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Title: Memories at the Spiker Farm
Author: Melinda Spiker Chambers
Date: 2006
As I was growing up, I always looked forward
to going to the Spiker farm. Many of my early memories centered around
Marjorie. As a child, I didn’t really think about her age. I just knew
she was always very friendly and fun to play with. She would make little
dolls from hankies by wading up a tissue in the hankie and fastening it
with a rubber band to make the head. When we weren’t playing with these
dolls, we would often cut and paste pictures from magazines and put them
in scrapbooks. In the evenings we would catch lightening bugs. There was
also a large shrub (probably forsythia) at the front edge of the yard that
had an opening to the inside, much like a tent, which made a great hiding
place. Marjorie always seemed to look forward to my visits and was eager
to spend time with me.
Another favorite memory was when Grandma
Spiker would bake her wonderful homemade bread. The smell of bread would
fill the house as we would wait eagerly for her to get the bread out of
the oven. She would slice the bread, put butter and homemade jelly on
each slice, and place it in our outstretched hands. To this day, whenever
I smell homemade bread baking, I think of her.
Grandma Spiker was very good with growing
flowers. Many of the flowers she planted are still flourishing around the
farm. She had planted a lot of daffodils on the hill above the house and
the flowers spelled out “Daffodil Farm.” I remember my dad telling me that
Grandma knew the names of every plant, shrub, and tree that grew on the
farm. She was also very crafty. One of the crafts I remember was when
she had strung seeds and had wound them around bottles and painted them.
I also admired her beautiful quilts and hand sewing skills.
Whenever the cousins would gather at the farm,
we would spend a lot of time at the river. My favorite spot was down
river from the farm where the “old man of the river” was located. It was
an old, dead tree that had large holes in it that looked like it had eyes,
a nose, and a large mouth. I’m not sure who named it, but I think it was
Marjorie. It was always fun to wade in the river, but I made sure I
didn’t wade at the bridge because of the big black snake that lived in one
of the culverts. We would also swim in the hole just below the swinging
bridge. The water always seemed to be muddy, so one of the games we would
play would be for one person to go under water while the rest of us tried
to guess where the person would come up. It was also a lot of fun to run
across the swinging bridge, timing the steps with the rhythm of the swing.
Another favorite memory is one that happened
more recently. During the Spiker reunion on Memorial Day weekend, after I
was married and had two children, I was on the “river patrol” where some
of the grandchildren were fishing below the swinging bridge. My son,
Chris, who was preschool age at the time, was fishing with a little pole
that had a little fishing worm on it. He was dipping the line at the
river’s edge, trying to catch a minnow that he was watching. The minnow
went for the worm and all of a sudden a very large muskie went for the
minnow. Chris began reeling in as fast as he could with everybody jumping
around with excitement. We never did see the end of the fish as it just
kept coming out of the water, but it looked at us, broke the line, and
swam off with the bobber flying up in the air. While we were disappointed
that it got off the line, it was probably a good thing, considering the
size of its teeth.
Although many
members of the Spiker clan have passed on, memories of them will always
linger in my heart, particularly when I’m at the farm. We have a proud
heritage and I’m so very thankful to be a part of such a warm, loving,
Christian family. |
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