Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Home For Sale

  Thanks for all for the encouraging comments on my last post.  Hearing the personal stories of all the successful knee replacements has helped me feel confident that I’m going to get through this just fine.  I think the most repeated advice was to faithfully do all the exercises prescribed and I will do that, for sure!  

  


We have been having some wet weather after a very long summer dry spell and lots of fungi has shown up.  Look at this one.  It’s growing on the ground and is the size of a basketball! It started out white and soft and has slowly changed to bright orange and quite stiff.  







  We were on our way to Charleston one morning last week and stopped at a small outdoor coffee shop.  The town we were in has a law banning single use plastic shopping bags and plastic straws (yay!) so most places either don’t offer straws at all or offer paper ones.  
  This coffee shop has pasta straws — uncooked noodles!— available for their iced coffee!  We have steel straws that we bring in with our reusable cups so we didn’t try them out.  Definitely a biodegradable alternative to plastic!











  One of the many gorgeous old southern mansions in Georgetown, the Mary Man-Hazard-Doyle house circa 1775, is for sale!  Are you interested?

  Miss Mary Man was the owner of one of the largest rice plantations near Georgetown and had the house built for “in town” entertaining of guests.  Crafted from handhewn cypress from the plantation, the house has eight original fireplaces, four bedrooms, and 7,000 square feet of original heart pine floors.  It has withstood the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, and numerous hurricanes so I think it has proven it’s a sound investment.

  AND it comes with its own ghost!  Last week a woman dressed in gray appeared behind the For Sale sign on Front Street, the ghost of Theodosia Burr Alston, daughter of U.S. Vice President Aaron Burr and wife of a governor of South Carolina. 

  Alas, Theodosia was a New York City girl who hated plantation life with all the heat, humidity, mosquitoes, and such.  Then in December 1812, despairing over the recent loss of her only child, a 10-year-old boy, she was entertained in the Man home.  After attending a New Years Eve party, she boarded a schooner to set sail for New York City to visit family. The Patriot was lost at sea off the coast of North Carolina, either to a storm or to pirates.  Theodosia, 29 years old, was never found and thus has no grave.  Hence, she often wanders the night from the Man house down to the Georgetown docks, where an old brick warehouse still stands, presumably still hoping to make her way home to civilization in New York.

  So are you still interested in a lovely old home?  It’s only $2,959,000.  A bit steep but remember — that includes eight original fireplaces and the ghost of Theodosia Burr Alston!  
 

13 comments:

  1. It is gorgeous. Aren't old houses so interesting. They are remodeling an old beauty in my neighborhood that is in terrible disrepair. I tried to look up the history but couldn't find records far enough back. I would love to know how lived in my beauty and what their story was.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I never would have thought of using pasta as a substitute for straws, but what a great idea. More restaurants would do well to latch on to this practice. Kudos to you for always carrying your own metal straws.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I wish we could completely do away with plastic straws. The pasta straws are perfect. I love that old house. It's beautiful. But I would never sleep a wink. Scares me to even think about going to bed in one of those old bedrooms.

    ReplyDelete
  4. How clever to use pasta as a straw substitute. I never use straws, even when I order iced tea. The home is beautiful but I don't care to buy a home with a ghost, thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  5. That looks a wonderful home with a ghost.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I like those plantation houses, would certainly sit in a rocking chair in the front place...:) But I don't like ghosts...

    ReplyDelete
  7. Oh, this straw ban thing! I can't figure out why we use straws anyway. So, I don't use them. My tea (or soda) goes down just fine. I wonder if I will ever see a ghost in my lifetime. I think I once saw a UFO but everyone said I was just imaging things. I guess if I said I saw a ghost they'd say the same thing... just in my head. he he.

    ReplyDelete
  8. In my younger years I would have loved buying a house like that, but I couldn't afforded it then anymore than I could now.

    I've never seen pasta straws! That is so cool. I carry my own paper and steel straws. I like the frequent reminder to be more conscious of recycling in general. I have even bought the little mess bags to use for produce when I shop to cut down on the plastic bags I used to go home with.

    I missed the post about knee replacing but I've had two and your take-away was on target. Practice getting in and out of chairs using your arms BEFORE the surgery helps too.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Por Béjar con la llegada de la lluvia han salido por todos lado.No creo que comprara esa casa con fantasma :)) Cynthia.
    Buen jueves.
    Un abrazo.

    ReplyDelete
  10. A bargain price! Don't think I would like to use a pasta straw but it's good to see people are thinking outside the box. Many places no longer offer straws which seems the best way to go.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Wow that is some house...no thanks too much to clean:)

    ReplyDelete
  12. Pasta Straws that's a new idea like it! Here's to your speedy recovery for your new knee.
    Wren x

    ReplyDelete
  13. I love Laura Childs Indigo Tea Shop mystery series. The main character is Theodosia Browning who was named after Theodosia Burr Alston. She has told the story of the original Theodosia in several books. It is very interesting to have more information about her.

    ReplyDelete