Lazy W Marie

Carpeing all the diems in semi-rural Oklahoma...xoxo

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What Opening Papa Joe’s Journal has Also Opened Up

February 17, 2014

After posting that first little excerpt from my great-grandfather’s apiary journal, a couple of wonderful things have happened. It all makes me even more excited to continue exploring this delicate treasure.

First, I took the old green journal with me to last month’s Frontier Country beekeepers’ meeting and asked one of the old timers, Chuddie, if he recognized my Papa Joe’s name. It may sound like a long shot to you, but Joe Nieberding was a slightly older contemporary of Chuddie’s in the seventies and eighties, and the Oklahoma beekeepers keep a pretty tight circle. Also, Papa Joe was apparently president of the statewide beekeepers’ association for some years and was pretty well known.

Well, Chuddie definitely recognized the name. His face lit up and he nodded slowly then said with firmness, “Oh yeah, yes of course I knew him! Joe was quite a beekeeper. I learned a lot from him.” That was the first time I had ever heard someone refer to our family patriarch without his proper title, “Papa,” and it was strangely endearing. The feeling was akin to realizing your parents have friends and colleagues who love and respect them but have nothing to do with you or your siblings. Weird, but proud. And never mind that I had first just shown Chuddie this yellowed newspaper clipping of my Papa Joe. 

Papa Joe calming a swarm of wild bees, most likely destined for his personal apiary in Miami, OK.
This is Papa Joe calming a swarm of wild bees, most likely destined for his personal apiary in Miami, OK. I found the photo between the pages of his beautifully scrawled journal.

 

“Do you know this man?” I said awkwardly, indicating someone fully dressed and covered to the point of perfect anonymity.

“Are you touched in the head?” Chuddie might have thought. “Someone take her bees away pronto.” 

Anyway, Chuddie was as sweet as honey and never actually said that. In fact his kind words about Papa Joe brought tears to my eyes. I resolved at that moment to learn everything I possibly could from this journal. It really is a treasure, both from the family history perspective and that of the beekeeper trying to learn from someone’s firsthand experience.

 

This journal entry mentions missing bees with no explanation as well as queen economics, two problems that beekeepers still discuss. And January rain.
This journal entry mentions missing bees with no explanation as well as queen economics, two problems that beekeepers still discuss. And January rain.

 

Whatever your hobby, wouldn’t you love to have an expert with decades of experience coaching you, whispering gently at your elbow of his trials and errors while you feel your way through a new challenge?

That brief exchange with Chuddie was amazing and inspirational. Then this happened…

Last week I received a note from a gentleman named  John Foust, a distant cousin who grew up with my Dad and his siblings and who spent lots of time with Papa and Mimi Nieberding during his college years. You can actually read John’s first note as a comment on that first apiary journal entry; I’ve inserted it here.

Joe Nieberding was my grandmother’s little brother. I grew up with the wonder of his veterinary hospital, his bees, his pigeons and his amazing garden. And the mysterious basement. I spent a lot of time with him, refitting the wax bee frames, playing with some of the puppies, and hearing him name some of the pigeons. Aunt Velma and I attended community concerts together at the NEO Fine Arts Center, my first experience with some of the old big band groups such as Fred Waring. Velma’s mother Mrs. Seamster lived across the street from the college. I mowed her lawn as a kid, and parked in her driveway when I attended NEO. She always had a jar of cookies for a hungry college student. Uncle Joe’s notebook must be an amazing peek back into history for you. The story I remember as what must have been most memorable was that “Army Captain” Joe and Velma attended the premier showing of Gone With The Wind in Atlanta. Velma talked about the reception afterward with the actors. Dr. Joe and Velma were amazing people.

Wow. This beautiful couple who were already gentle, loving, and fascinating to my memory have so many stories I have never heard. What a colorful life they built! I had no idea that sharing Papa Joe’s apiary journal piecemeal would yield such a wonderful history lesson, such a kaleidoscope view into my own family. 

John I have emailed a bit since and I am hopeful that along with my Dad he will help me share more stories about the Nieberding gardens, home life, and bee yards. It all felt so magical to me as a little girl, and my wish to know more might be granted.

And can I just say how refreshing it is that someone else remembers the fabled cellar and its toothy  dangers? I mean, I grew up believing all dark bodies of standing water to contain hungry crocodiles. Even small puddles.

This gorgeous honeycomb, empty, still smells magical. I keep it on my writing desk.
This gorgeous honeycomb, empty, still smells magical. I keep it on my writing desk.

What childhood memories of your own would you like to expand? Which of your elders would you love to sit down with and take notes from their lives? Who do you emulate, either accidentally or by design?

For the record, we only have alligators in Oklahoma.

Definitely no crocodiles.

Probably.

XOXOXOXO

Related posts:

  1. This Time Last Year…
  2. The Secret Life of bees (a very long & personal book review)
  3. all abuzz at the oklahoma state fair
  4. extra curricular activities, lately

3 Comments
Filed Under: beekeeping

Comments

  1. Kat says

    February 18, 2014 at 6:02 pm

    Wow!!! I love this! The responses you got, the journey it’s sending you one. Book worthy! Someone get this lady a deal!

    Reply
  2. Marie at the Lazy W says

    February 18, 2014 at 9:17 pm

    Kat, thanks!! I am super psyched about the whole thing, just overall a wonderfully surprising experience, you know?? Thanks for your enthusiasm! xoxo And yes to a book deal. Yes PLEASE. :-))

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. happy return to frontier bee club | The (Not Always) Lazy W says:
    August 20, 2014 at 1:03 pm

    […] beekeeping mentor back in the 1970′s. Chuddie clearly remembered Joe Neiberding when I first brought the apiary journal with me, and it just makes me feel wonderful in so many ways. Life can be beautifully full circle once in a […]

    Reply

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Hi! I'm Marie. Welcome to the Lazy W. xoxo

Hi! I’m Marie. This is the Lazy W.

A hobby farming, book reading, coffee drinking, romance having, miles running girl in Oklahoma. Soaking up the particular beauty of every day. Blogging on the side. Welcome to the Lazy W!

I Believe Strongly in the Power of Gratitude & Joy Seeking

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