A place on the web to preserve our family history! Email stanmoffat@gmail.com for details or information, etc. This a work in progress...
Sunday, August 31, 2008
Just because it's unusual for Phil to post so quickly... love ya....
http://www.pmoffat.com/trishbday/trish_bday.html
MY MY MY.... we birthdayed it up for Trisha...
Friday, August 29, 2008
Thursday, August 28, 2008
From Ann... This is from the hometown of one of our dear friends... who shall remain nameless due to... hahaha.....
Posted: Aug 27, 2008 06:41 PM
Updated: Aug 28, 2008 09:17 AM
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Wanda Haley has experienced things in her home she can't explain. | ||||||||
OKPRI was contacted to do a paranormal investigation in the Colbert home. | ||||||||
Light anomalies were captured throughout the night. | ||||||||
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By Christian Price, News9.com INsite Team
COLBERT, Okla. -- Located along the Red River is what is considered the oldest occupied house in Oklahoma, but it may be occupied by something else.
Tracy Agee, who has lived in the house for the last 10 years, has had things happen to her and her family that they cannot explain.
"We've had a lot of things going on that makes us believe it could be haunted," Agee said. "The sound of church bells chiming with no explanation, seeing shadows, hearing doors slam, voices of crying babies."
There have been a couple of times where Agee became more frightened than usual.
"I've been afraid a couple of times," Agee said. "One night, being in bed and hearing knocking and scratching at the screen, thinking it was somebody that I was expecting and getting up to find no one."
Asked if the scratching at the door could have been a pet wanting to come into the house, Agee explained that it wasn't that type of scratching.
Agee isn't the only person who has experienced things within the house. Agee's grandmother, Wanda Haley, has lived at the property for 21 years and has had her own experiences.
"I have experienced the doors opening with no reason, like the kitchen door. I shut it at night and I got up the other morning and it was opened," Haley said. "Honey buns was all over the table and the light was on. So, I asked my husband if he had been in there anytime that night eating and he said ‘I didn't get up.' Well, I didn't either. We couldn't figure out what that was."
Dessert cakes being strewn about the kitchen was only the beginning of Haley's experiences.
"In this bedroom one night, I felt somebody stroke my back and it really scared me," Haley said. "I looked down on the floor and I thought somebody got in the house and laid down on the floor there beside my bed," Haley said. "No one was there. I had that happen to me two more times. They stroked my back."
The family has reached the point where they feel they need help. They don't care about ridicule. They don't care about skeptics and their reasoning. They just want to feel safe in their home. They would like to know what it is that's in their house and what they should do about it.
The family contacted Oklahoma Paranormal Research and Investigations. They hope that OKPRI can provide some answers to what they are experiencing.
OKPRI is currently investigating the paranormal activity. When they review their results, the report will be posted.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
From Heather... The Stillwater NewsPress.... The man behind the fair
Butch Young keeps things hopping at the expo center
Everett Brazil III
Butch Young may be the hardest working man at the Payne County Expo Center, and possibly in Payne County.
As marketing director, he spends much of his time at the fairgrounds, bringing new events to the county and aiding in the operation of the expo center.
But Young wasn’t born in Payne County. And while much of his life has been spent in the Stillwater area, he has lived and worked in many places, in many fields.
Young grew up in Woods County, near the Kansas border in a little town named Dacoma, a town that no longer exists. From the time he was 8, he was reared by his aunt and uncle on their farm, where he first became interested in livestock.
Woods County went through an awful drought, Young said, in the 1950s. But after high school graduation, Young attended Oklahoma State University from 1959-61, earning a degree in animal husbandry, known as animal science today. He stayed on at OSU as the swine herdsman in 1963.
“I told my uncle, ‘If I ever hang my hat somewhere, it was going to be here because it rained!’” Indeed, compared to the extended drought of northwest Oklahoma, precipitation flowed more freely in central Oklahoma.
Then, Uncle Sam came calling, he said, and he served two years overseas in the U.S. Army.
When he returned, he was determined to do something different with his life, in a way, to seek adventure. He accomplished this as a traveling representative for the Polland China Record Association in Illinois. Polland China is a breed of hogs, a type of livestock Young has been interested in since growing up on the farm. He traveled across the country, traveling from “Minnesota to the north, to Georgia, Alabama and Florida to the South,” he said. He also traveled the Southwest and as far northeast as Pennsylvania. He spent just over two years traveling for the company.
During his travels, he found time to attend the Rash School of Auctioneering in Mason City, Iowa, and soon began auctioning purebred hogs. It was a line of work that would become a career to this day, where he still calls auctions at the Expo Center.
After leaving the hog company, he found ample work as an auctioneer, and has called them across the state, and even into Texas, and especially at the Expo Center. He started auctioneering the premium sale regularly in 1978 at no charge.
Young has worked at the Payne County Expo Center for about nine years. He’s in charge of booking returning events and attracting new attractions and events to the Expo Center. He’s seen a lot of usual events: County fairs, livestock shows, family reunions and wedding receptions. Girl Scout and Boy Scout troops use the facility, and many a fundraiser has been held there.
“From livestock shows to antique shows and everything in between,” he said.
Which means a lot of events that are considerably different than usual. One of the most interesting, and biggest, he said, was an RV convention held about five years ago. The entire grounds of the expo center were covered in recreational vehicles. The event brought in so many people that it had the largest sales tax collection in the county for that month and that year.
“It was a time of the year when we didn’t have much going on,” Young said. “It was a blessing.”
Another interesting event occurred a few years ago when a machinery company came down from Canada with an interest in the Expo Center.
“We made a contract and they rented four or five buildings for about three weeks over Christmas time.”
Although the company was going through a buyout during the show, the event went off smoothly, he said.
The Expo Center has grown dramatically in the past 10 years, and Young has been there to witness is all. There was a time when there wasn’t much happening, when goat shows were some of the largest events. Today, buildings are regularly booked continuously in July and August for wedding receptions and family reunions, he said.
Young and his wife Rosie have one daughter and will celebrate their 39th anniversary in November.
When events are hosted at the Expo Center, especially the Payne County Fair, he works at least as many hours as anyone.
“When Butch says he’ll do something, you don’t have to worry. It’ll get done,” said Dee Shenold, secretary for the Expo Center.
Nathan Anderson, Payne County’s OSU Extension agent, has worked with Young many years.
“He may be older than dirt, but he stays on his feet and works as hard as any young man I have ever seen.”
Editors Note: Butch is neighbor of ours... we know first hand the reason he is so good... it's Rosie, his wife... she is his rock! They helped raise our kiddos too, along with many other neighbors children and family. We are proud to call them our lifelong friends!
Monday, August 25, 2008
Saturday, August 23, 2008
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Several Granddads out there reading this... in honor of Miss Madison who loves pink....
Man Makes Record Catch With Barbie Fishing Rod
Thursday, August 21, 2008
ELKIN, N.C. - David Hayes' granddaughter just ask him to hold her Barbie rod and reel while she went to the bathroom.
He did. And seconds later he landed the state record channel catfish at 21 pounds, 1 ounce.
Alyssa's father had bought the pink Barbie fishing rod for Christmas and she had caught a few bluegill before her grandfather hauled in the catfish.
The Winston-Salem Journal reported the catch Aug. 5 in eastern Wilkes County has been certified as a record by the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission.
Hayes and his granddaughter have been fishing in the pond behind his house since she was big enough to hold a pole.
Hayes says his granddaughter worried he would break her rod. He landed the 21-pound fish on a 6-pound test line. It was 32 inches long, 2 inches longer than the rod.