On a lovely Monday
Our granddaughters showed up
Spending the day with the horses!
A perfect day for everyone!
Your friend on a western Colorado farm,
Linda
I was sitting in the car, parked behind the scoreboard when a small group of Middle School boys passed me by:
One of the young men separated himself from the others and stood in front of our car; crossing his arms in front of his chest he said to me: “A Corvette! I LOVE CORVETTES!”
Then they were off.
A few minutes later the group returned and I thought: Why not make their day and mine. So I got out of the car, asked one of the young men if he was the one who made the comment that he LOVES corvettes. He replied no. And I explained to him I was going to ask that young person if he would like to have a sit in the car.
“WOW! I’ll go get him!” He was off. Running a high speed to the grandstands, in seconds (YES SECONDS) he was back with his Corvette-loving friend.
I asked my question again, receiving an emphatic nod of the head and a dash to the rider’s side of the car.
“No, Wait!” I said. “Get in on the driver’s side.”
The young man stopped for just a second and wildly ran around the back of the car to get in the door I had open.
His smile said it all.
Then more friends showed up
The atmosphere of excitement was HUGE!
Their joy filled my, heart!
More friends showed up; the Jeepster owners gave permission for a young man and his friend to sit in their classic car.
The young man explained while he asked for permission, that his grandpa had found a Jeepster not long ago and was starting to restore it. If he could just sit in this one he would know what it was going to be like to ride with his grandpa. Gary and Connie graciously understood.
Now the small crowd of “Car Guys” had GROWN.
And another young man (in the Driver’s Seat) asked if he could sit behind the wheel, just once in his life.
Putting on his glasses he (along with everyone else) flashed a HUGE smile at me!
Then a parent came over and got a photo.
Delightful smiles from everyone all around!
Car Guys!
These young men just made my day, my week, my month!
From my world to your heart,
Linda
Friday night, five classic cars lined up by the scoreboard
Then they were off—the first set of Senior attendants
The second set of Seniors
The Junior Class of attendants
Followed by the Sophomores
And the Freshmen.
The beginning of an exciting Senior Year for the class of 2022!
Delta High School’s 2021 Homecoming.
I just love all those huge smiles, don’t you?
Your friend on a western Colorado farm,
Linda
“Now, just so you know, the reason Dad (and I) farm is: to make money.
Well, that doesn’t always seem to be the case. The idea is to make money. You can’t farm if you don’t have money. So, the whole idea of farming is to make money.
Just like people who go to work for someone else…to make money.”
Mom put me up on her shoulder and petted me, while we walked toward the house.
“So, you see, TLC Cai-Cai, (Mom calls me by my full name all the time,
Dad calls me things like CLT, LTC, TLC—he makes stuff up all the time, sometimes he calls me a GIRL!!!! It’s okay I still come to him no matter what he calls me. 😊 )
It is very important that a farm makes money, for without money there is no canned cat food or dry cereal to munch on…it takes money to buy your groceries.”
Farming is a risky type of business. It’s not like a regular job, where every two weeks or once a month you get a paycheck. Paycheck time is whenever the crops come in, which can be only once a year, depending on the crop.”
Mom and I sat down on the sofa where I can stretch way out while Mom pets on me.
“For us, You, Me, and Dad, the paychecks come in each time we sell hay. Hay is a big deal around here. It brings in money three times a summer.
Then in the fall and early winter, Dad will get out the corn combine and combine the corn, haul it to the Elevator by which, around Christmas time we will get the most money. This is the money we live on. It buys everyday living, all the spring requirements: seed, fertilizer, fuel, it holds us together.”
I am purring so loud; I’m starting to get tired. Just a little bit tired, like maybe just rest my eyes tired.
“And you know what, TLC Cai-Cai? Farmers can’t control the weather or the price you get paid, ever. That’s just how it is—the reason farming is such a risky business.”
ZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
“Hum, I guess you feel safe and warm and fed, Little One. And THAT is a very good thing.”
Mom got up very slowly leaving me there on the sofa to dream on.
TLC Cai-Cai
The sky is shot-through with bugs, this time of year
Their little bodies are caught in your hair, on your face, and smashed on your glasses
Sometimes they like to sting you
Diving right to you—————-RUN, I think, but instead I snap a photo 🙂
Then taking off like a speeding plane
I mean…after all…I have to see if I can get a photo.
I think you know me well enough by now. 🙂
Your friend on a western Colorado farm,
Linda
I like it when I can find ditch foam. It’s not rare but it is unusual. (TLC Cai-Cai is walking with me)
Then there are the NAUGHTY Girls, who broke out of their pasture
Yep. Not a good sign.
Thankfully I was home and able to catch them and put them back in the corral.
Your friend on a western Colorado farm,
Linda
The hot, hot sunlight is gone, in place is more of a crisp bite in the air in the early morning–a shiver, which often-times ripples over your warm skin.
The day warms to up to show glistening heavy dew on all the plants.
Thankfully, the sun heats the day hot enough it still feels like we have the gift of Summer.
Nighttime is a wee bit darker, even if there is a moon or a slew of a million zillion stars
Daylight starts later, with evening shadows crawling quicker and quicker
Autumn…a different kind of peace is now on the land.
Your friend on a western Colorado farm,
Linda
My little flock of Hummingbirds is starting to dwindle
Gradually the feeding at my feeders is becoming less and less
I have gone from 12 feeders
Down to two.
And the reality is, I really only need one. But I keep up two so they don’t have to fight for a spot.
Soon the Swallows will follow. When that happens the Summer birds are all gone.
Sigh!
Your friend on a western Colorado farm,
Linda