“It really wasn’t no fun,” he reflected, from his bed at Franklin General Hospital.
On March 14, his birthday, no less, Krabbe underwent a partial hip replacement operation at Mercy Medical Center-North Iowa.
Two days earlier, he had fallen in the night when getting out of bed at his home in Latimer, shattering the ball in his hip joint. It was the first time in his life he had broken a bone.
The worst of it was, he and his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren had been planning a nice big birthday party.
“The party is on hold,” his 67-year-old son, Willard, of Thornton, said, laughing, at his father’s side.
It wasn’t funny at the time, however, they said.
“With a fractured hip, he was in so much pain, they had no choice but to do the operation,” said Willard.
At 6 feet tall and 245 pounds, James Krabbe is not your ordinary 98-year-old.
A farmer all his life, he maintains a good appetite — he loves sweets, the family says — and a positive, upbeat outlook.
“It feels a lot better now,” he said Friday, smiling broadly, his right arm bent at the elbow, and his hand propped behind his head on the pillow.
Thursday he walked again for the first time, supported by nurses on both sides. On Friday, he walked “10 feet or longer,” he told Willard.
His doctor has told him his progress is excellent.
Everyone has been so nice to him, said James.
The morning of his birthday, the doctors and nurses sang “Happy Birthday” to him. “It was just so cute.”
“He was laughing and really enjoying it, up until his operation,” observed Willard.
In the meantime, medical staff, friends and family have sent cards, balloons, flowers and an array of sugary treats, including a box of candy. His caregiver Diana Norem sent him a talking photo of herself that makes him laugh to hear it.
Visiting with Willard and Willard’s wife, Barb, James looked back on a life that he said has been good to him.
Born in 1909 in Boddum, Denmark, he immigrated with his family to the United States at the age of 6. The oldest of seven children, his name was changed to James from “Jens Peter” by his schoolteacher at Coulter.
In 1934, he married Leona Larsen. She died in 1999.
“To this day, I thank my parents many times for the hardships they endured so I can live in this wonderful country,” he wrote in a letter to his great-granddaughter Jenna in 2004.
Today, James is looking forward to being home again to share that birthday dinner with his family, including Willard and Barb, son Dean, of Dows, and daughter Joyce Wagner, of Latimer, and her husband Merle.
He is hoping for chicken, fish or meat loaf — and an angel food cake “with strawberries and ice cream.”
Reach Kristin Buehner at 421-0533 or kristin.buehner@globegazette.com.





