Thursday, December 15, 2011

My light-up Santas



My girlies.  Santa and his reindeer appear to fly through the sky!
      I started collecting vintage plastic, light -up decorations the summer of 1994.  At the time I was really into going to garage/estate sales searching for hidden treasures.  I was at the estate sale of an old woman who had lived on the mesa, and I found this mint condition light-up lawn decoration of Santa in his sleigh with 2 reindeer, still in the box.  I got it for a steal, because everyone, including my husband, thought it was white trash.  Well, I was determined to prove I had purchased a vintage treasure.  Nine months pregnant with our second child, Michelle, whose birthday is today, December 14th, I got out the ladder and tie wire and decided to find a way to make the Santa and reindeer fly.  I was able to string the sleigh and reindeer and suspend them from two eye hole screws that were already exactly where I needed them.  I have never figured out what the previous owners of my 97 year old house would have used the screws for but I took it as a sign that I was on the right path.  Some how, in my very cumbersome condition, I got that Santa and reindeer to fly, all by myself (with the help of a few expletives!).  I'm proud to say, my husband loved the effect of the flying Santa, I was proved right and it subsequently became a holiday staple for us and the neighborhood.  For years we would describe our house as the one with the flying Santa at Christmastime. Sadly, years of weathering, and more than a few wind storms put our Flying Santa to rest, but I have expanded my collection to indoor light-up Santas.  When lit, the Santas give such a festive glow to any room...even the bathroom.
My daughter, Natalie found this one at a garage sale...$1!

Look at that patina! I got this one in an antique store in
San Diego because it reminded me so much of my childhood.
Notice the Currier and Ives print in the background.
Another collection.

I think the Santas look great even when they aren't lit up.  I got the little Santa last year after Christmas
in an antique shop in Carpinteria.  My daughter, Gabrielle, bought me the other one at the Rose Bowl Swap meet.



How magical do the Santas make my hot cocoa station look?

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Christmas Magic From Goss Cottage

In the tradition of Dickens' England, we named our house "Goss Cottage".
     Well, Christmastime is officially upon us.  December is a magical time of year, from the extreme excitement children feel, with 'hopes that Saint Nicholas soon will be here', to the kinetic frenzy of the grown-ups who feel the necessity to add so much into their already hectic lives, in a halfway balanced and sane way.  Do you ever wonder how it all gets done? How do we add re-decorating the majority of the house, outings to the tree farm to pick out the perfect tree, creating and distributing Christmas cards, thinking up and buying clever and heart felt gifts for those we love, going to and/or throwing parties (that require outfits being purchased, nails and hair being done, though I rarely get to nails and hair, much to my disappointment, dishes being prepared or purchased, and the house being cleaned, at the very least),  baking of cookies, watching of Christmas specials, and finding time to enjoy it all? 
     Tomorrow is my 2nd daughter, Michelle's 17th birthday and my oldest daughter, Natalie, will turn 20 in another week.  We try to make birthdays special around here, and when the girls were younger we always had big parties for them individually, so that was added to my "December Panic".  No wonder I have a reoccurring dream that it's Christmas Eve, I'm shopping at Long's Drug Store, needing to buy all my Christmas presents with $20 and the store is closing in 20 minutes! I'm rushing around the isles trying to find something that will make my kids dreams come true and nothing seems to fit the bill. (Literally!) Sometimes I dream it's Christmas morning and I've forgotten to get everything ready for Santa Claus.  My kids are waking up and coming into my room and I'm trying to scramble around and unscramble my foggy brain and come up with an excuse as to why Santa didn't come yet! Dreams? more like nightmares.  Moms on overload.  My mom used to say she wished Christmas wasn't all about the presents and that it was more about the good feeling.  Boy, did I ever think that was a 'bah humbug' attitude.  What could be more fun for a kid than to look at their presents under the tree, wondering what great surprises awaited them...often stacking them to see who had the most...probably about the time my mom mentioned she wished Christmas wasn't all about the presents when she noticed the stacks were uneven!! I thought, 'gosh, Mom, how can you say that? Christmas is soooo fun. '  I sure understand her now, though I still remember that incredibly, somewhat indescribable, excited feeling that only Christmas could bring, and because I do, I still side with the children, at my own expense. (no pun intended) I think, because my own childhood was so enchanted, I put a lot of pressure on myself to recreate that Christmas magic for my own children.  I look at them and wonder, "are they feeling as happy and awe struck as I felt?" I just can't tell.  My siblings and I had butterflies the whole month of December, right down until the moment all the presents were open.  At that point emotions ran the gamut going from the happiest time of the year to the most depressing, because at that moment, even though it's still Christmas day, you are at the  farthest point from the next Christmas.  Talk about crashing down off a high.  Isn't it funny...now I enjoy Christmas night thinking, whew... a whole year before I have to do this again.  Don't get me wrong.  I love Christmas.  It is the most wonderful time of the year, but it is also a monumental amount of work, so when I get through it, I'm relieved.
     These are some  Christmas family traditions I cherish the most:
1. Going to Lane Farms to pick out the perfect tree.  The smell of the trees still makes my stomach do somersaults.
2.  Driving around with the whole family, looking for the best lights and decorations.
3. Watching our favorite Christmas specials. As many versions as possible of Charles Dickens', A Christmas Carol, How The Grinch Stole Christmas and The Grinch,  A Charlie Brown Christmas, Rudolph, Frosty The Snowman, Elf, Heidi (the Shirley Temple version), The Holiday, Home Alone, You've Got Mail, Miracle on 34th Street (both versions), and of course, our very favorite...It's a Wonderful Life, which we watch every year on Christmas Eve.  What a great movie.  Year after year, we cry as we see George Bailey overcome the challenges life brings to an everyday guy, who  is anything but average.  "George Bailey, I'll love you 'til the day I die."
4. Spending time in the Christmas room, sitting in front of the fire, sipping eggnog, basking in the glow of the tree.
5. Playing Christmas music.  Our favorite album is Johnny Mathis. (His first album) Every Christmas morning, the kids wake us up around 7am.  Dave goes down stairs, brews the coffee (essential), lights the fire, gets the camcorder ready, and turns on Johnny, (...chestnuts roasting on an open fire...), signaling the kids that it's okay to come down stairs to see what Santa brought them.  Pure magic. James Taylor's At Christmas, is another favorite...especially his version of Auld Lang Syne...very touching.  Perry Como, Tony Benett, Dean Martin, Bing Crosby, the great Nat King Cole, The Carpenters, and Vince Gill (Let there be Peace on Earth, is beautiful), all deserve honorable mention.
Last year's Christmas hearth


Enjoying some window art on our way downtown.
This barber shop on Arlington in Santa Barbara, always goes all out!
In front of Lewis and Clark, my favorite store in Santa Barbara. (taken last year)
Lizzie's ready for the Holiday Parade

7. Walking downtown with the family to do some Christmas shopping, eat dinner and see a movie.  This really puts me in the Christmas spirit.

8. Setting a festive table for Christmas Eve dinner.  We usually have a standing rib roast with Yorkshire pudding, baked potatoes, and roasted asparagus. We raise our glasses to "Mr. Scrooge, founder of the feast... and vow to honor Christmas in our hearts and try to keep it all the year. God bless us every one."
9. Opening one present after dinner on Christmas Eve.  It is always matching, cozy jammies, that we wear to watch It's a Wonderful Life.
10. Having the privilege to get everything ready for Santa, even if it takes until 3 am.  How can I be so lucky to have such a charmed life.  Thank you Jesus, Mary and Joseph!
You can bet Johhny's playing in the background.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

I'm back!


Hello, all.  I'm back and new and improved.  While trying to buy the domain name for Holiday Mama, I discovered someone already owned it...the nerve!! So I decided to add a little spice to my name and embrace my Hispanic roots by changing my name to Holiday Mamasita (holidaymamasita.blogspot.com).  My 9 year old daughter, Lizzie, looked horrified when I told of the change, saying, "Mom, 'mamasita' means 'sexy lady'!" (She attends a diverse school where the term 'mamasita' is thrown around the playground.) "Are you trying to say you're a sexy lady?" I told her mamasita literally means, 'little mama', but if the shoe fits.... Anyway, I now own the domain and am for evermore Holiday Mamasita! Sorry for the lapse.
     I am a person in love with the past.  I am fascinated with my ancestry and that of my children, the history of my 97 year old haunted house, antiques and vintage memorabilia.  I collect many things, but the mother load is my collection of Christmas "stuff".
I collect antique or vintage: ornaments, glass bead garland, Currier and Ives prints, plastic light-up Santa's, butter pats that I place in plate hangers and hang on the tree, red transfereware, Christmas trees, post cards, tablecloths, records, molds and so much more.  I love when things have a well-used and well-loved patina and a history.  
  Tradition is also central in my life, and we have many of them in mi familia. (see that easy use of Espanol? I am a Mamasita, after all!)  History, collecting and tradition go hand in hand around here, and I'll be sharing some of mine with you.  I hope you likey.
  -Holiday Mamasita


Me enjoying a tissue restorer








Friday, December 2, 2011

Parting is such sweet sorrow

How was your Thanksgiving "Stuffing"?

Some of the accoutrements to Katie's splendid cooking
Katie H.'s Blue Ribbon Bird!
     I was adequately stuffed this year, but mostly I was satisfied.  The good food was of major importance, I admit, but my favorite part was all the family togetherness.   I feel so lucky to have a family that loves to spend time together: from the little kids, to the teenagers/young adults, to the old folks, we spend as much time together as possible.   Many people have commented on this phenomenon, and on why we seem to be so pleased with each other's company.  I  don't know exactly why it's true, but I know we were always loved unconditionally by our parents, no matter how stupidly we behaved, ( and we try to carry the tradition on with our own kids), we laugh at ourselves and each other on a constant basis, (if laughter leads to longevity, which I believe it does, then we should all live long lives, and we add a few years with each gathering), we root for each other, feeling that an achievement by one of our members is a feather in our own cap, not something to envy, we clear the air having big blow-ups when needed, feeling secure in the fact that it will all blow over, and we are rooted by our much loved and often remembered common past.   We are a clannish group, descended from our esteemed Scottish kinsman, Sir Walter Scott, and love to pass down the 'old stories' much as he did.
Welcome one...


welcome all.
Smiffers
Elsita
Matt, Julie and Ellie

Mr. Bramble pants, Danny, Matt, Pat and Rick
Daniel (our newly married Nephew-in-law)

Gammy consulting her cooking bible



  Our week together, started early for me, on the Friday night before Thanksgiving, when I drove down to San Diego, to meet my younger brother, Pat, at my parents house, to help put the place back together after an extensive remodel of the lower level.  We needed to finish laying the laminate flooring in one room,  (Pat, my mom and new nephew-in-law, Daniel, had already finished the rest of the house, thanks guys!), to sort  through my Nana's boxes and boxes of stuff, (she is 97 years old and living in an old folks home), deciding what to keep and what to pass on, to put the bedrooms back together, and then, get ready for 33 people for Thanksgiving and beyond! It was a daunting task, let me tell you!  We took 6 truck loads to the dump and 4 to the thrift store. (A special shout out to my nephew, Kacy, for having a great attitude and helping with the heavy lifting whenever asked!) I have to admit I enjoyed getting the chance to go to the dump with my dad, just like when I was a little girl. Simple pleasures!  Amazingly, we were still speaking by Wednesday afternoon, but we still needed to get the upstairs in shape, do most of the shopping, all of the cooking and set up the dinner tables! Yikes! No rest for the weary! By this time the troops were descending.  My husband and daughters had arrived the night before and were ready to help.  I am so proud to say all the older girls rolled up their sleeves and scrubbed the kitchen leaving it ship shape and Bristol fashion.  Everyone really pitched in, giving credence to the old saying, 'many hands make light work'.  I knew there was a reason we had so many kids!  The stamina of my 71 year old mother was very impressive.  I don't know many women her age who could muster the will and energy to do what she did.  Her selfless devotion to our family is probably the biggest reason we love each other so much!  Once again, miraculously, everything got done and done well, for that matter.  We sat down, our plates laden with Thanksgiving splendor, ready to dig in when, clink, clink, clink, someone had the nerve to propose a toast.  In our family, it is a tradition, for various family members, to stand and make a loving toast to the family.  If no one starts the ball rolling, the kids will invariably start yelling, "speech, speech!" What always starts with a smile and a laugh, quickly transitions to quivering lips and tears, but ultimately leaves us feeling grateful, appreciated and full.  It is of utmost importance to mark special occasions with words, to thank and remark upon the unique nature of such gatherings, no matter how hard it is to do.  The more you do it, the easier it becomes and the whole affair becomes more memorable.
Natalie, Nana, Mason and Kacy mucking it up!
Natalie and Smith
Mason, Natalie, Daniel, Carrie, Maddie, Kacy and Emma
Gabrielle on top, Lizzie, Gretchen, Elsa and Smith

Traditional sweet potatoes with marshmallows
Now that's a pretty bird!


Praline Sweet Potatoes
10 lbs. Yukon Golds

One of the two tables we had set

    We continued our love fest on Friday, by going to my nephew, Kacy's, high school football playoff game.  It was a bitter-sweet occasion, as we have had the good fortune to be in the playoffs for the last 4 years over Thanksgiving break, but because my nephew is a senior this year, it will be our last for a few years.   We bundled up in our green and black, ready to cheer on #20, Kacy Smith.  My little nephews Smith and Madsen wore their team warm-up jackets with Kacy's name and number, and "Scottie in training" logo, and sat mesmerized by the game.  Our team, the Helix Highlanders, have a powerhouse program and are competitive year in and year out ( Reggie Bush and Alex Smith, to name a few alumni, went there...in fact my brother, Pat, went to prom with Alex Smith's sister when he attended Helix!) but this year's team is one for the record books!  They are so good that they have a good chance to play for State Champion, but because they are so good, the games have gotten a little boring, because they roll over their opponents.  The game ended with the 2nd and 3rd stringers, who are very good too,  and a score of 44 to 7, with a running clock, but Kacy had a great game.  Last year Kacy made First Team All East County, First Team All League,  First Team All CIF, First Team All Academic, and all as an underclassman.  He's not my son so I can can brag.  I can't wait to learn what accolades he receives this year!  Our hearts swelled with pride, as we left the field for the last time ( until another Smith dons the sacred Scottie uniform).
   The party progressed on Saturday, with a trip the mountainside town of Julian, to take a ride on Smith Ranch's Christmas Train.  By this time we were down to 17 people.  We wound through the hills, on our way there, singing Christmas Carols ( at least in our car, we did) and tried not to get too car sick.  After our train ride we spent a little time in the packed town of Julian and then headed home for our final night together.  My mom paid homage to our Mexican ancestry by making her usual Mexican feast of sour cream tacos, shredded beef tacos, tamales (a friend of mine made them in Santa Barbara), and rice and beans.  Yummm! Muy delicioso! Then those of us who were left standing, had a competitive game of boys vs. girls Trivial Pursuit: Pop Culture version.  Let me just say, it came down to sudden death and they got the question, 'what creepy spin-off of Gummy Bears became popular in 1981?' Gummy Worms, duh! Nice job with the answer, Anthony, but we got robbed!! We'll have a rematch next year and the girls will no doubt be victorious!
   Our week of revelry came to a close, but I was "stuffed" with a host of wonderful new memories, a couple of extra lbs. and a deep sense of fullness.  My cup runneth over.  I hope your Thanksgiving left you feeling as satisfied.


Uncle David, Lizzie and Gampy
Danny, Daniel, Maddie, Ellie, Carrie, Katie Z., Michelle and Natalie

Matt, Lizzie and me
Dave and Lizzie



Tony
Natty and Aunt Bee


Carrie, Gabrielle, Emma, Natalie, Maddie and Gretchen
Tony, Patrick and Dave posing for a Lowenbrau commercial
Maddie, Michelle, Maizie and Katie

Emma, Mason and Smith
Katie H., Kacy and Nana sitting behind
Cuzies



Elsa and Lizzie
Me and my Goobs




Gooby, Bellie and holiday mama




Katie and her dad, Rick
Dave and I
Dan and his bride, Katie
Pat's family + Lizzie

Panning for gold at Smith Ranch

Madsen had second thoughts!


Michelle ventures into the mine in search of some gold


On the quaint streets of Julian

Natalie, Gabrielle, Carrie, Michelle and Anthony











Melinda and Tony






"Lizzie, what are you doing out there?"







Clean-up, clean-up, everybody everywhere...

Getting ready for the Mexican Feast
The usual suspects and our prodigal son, Jake Reed


Cozy coz



Exhaustion
                                                               I have the best family!

Steppin' out with my sweetie

About Me

Happy housewife, mother of four daughters and lover of the holidays/seasons, goes a long way to describe me. I want to share some of my thoughts and experiences as the seasons roll by. Hope you share some of my passions! Con mucho gusto! Holiday Mamasita Lauren Smith Goss