Couple’s decorations celebrate the season, highlight the Nativity

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Darkness doesn’t have a prayer when it comes to Jim and Georgena Fick’s yard at Christmastime.

The couple has amassed dozens of large, illuminated Santas, elves, snowmen, candy canes, reindeer and other nostalgic emblems of this most wonderful time of the year.

The heavy plastic luminaries, known as blow molds, give the luster of mid-day along the Ficks’ stretch of U.S. 63 in Vienna.

A matching Nativity scene shines alone inside the couple’s arc-shaped driveway — including the Holy Family, angels, shepherds, wise men, and farm animals — clearly set apart from all the rest.

“I’m an old-time religious man. That’s why I don’t put Santa Claus up in front of the Holy Family,” said Mr. Fick, a Brinktown native who has been a member of Visitation Parish in Vienna for 65 years, and whose wife has been a Visitation parishioner her whole life.

“That’s the way I was brought up and the way I’m going to be until I die,” Mr. Fick stated.

Inner light

Blow molds, illuminated from the inside by old-school incandescent lightbulbs, were once a mainstay of American Christmas décor, reaching their peak of popularity in the 1950s through 1970s.

The Ficks began collecting the mid-century artifacts at flea markets and rummage sales around 30 years ago.

“Some from Springfield ... we went to Joplin a couple of times when we were younger ... Belleville, Illinois, and a few others,” said Mr. Fick, adding that his wife “probably bought most of them.”

“We have contacts at some of these flea markets,” he noted. “We have friends who are on the lookout for them. They buy them and resell them to us if they find them at yard sales.”

At last count, the couple had 105 Santa Clauses and 30 snowmen to display in their yard.

Their vintage illuminated Nativity set includes about 25 pieces, including carolers, angels, sheep, cattle and a donkey.

Mr. Fick replaced all the retro incandescent bulbs with energy-efficient LEDs, saving money and tamping down the display’s environmental impact.

“Most don’t go more than 10 or 12 watts,” he noted. “Everything has a light in it, but my electric bill is nowhere as big as an air-conditioner.”

All the figures have outdoor wiring and are hooked up to switches on timers.

“I have nothing that you would have on an indoor lamp cord outside,” said Mr. Fick. “Otherwise, you run the risk of burning the house down.”

Lighting the way

Mr. and Mrs. Fick met in high school and were both 20 when they got married in Visitation Church.

They bought their home in Vienna a few years later and have lived there for all but seven years of their married life.

“Back in ’63, you could play ball out on the highway,” Mr. Fick recalled. “Nobody came by but the mail carrier and the milkman. Now it’s a major north-south route for trucks.”

Like the traffic, the Ficks’ collection started out low, and it started to grow.

“I always put Christmas lights up on the outside of the house, even way back when the kids were growing up,” Mr. Fick recalled.

That tradition followed the family for the five years they lived in Meta after Mr. Fick got promoted with the Missouri  Department of Transportation (MoDOT).

They acquired their blow mold Nativity set after moving back to Vienna in 1982, with the other characters following.

“We started with one big old Santa Claus from the Rolla Kmart,” Mr. Fick recalled.

The winter hobby flourished after he retired from MoDOT in 1998.

“My wife and I would go out on Saturdays,” said Mr. Fick. “We started seeing these things sitting around for little or nothing, and we started buying them.”

Over time, they filled up their front yard and started decorating the neighboring lot, down to the home where one of their sons now lives.

People are often amazed when they drive by.

“Sometimes, someone will send me a Christmas card, saying they enjoy the lights,” said Mr. Fick. “Or if they see you outside, some people will stop and talk to you.

“You also see a lot of cell phones sticking out of people’s car windows,” he observed.

Light burden

The hard work of putting up the display lies not in carrying the figures from storage into the yard and wiring them up.

“The wind here blows all the time,” Mr. Fick noted. “You have to stake them and post them and tie them down. Otherwise, if you get a good west wind, they’ll wind up on the other side of the highway.”

Maintenance is pretty simple.

“The bulbs will sometimes get loose just from the vibration of having them turned on,” said Mr. Fick. “The wind can shake them up some, too, outside of getting blown over in a storm.

“Sometimes if they crack, I hot-glue them,” he said. “If a piece breaks out, I cut up a milk carton and patch it up.”

Central figure

Several of their grown sons and daughters and grandchildren, some in Jefferson City, have taken up the blow mold tradition and are decorating their yards with similar abandon.

“If you see a lot of them in one yard, you can figure we gave them to them,” said Mr. Fick.

As for the display on Highway 63, “we cut back some this year,” he said.

“I’m going to be 86 years old next year. If it weren’t for my son and grandson from Jefferson City coming down and the boy next door helping, I wouldn’t be able to get it done anymore.”

He hopes that people who drive by and notice the display will pray for him and his family to stay well, and for the Church to be strong in its witness throughout the year.

He prays that people will take the layout of display to heart.

“The Nativity is in the center of everything,” he noted.

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