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Goodbye, Santa!
Santa and Mrs. Ramsdell take a bow after 30 years
By Rodika Tollefson, KP News
Fred and Mary Ramsdell have been the
Key Peninsula’s most popular people at Christmas-time for
many years. Known better as Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus
during that time of year, they have braved windstorms,
rain, sleet and snow to ride around neighborhoods,
bringing along cheer, hugs and candy canes.
The years have transformed the
landscape — new subdivisions popped up, streets got paved
and the roads filled with cars — and changed the faces of
neighborhoods as kids grew up and second- or
third-generation lap sitters came out to greet Santa. And
as much as the neighborhoods could count on new homes
going in and roads getting more crowded every year, they
could count on Santa Ramsdell coming along, rain or cold,
to wish them a Merry Christmas.
In December, the cheerful sleigh
rides around the Key Peninsula were bittersweet. By this
time next year, Fred and Mary will trade the chilly
Northwest weather for sunny days in Hawaii. After three
decades, their December 2005 Santa act was the last one.
The news hasn’t escaped many
“regulars” who have been waiting outside their homes every
year to greet the couple. As they drove their routes for
the last time, the Ramsdells received many well-wishes and
even tears, hearing many times over they will be missed.
“I just want to wish Santa and Mrs.
Santa a good flight over Hawaii next year,” a man with a
young girl in his arms tells the couple near the Lakebay
Christian Assembly. He has caught up with the Santa sleigh
on the couple’s penultimate night as they were stopped by
a group of cheering teens.
This night is a long one as they
cover Jackson Lake, Home, Joemma Beach and other areas —
but not as long as two nights earlier, on an exhaustive
run around several subdivisions like Lake Holiday. In
Santa’s younger days, he would run up to every house to
deliver a candy cane. He still sprints from group to group
and up many driveways, but it’s easier to run out of
steam. Although they no longer trek every single road as
they did in the early days — because of the sleigh’s
maneuverability — the proliferation of digital cameras and
the growing populace have made the runs longer. Another
trend has also emerged — kids used to run out on their own
years ago, and now the Santa “greet and hug” has become
more of a family event.
This last year, the weather has been
kind. Only a few rains and a low moisture level made the
cold more bearable. A couple passing by the sleigh with
their dog jokes, “Do you guys have a heater in there?”
The sleigh, which does have a
generator to run the lights, the music and the PA system,
indeed has no heater. While Fred keeps warm rushing in and
out of the sleigh, Mary must keep busy unpacking the candy
canes. She can only wear one glove in order to open the
wrapped boxes, and by the end of the night her fingers are
red and freezing. Even the candy canes don’t like the cold
— the brittle sweet treats keep breaking.
The Ramsdells recall their startup
days, when originally they rode on the back of the old
fire trucks, which entailed being regularly drenched.
Their mode of transportation has changed from the fire
truck to a brush pickup and eventually to the sleigh,
designed by artist Bev Pedersen who worked at the fire
district. Fred and several other volunteers built the
sleigh, which originally had no roof and no windshield.
The modern version looks quite lovable, with the reindeers
perched on top of a pickup that hauls the former trailer.
But no heater. And not very good suspension — which means
the riders feel every speed bump and pothole during the
rough rides.
“You always hope Rudolph has his
skids on,” Mary jokes as the sleigh takes a steep downhill
toward Von Geldern Cove.
As the sleigh approaches a
neighborhood, loud sirens from an accompanying fire truck
or ambulance alert the residents. This night, however, the
ambulance had to respond to a call just 15 minutes into
the route. No matter. Santa talks on the PA system the
entire time, even singing along to the tunes played
through the loudspeakers. “Ho, ho, ho! Happy Holidays!”
“Enjoy each other!” “Be Happy!” “Come on, Rudolph!”
Everyone in the caravan, which also includes a command rig
when possible, looks out for children and adults. In the
dark, it’s not easy to spot eagerly waiting residents.
Santa, Mrs. Claus says, is like an owl: He may not see the
kids, but he can hear them from far away.
The wooden Rudolph and all the other
reindeer cast a shadow on the ground as the sleigh glides
through the neighborhoods, passing multiple children in
pajamas and bare feet (a sight that hasn’t changed through
years, Mary says), various homes that look like
mini-wonderlands with spectacular holiday light displays,
dogs that get their own treats from the ol’ fellah, people
waving from inside their warm homes, and the many adults
who come out on their porches or into the streets to give
a hug, briefly chat, and get a candy cane. “This time of
year, there is no such thing as age, we are all young,”
Santa booms on the mic.
The Ramsdells have been donning their
Christmas attire ever since they found out the Spanaway
fire department did a Santa run and wanted to bring
something similar to the Key Peninsula. At first, they did
only some neighborhoods every year as the KP Firefighters
Association, who sponsors the Santa visits, had several
“actors.” But with time, Fred did more and more routes and
eventually became the official deal, also making
appearances at the tree lighting and other KP events. For
a guy described by those who know him as a “ham,” it was a
natural role.
Mary started out as an elf. One year,
Santa’s presence was requested at two different events. To
solve the problem of double booking, Pedersen suggested
[that] Mrs. Claus could make one of the visits —so she
sewed up a costume in a hurry and Mary became Mrs. Santa.
People who may not recognize Fred out of costume minus the
beard and hat can figure out their identities right away
when they see Mary. They receive thank-yours in some
unusual places during the year — grocery store lines,
hospital stays.
But it’s not the thank-yours that
brought them out every year. After a particularly brutal
run, with their faces cut by sleet or clothes wet, the two
may have wondered why they do it. All they had to do is
think about the lit-up faces of the little kids, Fred
says, and the question of “retirement” went away. Kids
like 9-month-old Joseph Geier, who is brought by mom
Jennie to see Santa for the first time. Or 3-year-old
Lincoln Lopez and 2-year-old K.I., who brought Santa a
letter and cookies. The two made a special trip to their
grandparents on the Key Pen just to see Santa. “They are
from the city and never see something like this,” grandpa
says.
Santa receives many letters and
cookies during his stops, along with wish lists, cards and
small gifts. On their final night, with a full moon
lighting the sky, they also get greeted by tears: An adult
couple in Taylor Bay Estates who put on an incredible
light display give them hugs for one last year.
From one father, they hear, “We
really love you guys coming around.” From three teen-age
boys, “We’ve been running all around Palmer Lake looking
for you.” From a man near toward the end of the night,
“Have fun!” “We do,” Fred replies.
And that’s how the two former
firefighters describe their 30-year affair with the Key
Peninsula’s Christmas tradition: fun. It’s the same word
they use to describe their new adventure, moving later
this year to Hawaii, where they are building a new home.
Fred, a volunteer who became the KP fire district’s first
paid firefighter (long retired), grew up on Herron Road
and has lived here his entire life. Mary, who was also a
longtime volunteer firefighter and has worked as a
dispatcher (with a dispatch phone in her house), is a
longtime resident. An extended family, from Fred’s
brothers to the couple’s children, will stay behind on the
KP and nearby areas, a guarantee the Ramsdells will visit
often.
The two are very excited about their
new adventure — as evidenced perhaps by the lighted palm
trees that have been part of their outdoor holiday décor
the last three years. “I look forward to planting my
banana trees,” Fred says, while Mary calls their move “the
opening of another door.”
What will they miss the most? “The
joy and the kids’ faces,” Fred says.
They, too will be greatly missed by
the Key Peninsula’s young and old who have counted on
their hugs and cheer. Santa Ramsdell and his missus’ big
shoes will be pretty hard to fill.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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