Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 October 2014

Weldon B Astle

The Germans have a word for everything, don't they?   

My personal favorite would be Kummerspeck: literally "grief bacon".  It is the food you eat when you are stressed out and grieving.  Your body has a bit of a freak out when you get bad news and goes into survival mode: things are bad, you better eat something.  A lot of something.  

So, while I've been experimenting with vegetarianism lately (re-experimenting?  Don't worry, I won't force you to grill those vile tofu dogs for me) and I haven't really felt the need for rampant bacon consumption, my heart has been heavy with the news of the passing of my grandfather.

Yes, he was 88 years old.  He lived as good a life as any- the world has never seen a more ethical hard working man.  His mind was sharp right to the end.  I was always intimated by his intelligence and power of recall- we would talk about a trip to Arizona or California, and he'd start rattling off route numbers and names of towns where he had stayed 60 years ago.  The same with New York.  "Have you ever heard of Floyd Bennet Field?" he asked me once.  Why yes, we would take the motorcycle out there and ride around the abandoned runways and explore the swamps where the mob dumps the bodies.  How could a person have room in their brains to remember that was where you flew into while hitching a ride on a military convoy plane in 1944?  I stood by the baggage claim at Heathrow for the JFK flight for a half hour once before I remembered I had flew from Logan.  

We liked the same music.  Well, for the most part.  Lawrence Welk was a bit too white bread for me, but he was down with the jazz music and that's just groovy as far as I was concerned.

He was opinionated and funny and really just held it together when everyone else couldn't.   He always just knew what the right thing to do was- stopping to assist people broken down on the side of a lonely northern Maine stretch of road, giving Appalachian Trail hikers a lift into town, giving some poor souls on an Outward Bound mission the fish he had just caught.  Ah, and thrifty!  Growing up in the depression really molds you.  Every report on anything I did in grade school was based on information gleaned from an encyclopedia set that the local library was just throwing away and he rescued from some horrible fate.  No matter that I couldn't write a report about anything that started with G, N or W as those were mysteriously missing, and no one seemed to ever fact check that I was using figures from the 1968 editions, but those outdated dinosaurs kept me in A's all through grade school.  

We got the news of his cancer in the Spring.  Sadly and cruelly, a slow agonizing end was in store as the disease robbed him of all his senses- his hearing, his taste- and any joy.  He put on a brave face until he couldn't any longer.  

We got to work on an obituary a few days after he passed.  I submitted it to the local newspaper and found it would cost $450 and would run for a day.  Picture would be extra.  Screw you, Bangor Daily.  You can start a blog for free, post as many lines as you would like and the obituary will run for-EVER.  Also, ampersands are not slang, I can put as many of them as I want &&&&&  so screw you.  
Aside from the death-profiteering local newspaper grating my nerves, I've been holding up.  I hope the rest of the family can say the same, if not right this moment, perhaps very soon.  

So here it is, the new and improved illustrated obituary, which will live on somewhere in the vast expanses of the internet for eternity.  Grandma, it's not costing you a dime.  


Weldon Bryant Astle passed away on October 11th, 2014. He was surrounded by his family at home in Millinocket, the same house where he was born on July 31st ,1926.  Weldon was the son of Tyler and Amy (Surrette) Astle and was predeceased by his two older brothers Peter and Warren and younger sister Charlene.  He was an avid outdoorsman and spent a great deal of his life in the woods surrounding Millinocket.

Weldon left high school at 16 to join the US Marines, serving in the Pacific during World War II and again when he reenlisted to serve in Korea.  Upon returning to civilian life, he worked as a painter and steeplejack in Rochester, NY.  This is where he met the love of his life , Donna Haigh Astle.  This union was blessed with five daughters.


Weldon returned to Millinocket where he continued to work as a painter, paper hanger and for the Millinocket School system.  He served on the Millinocket Fire Department’s Pioneer Hose Company from 1960 to 1989 and assisted the Baxter State Park search and rescue team that went out in any weather to rescue lost and injured hikers.  He loved the North Woods and had many adventures hiking and camping with his family and friends.  His exploits were legendary, such as the time he skied down Mt. Katahdin.  He was filled with stories of long treks, paddles and portages on his way to find just the right fishing spot or spring with good sweet water.  Weldon was a lifelong learner, and his curiosity and natural inquisitiveness made for fascinating conversations in a wide range of subjects.  His accomplishments were honored by his family and friends when he was given a high school diploma, complete with School of Life graduation ceremony at his beloved camp on North Twin Lake. Although set in his ways, he would surprise  us with his openness of mind.  His loved ones miss his dignity, humor, and humility.   His example will live on and continue to inspire.  





He is survived by his wife Donna, his daughters Amy Astle Pease of Millinocket, Lori MacKenzie and partner Steve Onacki of Biddeford, Patricia and husband Roy Evans of New Bern, North Carolina, son in law William Radon of Glen Ellyn, Illinois; grandchildren Sara MacKenzie and Bryan B; Tyler, wife Chelsea, and Hannah Pease; Kyle, Andrew and Paige Radon, and Natalie Evans.  He was predeceased by daughters Elizabeth Astle and Susan Radon, and grandson Ryan MacKenzie.

A service to celebrate Weldon’s life will be held on Saturday October 25th, 2014 at the Millinocket Cemetery at 11 am. In lieu of flowers donations should be made to Baxter State Park at 64  Balsam Drive, Millinocket, ME 04462 or the Ronald McDonald House in Bangor, ME.





Tuesday, 29 November 2011

Thanksgiving!

I hope that everyone had a wonderful Thanksgiving. Any holiday that involves overeating with your loved ones can't be all that bad, right?

Thanksgiving 2011

As long as I have enough booze to see me through...

Thanksgiving is by far my favorite holiday. Sometimes I make a mini thanksgiving dinner at home when the mood strikes me, usually in mid-April. Since my family lives in the far reaches of northern Maine and they aren't exactly easily accessible, visits are few and far between and they are usually a pretty big effort on my part to get there. No matter though. So we got nearly a foot of snow this year...it was pretty stunning to wake up surrounded by deep winter.

Thanksgiving 2011

Thanksgiving 2011

No matter that I didn't have my winter boots on me since it's still a balmy 60 in New York as of late so I wouldn't even know where to start looking for them. I did get yelled at for punching holes in the lawn with my spike heels before changing into a pair of enormous Wellies that were handy.

Family thinks I might be a tad special. I just go along with it.

Because he just had major surgery, my Grandfather isn't supposed to be using the chainsaw or lifting more than 25 pounds, but apparently he's ok to get the snowblower going.

Thanksgiving 2011

It left the younger generation to deal with the downed trees.

Thanksgiving 2011

Thanksgiving 2011

Thanksgiving 2011

Thanksgiving 2011

Thanksgiving 2011

We also have a nice tradition to grill the turkey slow and low out on the Webber.

Thanksgiving 2011

I normally count turkey as one of my least favorite animals to eat, but do it up on the grill over coals and I'm in heaven. It's perfectly juicy with that lovely smokey taste that leads me to believe that I might be a closeted Southerner.

Thanksgiving 2011

Thanksgiving 2011

Thanksgiving 2011

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It makes me contemplate thankfulness, of course. I have my health and I live better than the majority of the world does.

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I am thankful that the kitchen is small enough so that you couldn't possibly fit one more person around the sink to do dishes.

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I got to clean the turkey carcass instead. For some sick reason, I love doing that job and I get about as Zen'ed out as one possibly can while dealing with a giant mutant bird carcass.

Thanksgiving is right at the tail end of deer hunting season in Maine. Growing up, we always had venison for or with dinner since someone ought to have gotten a deer tagged by then. For whatever reason, no one in the family hunts any more. Bambi gets to frolic around the back yard while we're eating notdeer.

It was fabulous to see everyone and interesting to see the landscape change as I'm usually only willing to make that journey in the middle of summer, when the lake has no ice on it and the brave might even dip a toe in.

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I couldn't leave Maine without finding a descent Lobster roll either. It just doesn't feel right.