They mostly just pass on cruel propaganda. This somehow reminds you of the kids in the school yard who just stood around and watched as some sneering bully made life miserable for some poor soul who had the gall to be different. So if I am profiling so be it. When the holy rollers come around knocking on doors, I pretend like I am not home. With which I segue into my second facebook bitch. .Those who feels it is their duty to insult what little intelligence I have by smugly spouting scripture to my evil hopelessly lost soul. That too is disrespect for others. So I guess my only recourse is to shy away from facebook like I do the canvassing neighborhood bible thumpers. It’s hard enough to have to endure bigotry with out seeking it out in what is considered a social media. I probably should start using the only part of electronic devices that I feel comfortably able to manage, the shut down icon.
My third gripe is my futile attempts to reach any one I have business or medical connections with by telephone. After glancing over my shoulder to make sure no one is watching or listening to me talk to a recording. I proudly submit that yes I do speak English, and then after I fend of a long list of options that no sane person would opt for, the recording gleefully invites me to start the same process all over again. Of course this strategy is a well thought out ploy to get me to hang up. How can you as a customer or a patient dare to have the nerve to expect to get any kind of service or courtesy?
Finally I figure out how to talk to an actual being. Sometimes it is as simple as hitting O for operator or simply slamming the phone against the wall or my head. As a rule I usually use which ever is closest. Now they really start to crap all over my sensibilities when they connect me to a slurring alien who certainly was not asked to press one if he or she could speak English. Now I am talking to someone in some remote part of India, he actually acts insulted when you have the nerve to tell him you do not understand a word he is saying. When you ask to speak to his supervisor or perhaps some one who might have any idea of what you are asking. He promptly agrees and puts you on hold. Of course after a pregnant pause another recording tells you to hang up and try redialing. Or if the phone company is having a bad day, just an irritating busy signal.
As an aside I have to say “hats of to Prudential life” they have some how managed to make their web site even more convoluted than their phone system. It just goes to show you that insurance company’s are still always one step ahead of every one else when it comes to indifference. So I show my age when I say, I remember when you dialed a business number and a cheery voice said “Hello, how may I help you”
So as I delve further into my electronic insecurities my next gripe pertains to a plumbing problem I have. Well actually I have two plumbing problems, but the physical lament I will put aside for another day. I had a hot water pipe spring a leak. A plumber made a temporary repair and promised to return and rectify my problem. Needless to say he like most professional people overbook at every chance they get, as they all fear that congress is hell bent on creating another recession. So his office like all businesses answers the phone with a recording that announces that they are way to busy to talk to you. But if you leave your name, telephone number and address with a brief summation as why you would have nerve enough to bother them. They will get back to you. After you try calling them back three or four times in the next week or so, you start wondering did I screw this up. Did I jump the beep? Or did I wait to long after the beep? Was I supposed to hit the pound key when I was through with my message? But off course the message is there. It just does not seem like a priority to them and like the facebook sixty percent a total lack of courtesy and disrespect is accepted as the norm.
My last bit of electronic frustration is my failure to master the computer key board. How I can have my words jump to any anyplace they want is beyond me. Sometimes I will glance at the monitor and what I thought I typed is no where to be found. And other times when I look up I see the words have some how just inserted them selves randomly in a completely different paragraph. This off course makes my task quite tedious. But unlike the mysteries of my other gripes, I know what my problem with the keyboard is. I am over extending myself by trying to type and think at the same time.
My final shame is that every month after I have paid my TV ransom to Comcast. I realize that one of the big trees that hang over my house must be a Chestnut because that is certainly where the village idiot sits.

So after this bombastic spiel, I climb down off of my shaky soap box.

Friday, August 30, 2013

Jumping At the Woodside

I had intended to go off in a different direction at the end of my last blog but I started to do a little “Jumping At the Woodside” and I got distracted. I had intended to mention some of my odd summer distractions. You would think that here where I live was rural East Overshoe, New Hampshire instead of the southern sea coast. The other morning at day break there was a deer drinking out of my birdbath. This would have been all right, except he was doing his Gene Gene impersonation all over my Geraniums. After dispersing him, I went back into the house to finish my coffee. I glanced out the window to make sure he had not returned and much to my dismay there is a young woodchuck dining in my cucumber patch. So after a few days of skirmishes, I do believe he has taking up residence down the street in my neighbor’s yard and seems to be quite content. My neighbor however seems to have acquired a slight case of Saint Vitus Dance. A foot note to the ground hog saga. A noted woodchuck aficionado advised me to coexist with the little rodent by serving him a buffet a couple times a day. Needless to say, I filled that suggestion in the circular file.
Last but not the least, a family of Turkeys has taken up residence in the neighborhood. It was interesting to see the mother hen lead her little brood around the neighborhood. How ever as they grew they for their own safety had to find a place to roost at night. Much to my next door neighbors dismay they selected a tree in her back yard. So every evening about a half hour before dark they arrive from their day of foraging proceed to her front yard fly up on her roof and then up into the tree from there. Needless to say this has become a nightly attraction. I suggested that she should sell tickets to the spectacle. She suggested that I do something very difficult and painful to my posterior. So I filed that suggestion along side of the buffet suggestion.
It will be interesting to see where the turkeys move to when all the leaves have dropped. Some spruce thicket I imagine.

Semi Sentimental Journeys

I have not written a blog in awhile, but I promised my children that I would put my thoughts into print. The reason I have not done so lately is because when ever I get the urge to write something, I go back and read my last blog and decide that I have already made a big enough ass out of my self. Thus the gaps between blogs get longer and longer. I think when my kids first urged me to write a blog they were really interested in learning about the Lemp side of the family. As I have previously stated I was remiss in my obligation of enlightening them to their heritage. But I do feel that my blogs in their view point have become their own personal comedy hour. It seems my vocabulary, adages and slang from my youth is foreign to them. Especially when I am with my two youngest, they look at each other roll their eyes, grin and try there damnedest not to start giggling, it seems to tickle their fancy when I unwittingly go into my own personal unknown comic routine. (Here I digress for a bit to say that I first saw the unknown comic on TV, on the Gong show. In my opinion all the current talent shows pale in comparison. Not only was the list of guest judges lengthy it was a virtual who’s who of that era. Not only can I relate to the unknown comic, I also was always a comparable dancer to Gene Gene the dancing machine. It was with out a doubt the fastest half hour in television.) I will admit that my enunciation and or articulation is some times laughable at best. Thank god for the spell check icon. So for their amusement and much to my chagrin, I post a few more thoughts about the Lemp’s
This spring Diana, Lisa, Joe and I decided to take a trip to Arizona. I had mentioned to my son the previous autumn that I would really like to go out there and visit my brother David. So Joe and Diana decided that we would do it. I of course never would have gone on my own, as I am a thinker and ruer not a doer. To me this trip accomplished three goals. I got to visit with my brother and sister in law, who I had feared very much I would never see again. Lisa, Joe and Diana got to finally meet relatives on the Lemp side of the family. And we easterners got to tour the beautiful state of Arizona. All things considered it was a great trip. We actually interacted like a real family as the two half-sibling girls engaged in a few spirited sparing matches. So as this is a blog about the Lemp’s I take the liberty of blaming their minor grievances on their mothers.
This last week Joe took me to Cooperstown New York to visit the MLB hall of fame, take in a minor league baseball game in Troy and visit the Vale cemetery in Schenectady.
Vale cemetery is where my father, Grandmother Clara, Uncle James and his wife Marion are interred. I was always reluctant to make this pilgrimage because of my reluctance to except reality in general. But again my children have steered me in the right direction. Maybe I am starting to mellow out. But more than likely it’s the fact that at my age I am starting to ponder mortality.
Aunt Clara once waxed eloquently about Vale cemetery she described it as a blissful Eden where she and her brothers spent many enjoyable hours. It seems it was used as a park as well as a burial-ground. If you believe the old adage that a person would turn over in their grave if they saw how things are today, then we would have to refer to Clara as “pinwheel Clara” because Vale cemetery has fallen into total disrepair. The neighbor has deteriorated drastically and the cemetery and adjoining park are surrounded by what can only be described as a ghetto. The cemetery it self shows signs of negligible maintenance
vandalism and graffiti. The curator or caretaker assured us that there are corrective measures in the works. This is something I plan to monitor and maybe some where down the road the family might consider donations or some other action. This is a private cemetery and appears to have had mismanagement or poor funding.
Two days ago Diana and I went to visit the grave of our great-grandfather Dr. Hermann Lemp who is interred in Pine Grove cemetery in Lynn Massachusetts. The only similarity I can see between these two burial grounds is that Pine grove is what Clara’s Vale cemetery was in her youth. I have never seen a prettier or better groomed park anywhere. This is a huge beautiful place.
I suppose I should go to North Beverly and visit my mother and brother Noel and complete the circle.