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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Cabin Changes During the '80s



Shortly after the Green Cabin was finished, or as finished as it would be, Margaret and Roy started on the Gray Cabin.  Before the paint was barely dry, a tornado blew through, destroying alot of their hard work.  Being of perservering natures, they worked to put back the pieces.  They would then move on to build a duplex next to the Green Cabin, later known as the Brown Cabin.  Around 1982, Margaret and Roy  decided to sell the Brown Cabin to Bill's parents, ending years of staying in the Green Cabin and listening to all the different levels of snoring from tired, alcohol infused bodies at night.  By 1989 Roy had passed on to the big lake in the sky, leaving Margaret older and tired of walking on a slope.  Bill still had fond memories of the Green Cabin and approached her to sell.  Her only way to sell was if he bought the Green Cabin and her cabin, soon to become known as the Gray Cabin.  The next years flew by with Bill's parents doing a major remodel to the Brown Cabin and Bill doing lots of cleaning, building seawalls, etc.  1996 brought about many changes, with the youngest daughter about to graduate from highschool, we put the old house in Versailles up for sale and set about work on a major face lift on Margaret's old home place. She had moved on to Sedalia, Missouri.  The day after graduation we packed up and headed back to the lake!  We had now lived in Laurie, Gravois Mills, Versailles, and now Rocky Mount.  It seemed we had tried to circle the lake in a manner of speaking, actually we were just coming back to the spot where we had shared many great moments in time, ready to share more!

Monday, December 12, 2011

Changing Jobs, Changing Locations, Changing Times





When we first married Bill worked for Chrysler building vans in Fenton, Missouri.  Some hard economic times were rapidly approaching our young family. By the time baby number two was born, Bill had been laid-off from Chrysler and he was doing odd jobs to supplement unemployment. 

A family friend suggested he go to work in line construction and complete lineman training for a card.  So, in the early '70s, he was a groundman rapidly finishing his classes and becoming a lineman. Traveling from job to job, it was hard to say where he would be going for the next job.  Sometimes the job was close enough to drive, sometimes he lived out of the back of a camper and sometimes he lived in old hotels. It was kinda hard for us both, me with a baby and a toddler and him on the road. 

In the summer of '82, he went to work on a job building new lines here at the lake. We were able to stay in the Green Cabin with the girls for weeks.  It was a wonderful summer, the girls played in the lake everyday and when Bill would come home from work we would jump in the boat and go water-skiing.  Bill was incredible on the water, he could salom ski and make it look effortless, he could pull the girls up on his shoulders and water-ski all over. Back then there was no boat traffic and no wave-runners to worry about.

On a rain-out day, Bill drove over to a local RE and applied for a job. Powers to be called the week before I graduated from Jefferson College, and one week later we packed our belongings in our old Ford pickup with cattle racks borrowed from my Uncle Floyd.  We must have looked like a traveling comic show, but we were on top of the world - we were moving to the beautiful Lake of the Ozarks!

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Possum Hollow Cove


By 1974, Bill's mother, a third grade teacher who liked her summers off, had rented a little green cabin on the Gravois Arm here at the lake.  She rented from a couple named Margaret and Roy Thompson, also known as Tom Cat and Whipperwill in CB Radio language - used to communicate with others on the other side of the lake in the old days to avoid long distance phone charges.  Margaret and Roy lived in one cabin, rented the green cabin and another cabin that was two levels added renting availability.  Roy was one of the first dock builders to the lake and even engineered a pully cable boat lift system.  They also sold gas for boats on the dock.  They had an old wooden phone you would crank and they would walk down and pump your gas and give the fishing reports.  If they weren't home, there was a box to put your gas money in.  I guess you could say old Margaret and Roy were entrepreneurs of their time, for this all began back in the '50s.

By 1975, we were expecting baby number one and bored out of our goards.  We decided to drive down to the cabin for something different to do.  Word of caution, one probably shouldn't take long drives in the dead of winter to a place that has no phone and before cell phones have been invented - very uncomfortable and scary!