Pink Rain—-Thursday, October 22, 2015

Pink-Rain

Last week a little storm played over the Uncompahgre Plateau…(Un-come-pah-gray).

As I stood taking a photo of the sunset and the pink rain cloud — a wedge of returning geese passed over us…calling to all who could hear…”we have returned, winter in near.”

As always your friend,

Linda

 

 

Today There is Fog—Wednesday, October 21, 2015

I tried to take a photo of our world, but it just looks grey.

fog-3.jpgFog!  Beautiful wonderful fog.

We get fog very, very rarely here.  It’s not a common occurrence.  Momma used to tell my brother and I, that fog was when a cloud got tired and sat down upon the earth to rest.

Fog-2Although that isn’t the scientific fact, I like it much better.

A cloud resting.

Fog

There is a perfect stillness in the heart of a cloud.

Your friend,

Linda

I Give to you a Love Song—Tuesday, October 20, 2015

The weather is decidedly cold and wet.  Boomer, Sam the Cat and Monkey the Cat, have decided going outside and ‘hanging out’ is best left for another day.  🙂

Still Boomer and I went for a small walk, tramping down the ditch bank roads filling our lungs with sweet, cold, fresh air.

As Boomer checked out the news I realized the wind was playing a lovely Love Song. The following is the melody…and in the end you get to hear my old lady voice as I storta stumbled while trying to turn off the camera.  Be Kind, now.  I was shocked to hear how much I sounded like my paternal Grandmother….I put it down to almost falling.  (Lets hope so.)

As always your friend,

Linda

It’s Raining Here—-Monday, October 19, 2015

Rain-2It’s raining!  Lovely drops of rich moisture, turning the drying corn a golden color.

Rain-1When you go outside the air smells good.  It’s a different smell from spring and summer rain.

CloseYou can smell the drying corn as absorbs the moisture, the earth as the dust is settling and the rich odor of the leaves as they are pushed from the trees, landing with little pitter and patters on the grass, the sidewalk, against the house, on the roof of the buildings.

Rain!  We have been needing it.

As far as Terry and I know all the crops are now in…the hay is cut and stored, the pinto beans harvested, the ensilage/silage chopped and packed into the pits, and the onions are in the sorting sheds.  The sweet corn harvested ended on Labor Day.

The warm autumn days are starting to give way (now) to the cooler and wetter weather.  The forerunner to that four-letter word, which starts with s.  (Although, snow IS an important component for survival.)

Soon, very soon, the corn will dry to the perfect moisture content and we, along with many others, will begin the last harvest of the year….pick’n corn.

Until then…everyone is enjoying the rain.

EdgeAs always your friend on a Western Colorado Farm,

Linda

 

 

A New Bird to Our Area—Sunday, October 18, 2015

When out and about the other day, Terry, Boomer and I came upon a new bird.  A couple of pretty little doves.  I took a photo of them, but it turned out too dark to use.  Then two or three days ago a reader, OneFly, sent me a photo of the same doves in his area down in the corner of our state

Type of Dove

He asked me if I had

Type of DoverHe asked me if we had any of these birds up here.

Surprisingly we just had just seen some.

Then yesterday, OneFly sent me the answer: They called Inca Doves, and they ARE new to our area!

How very cool this is.  I hope they hang around and find our neck of the world to their liking!

Your friend on a Western Colorado Farm,

Linda

Guest Post by Mr. Jim Wetzel, Curator Delta Museum, Thursday, October 15, 2015

The following history is Part 2 of three parts and was written in June, 1956 by Mrs. Cy Stone, wife of the field representative for the R.E.A. Telephone Loans Program. The history was prepared for Oliver J. Stone (no relation to Cy Stone) when he was Manager of the Delta County Co-operative Telephone Company the same year. This history predates the transition to dial telephones in the county. It has been edited for clarity.

Newsletter

Outside the Co-op Telephone office in Paonia – 1907. O.J. Stone second from left.

Oliver Stone carried a 30-30 along in his buggy, but said he only used it to kill coyotes. However, the area was not without its excitement.

Crawford, Colorado, was quite a rough town in the early 1900’s. Cowboys would whoop-it-up in the town theaters (saloons), and dancing girls decked out on the stage would sing some little ditty to the crowd. The cowboys would “catch on” to the words and sing in lusty unison, then punctuate the atmosphere with gun shots through the roof of the building. Oliver stone was very quiet and mild mannered, and claimed only to be an observer to such scenes of real western thrills, or chills.

On one of Oliver Stone’s first trips to Delta to repair phones in 1906, the first resident he called upon for repair work, curtly informed·him that “it was about time the phone was fixed”. Then added, “The only reason we keep the phone is because of that nice operator, Sadie Guyer.” Sadie was the first operator in Delta. Her folks ran a room and boarding house in Delta. Stone stayed there when his duties took him to that town. There he met Sadie’ s sister, Miss Ethel Guyer, who became Mrs. O. J. Stone in 1912. They had two daughters, Harriet and Shirley, and one son, Wendell, who served as Paonia Exchange manager and assisted his father for many years.

Subscribers with telephones began to pay their bills more promptly as Oliver Stone got around to getting them operating correctly. The original rates for the Co-op were residence, $1.50, and business ; $2.00, per month. Only two rate increases were initiated in the life of the Co-op. In 1931, rates on business phones were raised to $2.50, and residence to $1.75, which only raised residence rates 25 cents and business rates 50 cents per month. This was done so that tolls would not have to be charged between exchanges. The second raise in rates came in November, 1952 in order to meet rising costs of operation, which more than tripled during World War II.

By 1956, there were several pioneer linemen still residing in Delta County. One was W.M. Erickson, known as “Wes” to the folks at Paonia. He served as a lineman from 1911 to 1938 and was Exchange Manager. He started out on a salary of $85 a month. He came to Paonia as a carpenter three days after O. J. Stone, on July 4, 1906. “Wes” said that Oliver had been like a brother to him all his life. After Wes retired, he still operated a repair-shop. Stone claimed that Wes could fix anything that needed to be fixed.

Mr. H. H Addams, President of the Hotchkiss Bank, had been a director of the telephone company since 1924, and became President of the company in 1938, and was still president in 1956. Mr. Addams took a keen interest in the new plans for converting the system to dial phones. He observed that the growth and progress of the Delta County Co-operative Telephone Company closely followed the economic conditions in the county. He had high praise for Stone’s fifty-some years of service as a superintendent, secretary and manager of the company.

Sometimes the labor situation had its difficulties. In 1909, Ray Stanford and O.J. Stone built fifteen miles of telephone line at Crystal Creek, south of Crawford. They employed about a dozen Japanese workers. Cowboys told them to get the “Japs” out of the country. But Stanford and Stone were not easily intimidated. They went to the pool halls and told the cowboys they would not replace the Japanese unless they could get available help elsewhere. Thus, the Japanese men stayed on the payroll, digging holes for $1.25 per day.

Stone believed that the bigger the pole, the longer it would stand. There were some about two feet through at the butt. But he found out that the bigger they were, the harder they fell and they rotted off just as quickly as the smaller poles. The Forest Service was interested in the line at Crystal Creek because it provided a means of communication for fire alerts. The Forest Service provided a vat of creosote and a farmer supplied a hay derrick to lift three white spruce poles at a time to dip into the hot vats of creosote. The penetration was not very thorough, and these poles didn’t last much longer than the untreated poles

However, Juniper or cedar poles were bought by the company by the thousands, and a lot of lines were constructed from red cedar poles, costing $1.00 per pole, delivered on the ground. Many of these poles lasted the life of the company. Some of these were used in the main toll line from Hotchkiss, then across Redlands Mesa to Eckert. It was lots of work to get the poles out of the mountains and deliver them by team and wagon to Delta and Hotchkiss and surrounding exchanges. By 1917, an inventory of the system was made and there were 10,000 standing juniper poles and several thousand spruce poles. Stone says, “It’s hard to believe we can rebuild this system in a year and a half. We’ve been building it now for more than fifty years. There’s some that have helped a life-time too – like Wes Erickson, Grant Miller, Herman Schulte, – just so many people have cooperated with this project that I would like to give credit to all of them; in fact, the whole story would fill a book.”

In 1956, the Delta County Co-operative Telephone Company system had a total of forty-eight employees. There were seven operators at Paonia, five at Delta, five at Crawford, seven at Hotchkiss, eight at Eckert, and five at Cedaredge. Four exchange managers were in charge of repair and maintenance. They were Wendell Stone of Paonia, Ralph Crim in Hotchkiss and Crawford, Orville Hanson in Cedaredge and Eckert, and Vanoy Welch in Delta.

The system then consisted of approximately 1,934 miles of wire line in Delta County, 44 miles of wire line in Montrose and 10 miles of wire line in Gunnison County on a total of 416 miles of poles. Even though there were only 2,500 subscribers, there were about 10,000 people who made use of the phone system.

The records of the company were preserved exceedingly well. The Field Representative for the REA Telephone Loans Program observed that they were the finest ever encountered for any independent company applying for financial assistance.

O.J. Stone took over as Secretary for the company in December, 1912. Yearly audits of his books were always found to be accurate to the penny. The basement of the exchange in Paonia housed the records of the company. The first directory of the Delta County Co-operative Telephone Company was printed in 1903. The directories were all printed on the basis of money collected for advertising space by business firms, and the company never had to expend their own funds on a book. Several telephone listings were unchanged from 1903 to 1953, and they were Henry E. Welborn of Crawford, who operated a drug firm in Paonia in 1903, and Abner McKee of Paonia. The Independent Lumber Company listing in Delta also remained unchanged.

In Delta, the first telephone exchange was above the Stockham Hardware building (Columbine Mall, today), and then in 1911, office space was leased in the Delta National Bank building (City Hall building, today), later occupied by The Colorado Bank and Trust Company on the ground floor.

For thirty years (1908-1938) Judge Milton R. Welch advised the growing company as legal advisor and served as President of the Board of Directors for many years. He assisted the company greatly in solving its difficulties over the years. Judge Clyde H. Stewart filled his vacancy, along with other Board members, H.K. Ferguson, C.C. Hawkins and R.L. Stanford during the early years.

MUSEUM DIRECTOR:   Jim Wetzel    835-8905

MUSEUM:  (970) 874-8721  deltamuseum@aol.com

For your reading pleasure!  Your friend,

Linda

 

 

Gifts—Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Corn-and-Sun-1We are all blessed, each and every one of us.  But sometimes…just sometimes life gets in the way.

Fall-1Something that takes us away from looking at the good–something that makes our hearts and minds roil in panic or sadness.

Crazy-MoonStill the gifts of this world keep on shining…

MovingTelling us to be calm.  Given time everything works out.

Rainbow-2Everything!

As my dear departed Momma always said: “Everything works out for the best, if you just let it.”

Pink-in-the-clouds

And it does.  It really does.

Your friend,

Linda

An Amazing Gift—Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Air-Show1

We were invited to the Grand Junction Air Show on Sunday…

Air-Show-2

thanks to our oldest daughter, Shannon,

Air-Show-3 and Shannon’s friend, Marianna, and her husband..Lt. Harold Elam.

Air-show-4

It was a most gracious and

Air-Show-5

luxurious gift.

Air-Show-6Watching the pilots fly their plans was like watching a

Air-Show-9a fluid and graceful

Air-Show-flagballet in the sky!

Terry and I felt very blessed to have the opportunity to attend.

Your friend,

Linda

It Is Not Always Work—Monday, October, 12, 2015

 

Moving-PipeWe’ve moved all the pipe!

Last-of-the-pipeEach four-wheeler hauling it’s share…back and forth, back and forth.  Suddenly we were done!

FoothillsAs the day started winding down, Terry asked me if I wanted to go for a little ride.

terrys-corvette

Sure!

wheeeeeeeeeee

Flying low to the ground

Shadow-Ride

Hair in the wind….we unwound from the day.

Your friend,

Linda

 

Sit Still and Listen to the Whispers–Sunday, October 11, 2015

Blaze-3

“There are times when we stop,

Blaze-4we sit still.

Evening-SKyWe listen to the breezes from a whole other world

Setbegin to whisper.”—James Carroll

How true!  We just have to stand still…and feel…listen…and there they are…the whispers of the wind, the earth and the sky.

Your friend,

Linda