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My name is Linda Brown. I live on a farm on the western slope of Colorado, in the high mountain desert. I’ve lived here all my life, hailing back four generations on my father’s side. Today I blog about our farm, the everyday activities that keep the farm going. I also write about my thoughts and dreams and goals. On Friday’s I always write about TLC Cai-Cai. Our sweet kitty who helps keep the farm safe. And Boo Berry Betty, a breeder dog learning to be a Farm Dog! The lovely thing about blogging it opens the world up for all of us to reach out and meet people from many different cultures and different ways of life. You can find me every day (but Saturday) at https://coloradofarmlife.wordpress.com/ Your Friend on a Western Colorado Farm, Linda Brown

The Adventures of Fuzzy and Boomer on Friday — Whew!

One set of company has gone home.  Zooker and Bella are now home with their Dad and their soon-to-be new Mom and TWO CATS!!!!!

Best-Friends

Teehee Bahhahahah laugh chuckle

On-a-walk

Fuzzy and I took them for many walks daily for about a week!

Now Hank is staying with us while his Dad goes to work and the little kids and Mom-mom stay with our Mom and Dad until their Mom-mom gets to feeling better. She is really sick so we are helping out.

The other dog cousins (Houston, Chaco, and Balou) have company also, so those companies are also staying with Fuzzy and I and our Mom and Dad.  They have some really cute kids we love playing with.  Then Sunday our other first cousins…our Mom’s Brother and his wife and their two fun dogs…Cocoa and Butter are coming to play with us.

Birds

The hummingbirds are THICK…all of the little kids like to stand in the flower beds trying to get the hummingbirds to land on them.  The birds don’t land, but the kids seem to have heaps of fun trying to get them too.

Humming

Fuzzy says that is the longest he ever sees those kids stand still!

Many

We had a very exciting ‘tree event’ right smack in the middle of all this, but I will let Mom tell you about it later.

the

Anyway, for now…just know that we are taking care of lots of pets and kids and our Mom is taking care of our sister Misty and other really nice people who are visiting.

Sleeping

Your wore-out friend,

Boomer

August 6, 2013

DailyStill struggling with the “situation” which we have been dealing with for several weeks. Maybe be by this afternoon we will be on the road to fixing everything.

of

Please hang with me…I really do want to get to everyone’s blog and answer all my comments…life is just not letting me at the moment!

More

I thank each and everyone of your for your prayers, crossed-fingers, and magic thoughts.  They have been necessary and are starting to take effect!

The-Daily-View

Thank you, your friend,

Linda

August 5, 2013

Sorry I’m late today…I had a bit of a family emergency that took my time.  All is okay now, but we had a bit of juggling act for a few hours there.One-cloud

The clouds are rumbling and grumbling across the plateau as I write this, so the possibly of another storm is in the making.  Maybe it will just stay up there watering the flowers and trees.

Although, we Do NOT raise sweet corn our neighbors do so we are always concerned how it’s going for them.  Since sweet corn has a very tiny window of sweetness they are having to harvest if in the mud and rain.  Lots of mud…the tractors are having to pull the trucks through the fields then the trucks leave huge wads of mud on the road.  After each field is done, then they run a blade down the road cleaning off the mud.   Harvest is always a tad stressful, I must say.

Anyway, I hope to get caught up and back into some sort of routine again soon.  Please know that I still have all your comments and will be answering them as I have a spare moment here and there AND I will be visiting each of your blogs!

Path

Like a man told me awhile ago…everyday we have a choice to either be happy or to not be happy…for life happens and things get rough so you can either approach everything with a calm smile or fall apart.

I going for the calm smile and happy feeling!

Have a good one everyone! I’ll be around to visit you soon.

Linda

Sunday, August 4, 2013

And the rains just keep on coming…………

We are having so much rain that the ground is now saturated, which is good and bad.

Good because the rivers that usually dry up in the summer have water in them again.

Flood-2

Good because everything is green, even the desert.

Good because I don’t have wrinkles right now 🙂

Bad because the weeds are growing fast, faster, and fastest!

Bad because the ground is soaked and the puddles are growing moss.

Bad because we now are having flash floods.

Flood-3

Water in the hills, mountains, knolls, and the plateaus are now finding dry gulfs and washes causes flash floods.

Since the desert is so lush and green and full of water, there really isn’t any place for the thundering, spilling roaring water to go…a short time ago a huge flash flood roared it’s way across Highway 50 between Delta and Grand Junction…the effect was amazing.

Flood-4

Water and many splendid thing and also very dangerous!

My Mother grew up in Corona, New Mexico, where they (as children) would play by the many arroyos and dry washes close by.  She always cautioned us to never play in them as a flash flood could come any time.  She also said you can hear the water coming.  Then the towns people would come out to the edges and peer over the sides at the rocks and trees being carried along from the hills far away.

Flood-5

These photos can give you a small idea of what we just saw and what she used to talk about.

Have a good Sunday everyone!

Linda

 

 

The Adventures of Fuzzy and Boomer on Friday — Thunder

It’s raining here!

Ahhh

Lots!

In

Some much so Fuzzy and I have decided we don’t like it

New

You want to know why

Rnbw

THUNDER!

Thunder is terrible!

Through

I didn’t used to be afraid but NOW I AM!!!

First you see a HUGE FLASH LIGHT

And then the SKY GETS REALLY LOUD

Like a GUN going off!

We have to hang with MOM all the TIME

Because it is just so SCARY!

Thunder

Boomer and Fuzzy

August 1, 2013

Today is cloudy and cool.  It is 67* right now…with rain showers here and there around us … nice!

Fun

Terry came in this morning and said he found stripped pinto bean pods…a sure sign we will be looking at harvest in a couple of weeks, by the third week of August for sure.

Today is Lammas Day—after Lammas Day the corn ripens as much by night as by day.  Although, I think most of the wheat harvest is done here and in the other states next to or below ours.  I am also sure that the wheat harvest is moving on up into the northern most states.  Maybe it is over for those states also, hummmm.

The last load of hay is leaving today…every bales sold (now) until third cutting.

Boy, is summer flying now.  We still need to get 3 more cords of wood, maybe 5 cords.  We used 7 cords last winter and still ran out.  It sure was a long winter.  Geez, I dread winter.

Sweet-Corn

I got all the corn up that I’m going to put up.  That is always a good feeling.

Off to do my work for the day…it’s so nice outside I don’t think weeding is going to be much of a chore.  All my seeds I planted are blooming now, sure makes me smile.

Have a good one everyone!

Linda

Sugar Beet Harvest

Way back when our kids were growing up the Holly Sugar Factory still operated here and farmers in the area grew sugar beets for a cash crop.  Not only did they grow the beets, but the factory hired many farmers to help process the beets into sugar.  The job was a very welcome thing—fall and winter (sometimes until March) employment.  Right during the time many farmers had to be very careful with their money.

Farming gives you ONE paycheck a year…yes, one per crop you grow.  This is the money that a farm family lives on and uses to purchase all the necessities, pay the taxes, and pay the huge irrigation bill plus to start and continue farming until the crop ‘comes in and is sold’.

If you know what a once a month paycheck is like to stretch – try a once a year paycheck!  Then get all your expenses out to start your business all over again in the spring and carry you over until the crop is sold.  Sure can be hard at times.

Holly Sugar was a great and wonderful thing for ‘tiding’ a farm family over—not only did they buy your crop …  paid on the sugar content of your beet…poor beets poor paycheck…rich in sugar beets really nice paycheck.  They hired four shifts of men and sometimes women for certain jobs.  The pay was always very welcome…you work you get paid.

Holly Sugar left town in the 70’s.  It was sad for everyone.

Sugar Beet harvest always started in October giving the beets a chance to get cold so the  sugar content in the beets would rise.  Many times the harvest happened in wet, frozen, turned to mud fields.  Right along side the corn harvest and the apple harvest and the turning of the leaves.

Sugar Beet Harvest

 

This is the way our local farmers used to bring their sugar beets to market. This photo shows a line-up of wagons loaded with beets waiting their turn to dump their load at the Delta beet dump. Beets were dumped directly into open rail cars prior to 1921, and after the factory was built in Delta, they were dumped at the factory site where they were transferred mechanically to the processing at the facility.

My sweet corn is ready for picking so I’m off to start my tiny harvest of sweet corn.  When winter comes we will enjoy rich, golden, sweet, sweet corn once in awhile.  A small delicious reminder of summer.

Have a good one my friends!

Linda

 

 

July 30, 2013 A Story to Share With You

The Story of OLD TWO TOES

by Jim Wetzel

Grand Mesa was a primary recreation destination for our early pioneers, and has remained so through the years. Many Delta citizens had a get-a-way cabin somewhere on the mesa, and, though it might take a day to get there, they would spend days and weeks enjoying the fishing and hunting while there. The Grand Mesa area had been a prime source of food (hunting) when the Ute Indians were still in this area before 1881.No hunting story was repeated in Delta more than the story of “Old Two Toes, or sometimes referred to as “Old Club Foot.”

 

E. M. Getts

Old Two Toes is pictured with E.M. Getts in front of his store on Main Street.

For more than a decade, a large bear had been seen on occasion on Grand Mesa, and it was long suspected of killing many cattle over the years. In 1890, the bear was caught in a trap, and lost three toes on his right foot in the adventure when he escaped from the trap. From then on, he was identified as “Old Two Toes”, and he was easily identified by his tracks around slain and partially eaten cattle. He preferred his meat “fresh”, and would not go back to a previous kill. Angered cattlemen put up a $500 bounty for the removal of “Old Two Toes.”

In late October, 1902, a small hunting party happened to be on Grand Mesa, and 61 year old Franklin Manges, a novice hunter, decided to tag along. Manges decided to stay in their camp as the others went looking for game. After a while, Franklin took his Winchester .30-30 and left camp for a look around, thinking he might scare up a deer for sport.

As he was walking along, he heard a loud “woof” behind him, and looking around, saw an immense bear approaching him. Standing perfectly still, the bear left him alone, but when it was about 60 feet away, Manges fired and wounded it, and it ran off. He tracked the bear for several miles, and as he was crossing a stream, the bear stood up on his hind feet about seventy-five feet from him.

Fank Manges

Franklin Manges, the man who shot and killed Old Two Toes.

He shot it once and broke it’s shoulder and then gave it one more, at which it retreated into the brush. As Manges circled around some willows, the bear emerged from about fifty feet away and charged him. “Then he commenced to shoot pretty fast”, according to the original story version, and the bear sank to the ground. A total of eleven shots had hit the bear.

Thinking he had killed the bear, and because he was getting hungry, he returned to camp for dinner and told his companions about the incident. When the group went back to where the bear was downed, it was not there. They followed it’s tracks for about a hundred yards before they spotted it near a thicket. Manges placed a twelfth shot just below it’s ear and finally completed the job.

“Old Two Toes” was reported to have weighed about 1,600 pounds. The hide was 8 feet 4 inches in length. Of the twelve shots that penetrated the hide, only two penetrated the fat layer under it. Is it any wonder that a bear of this size survived as long as it did? Experienced bear hunters were afraid of it! Franklin Manges was quite inexperienced, and didn’t know any better. Had it not been for his cool demeanor under pressure, he might not have survived either.

The bear hide was placed on exhibit in a Delta store window for some time, and was also taken to the St. Louis World’s Fair in 1903 and admired by thousands. Franklin Manges had secured his place in Delta’s history. Today, the “Old Two Toes” hide is with family descendants of Franklin Manges in Pennsylvania.

About ten years ago, I received an email from such a descendant and it included several photographs of the hide as it was currently displayed in his home. “Old Two Toes” seems to have survived total anonymity and, though the hide has deteriorated some over the years, it is still around to remind the descendants of Franklin Manges of his contribution to our local history.

 

Two toes

Photographed about ten years ago, the hide of Old Two Toes clearly shows the remaining two “toes”, having lost the other three while escaping from a bear trap.

Just for Fun — Courthouse Jury Chairs

While an old chair is not an unusual item to be found in a museum, it may be unusual that we have eleven of the twelve original courthouse jury chairs in our museum. These chairs were used in the 1896 courthouse, in the District Court, and may have been used for over fifty years in that building until the new courthouse replaced it in 1958.

All eleven of the chairs are in use, even today, in the museum. Nine of them are placed in the Stephens Gallery around the tables which are used for board meetings and are also used by the public when conducting research. We keep two chairs near the reception desk for use by visitors, as well. The twelfth chair is in Delta in private ownership, rescued by a well-known attorney of earlier years.

The museum acquired the chairs in 1965, a gift from the Board of County Commissioners that year. While the Delta County Historical Society added cushions to the chairs years ago, the jurors had no such comfort. Perhaps the lack of comfort kept them awake, if needed.

Imagine how many lives were affected by those that sat in those chairs years ago?

Jury Chairs

Jury chairs from the 1896 courthouse are still in use at the Delta County Museum

Jim

Museum Director / Curator and Newsletter Editor

Jim Wetzel (970) 874-8721

deltamuseum@aol.com

Linda

https://coloradofarmlife.wordpress.com

http://deltacountyhistoricalsociety.wordpress.com

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Terry got the hay all in and most of it sold…orders came in Friday.  Come Monday the most (of the rest) of the hay will leave.

Hay

The dogs and I got our part taken care of so Terry could finish up his.  Aren’t they a hoot ‘helping’ me?

Dogs-on-write

It’s raining here.  The rain is nice.  It started around 8 in the evening and has only stopped around right now.  All the dogs are outside, which I like and so do they.  The other nice thing about this rain is our temps have dropped to the high 70s, most enjoyable.

To-catch

Our youngest grandchild is delighted with all the hummingbirds…she keeps hoping if she stands really still one will land on her.

Buyers

Saturday afternoon I went with Terry to one of the 4-H and FFA annual livestock sales where Terry was representing a company he is on the board as a buyer. It’s been a long time since I sat in a sales ring watching kids bring their animals through for the sale.  I found the experience lots of fun.  I would post the photos here but I didn’t do a very good job taking them, they all turned out poorly.

Since it’s too wet to do anything outside I think this day is going to one of catching up and taking it easy all at once.

I hope you enjoy your Sunday…it is really nice here!

Linda