May 092012
 

My maternal grandfather’s birthday is today.  It seemed a fitting time to share this piece I wrote ten years ago for a college writing class.  Happy Birthday, Papa!  Thanks for your example and all the memories. I love you.

Papa's Barn

Stepping lightly over the hot wire fence alongside my cousin Melissa, I recall the day not so long ago when I could duck under the wire more easily. And as I step into the mucky barnyard, dodging more than just mud puddles, I begin a journey back in time. First I stop to gaze at the barn in front of me. The rooster weathervane stands atop the tin roof with its red head outlined against the blue sky, while the siding below is lightened to a tan by the sun. The metal gates enclosing the front of the barn were once bright yellow, but through the years the paint has faded and chipped away. I slip the rusting chain out of the catch and place my hand on the cool metal bars, swinging the gate open just wide enough to slide past it. As the drawn-out screech of the gate’s closing hinges echoes throughout the Brink Ranch, I step into the past.

It was a crisp but foggy morning in the late 1980’s. A casual observer along the road might have seen a six-foot tall man walking toward the barn, in green coveralls and a brown hat that advertised Ivomec. Four children traipsed along behind him. The oldest was Robert, a grown-up boy of seven, attired in faded blue jeans, a red sweatshirt, and the ever-present dirty baseball cap. William, four years younger, in a dark blue coat that added to his waddle, looked up to his older cousin as the essence of manhood. Five-year-old Gretchen hopped along in pink rubber boots right behind her brother. Bringing up the rear was a quiet four-year-old, Melissa Ann, with a long dark braid reaching halfway down the back of her purple coat.

The thin gray-haired man opened the barn gate, as the children ran past him to scramble up the neatly stacked bales. Robert reached down the post to flip a switch, and the barn was illuminated in a soft glow coming from light bulbs hanging high above the rafters.

Breathing hard as they ran up and down the hay bales, the children were enveloped in the familiar scent of cow pies, made sweet with the mixture of straw and alfalfa. Though never sold in stores, it is a pleasant perfume to many a man, including the tall rancher who now was ascending the steps of tightly bound hay bales behind the younger generation. Armed with wire-cutters, he was ready to feed the three dozen hungry Herefords who were loudly mooing their impatience in the feed bunks below.

Clip, clip. The fragrant alfalfa split into many flakes as he pulled up the baling wire and expertly bent it into a bundle that he stuck in his back pocket with the clippers. The boys were standing ready—Robert grabbed a flake and carried it to the edge of the haystack, dropping dried clover-like leaves as he went. He looked down at the feed bunks where steaming noses and drooling mouths were sticking through the green metal slats, and shouted, “Here you go, cows!” while the heifers below vied for the first bite.

In the middle of the barn could be seen a pair of once-pink boots, now covered in manure and straw particles, where Gretchen was lying on her back staring up at the rafters. Heedless of the straw now entwined in her long red braids, she breathed deeply to absorb the aroma, then sneezed at the dust. Each summer during hay time the bales were stacked to the rafters, but now the supply was depleted. A flicker who made his nest in the barn every year fluttered near the roof. As Gretchen lay gazing upwards, she began to count the mud dauber nests on the walls but ran out of fingers.

A meek “moo” from the other side of the barn reminded the girls of the big plastic bottles that had warmed their hands on the trip down the driveway. Two twin calves awaited them—each from separate mommies that had chosen to care for just one calf. Melissa didn’t mind, though. She loved the twice-daily ritual of feeding them. The little calves eagerly stuck their noses through the green bars of the Powder River gate, sucking vigorously on the bottles. It was all the girls could do to hold on, while the warm milky saliva dripped off the nipples onto their fingers.

Meanwhile, Robert and William followed the older man inside the barn as he expertly forked the alfalfa and hay throughout the feed bunks. This man they called “Papa” was not just a rancher, but also a veterinarian. Papa the rancher could pick up hay bales with ease. Papa the vet was concerned when a pregnant heifer or a young calf didn’t show up at meal times. And Papa the Christian showed his grandchildren how to work hard and do right as he went about his daily chores, imparting values that would influence the cousins the rest of their lives.

Melissa’s call awoke me from my reverie. I meandered down the hay bales that somehow looked smaller now. “Remember when we were little, Mel, how much fun we had coming down with Papa every morning to feed?”

Of course she remembered. Her life had been shaped in Papa’s barn even more than mine. We cousins will always share special memories of our time at Papa’s barn.

May 012012
 

Last week, I planted miracles in the ground.  Racing the coming thunderstorm, I spaded the earth and pushed them into the holes.  With one eye on the lightning streaking through the black clouds, I covered them quickly, knowing the rain would soon do the rest.

Little bits of dried up nothing.  Barely a wilted green stem poking out.  Cast-offs, extras, dug up and discarded because they were in the way. 

But next year, they will be little spots of sunshine, miracles of daffodils, tulips, and irises, blooming all along our driveway.

I love driving through farm country in the springtime.  The random patch of daffodils in the midst of a field is often the only evidence of a long-forgotten homestead.  Sometimes, there’s a lone old oak tree beside it, that someone couldn’t quite bear to cut down. 

The farmer has probably cursed those daffodil bulbs and their tenacious capacity for growing against all odds, for spreading when split in two.  He’s probably tired of farming around the tree.  But to me, they represent miracles and memories.

So I keep planting miracles around our little farmhouse, knowing someday the memories surrounding each will be precious.

Sep 142011
 

aprons in the garden

The thing I love about aprons is that they are so practical.  I mean, what is an apron for, but to get soiled—and in so doing protect what you’re wearing underneath?

“Go and make yourself tidy. Your hands are dirty, your apron soiled, and your hair looks as if it hadn’t been combed for a week.”
-Grandmother Elsie by Martha Finley, page 134

in the herb garden

Of course, I’m much better about remembering to wear one when I have a pregnant belly to cover up.  Something about that extra bit sticking out there—it gets covered with everything I’m baking or eating!  In fact, I often wonder why I wear an apron to cook meals and then take it off before I eat: from the looks of my shirt afterwards, I obviously need either an apron or a bib—especially when pregnant.

Continue reading »

Jul 072011
 

IMG_2339Everything I love about summer is everything that makes me long for autumn days turning to winter.

The long sunny days.  The warm nights.  The crickets chirping peacefully in the evenings after the little ones have gone to bed.

But the long hours of daylight mean so much work to be done in our short summer season.  And the warm evenings are ones in which I sit outside, my fingers tapping away at the keyboard while my eyes scan the fields for my farmer husband, coming home from long hours of work.

Growing things.  The smell of fresh-cut alfalfa hay.  Tractor rides.  Abundant garden produce.

But it’s too hot to cook or to can.  The tractor rides mean he’s working day and night to get it all done.  And each cutting of hay has us watching the clouds and praying away the rain as the pressure mounts to get it all baled in time.

Sometimes it seems the summer days fly by and it’s already dusk and we didn’t get it all done.  Sometimes they are hot and sticky and endless and crawl as slowly as the turtle from the irrigation pond that the girls’ daddy brought home to show them.

Like they say of the days of motherhood, ‘tis true of summer as well: the days are long but the months are short.  And soon, it will be wintertime again, with two feet of snow and ice cold and we’ll be looking forward anew to all the warmth and busyness of summer.

So I sit and I slow and I appreciate the seasons.  Because even the turtle seems to pass by too quickly for those who truly appreciate it.

IMG_2348

IMG_2345

IMG_2340

Jan 282011
 

It’s making plans.  It’s writing lists. 

Ordering seeds, ordering supplies.

(Ordering a tractor, too.  After selling another one, mind you.)

More to-do’s.  More plans.  Events.  Promotions.  Brochures.

It’s January on the farm.  And it’s enough to overwhelm anyone.

I’m not ready for summer.  I’m so not ready for summer.

“But it’s only January,” my husband tells me.

And so I do one thing at a time.  I cross one thing off the to-do list and write two more down.

I lay awake nights making plans and rewording promotions.

I’m already tired.  And it’s only January.

But before summer comes in all it’s busyness, we have spring to look forward to.

New growth, new life—including the birth of the little one growing within me.

Somewhere in that sweet springtime, I need to slow down enough to see the flowers pushing their way through the dirt.

I need to stop and see and give thanks.  And remember the things I love about summer (like sunshine and green grass and barbecues and my clothesline…).

I’ll add that to my to-do list.

Right after “getting through January.”

Written for Lisa-Jo’s 5-minute Friday because, oh look at the time, it’s Friday afternoon and I forgot to post yesterday, let alone this morning—must be time for a 5-minute post in this to-do list somewhere!  And for the record, today I really, truly, only spent 5 minutes on my post—but, of course, this addendum was not part of the 5 minutes. Smile

Oct 222010
 

Bullets because it’s hunting season.  Brevity because it’s Friday.

  • Gotta love calling my brother-in-law’s phone and asking, “Do you have any idea where my hubby is?” only to hear my husband’s voice saying, “No, I have no idea.”
  • Excited to hear a new favorite Country song, “I Call That Real,” make the top 30.
  • Putting things on your weekly schedule does not guarantee they will happen, but it does increase the likelihood that they will.
  • You can switch to self-hosted WordPress and not break all your old permalinks.  (Why is this not a more generally known fact?)
  • This logger’s daughter’s heart hurts every time she hears of a logging accident, even though my daddy isn’t logging any more. Of course farming is not any safer—and I’m married to a farmer. And yet, I know He is in control—always.
  • We’re pretty proud of our cousin at West Point.  Even if his smile is so big it gets him into trouble sometimes.
  • Sometimes, morning chats with a friend who needed to talk are more important than what’s on The Schedule.
  • Friends and I attended a mutual friend’s wedding together a few weeks ago by watching the live stream online from our own homes throughout the country.  Now I’m attending a blogging conference across the country with friends by watching the live stream of the conference they are at.  Ah, technology! (Now if only they could live stream the smells that waft through the streets of Hershey, Pennsylvania!)
  • I don’t usually cry so hard I can’t see the pages of books I’m reading.  But book two of Charity’s Diary ?  It’s hitting every emotional nerve.  Positively loving this series.
  • Why is it always two people before me who have won 50 SwagBucks—just never me?
  • My in-laws are very, very smart: they waited until the morning they were leaving for a weekend trip to separate the calves from the mamma cows.
  • I finally have my own BlueHost account. I can’t tell you how excited I am to deal with able WordPress tech support in the future!  (That is, after I figure out the best way to transfer my sites from one server to another.)
  • If the clock falls off the wall and breaks into pieces, does that mean it’s the end of time?
  • My farmer has been taking the tractor “another round, another round” for weeks now… Pray with me that the final few hours of planting the wheat field will go smoothly today, and that then all the forecast rain pours down to water it?!
Aug 022008
 
As I write Merritt’s within an hour or two of being finished cutting the second cutting of alfalfa…  They just get through with one field and it’s on to another.  But there’s only one more cutting after this, in the same field.  The year is going by so fast!

Punkin’s teeth are coming in really well on the right side…she’s looking lop-sided.  She continues her amazing potty habits.  Her Nanna babysat her this afternoon, and she’s really amazed.

We’re looking forward to lots of visits from family this month–as well as a few friends and would-be family stopping by as well!  I have a feeling August will fly by…  And then it’s on to my favorite time of year.

But let’s not rush things.  Because soon my baby daughter will be one year old!  Oh my.

Have a great weekend.  Enjoy the sunshine.