Saturday, September 21, 2024

Last Day At Starvy Creek

77º with steady rain here in Starvy Creek Bluegrass Campground at 11 am Saturday.  Forecast shows rain to leave area about noon when last day of our music festival begins.



At right -  A sculpture recently placed on a bench in Amsterdam. The artist simply called it “Addiction.”












Was a bit
warm 
yesterday.
This
weather
station
is a bit
SW of
here.

Shade
from
trees was hit & miss, but was not too bad an afternoon, little breeze.



At right shows tree cover.

.


Steve Miller sang in church choir for many years.  Quit a few years ago when Parkinson's Disease took over his life.  He passed away this week, a few days short of his 72nd birthday.
Photo of my Dad in 1963






Hope to post more when home Sunday

LC
On  this day in 1931, a teenage girl made history in a way that no one saw  coming. Jackie Mitchell, the 17-year-old pitcher for the Chattanooga  Lookouts, took the mound and did the unthinkable: she struck out  baseball legends Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig in an exhibition game. This  feat, which sounds like something out of a Hollywood movie, is very real  and showcases the incredible talent Mitchell possessed.
From  a young age, Mitchell's potential was evident. Living next door to  future Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Dazzy Vance, she learned to pitch  using his special "drop ball" technique. Her skills quickly advanced,  and by 17, she was playing for a women's team, attending a baseball  school in Atlanta, and catching the eye of the Chattanooga Lookouts. In  1931, she signed one of the first professional baseball contracts given  to a woman.
Mitchell's moment of fame came swiftly  that season, but her triumph was short-lived. Despite her impressive  performance against Ruth and Gehrig, the baseball commissioner soon  voided her contract, deeming the sport "too strenuous" for women.  Undeterred, Mitchell continued to play professionally with traveling  teams until her retirement in 1937.
Jackie Mitchell's  story is a testament to breaking barriers and challenging norms. Her  legacy reminds us that talent knows no gender, even if the world isn't  always ready to accept it.

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