That's a great idea. I wish I had done that with my grandmother. She had a lot of recipes and stories I wish we had preserved.
That's sad!

Are there any other older relatives who might help you?
My gma was an adopted child, so we still have trouble finding out where she came from (though we've tried repeatedly). I think this makes her feel disconnected. We know she was born on a train headed for a town in our state where her adoptive parents were waiting. They had to stop the train at a closer depot to get my grandmother delivered.
She holds all the information, pictures, lore, etc of my grandfather's family too. Without her, we'd have big stacks of 100 + year old pictures of people I only remotely recognize. For instance, I have a pile of extremely old postcards on my computer monitor. I was in the process of scanning them (my scanner is acting up presently) and loading them at Flickr because not only are they scenes from NC and SC that have changed dramatically from 100 years ago, but the correspondence on back has been very intriguing. I recognize all the names, and seeing them speak to each other over the years in a very casual manner has been thrilling for me.
There was a great great uncle of mine who lived with his two spinster sisters (the others married, though only one child was ever born to the bunch, which would be my great grandfather who was a hellraiser...). He died of consumption (TB) at an early age, and his sisters turned his room into a shrine really. Wouldn't let anyone in there, didn't move his things as he'd left them. My father remembers being in that house and being shoo-ed away from that closed room.
How Southern Gothic and Victorian of us. haha!
I wouldn't know half the stuff I do without my grandmother, and she likes to feel useful and share information. It's mutually very agreeable.
