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February 29, 2008

Everything I Know About Annie Bidwell

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(Photo stolen from these guys)

This is Annie Bidwell, or, if you'd like to be formal about it, Annie Kennedy Bidwell. Around Northern California she is most famous for the following things:

~ Generously donating about ten square miles of land to the city of Chico, for a municipal park (now known, of course, as Bidwell Park)
~ Knowing a lot of influential people of her day, including three U.S. presidents, John Muir, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Susan B. Anthony
~ Being a teetotaler, and casting a long, alcohol-free shadow upon the land she donated to her town (much to the chagrin of some golfers at Bidwell Golf Course)
~ Having a really big pink house

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(Photo stolen from these guys)

But there's one story about Annie Bidwell that you don't know. It's a tiny story, admittedly; most of my family have forgotten it. But I remember it, because the first time I heard the story, it made Annie Bidwell a real person to me. My own tiny link to history.

My grandfather, Frank LaGrone, was born in 1903. When he was about seven, he and his little sister Stella were on the lawn of Annie Bidwell's mansion, for some reason. They had probably been playing in Big Chico Creek, or over at Children's Park (just across the creek from the mansion, and also a Bidwell endowment). They peeked into the carriage house to see the dusty and forlorn horse-drawn carriages, decaying in the dark after the advent of the automobile.

And as they were investigating the carriage house, Annie Bidwell herself appeared. What did the great lady do? Shoo away the tiny trespassers? Scold them for snooping?

She gave them cookies.


Annie Kennedy Bidwell (1838 - 1918)

Henry Frank LaGrone (1903 - 1990)

February 16, 2008

Origin of Species

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This is a member of my dad's cat collection. (It used to be my mom's cat collection, but Dad felt she was neglecting them by feeding them only twice a day.) This is Pinkie.

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He's window shopping with his neighbors, the bird collection: zebra finches, parakeets, and red rumped parakeets, or some name like that. The bird collection is continuously fed.

As far back as I can remember my dad has raised birds. There were always chickens, but not necessarily the kind you think of when you think of a farm or dairy (big layers like Plymouth Rocks, White Leghorns and Rhode Island Reds); Dad preferred the fancy bantam chickens.

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(Photo stolen from this site)

He also raised white doves and fancy pigeons, the above-mentioned finches and parakeets, as well as love birds and cockateels. Dad has always planned and built all of his chicken coops and aviaries himself, which he has at least painted to match the house, or I think Mom would kill him.

I recently sat down with my dad, armed with a note pad and pen to get the fine details of one of his childhood stories. As often happens with Dad, the story began in English and ended in Swahili, so to speak; we covered a lot of ground and the rabbit trails were many and far-flung. But I learned something I thought was significant, and I'd like to share it with you.

When Dad was 14 his family moved to Hawaii for two years for my grandfather's government job. Since this is the larger story I'm working on I'll save that for another day; the move home is what caught my ear as Dad related his story. They had to move to Oahu (1948) and back (1950) by ship since commercial air travel was in its infancy, and remote Hawaii may as well have been the North Pole in those days. The government paid for everything, including moving their furniture. The only hang-up of their plans was the ship's policy about not transporting live fish in fish tanks, so 16-year-old David, my future dad, made arrangements with someone on a cargo ship to transport his new pet fish home to San Francisco, where David would go to pick them up later.

But David was able to take his parakeets onto the Lurline for the voyage home to Berkeley, in their cage, in the family's quarters.

I thought about that for a minute. "You had parakeets back then, Dad?" I asked him.

"Yeah," he answered. "I bought them for a quarter apiece in Honolulu, and raised them while we lived there."

"Had you ever seen parakeets before you moved to Hawaii?" I asked.

"Well . . . I guess not," Dad answered, a little impatient with this line of questioning, since we were really supposed to be talking about traveling on the cruise ship Lurline.

"And how about the tropical fish? Did people have tropical fish in Berkeley in those days?"

"No, I'd never seen a salt water tank before. This isn't important --"

"So you were probably the only person in your neighborhood to have tropical birds and fish. I would imagine your friends must have been fascinated by them. How did you keep them once you got them home?"

"Well, we had had a Victory Garden during the war, just like everyone else, and that included chickens. The chicken coop was empty, of course, when we moved back to Berkeley, so my dad helped me convert it to an aviary for the parakeets. I kept the fish tank on an old metal patio table in the corner of my bedroom. I must have gotten some kind of heater for it."

"Did you meet anyone else who raised tropical fish or birds?"

"Well, there was a guy in Alameda that the pet store people told me about. I used to go out to see him, and I bought some more birds from him. I started raising the birds and selling them to a high-end pet store in San Francisco. Every time I had birds to sell, my dad would take a cage of them on his lap for the bus ride into San Francisco where he worked, then at lunch he'd take them to the pet store and sell them for me. I got four dollars for each bird. I made $500 the first year, which was a good month's salary in those days, and $200 the second year. It started my college fund. But people don't want to know about this stuff!"

Maybe they don't, but maybe they do. In any case, I now have a better understanding of the origins of the menagerie that was always present in some combination, throughout my childhood and up to the present. I'm just thrilled to death that there were no snakes in Hawaii.

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No finches, parakeets, or cats were harmed for this post.


February 12, 2008

Gonna Farm 'Til the Money's All Gone

In honor of my blogging friend Ang of St. Fairsted Farm, I have agreed to TRY to grow something other than bermuda grass, burr clover and puncture vine this year. You think I'm kidding, Ang, but I assure you, I am not.

Here's the plot I chose to wrestle with.

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Don't be alarmed by the shade. In July those crispy little plants will be BEGGING for any available shade, believe me. And I won't plant right up to the south fence line, anyway. Notice how green everything is? That's how it is in February here in California. February is our May. By March it'll be lush and green, with three foot grass that's beginning to go to seed already. I'm not kidding. By May everything is almost brown -- that's where the Golden State gets its name (because Brown State or Withered State just weren't sexy enough).

Here's a photo I took in May a few years ago, at Bidwell Park. Not a scrap of green grass to be found.

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Onward. See that big hole? That's a kitty potty, dug by my daughters for the benefit of the kitties, in case they have to go potty outside. Yeah, like THAT'S gonna happen.

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And this is a worm -- not photographed with any skill or finesse, you understand -- that was unfortunate enough to be flung by my shovel onto the fence post. He'll be just fine as soon as the Worm Witness Protection Program takes over.

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This is The Ugly Shovel, or The Shovel of Many Splinters, as photographed by Smedley. She has not yet grasped the importance of a clear path to the subject matter, so you are getting a bit of whatever plastic toy she was toting around. And no adjustment of your monitor is necessary; the ground is level in the yard -- it's Smedley who's cockeyed.

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And here is the 6 x 6' patch of yard after I had taken 4" or so of (clay) soil and (weeds) weeds off the top. Yes, I'm aware that the fence needs to be painted -- it's been almost five years; what's another five among friends?

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In the summer there will be no shade, Ang -- don't panic; the sun will be farther north and it'll be a nice, sunny desert.

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I bought my soil test kit yesterday. I'm going to rake the rocks this weekend. The cats are fertilizing it nicely, I can only imagine. Okay, Ang -- now what? Is it tomatoes yet?

February 10, 2008

Nothing Is Permanent

This is part of the south wall of the calf barn.

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Not the old calf barn; that would be this, these days. . .

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. . . but the "new" calf barn, which is maybe only 30 years old. And stands unused anymore. Anyway, do you know the cause of those holes are in the siding? Let's take a closer look.

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Plywood siding; nothing unusual, other than those strange organic-shaped holes. The holes were created by baby calves, who (after having drunk every last drop of warm milk from their plastic buckets, and sucked on the buckets as long as they could get away with it) sucked on anything else they could. If you walked down the row of pens just after feeding time, you'd see 50 calves, from a few days to a couple of months old, crane their necks as far through their gates as possible, trying to get some fingers or pant leg into their mouths. They'd settle for plywood, and over time, these strange holes were the result.

The funniest part was seeing, from some distance away outside the barn, several pink tongues extended through the holes, or an occasional lower jaw jutting through a hole as a calf got purchase and began sucking the tar out of that barn.

These days, because there are no more dairy calves, but only beef cows around the ranch, the little ones stay with their mothers, and get their milk from the source. It's a very different scenario to see calves consorting with each other, romping together or just relaxing in one another's company. I really enjoy their freedom.

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Even their piddling in public.