Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Kaitlyn at her Bible School program this

evening, taken by Jonathan

finishing up under the lights... the blur is Madison Ann...


Austyn's last game of the season.. he is on first.. they loaded the bases.. and lost the game by one run... wow... but they played their hearts out


Opposing pitcher had his "catfish" stance down to a t.... one could tell he was well groomed in intimation ... haha...


Madison Ann being, well, Madison.... haha...


A Man playing short stop


A-man throwing to Third...


Austyn caught a pop up fly... nailed it big time and a very quick throw back to home...


Cars, cars and more cars at the ball park last night...


Austyn on his way to Third


the ladies watching Austyn's last ballgame of the spring season 2009

Mike Anderson's new puppys.. think they are for sale too....


I am trying to upload videos of the new puppies on youtube without much success, maybe by the end of the day... sigh...

thinking of my own Mom who turns 90 on June 23rd....

Living legacy
Man's father fought in Civil War

Charles Cox, 93, of Pawnee poses with a photo of his parents and a picture of himself in the Army in 1942. Cox is one of the the nation's few remaining sons of a Union Civil War Veteran. RHETT MORGAN / Tulsa World

By RHETT MORGAN World Staff Writer
Published: 6/17/2009 2:18 AM
Last Modified: 6/17/2009 3:16 AM

PAWNEE — Charles Cox traveled in a covered wagon, courted in a Model T and served on four continents in the Army.

His history also contains this jaw-dropping nugget: Cox's father fought in the Civil War.

Cox is the son of Joseph H. Cox, a Illinois infantryman for the Union Army from 1862-65. Charles was born when his father, who married three times, was 73.

"I think I was an unexpected child," said Cox, 93, of Pawnee.

Today, he's a link to Lincoln.

Only 52 children of Union Civil War Veterans are still living, according to the Pennsylvania-based Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War. The Sons of Confederate Veterans has located more than 100 sons and the United Daughters of the Confederacy has located more than 150 daughters.

Charles Cox wasn't on the list, which chronicles only one Civil War child from Oklahoma, a daughter.

"... Unless the order learns of family members of a veteran due to a news item or the survivors make themselves known to our order, it is not possible to know of them," David Demmy Sr., executive director of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, wrote in an e-mail. "I am not aware of any other organization that may attempt to contact and tabulate these folks ... ."

Cox shrugs off his unusual status, mainly because of the arithmetic of it all. Cox was 13 when his father died in 1928.

"My older brother had more to do with my childhood than anybody else," Cox said recently from an easy chair in his home.
"He really was the one who saw to it that I was taken care of. I've never forgotten how he was so involved in my life."

Documented life in letters

Joseph H. Cox was a corporal of Company F, 127th Illinois Infantry. Enlisting in August 1862, he served in the 15th Corps under Gen. William Sherman before being wounded and taken to the notorious Andersonville Prison in Georgia, the first of several POW camps in which he was held. He escaped in December 1864 while being moved to Jacksonville prison and reached the Union lines the following February.

J.H. Cox wrote down his remembrances of the war on stationery dated July 10, 1875. His family still has the original copies and other documents detailing his colorful life.

J.H. fathered 12 children from his three marriages, including eight from his last wife, Emma Thurston, whom he wed in 1889. When he made the first of two land runs into Indian Territory in '89, he wrote to his wife in a letter dated April 19, remarking on the difficulty of crossing the Salt Fork River.

"Now came the critical part of our journey," J.H. wrote. "Two men and one team had already drowned, and the ferry men were all drunk but I decided to risk it. I put harness and everything in the buggy, laid my overcoat off, and got Henry Gazway to go with me and lead the gray mare. I took poor Rompy who could barely breathe with distemper."

He continued: "The men behind whipped their horses in, and we hung to their halters. They had to swim almost from the bank. The gray mare swam like a duck but Rompy struggled for about 5 rods (came near pulling me in) and turned over on his side and gave up. Men from the shore yelled, 'Let him go, he will drown.' Those on the boat said, "Give him some more rope or he will drown.'"

In an April 22, 1889, letter to Emma, J.H. complained about food. "I don't think I shall stay as long as I intended, as I have had a falling out at my boarding house with the cook," he wrote. "The pancakes don't come up to standard. I went to turn one and it fell 4 1/4 sections adjoining. Please tell me what to do. My stove is a daisy, but I am sadly in need of a cook."

Traveling the world

Charles Cox was the last child born to J.H. and Emma, who was 30 years her husband's junior. When J.H. purchased property in Arkansas, he rode a train there while sending his wife, teenage son and Charles in a covered wagon, said Gail Gazin, the younger of Charles' two daughters.

It was in Arkansas, near a place called West Fork, that Cox was treated for diphtheria at about age 4. He recalls the physician saying, "I don't know whether he will make it through the night."

"I proved that they were wrong. I'm still here," Cox said.

The family eventually settled back in Pawnee. Cox married Elna Griesel, a switchboard operator whom he first met in a Pawnee telephone office.

"Dad went in there to call a girlfriend and saw mother," Gazin said. "He thought she was a pretty good lookin' woman, and he might just have to get to know her."

Cox did medic-related duties while in World War II, working in such places as Capetown, South Africa; Brazil; Canada; India; and France.

"I got to be a world traveler," he said. "Wherever they had a problem, they sent me."

When the war ended, Cox made a career of education, first teaching at a one-room schoolhouse before spending roughly 30 years in the Pawnee school system. His wife of nearly 67 years died last May.

"It's a life that I don't really have to apologize for because the things I have done have been beneficial to a lot of people," said Cox, a company commander for the Oklahoma National Guard from 1954-60. "My life has been respectable. I have no reason for regretting. I've managed to survive all this time and I'm crowding 100."

This young man bought feed from us for his show pigs over the years and grew up about 2 miles from us.. now look...

A unique dairy in Payne County

Ashley Stockamp
Stillwater NewsPress

A Payne County farm is complete with pasture, barns and even a milking parlor, but there are no cows.

Chester and Dora Busch operate Feather Creek Farm, located between Stillwater and Glencoe. The farm is a full production goat dairy with about 100 milking goats, 48 of which are being milked at this time.

Dora Busch said they started in the dairy goat industry about seven years ago when their oldest son wanted to show dairy goats. After he graduated and moved away from the farm, the Busches decided to transform into a grade A goat dairy.

Feather Creek Farm became grade A in 2007 and they began selling their milk at Pure Prairie Creamery, LLC, a cheese factory in Ada. The cheese is sold in local groceries throughout Oklahoma including Consumers IGA and Companies Comin II in Stillwater.

“We sell it locally, we are legal to sell 100 gallons of raw goats milk, which is unpasturized,” Dora Busch said. “The only thing that has been done to the milk is that it has been filtered for cleanness. We can sell that from the farm every month.”

Pure Prairie Creamery, LLC Partner Bill Clark said the creamery produces a market for Oklahoma goat dairy producers. He said the Busches are one of his best producers.

“It’s been excellent,” Clark said. “They have the highest quality of milk of any producer we buy from. Their quality has been superb.”

Clark said he can’t talk enough about the quality of their milk and attributes their success to careful genetic selection. He said milk usually gives an average 9 percent yield on cheese, but Feather Creek Farm’s milk yields 10 to 11 percent.

The Busches hope to add a cheese factory to their dairy and sell direct to consumers, but Dora Busch said the Stillwater market is a tough market.

Chester Busch said he has wanted to milk for a long time, and took losing his job as an opportunity to farm full-time. He said now was a good time to get into the dairy goat industry because people are becoming more health conscious.

“It’s something I always liked doing,” he said. “It’s a specialty item, a novelty item. More people are getting more health conscious so goats milk is on the rise.”

Dora Bush said milking goats is the same process as milking cows, but is actually a little easier.

“The only difference is you’ve got two teats instead of four,” Dora Busch said. “My husband’s favorite saying is ‘If god had intended us to milk cows he would have given us four hands.’ ”

She said the size makes them easier to handle and the milk is a little easier to digest. She said the goats are good to work with and develop better personalities than dairy cattle.

“They’re very personable,” Dora Busch said. “Every single one of these goats has its own personality. They’re just lovable.”

Goats are considered browsers; they will pick through weeds and leaves instead of eating grasses. Dora Busch said the dairy goats are kept on an alfalfa and sweet feed diet to help with production.

“If all we did was let them browse, they would milk but it wouldn’t be what it is now,” she said. “It’s the same as with a cow dairy, the more production you can get out of one animal, the better off you are.”

Chester Busch lost his job in April and along with running the farm, distributes cheese for Pure Prairie Creamery. Dora Busch said this was a “mixed blessing” because he can now make more money on the farm.

“You don’t have to go out to an eight to five job,” Chester Busch said. “Farming’s really 24/7, but it’s something I enjoy doing.”

The Busches said they would like to expand their operation to around 150 milking goats. They also want to raise awareness for the industry and let people know the opportunity is out there.

For more information about becoming involved in the Dairy Goat call 405-334-1318.