Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts

Friday, July 1, 2016

Cocoa



About 14 years ago I decided I wanted another poodle, our first poodle was white just like the
one in this picture her name was Sugar. So I started looking for someone who sold registered poodles in the local paper which I luck out
and found a women that raised poodles so I called and sure enough she had baby poodles just
born so she said I could come and look at them. I did and they were adorable. There were only
2 left that did not already have a deposit on. So I picked out the poodle I wanted and gave her
the down payment on the poodle. She begin to tell me the story of the generation of this poodle. She had come from a long blood line of show dogs and from a famous Texas Goouchy line that
were famous poodle show dogs. Well I was impressed. And she told me when I come to pick
her up to take her home she would have newspaper clipping ready for me about Texas
Goouchy. The puppies were about 1 and 1/2 weeks old so I knew it would be at least 4 weeks
old or 5 before I could pick my poodle.
I waited ever so patiently as I could, and one day I got a call from the women that I could pick up
my poodle that the mother was trying to kill the pup at 3 1/2 weeks old. So I was so excited to
hear this news, as soon as my husband got off work we went to pick up my poodle and paid for
her, and sure enough she gave me a copy of the poodles bloodline with a newspaper clipping of
the picture of famous Texas poodle.
I named my little fluff ball Cocoa. She was so playful and loved being played with. She was so
tiny and cute. We took her just about everywhere we went. Our friends invited us to go on a trip to Mississippi and we took her along in the car with us she
slept laying across the back of my neck almost all the way there. We had such fun with her.
I think of this today and our many travel 's with her in our motor home and hotels we stay in and
how great she did. I believe traveling with a small dog as we did worked out just fine and she
seem to adapt to the traveling very well.
If we left her which was not to often we would always leave her with her vet that boarded pets.
Now Cocoa is old and blind and we know we probably won't have her with us but just a few
more years. I will not be looking forwarded to that day. As we think of her as our baby and how
much she means to us. We do have very fond memories that we will cherish forever.
A few years ago she died in her sleep. We will all ways miss her and forever in our hearts.








Monday, November 16, 2015






I thought I would share about the Lives of Apache Women in Texas, in the 1800s

According to David M. Brudde, in the Handbook of North American Indian: Southwest, Texas, in the 1800s,
was predominately populated with Apache tribes (1). Lives of women in those Apache tribes, in the 1800s, in
Texas were vastly different from the lives of American women, today. For example, Morris E. Opler, in
American Anthropologist, describes the Apache tribes as living clustered in extended family units. The home,
or wiki-up, would be built by women. It was a circular, dome shaped, hut made out of brush, grass, and plants.
The floor was dirt, covered with brush, grass, and animal skins, except for a fire pit in the center.
In the small wiki up, lived a husband, wive, and their children. When a daughter married, another wiki up was
built next to her family home for the couple. Sons who married would leave home and move in , next to their
wife's family. Sons in law avoided their in laws. They hunted and provided food for their wife's family, but did not
have much contact with them.
Grenville Goodwin states that, “traditionally, it was the women and girls who instructed children, gathered
plants for food, cooked, cleaned, and made clothing. Older boys were trained to hunt by the men of the tribe”
(3).
When an Apache girl hit puberty, marked by the onset of her first period, a special ceremony was held. The
ceremony was huge. Guests were invited, feasts of food were prepared, There was music and dancing. The
party lasted for four days. Towards the end of this ceremony, the girl's family would usually arrange a marriage
for her. Typically, the husband chosen would be older and would gift the girl's family with horses, food, and
animal skins. Sometimes men would compete for a girl, usually the one who offered the most gifts, got the girl.
When a husband was chosen, a home would be erected for the couple. The girl's mother, sisters, aunts,
and female cousins would often help to build it. Then, without further ceremony, the couple would move in
together.
Divorce was not uncommon among the Apache. If the girl thought her husband was not treating her
properly, she returned to her parents home. If an Apache male wanted a divorce, he just left and moved back in
with his family or with another wife. Apache males were allowed more than one wife. Each wife and her
children lived in a separate home (4).
Childbirth was vastly different from what we experience, today. When a pregnant woman went into labor,
she was tied to a tree, standing up, with her legs spread and her hands above her head. When the baby came
out, another woman took it, cleaned it, wrapped it, and placed it on a cradle board. The mother was untied,
washed, and returned to her home to nurse the baby. Often, the mother was expected to return to her work
right away (5).
Lives of Apache women, in Texas, during the 1800s, were marked by hard, physical labor, little medical
care, and childbirth at young ages. If a woman lived into her forties, she was, often, the oldest woman in the tribe
(5).
References
1. Brugge, David M. (1983). "Navajo prehistory and history to 1850", in A. Ortiz (Ed.), Handbook of North
American Indians: Southwest (Vol. 10, pp. 489–501). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution.
2. Ogler, Morris E. (1936b). "The kinship systems of the Southern Athapaskan-speaking tribes",American
Anthropologist, 38 (4), 620–633.
3. Goodwin, Grenville (1969) [1941]. The Social Organization of the Western Apache. Tucson, Arizona:
University of Arizona Press. LC 76-75453.
4. Schroeder, Albert H. (1974a). "A study of the Apache Indian: Parts 1–3", in American Indian ethnology:
Indians of the Southwest. New York: Garland.
5. Hodge, F. W. (Ed.). (1907). Handbook of American Indians. Washington.