Time Long Ago —- Tuesday, June 17, 2014

IMG_4279This is our sky…full of dirt and wind and wind and dirt and dirt and wind…oh, yes I said that.

Roubidoux-2Here is the Roubidoux just the other day

IMG_4280Here is the Roubidoux now and yesterday.  I think all of Utah has come in on the 40 m.p.h. gusts we have been having.

But enough of that!  I wanted to relay to you a story told to me by a long-time blog follower- Mr. John North.

Here is what he had to say:

Speaking of long ago— you are so good in relaying history of your area and your family too, I am going to start a bit of that myself. Not a blog, but just “personally” to you.

My maternal great Grampa,Charlie, an original settler west of the White Mud River in Saskatchewan ( early 1900’s) told the following story to my father when he was a relatively young man and around the time my dad married his wife, Grampa Charlie’s daughter.

He was a rancher and at the time of the story I am about to relate, he was a widower.

One day he was out inspecting his cattle. (The pastures in Sask. are measured in Sections, they were that large. My cousins still do that. ) He was an excellent horseman till nearly the age of 90 and sat tall in the saddle, dad would tell.

Well, it so happens that Charlie needed to dismount and walk nearer some of his cattle. So intent was he on looking after the Mums that he failed to notice that a big bull walked between he and his mount. (I wish I could remember his horse’s name, but I can’t.)   He heard the bull sound off and turned around to see him pawing the prairie. He could do nothing to save himself, running was a waste of breath. So he locked eyes. The bull charged him.

Great Grampa Charlie was pretty fearless as the one tonner closed in. At the last second he sidestepped the big fella. But back in that time the bulls had their horns. As he rushed on by with Charlie doing some quick footwork, he swung his head and hooked Grampa, laying open his stomach.

There was a grievous wound, as you can imagine. Being far “out there”, there was no possibility of medical help.

Period.

He held himself together, and somehow made it to his horse who hadn’t drifted too far. He finally got up in the saddle and rode slowly back to his house. It was not easy and it was not a short ride. The distance is lost on me and I can’t ask my dad because he has passed on. But by and by he made it home and slid off. He got into the house and came out with a needle and thread. He then found an old plank which he laid on a flat area. Then he laid on the plank, tucking his innards back in. As best he could he stitched himself back together.

I know there are other details, now forever lost, but Dad said that he returned to the house, recuperated and went back to work. Not sure how long it took but he was up and doing and didn’t look back.

This happened while he was an older man, I forget what age, and he went on to live many more years. It all seems incredible, but he did what he had to do.

I guess it was episodes like that that made him the man that he was, Dad loved the ‘ol guy and the the feeling was mutual. He was strong and he was kindly. He had grit and he had cattle savvy. And it seems he was a “Doctor” as well.
Your friend,
John

What’s a little wind and dirt in the air compared to this?

Pink-SkyAt some point in this week the wind will leave and the dirt will settle down upon the land adding new soil to the old. The clouds will reappear and the sun will rise and set with outstanding colors.  Just like Mr. North’s Grampa we really need to do whatever it takes to ‘get ‘er done’, then move on.

Thank you, Mr. North for sharing with all of us this feat of ‘just making it through the day’!

Than you, Dear Readers for sharing your photos of rainbows, and birds and fun stories.  I’m always interested in what you send me.  If you don’t mind I would love to share them with all of those who have subscribed to my blog.  Life is full of wonder every where we live.

Your friend,

Linda

 

 

No One Likes a Bully —March 31, 2014

We had a huge bully wind yesterday….55 m.p.h. gusts that picked up everything and flung it here and there and everywhere.

Wind3All of Utah came with it!

No, not really, but the sky was brown.

Along with the dirt and wind came ‘almost’ rain.  Just enough to coat my very clean and sparkling windows.

I haven’t really gone to check the apricot trees, I guess I know what I will find.

This morning the sky is Spring time blue, the sun is shining, the air calm, with a few puffy clouds around Paonia.  It will stay that way until this evening when another wind will blow in.  The weather people say we will be like this for a week.  Then more settled weather will arrive with 70* temps.  YIPPEE!!

Off now to rewash the windows to let the sunshine into the house!

Your farm friend

Linda

 

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

We fought wind and dust all day long yesterday.  Sure was a mess!

And of course it had little bits of rain with it…nothing that does any good, just helps the blowing dirt stick to stuff.

Here is one of our windows to give you an idea…that isn’t rain, it’s dirt.

Dirt-on-the-window

I went to bed thinking I will be glad when the weather settles and I can get the windows and screens washed.

This morning we woke up to this-

Now

Yep!  And we still irrigate even though there is snow.

Terry and I were talking about those that have corn seed in the ground ready to ‘water-up’–sort of scary, because this type of moisture will cause the seed to swell and break out roots and a stalk, if the water doesn’t hit them at the right time the seed will die.

That is one reason we water the ground first, wait for it to dry to the right stage of moisture and then plant.

Everyone has their own theory and knows what works for them, but for us this is what and why we do what we do.

Also, this type of weather is a mess for those in the ‘prep’ stage of ground work.  You get the soil to the point of being a really nice sponge; it will act like a sponge.  In our clay type of soil sponges turn rock hard if you don’t get on it right at a certain point.

As in all things timing is everything.

There is an old saying: “As in gambling so is farming”  there just might be more than a grain of truth in it.

Well, moisture is moisture so we will just keep the fire going, the water flowing and know that someday, at some time, winter has just GOT to end!  🙂

Linda, from Canada sent me some bulbs of her Tarda Tulips, last year we were so dry they didn’t bloom, but this year they are lovely.

More-Tarda

Of course they are covered up with snow right now, but the photos I got yesterday show you how beautiful they are

Tarda-Tulips

Spring time in the Rockies or is it still winter time?  Maybe a mix of both 🙂

Linda

 

April 16, 2013 — The Perils of the Head Gate

After a very cold day yesterday, we woke up to thick frost on the ground which quickly melted by 7:30 this morning.  It was lovely.

Although…………….

Wind

We could see Utah dirt coming in from the Uncompahgre (Un-come-pah-gray ..  accent on the pah) Plateau.  By 8.30 it was here…nasty wind, full of red dirt.

The weather guy said we would not see this wind until around 2-3 this afternoon (I wonder if harder wind is coming in at that time), then it would change over to rain and then snow and would snow most of Wednesday then blow out of here.

More-@

I took a couple of photos of Terry cleaning out the head gate.  The Head gate is the out-take gate of the main canal to your farm….our canal, the one that runs by us is called the Ironstone, the water that leaves our place goes back into the Ironstone and into the FNC Lateral…which is a branch of the Ironstone canal.

We are lucky because the head gate to our farm is right at the beginning of our farm…its easy to monitor because it is so close.  Some farms have head gates as far as 2-3 miles FROM their farm.

Checking-the-head-gate-1

All head gates have to be monitored for trash, dead animals, big garbage that someone up the way didn’t want to deal with…on the most part everyone is really good about NOT dumping stuff into the canal for the next person to have to take of.  Sometimes an animal will fall in (or get tossed in) we’ve had skunks, sheep, calves and pigs that have been caught in the head gate.  No goats so far, which is good.

I’m heading out to sort firewood, we have some green I need to get into a different pile and I want to do it before the rain starts.

Thank each and everyone of you for following and/or commenting!  I always appreciate how wide spread the world of blogging is and how diverse our worlds are; yet how very close blogging makes us. I am most grateful for this blogging world and for getting to know so many people from around the world.

Cool-cloud

Sincerely,

Linda

 

The Second Day

I was excused from work this day.

Told I wasn’t needed.

Said it would go faster now and I could stay at the house and get ‘stuff’ done there.

I didn’t complain.

He was right.

Day-2When I went up in the late after noon he was over half-way done.

Day-2--2He thinks he will finish up today…tomorrow at the latest.

Which is good, because we are supposed to have a rain storm Thursday(tomorrow) and snow of Saturday.

If he can get done today the rain will help settle the soil around the pipe and into the trench.  After that we will know how much dirt we will have to bring up from the back side of the place to fill in what has settled.

Linda

 

 

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

 

Terry has finished getting the corn fields ready for the fertilizer.  Moving from former bean ground to corn ground doesn’t take as much tractor work.  First he disked the already mellow soil (beans are good for the soil), then he leveled.  Here is is leveling, which means he is filling in any hollows and removing any hills that the wind and water created over the last year.  It needs to have a little fall so the water can start at one end and run to the other end.

Finished!  (Complete with a little dirt devil).  Next we will add fertilizer, then roll in the fertilizer, then mark it out (so the water can run from the top of the field to the bottom) and start water.

I don’t do tractor work, but I do irrigate.  Irrigation should start the first week in April on this field and on the already planted alfalfa fields.

Terry ripped up an old alfalfa field (they have to be torn up every 3-5 years to keep the hay produced full of healthy rich hay, instead of mostly weeds), which will go into corn.  We will put water on that field around the second or third week in April.

The upper end (which burned in the fire) will be worked up and planted to alfalfa.  He will do it sometime in April.  It had corn in it, but since we are losing the largest field he likes to have a certain amount of hay to sell every year.  Usually Terry plants a mother crop with the hay, but this year he is going to ‘thick seed’ it.  Meaning only the very, very expensive alfalfa seed will be planted, a planted very thickly to choke out the weeds.

Old corn ground has to be plowed.  We have lots of clay in our soil so plowing is the best way to go.  Old corn ground is the only ground we plow.  Plowing takes all the old stalks and leaves, turns it under in the soil where it breaks down adding richness to clay-type of soil.  More work with the tractor, but way better results.

This field will become a pinto bean field next year.  We do rotational farming, which helps the soil and the plants the next year.

The nasty high winds have left our area for a spell.  I worked in my yard all day yesterday and came in looking like a fresh dug potato.  Its a wee bit cooler, but HEY no wind.

I take it!

Linda

 

The End of the 2011 Harvest

Finally we made it….done!  Finished!  The 2011 year of crops are harvested and sold.  Even, what hay we save out to be sold is sold!

Now different work starts…repairs to the machines, fences and buildings.  Always the fences need checked, but we have finally finished.  This year was good.  Nothing like last year that seemed to go on and on and on.  The last of the corn wasn’t harvest until in December, then we couldn’t sell it until the end of March.

Terry was thinking of getting out of farming…but guess what?!  He said he thinks he will go another year.  (Then there will be another year…when you have dirt for blood I don’t think you ever really want to give in and stop.)

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Have a nice Sunday everyone!

Linda

Utah Flew into Our Part of Colorado Yesterday

45 m.p.h winds full of grit, sand, and dirt came in from Utah yesterday

Making work on the farm hard

And exhausting.  Fuzzy still enjoyed the first set of water.

But Terry and I came in more than tired.  Wind can be exhausting, then add in being hit with shards of sand, grit and dirt …

A new little calf joined our herd right has the worst of the storm started.  He was a little upset as his rough windy arrival in the world.

Momma and baby are doing fine.

Cold here today, but the wind stopped. That is a gift in an of itself.

Linda

Step 5 – Kick the Dirt

kick-the-dirt

After all the snow and rain, then wind and snow, and then rain, the sun came out and warmed up the earth.

To check the soil to see if it was ready for more tractor work, a good rule of thumb is to rub your foot into the soil to see what type of moisture comes up.

The soil is ready!