Sunday, June 16, 2024


Remembering My Dad on Father's Day

It’s been nearly two years since I last posted here.  Why so long?  I simply haven’t had in me.  I like to write but I have to be in the mood.  Two years ago in January, we lost my 94-year-old dad.  He lived a good long life, and it was his time to go, but it was still hard.  I had intended to write about him soon after it happened, but I couldn’t.  It didn’t get easier as time went on.  Perhaps that is why I haven’t written anything.  I don’t know.  Somehow, this Father’s Day has been harder than the last two.  I am sad I can’t talk to him.  All the ads for this special day just make it harder.  There are tears.  I miss him.  I was so lucky that he was my dad.

Actually, I did write about him after he died.  I wrote his obituary with input from my mom and siblings.  My mom waited to hold his memorial service until their wedding anniversary on June 18.  In two days, it will be two years.  I spoke at his service on behalf of my family.  How do you sum up a life in such a short bit of time?  Today, on Father’s Day, I want to share my dad with you.  Here is what I said:

Good afternoon.  I am Verne’s eldest child.

It seems appropriate that we are celebrating my dad’s life here.  He attended this church as a child and was active in the youth group.  When he returned to Placerville 15 years ago, he and my mom became members.  He was sad when he could no longer attend services and hoped to return.

My sister commented on how much our dad’s upbringing influenced his life.  He was a country boy who lived a simple life. He grew up on Coon Hollow Road, just up the road from his grandparents.  He and his brothers walked down the road to the one-room Coon Hollow School, the same school that his mother and uncles attended.  In November, Dad and I sat on their deck overlooking Coon Hollow Road.  He talked about the orchards that his grandparents owned.  They covered the area, but those trees are mostly gone now.  He told me that when he went off to the Navy, the other guys teased him about being a country boy—but those city boys didn’t know how to shoot a gun.  It became his job to teach them.

Family was important when he was growing up and he carried that value into adulthood.  My dad was a devoted husband to my mom.  Today would have been their 72nd wedding anniversary.  They showed us what love looks like.

He was a wonderful father.  He didn’t discuss his feelings verbally very often, but he showed his love by his actions.  We never doubted that he loved us.  My sister and I discovered that we have a lot of the same fond memories.  When we were little, he would play with us on the floor.  We loved it when he would balance us on his feet.  When our brother was old enough to have an electric train, our dad created a board that he could raise and lower and on it he attached train tracks, buildings, trees, people—an entire town.  My sister and I got interested too, so we each had our own engine.  We can remember making items out of resin by pouring them into molds—all done in the garage under Dad’s supervision.  We made arrowheads and gifts for family.  Dad was not a big cook, but he was the one who did the barbequing.  On weekends he would often make pancakes; blueberry was a favorite.  When we were little, they were animal shapes.  Dad was a Boy Scout leader for years while my brother was a scout.  A large part of our garage was filled with their camping equipment.  He taught us how to fish here in Placerville and made sure that we knew how to put a worm on the hook and that we knew how to clean them.

Dad was very handy at building and fixing things.  He built us a playhouse at the back of the yard, right next to the raspberries he grew.  Dad built a large Barbie dollhouse for my sister and me which we later fixed up for our little sister; my girls later played with it.  He bought an old wooden boat, a real fixer upper.  It became his fishing boat plus he sometimes took us waterskiing on it.  After we all left home, he began building whirligigs and my family were recipients of several of these.  When they needed repair, he would take care of it when they came to visit.  My older daughter remembers his quiet concentration while he painted them.  When he was no longer making whirligigs, I bought him a couple.

Dad was the kind of guy who would give you the shirt off his back.  He would do just about anything for his family.  When my husband and I went on our first real date, we drove up from Menlo Park to San Francisco with our bikes and took the ferry to Angel Island.  When it came time to return to the ferry, my date realized that he had lost his car key.  We returned to our car and found a phone nearby, but he couldn’t reach his neighbors who could help him.  So, I called my dad for help and, of course, he said yes.  He drove from El Cerrito across the Bay Bridge to the vicinity of Fisherman’s Wharf.  He drove my date down to his house to get a key and then back to San Francisco.  That was the first time they met.  That was my dad.

Not only was he a great dad but he was also a loving grandpa.  My older daughter remembers him as a quiet, still presence which had an impact on her as a child.  She could sit and talk to him, and he listened; he never treated her like a child.  He was often the calm in the middle of a storm.

Our dad was a shining example of how to be a good person.  We miss him but he will be forever in our hearts.