Literary Dogs & Their South Carolina Writers |
“It was many and many a year ago, in a kingdom by the sea..." Edgar Allan Poe
30 November 2014
Archie
PIG!
Johns Island, S.C. |
We drove past the wee little lowcountry cottage to the gathering area by the dock. I got there just as the pig was being lifted out of the pit for an appreciative audience. I felt fortunate to be invited to Josephine Humphreys and Tom Hutcheson's pig roast on Johns Island and to catch up with so many old and new friends. Besides the crispy roast pig and soup there were tables full of the most delicious pot luck dishes. I've been to this gathering before and each time I know that although I won't know most of the people there, they will each be fascinating in some way - writers, historians, photographers, tour guides, chefs etc. Tom and Jo have gathered the most interesting group of people in their piece of Johns Island heaven.
28 November 2014
Thanksgiving Weekend
Pinckney St., Charleston, S.C. |
I hope everyone has had a good Thanksgiving. I've had a lovely one despite a nasty head cold. I packed a Thankgiving feast picnic and my son and I headed up to Lake Marion area for the holiday. We had a lazy morning, good meal, met a Facebook friend in real life and enjoyed a lakeside walk. The best news is that we still have two more days off, yay!
25 November 2014
Medical Memorabilia
Pitt St. Pharmacy, Mt. Pleasant, S.C |
Pitt St. Pharmacy: Washington "Wattie" Ziegler, RPh opened the Pharmacy in 1938 at 121 Pitt Street. In 1951, the Pharmacy was moved a few doors down to its present location. Dr. Ziegler died in 1982. He left the store to his wife, Della, Gene Whitley, RPh and Lavern James, RPh. Their commitment to the pharmacy lasted generations as Gene and Lavern worked here for 37 and 32 years respectively while Della continues to work here with over 50 years of service.
Throughout the years, scores of Mt. Pleasant children and teenagers have carved their name in the old black soda fountain counter, taking with them wonderful memories in return. There is plenty about the Pitt Street Pharmacy worth remembering. It's the kind of place where time seems to move at a slower pace, and people have time to be friendlier.
24 November 2014
Our Lady of the Fence Post
Fence Post, Mt. Pleasant, S.C. |
My house smells good. It will be me and my son for Thanksgiving so we are hitting the road and driving up to lake Marion area. I feel like I am preparing a Thanksgiving picnic. It is not an easy meal to keep simple!
23 November 2014
Church Photo in Lieu of Attendance
Huguenot Church, Church St., Charleston, S.C. |
History of the Huguenot Church: In April of 1680 the ship Richmond arrived in Charleston with 45 French Protestants (Huguenots) aboard. More refugees followed, and in 1687, a church was built on what is now the corner of Church St. and Queen St. in downtown Charleston. About four hundred and fifty Huguenots had settled in the Low Country of South Carolina by 1700.Edit to add this postcard from 1946. The church had been painted white for many years but apparently it is closer to the original color now.
The original church was destroyed in 1796 in an attempt to stop the spread of a fire, which had burned much of the surrounding area. The replacement for the original building was completed in 1800 and dismantled in 1844 to make way for the present Gothic Revival edifice, designed by Edward Brickell White and dedicated in 1845. The church was damaged by shellfire during the long bombardment of downtown in the War Between the States and was nearly demolished in the severe earthquake of 1886.
Short work week ahead, kids so something to be thankful already!
22 November 2014
Celebrity Chili Cook Off - Charleston Animal Society
Roper Hospital Chili Booth |
Checking their web site it looks like ABC News Channel 4 won the contest: Woohoo! Congrats folks!
When I walked in they were asking for ID before putting bracelets on folks who might want to drink alcohal. I tipped my ball cap to show them my gray hair and said, "I don't need to show ID, right? I don't think people have started wearing gray wigs yet", and then I had to laugh when I spotted the gentleman below in the gray wig. Maybe he was just too young to drink and wanted a beer....heheh.
It was all good timing since my son delivered a couple of pounds of venison today and I promised to come up with a good venison chili recipe.
20 November 2014
Partying with the Healthcare Heroes
Roper St. Francis Healthcare Heroes, 2014 |
I was there to celebrate them all but especially the young woman below who is one of my volunteers. The week after she learned CPR last year she was camping with her grandfather and saved the life of a toddler who drowned in a pond. I am so proud of Brittany I could bust. This gal will go far.
19 November 2014
Secret Gardens
Garden Gate, Charleston, S.C. |
I am fading fast. This week comes along with evening events almost every night. This evening I hosted forty teenagers interested in surgical careers. They were a great bunch full of energy and questions. There may be nothing more fun than teaching someone eager to learn. They drilled screws into chicken feet and X Rayed them, used a laser to write their names on tongue depressors, practiced cutting flesh in a large piece of steak and wore me out :).
18 November 2014
West Ashley Optimist Club Honorees
Honored for Community Service, 2014 |
I am pleased to present the honorees for 2014. From healthcare, parks and recreation to the aquarium this is an outstanding group of young people who have already left their mark in their community. Congratulations!
17 November 2014
Prepare for Gingko Biloba party day!
King St., Charleston, S.C. |
And yes, Virgina, there is a Gingko blog.
The Gingko Biloba family of trees are so old they are assumed to have been around for 230 million years ago. Darwin called them 'living fossils'. The trees are so hardy that one of them lived through the atomic blast that destroyed Hiroshima.
Ginkgo biloba - The maidenhair tree
Who wants to go gingko hunting with me in Japan next year?With their neat parachute shape, the leaves tend not to fall in a tidy heap, but to catch on branches of surrounding bushes. The actual material of the leaf is still quite resilient when fallen, and if they land on still water do not lie flat, resembling not so much a dead leaf as a drunken drowning butterfly, or miniature capsizing yacht.
16 November 2014
Gaillard Performance Hall progress
Gaillard Performance Hall, George St., Charleston, S.C. |
George & Anson St. corner |
George & Alexander St. corner |
Rainy Sundays
Charleston, S.C. |
Hmmmph. Rain. I had plans to go up the coast to Brookgreen Gardens today. It doesn't feel much like a field trip day. What is everyone else doing today? I've been slipping into lazy habits and watching sappy Hallmark movies (huh?) and visiting shopping sites online this morning.
Online reviews often keep me from spending money. The negative ones mention something I wouldn't like either and it saves me money. I did come across one of my favorite reviews ever. This was written for a rice cooker.
5.0 out of 5 stars
rice man, January 4, 2014
By
Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Aroma 8-Cup (Cooked) Digital Rice Cooker and Food Steamer, Stainless Steel (Kitchen)
i put rice in
i put water in
i turn on
rice cooks
i eat
i happy
i satisfied
end
i put water in
i turn on
rice cooks
i eat
i happy
i satisfied
end
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Comments (11)
Hahah! I think I love him.
Stay dry kids.
15 November 2014
John Carroll Doyle - RIP
John
Carroll Doyle CHARLESTON - John Carroll Doyle, 71, noted artist,
photographer, and writer (including this obituary) ended his journey on
this earth Wednesday, November 12, 2014. John was born and raised in
Charleston, and was often heard to say that our city was perfect for an
artist with its "golden light and long lavender shadows." John started
drawing at the age of four on the margins of Sunday church programs.
This became a lifetime artistic, as well as spiritual quest, that took
him through alcohol and drug addiction, being physically and sexually
abused, bouts with anxiety and depression, along with rehabilitation
through Love. John grew up on his beloved Trumbo Street near Colonial
Lake. To his young eyes, the lake was an ocean where gleaming silver
fish jumped and model boats sailed on wondrous voyages. These model
boats and leaping fish were the seed for John's later paintings of
majestic billfish and vintage fishing boats. In the summer months when
the dreaded school year ended (John said because of his difficulty
reading he hated school), he, with his buddies Jay Keenan and Johnny
Almeida, would venture to some of Charleston's wonders. These included
the old City Yacht Basin beckoning with its polished wooden boats, The
Charleston Museum (then on Rutledge Avenue) with displays of skeletons
and taxidermy including a colossal Polar Bear, and the old Public
Library located on Rutledge Avenue at the corner of Montagu Street. At
the library there was a wonderful lady who read to children sitting on
the floor around her as she voiced stories of long ago with a repertoire
of emotions. And of course King Street, with its Five and Dime stores,
artistic neon signs, and luxurious movie theaters that held the magic of
a miniature Times Square. Due to his painful experience in school, John
would later challenge the idea of dyslexia as a dysfunction. As a young
student he saw the printed page in the same way he composed a painting
or designed an interior with furniture. He saw the painting or room as a
completed whole and the printed page was no different-he saw the first
and last words at the same time. School was a daily torture and became
the primary root of his substance addiction. It wasn't that he didn't
see enough, he saw everything. He used alcohol as "novocaine" to deaden
his anxiety and depression for twenty five years until he surrendered
and began following the teachings of the 12 Steps. With sobriety, John
became known in the 1980's for his paintings in institutions such as
Porgy's, 82 Queen, Plums, Carolina's, Tommy Condon's, A.W. Shucks,
Angelfish, and Sermet's, as well as works in Chicago, Alexandria, VA and
various buildings throughout South Carolina. He also painted covers for
several magazines including Marlin, Saltwater Sportsman, Sporting
Classics, Plantation Polo, and Gamefish located in Paris. His last
magazine cover was the Fall 2014 edition of the nationally distributed
Charleston Style & Design magazine. John served two years aboard the
Coast Guard Buoy Tender Smilax. Later in his life, after he became a
renowned artist, he was honored to meet the Commandant of the Coast
Guard. John was also a walk-on defensive end at Presbyterian College,
serving on the Scout Team. John wrote an autobiography about being
raised in Charleston speaking for the generation of the 50's and 60's.
Among many accolades, John received the Order of the Palmetto from
Governor Carroll A. Campbell, Jr. in 1994. He was listed among
Charleston's notables in the recent book "Legendary Locals." John was an
accomplished photographer, publishing two volumes of black and white
photos in praise of women. For three years he built wooden boats with
the help of his friend Whitmarsh Smith. John volunteered to be a subject
in an MUSC study on agoraphobia; the fear of crowds. His "fear" of
crowds never went away because he later learned that he was just an
introvert. From then on, he championed the cause of introverts saying
that they were not at all shy, but would charge their batteries while
alone rather than having them drained amongst crowds. John consistently
donated paintings to numerous charities such as the Center for Birds of
Prey, the American Heart Association Heart Ball, Darkness to Light, Pet
Helpers, and the Charleston Symphony. John never married, but he would
say that he had over 900 children in the form of the paintings he left
behind, hoping to make this world a better place than when he first
arrived on Trumbo Street. In lieu of flowers, John's wish is that you go
out and buy something nice for yourself. Something not practical, but
something just for fun. Wherever he is, this will make him smile. A
gathering of friends will be held Tuesday, November 18 from 5:00 p.m. to
9:00 p.m. at the John Carroll Doyle Gallery, 125 Church Street. A
black-tie Celebration of Life will be announced and will occur in
mid-January. Arrangements by J. HENRY STUHR, INC., DOWNTOWN CHAPEL. A
memorial message may be sent to the family by visiting our website at www.jhenrystuhr.com. Visit our guestbook at www.legacy.com/obituaries/ charleston
Funeral Home
Charleston artist John Carroll Doyle passed away this week. I would have loved to have one of his original paintings but I this is the print I was able to afford and loved. What a sad loss. I first fell in love with his art after seeing the huge fish paintings on the wall at the old Angelfish restaurant.
He wrote his own obituary describing a full and eventful life and I loved the ending:
In
lieu of flowers, John's wish is that you go out and buy something nice
for yourself. Something not practical, but something just for fun.
Wherever he is, this will make him smile.
Life is short and precious. Let's make John Carroll Doyle smile.
In
lieu of flowers, John's wish is that you go out and buy something nice
for yourself. Something not practical, but something just for fun.
Wherever he is, this will make him smile. - See more at:
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/charleston/obituary.aspx?n=john-carroll-doyle&pid=173168687&fhid=6051#sthash.74oZujQv.dpuf
In
lieu of flowers, John's wish is that you go out and buy something nice
for yourself. Something not practical, but something just for fun.
Wherever he is, this will make him smile. - See more at:
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/charleston/obituary.aspx?n=john-carroll-doyle&pid=173168687&fhid=6051#sthash.74oZujQv.dpuf
In
lieu of flowers, John's wish is that you go out and buy something nice
for yourself. Something not practical, but something just for fun.
Wherever he is, this will make him smile. - See more at:
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/charleston/obituary.aspx?n=john-carroll-doyle&pid=173168687&fhid=6051#sthash.74oZujQv.dpuf
In
lieu of flowers, John's wish is that you go out and buy something nice
for yourself. Something not practical, but something just for fun.
Wherever he is, this will make him smile. - See more at:
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/charleston/obituary.aspx?n=john-carroll-doyle&pid=173168687&fhid=6051#sthash.74oZujQv.dpuf
13 November 2014
A bicycle built for blossoms
Blossom bicycle, Charleston, S.C |
Home late this evening after going to see Interstellar with my son. It was a three hour movie so we headed to Sesame for a bit to eat afterwards. Now I am confused. I usually go to the movies on Friday so tomorrow should be the weekend, right?
11 November 2014
Cards for Heroes
Cards for Heroes, Charleston, S.C. |
10 November 2014
Bicycle Rickshaw
Burns Lane, Charleston, S.C. |
(you can get almost anywhere in downtown Charleston in 10min)
it works out to $1.00 per minute for 2 people
09 November 2014
The Edge of America
Folly Beach Pier, Folly Beach, S.C. |
I can't do a Folly Beach entry without something quirky and fun. Pull up a chair!
08 November 2014
YALL Festival
YALL Festival, King St., Charleston, S.C. |
I am off to make black bean soup. I've been on a soup kick lately. Mushroom, potato, chicken ginger and now black bean. Love them all. Let me know if you have any other winning recipes I should try.
07 November 2014
One80Place
Bunks at One80Place, Charleston, S.C |
The photos below include Brad Cashman who is the Director of Community Involvement and has opportunities for anyone interested in helping out and the girls from Keys for Hope.
CRISIS MINISTRIES IS NOW ONE-EIGHTY PLACE.
Thirty years ago we opened our doors as a basic shelter and soup kitchen. Today we operate shelters in Charleston and Summerville, and provide everything from health services and counseling to legal assistance and job training for homeless individuals, Veterans and families.We feel the new name – One-Eighty Place – better represents all that we do to help people turn their lives around and begin again.
Keys for Hope |
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