By FRNash/PHX, AZ (Frnash) on Saturday, April 16, 2016 - 05:14 pm:
Uncle Chuck (Unclechuck):
"Porridge/oatmeal = kaurapuuro, for some reason, I don't remember my grandparents pronunciation of porridge sounding like that spelling!"
Nope, me neither, my grandma just called it "puuroa".
By FRNash/PHX, AZ (Frnash) on Saturday, April 16, 2016 - 05:50 pm:
Speaking of state parks and memories … here's an event from my childhood in Detroit that I'll never forget (I'm not so sure I'd like to revisit it again!):
(Reposted from From Cam Notes - 2008: June: Jun 24-08:)
Funny 'ting about rattlesnakes...
In spite of having lived in Arizona for 40 years now [46 years in 2016], and having spent many hours hiking around the boonies, I have never seen a snake of any variety in the Arizona desert! (Unless you want to count the Arizona Diamondbacks!)
On the other hand, as a kid (surely well over 50 [maybe 60] years ago), at a huge family picnic at a large metropolitan park near Wixom, MI (I am no longer sure where that park was, as I can find no sign of it on my current maps. I'm pretty sure it was not Proud Lake State Recreation Area.) I spotted what at first looked like a cow pie by the side of the road, but on closer inspection turned out to be a neatly coiled Massasauga rattlesnake. One of my uncles stepped in and dispatched the snake, grabbing it by the tail and cracking it like a whip.
When cut open, it proved to be a momma snake, pregnant with a substantial number of young 'uns, from my memory, far, far more than the "8 to 20 young" suggested in this article: Critter Field Guide: Snakes of Michigan — eastern Massasauga rattlesnake. [←That link has been updated, the one in my original post has changed.]