Pax . There indeed was a collie his name was pax I have many more photos of the courtyard area with me and my mom and pax Also several of the inside of the mill. They're in my scrapbook I will snap some photos when I'm back at my apartment and upload I still remember what it smelled like in there. Like plants and burning leaves. It was amazing. We also have a beautiful sketch of the whole mill I'll take a photo of tomorrow. The second picture was Paul , my mom, and I about 23 years ago.
QUOTE="LARGO, post: 122262, member: 186"]As luck would have it Val, here I am, a shadow of the past come to call on old friends.
Hello Guy it was like your voice beckoned from afar.
So Bob beware.
Paul used to let folks (Amatuer artist memory being selective, show work there)
The connection is this little old fellow who used to come in where I worked at the time to buy cheap trinkets at the electrical counter to fashion makeshift lights for portraits. no one had patience for him but me. took a couple hours every time for a few bucks of sockets clips and wire. I just liked the old dude,for some reason and it paid off.
I possess a bit of a gift for running into old timers with good stories willing to share stuff no one else ever heard. I like old folks, like old books, they are loaded with history but if you read any of my threads you will note their days are numbered once they've talked with me. It's my gift to find them and my curse to loose them again. based on what you wrote, poor Paul got caught in my legacy. Sorry, not trying to be ghoulish.He knew my Uncle Bear well just up the road and another friend old George Ireland just about next door.
So one day, and the post is here with pics early on in my presence to NJPB, I chose to canoe up the Mill race to eyeball it, banked the canoe, walked up to the road, door was open. Safe to say many had never seen or not in years the mill Playhouse proper.
I walked in, Lo! Behold! Paul!
We talked for a few hours about the place. he was a fun little dude. he gave me a little walk of the place. I seem to recall a dog (Collie?) I could be off on that one though. we walked the same wall line that Doug above did with us in 2010.
It was a fine time, a gentleman guide, and I walked back down the bank and to the canoe intoxicated with wonder. the paddle back was wonderful as I reeled with excitement from having seen a place no one had been in for years. Oh I saw Paul again a time or two getting his electrical trinkets and we talked and talked but eventually I just stopped seeing him come around.
So Val, he was as kind and willing to share a tale as any old timer I ever met in the Barrens that didn't chase me off. (That is rare)
I am better for having met him and even for that short time he freely gave a glimpse of the past that slips away from us every day.
g[/QUOTE]
As luck would have it Val, here I am, a shadow of the past come to call on old friends.
Hello Guy it was like your voice beckoned from afar.
So Bob beware.
Paul used to let folks (Amatuer artist memory being selective, show work there)
The connection is this little old fellow who used to come in where I worked at the time to buy cheap trinkets at the electrical counter to fashion makeshift lights for portraits. no one had patience for him but me. took a couple hours every time for a few bucks of sockets clips and wire. I just liked the old dude,for some reason and it paid off.
I possess a bit of a gift for running into old timers with good stories willing to share stuff no one else ever heard. I like old folks, like old books, they are loaded with history but if you read any of my threads you will note their days are numbered once they've talked with me. It's my gift to find them and my curse to loose them again. based on what you wrote, poor Paul got caught in my legacy. Sorry, not trying to be ghoulish.He knew my Uncle Bear well just up the road and another friend old George Ireland just about next door.
So one day, and the post is here with pics early on in my presence to NJPB, I chose to canoe up the Mill race to eyeball it, banked the canoe, walked up to the road, door was open. Safe to say many had never seen or not in years the mill Playhouse proper.
I walked in, Lo! Behold! Paul!
We talked for a few hours about the place. he was a fun little dude. he gave me a little walk of the place. I seem to recall a dog (Collie?) I could be off on that one though. we walked the same wall line that Doug above did with us in 2010.
It was a fine time, a gentleman guide, and I walked back down the bank and to the canoe intoxicated with wonder. the paddle back was wonderful as I reeled with excitement from having seen a place no one had been in for years. Oh I saw Paul again a time or two getting his electrical trinkets and we talked and talked but eventually I just stopped seeing him come around.
So Val, he was as kind and willing to share a tale as any old timer I ever met in the Barrens that didn't chase me off. (That is rare)
I am better for having met him and even for that short time he freely gave a glimpse of the past that slips away from us every day.
g