Tag Archive: Genealogy

Happy New Year

I love the freshness of the new year.  It reminds me of going back to school, with new pencils, rulers, pens and  best of all a fresh new lined writing book with no mistakes, corrections or red lines crossed through my words.  Must try harder, must be neater, must pay attention, must write between the lines.

Lovely thing about being older is that I don’t have to write between the lines!!  I can throw that ruler away, stray outside the lines -  I can even draw my own and use the red pen to create my own words.  Besides, as family historians we know we must constantly look outside the lines in order to move ahead with our research.

Bring out that fresh new genealogy writing book this year, but buy one without any lines and see where it leads you….

In my new writing book this year and written in red pen is:

  1. Me – I have a dream, but I would like to move it ahead from just the dream.  Because it’s my dream, I seem to allow it to get pushed down the list, but my goal this year is to keep it at the top.
  2. Order amongst the chaos!!  I cannot continue to save genealogy as paper, so I need to work on a digital remedy
  3. My own genealogy research.

I’ve purposefully kept my list short (not easy….but short!).

Dream big and write and research outside the lines.

~~and a very Happy New Year to you all!

A Child’s Christmas in Wales (remembered)

 

With Christmas just around the corner, my thoughts have been returning to my own childhood Christmas.  Remembrances of waking to the rustle of a stocking at the foot of my bed full of wonderful things to play with – flashlights, pens with red and green and blue ink, jacks, marbles and magical kaleidoscopes. Memories of the smell of mandarin oranges and chocolate mix together with those of reading a brand new Christmas annual by flashlight under the bedcovers.

Although my Mum is always so good about my need to listen to stories of her childhood, I realised that Christmas was one area that we hadn’t really talked about.  I wondered how many of our family traditions were carried over from her childhood and so we had a lovely talk about it last week.

We talked of typical Welsh winters with rain and snow, once in a while deep enough to halt travel.  Mum remembered her Dad and some other village men walking to Llandre one year, to pick up food that was sent by train from Aberystwyth because the roads were blocked.

We talked of Christmas Eve with an early bedtime so that my grandparents could put up the tree and decorate it.  The living room was strung with paper chains and paper lanterns.  Stockings were filled with nuts, oranges, apples, coins, yoyos and new skipping ropes and new Girl’s annuals, Beano or Dandy were wrapped and set next to the stockings.  When I asked Mum what her favourite Christmas memory was, she told me it was ‘always’ coming downstairs on Christmas morning and seeing the tree.  Christmas gifts for Mum were always books (she never liked dolls).  I laughed at Mum’s memory of going to the shop to buy her Mum either Ponds  vanishing cream, or the biggest and shiniest ring or broach she could find and cigarettes for her Dad, because my own memory of Christmas shopping was buying Mum the largest most colourful bottle of perfume I could find and cigarettes or tobacco for my Dad.  After all our parents deserved the biggest and the best!

Perhaps my love of food stems from my Grandparent’s home.  The smell of food cooking in their home still permeates my brain.  It was many years before I realised that all this wonderful food was made without a real kitchen, as my Grandparents only had a cast iron oven/hearth, similar to those shown on the Bricks and Brass website and once in a while the primus stove was called in to action. There was no running water in the house either, so water was collected from the village water pump close by.  However, delicious rice and tapioca puddings came from that oven on a Sunday and Welsh cakes were baked on the griddle.  Christmas dinner was a similar meal to Sunday dinner, with a goose, duck or chicken from Mamgu’s cousin’s farm and Christmas cake and mince pies. After dinner, parents napped in front of the fire, while children grabbed pieces of cardboard to go sledding if there was snow.

Welsh Christmas traditions such as Plygain, Mari Lwyd are well covered on websites such as BBC Wales and Historic UK, but if those were held in the village, they were not attended by my family.  However New Year was a really important time.  My Grandparent’s home always had a welcoming open door, but at New Year everyone’s homes were open for friends and family to visit.  The children headed out well before noon to participate in Calennig by singing carols at homes in the village and they were given a coin or apple in exchange for singing.  Mum told me she was always excited to put this money towards new shoes from Emlyn’s Shoe shop.

I loved this Christmas conversation with my Mum, but yet part of me felt sad afterwards – not at the memories, but at what Christmas has become.  My Christmas shopping list seems to have become a series of gift card purchases at the request of family members.  So I fret and worry, hoping that our grown children will have the warm, delicious memories of Christmas that Mum and I have - because I wouldn’t trade any of those memories for the biggest, shiniest gift in the world!

Enjoy making your own memories this Christmas and New Year! 

Nadolig Llawen a Blwyddyn Newydd Dda!

Ancestral Wales. 

 

Happy St. David’s Day

To everyone with an attachment to Wales – Happy St. David’s day. I shall be enjoying Welsh Cakes and a cuppa tea in honour of the day!