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Bridge to Newport
After my father’s 91st birthday, we drove to York
PA and met the latest addition to the Topper family, a Golden Lab pup named
Sadie. We celebrated Pat’s father’s 86th birthday. He is still doing
well for his age.
Back in MD we winterized our RV and put our RV and trailer
in storage at Susan and Windsor’s home. We moved in with Tom and Julie. Back to
York for Thanksgiving at the Topper’s home and then we left for a week in a
timeshare in Jamestown, RI. This was right across the bridge from Newport. It
was not a great week weather wise, but we did have a great view from our unit
of the bridge (see first photo). We did
go into Newport and tour a couple of the “summer homes”. I felt real bad that
income tax put an end to this Gilded Age of
“conspicuous consumption”. We hiked several parks and visited a few
forts. Ft Adams was so big, you could fit 3 normal forts of the same era inside
its walls. I guess Newport is the Texas of New England. On check out day, we raced back to MD, so we
would not be caught in a major ice storm.
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Pat at Gate to Breakers Mansion |
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Breaker's Interior |
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Marble House Interior |
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Snowy Owl |
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Ft Adams |
My father’s mobility problems got to the point that he
needed considerable help. Helen’s daughter Elizabeth had been living with them since
October and provided much needed assistance. It was obvious that the time had
come to find an assisted living facility (ALF). Our friends Lois and Eldon had
just completed a search for an ALF for Eldon’s mother. Their guidance helped me
complete the task in a few weeks. On
Friday Dec. 13, Pat had outpatient surgery for neuroma excision on her foot.
Concurrently, a RN for the ALF evaluated my father, as required, prior to
admission to an ALF. She recommended that he be hospitalized due to a buildup
of fluid in his chest. I took him to Franklin Square General Hospital that
night and they determined that he had pneumonia and admitted him. I had him
enrolled in an ALF the next day, so he would have a place to go when he was
released from the hospital. I spent most of the next two weeks visiting my dad
and getting his belongings pared down for his new studio apartment.
Unfortunately his condition deteriorated, as he picked up two infections in the
hospital, one causing severe diarrhea. Because he was aspirating, they inserted
a feeding tube directly into his stomach. It looked like he might now need a
nursing home after his time in rehab.
Of course this was the Christmas season so we tried to make
a few parties. We were back in York for Christmas Eve and had Christmas
breakfast at the Topper’s. We drove to Baltimore and had dinner with my family
at my sister’s home. Afterwards we all went to the hospital and sang Christmas carols
to my father.
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Jacobs family |
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Potter Family |
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My Dad |
On New Year’s Eve, I visited my father; he was feeling a lot
of pain in his stomach while I was there. On my way back to Laurel, I got an
emergency call from his doctor. He told me my dad was not able to breathe on
his own. Pat and I met Barbara at the hospital and our father passed away a few
hours later. Considering his condition, it was probably a blessing.
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Brookgreen Gardens |
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Getting advice from a pelican |
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St Augustine Lighthouse
After the funeral, we delayed our departure south, so we
could handle some of Dad’s affairs and get all his clothes and furnishings
moved out of Helen’s house. By Jan 10, we were ready for a break. Apparently I
had been a bit stressed out during the last month. We loaded the RV, headed
down to Myrtle Beach and enjoyed a week in a timeshare. We spent a few extra
days along the SC coast, before heading down to FL where we caught up with
Linda Erby. We toured the NE coast of FL all the way down to St Augustine, which
we spent several days exploring. By the end of the month we were in the Ocala
NF. We paddled Juniper Springs and I aggravated my neck stenosis. This caused a
lot of pain from my neck to my right hand.
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Castillo (Fort at St Augustine) |
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Don and Pat at Castillo |
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Flagler College |
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Don and Linda at Ft Menendez |
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Lightner Museum |
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Juniper Springs Mill |
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Linda on Juniper Springs |
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Juniper Springs |
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