For me anyway
Of being alive on this earth, on this farm
Working side by side.
Life is good, my friends, life is good.
From my heart to your world,
Linda
Well, this isn’t about the farm. But is about the farm yard, to be specific its about the farm yard drive way…
Yep the really nice FEDEX driver showed up. I’m always cautious…there is a mean UPS driver so I take my time warming up to these drivers. But this guy is nice. He always wants to make friends. Then he hands me a cookie before he walks to the house to give mom her package.
That’s about the farm yard road.
Out on the ditch bank there are lots of little raccoon critters. We have a huge group of them. Sometimes they travel all the way into the farm yard and skitter around out back where the hay is always stacked.
I like to go out and see who is there. A couple of the raccoons are my friends. We ‘do’ things together.
I go with Mom all the time. We go change water. We also go over to my sister’s so I can see my dog cousins,
and we head out and check on the fences —
good fences make good neighbors, Mom always says.
Mindy cat is a farm cat. She is really good at catching mice. Really good. She sometimes eats so many she herks them back up. I just sniff the herk, but—not to my taste. I leave it there until Mom comes along and picks it up with a shovel.
I don’t know what Mom does with it, but…something. Anyway, it’s gone.
And the wind…don’t get me started about the wind…it’s been so strong that it lifts my ears right up in the air. Mom says I look cute with my ears blowing in the wind.
Well, that my farm report. Mom and I hope you have a good weekend.
Boom Beaglie Brown a.k.a. Sherlock Boomer
STOP!
Right THERE!
And lift up your eyes
Rejoice in the everyday
Sing songs to the sun
And sing to the everyday commonness of [your] daily lives.
“Still, what I want in my life
is to be willing
to be dazzled—
to cast aside the weight of facts
and maybe even
to float a little
above this difficult world.”
― Mary Oliver
From my world to your heart,
Linda
Mom is such an old bore….whenever I go anywhere with her I have to STAY RIGHT BY MOM!!!
We finished weeding the second pinto bean field…and I had to STAY RIGHT BY HER!!!
We had to go clean up a big branch that broke at my sister, Shannon’s yard…and I had to stay “CLOSE BY”!!!
Romeo took a big escape and hoofed it over to our yard…Mom and I took him to the canal pasture, but I had to STAY WITH MOM!
If Mom and Dad walk somewhere I get to walk with them…
I can walk ahead or behind, but I have to walk where MOM CAN SEE ME!
You see there is Rabbit Fever on Grand Mesa—so Mom is afraid it might be down here. She says I’ve been too sick to get myself exposed to something awful again. She says fleas carry Rabbit Fever and all animals in the wild get fleas! (Rabbit fever: An infection in rabbits and other wild rodents caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis that can be transmitted to humans by contact with infected animal tissues or ticks. Also called tularemia.)
When my youngest sister and Linkin came to visit and they walked Shannon’s dog…Mom did NOT let me go with them!
Changing water I have to “SIT! Stay!” on the four-wheeler.
I think I have a
helicopter Mom!
Boomer, Mom’s Beaglie!
There is tremendous satisfaction from pulling weeds out of the soil. Backbreaking and endless the chore, but it always gives me a sense of triumph.
My yard is a series of rooms..flung around the edges of the lawn. Tearing the roots of thistles, bind-weed, wild grasses single-minded in the sun and the heat. (I love the sun and the heat. Love it!)
I ripped and tore with tremendous concentration–covering 1/2 acre…stopping only at the end of the day.
feeling the soil give up the stubborn root; the foe lying defeated in my wheelbarrow
The farm yard felt calm and empty as I worked. Pleasant, peaceful, healing!
(some of the above photos were taken previously, as is this one)
I still have the east side of the house to do, but today is Sunday. And it’s trying to rain.
I played hookey (just this morning) from changing water, letting Terry get the early morning sets! I’ll be back out there at noon and beyond. Right now I’m taking a wee break!
I love the silence of solitude.
Love,
Linda
Terry is out changing the irrigation water…not me. I’m sitting here, dry, and talking to you. 🙂
I know…I’m a fair weather irrigator! 🙂
Actually, he has some things he wanted to do that I couldn’t help with, but still
He is in the rain, with his yellow slicker on an rubber boots.
The corn has dented…a full dent. That means the last irrigation is soon.
The pinto beans are starting to stripe and turn yellow…once fully yellow it will be time to let them dry so they can be harvested.
We will irrigate the alfalfa field after the hay is cut and hauled in, then that will be it for the year.
More signs of fall…the ending of the growing season.
Your friend on a Western Colorado Farm,
Linda
We started the water for the first time Thursday morning around 6:00. Terry worked at the head gate and I cleaned the ditches as the water flowed toward the fields. I rejoiced that I had gained back my summer muscles by the time we turned on the water! You see a person must straddle the ditch, pitch fork in hand and scoop and fling out trash like crazy, then jump back to one side and rush down to a further location, straddle the ditch, and start scooping again until we get to end of our place and the water flows back into the canal.
There is always, always tons of trash in the ditches.
Then Terry joins me, he places the dams along the cement ditch; backing up the water. After which we start the tubes, he digs out the furrows and I start the tubes. We must work fast or the water will back up and flood over the sides creating a mini-disaster.
Twice a day every day the tubes are changed….every two hours or so, the tubes are checked to make sure there is no trash in the ditch and the water isn’t running over into fields that haven’t been worked.
During the daytime–the morning set —we are watering the corn ground —Terry likes to water-up the seeds, instead of planting and then watering.
In the evening we move the water to the alfalfa field, since it doesn’t need to be checked while we sleep.
Spring time work is always a huge, huge push. But there are so many wonderful things about being out there on the land: the smell of the ground as the water hits it for the first time, the extremely cold invigorating wind on your face as you drive the 4-wheeler, the warm body of Boomer as he huddles next to me using me as a shield, the peace and beauty all around, seeing pheasants rise with loud squawks and cries of alarm, if we get too close to them, watching a fox trot along the edge of the alfalfa field searching for mice, bending over and setting a tube (and it works the first time) then moving on, always staying ahead and in a rhythm, the sun coming up and starting to warm the air the land and you, shedding your jacket and feeling the sudden coolness that soon disappears as you work.
Long before we finish the last set of the day the air starts to cool down so the jackets come back on, Boomer is tired and hangs by me all muddy and pleased with himself, the Western Meadowlarks are now silent and the Red-winged black birds chirping sleepy time calls, a little family of Kill Deer run quickly away from us, and the sun breaks forth into dazzling colors, peace and calm settle down upon the land as the life giving water flows toward the end of the field.
Your friend on a Western Colorado Farm,
Linda
Boomer—Reporter @ Large That’s me! The official reporter for the Farm. Our Colorado Farm, that is!
Mom and I have been working in the hay field…whew! It’s a bazillion degrees out there!
Mom told Fuzzy he really needed to stay home and hold down the fort. He needed to stay where it was cool and nice. (I told Fuzzy he was actually lucky, it was miserable out there. He didn’t believe me. But it was, it really was!)
That evening Mom brought Fuzzy along with us to change water…the corn is starting to tassel out…see the little ears…each one of those silky brown things hanging on the ear will soon be pollinated by the corn tassel creating a golden juicy kernel of corn goodness.
(This is NOT sweet corn, this is hard dent corn used for animal feed and for making corn meal—Mom does have sweet corn for the house, but it is just for our use, not to sell.)
Blade came over and spent the night with us. We all went with Dad to check on a house…
Mom and Blade rode in the back of the pick-up with Fuzzy and I…we had a BLAST!
Fuzzy and I have a toad that lives UNDER our dog houses in a cool little hole/tunnel thingy. He comes out in the evening or whenever Mom is watering. I like to put my nose on him and feel his funny skin…feels sorts of cool and leathery like Fuzzy’s nose!
Sometimes I still forget to come when Mom calls: ‘HEAD Home, Boomer! We are heading home now! Hurry Up Come ON!’ When that happens I run LIKE THE WINNNNNNNNNND! Just as fast as my Beagle legs can take me….so far I’ve been able to catch up and ride the rest of the way. Mom always stops and lets me get on the Four-Wheeler. Always.
Yesterday we had a huge thunder storm complete with lightening and rain. It got Mom and Fuzzy and I wet since we were out checking the water when the wind blew it up. We knew it was around as we could see the crash and flash of the lighting; we still had to check water so out we went. WET! Very wet! But it did feel nice!
(Mom and Dad hope we don’t get any more rain since there are still 100 bales out in the field…the bales have to dry in the field ‘now’ before they can be hauled into the stack.)
Thanks for reading…I think I’ll take myself off and have a little lay-down.
We’ve been up and doing since 5 in the morning. I need to catch a little shut-eye before we head back up to check the tubes. Boomer
It’s warm here. We had 102* yesterday afternoon. The dogs and Terry languished melting into the house; laying around in the family room while the swamp cooler cooled them down.
I worked at keeping the yard watered then around four o’clock decided I would just have to wait and start all over again as soon as the temps dropped back down to 98* or so. The heat did pound right into me as I walked here and there moving hoses. It was hot enough walking made a person feel like they were moving in slow motion.
The day had started with huge promise of being hot and it kept it’s promise.
Moving through the growing corn to set water re-confirmed that we WERE in July. The biting bugs hovered and dug right in for a lush rich drink of blood as we moved from one spot to another.
Finally we hopped back onto the four-wheelers and drove through the almost to tassel (but not just yet) corn into the wildly green pasture at the very top of the farm…here the mosquitoes and biting gnats gave way to swarms of more hungry bugs…tiny horse flies, deer flies and giant horse flies, no-see-ums, you name it. But the air was cool and fresh in the pasture so it made the flies seem endurable.
Yesterday, was also Delta’s summer celebration –Deltarado Days. We only attended the Parade, the Car Show and the Tractor Pull (I sure you knew we would attend those last two…:) )
By evening and the last change of the irrigation water we had cooled down to a very nice 88*. The night cooled even further down with dew setting on around four this morning.
Terry is out baling hay right now. Although he won’t be out there very long because this day is heating up also.
Normally we don’t really work on Sunday…we treat it as a ‘day of rest’, but now and again somethings must be done…baling the hay when all things come together to create the bale is one of those things.
Thank each of you for your continued friendship across the miles. Having my internet back is sure nice!
Your farm friend,
Linda
Every single twilight…
Twice a day….
Morning and evening…
Sometimes more…
The always chore…
We head to the fields
Never leaving…
Always checking, moving and starting…
Picking up….
Filling…
Laying down….
Moving on…
Supervise…
Making sure it’s all done right.
Then gets bored…
Heads off for news…
Forgets to hear…
The call to come…
“We are heading home”…
When he does…
Wait for me, Mom!”….
Boomer applies the brake!
We’ve been really cold here. Fuzzy has even had us sleeping inside. THAT WORKS FOR ME!!! It’s so cold Mom and Dad still wear their winter gear and so do Fuzzy and I. (To be honest with you I dread that shedding, panting hot weather, but Mom says she is ready for so warmth. 🙂 )
Last night the sunset was stunning. Mom was even late following Dad in because she had to hang on the ditch bank taking shots of the setting of the sun! It was really cool.
But she CALLED me back and I came FAST, then we just sat there for-ever so long…geez. Finally after about an eternity she took off and we zoomed home.
Mom doesn’t really go fast ‘cause Fuzzy would fall off. Fuzzy’s balance isn’t very good anymore and he LOVES to stand up the whole way. I’ve told him to sit down and hunker, but he just gives me a dirty look. “I’ll stand until the day I die” he growls at me.
Shish….okay, Fuzzy. Just say’n.
So after three eternities, when I could have been out there getting news, Mom finally drove in and brought us inside for the night.
Inside to sleep when it’s cold outside…heaven! (I like being outside when it’s warmer, but not now)
Inside to sleep with a dog treat! PRICELESS!!!
Boomer