A Sunny Day—Monday, December 15, 2014

SnowThe storm clouds are leaving our mesa, being pushed toward Grand Mesa and the towns surrounding the base of that huge massive plateau.

It’s cold here today.  I’m not complaining I can take cold; if I can see the sun…and I CAN see the sun!

I am sure  you have all heard that Colorado get 300 days of sunshine a year. (I have never counted, but the propaganda says that is what we have so I suppose it is true…)

What ‘they’ don’t tell you is some of the sunny winter days are COLD!  Really cold!  But once more — cold is relative…I’m sure cold in Alaska or Iceland or Siberia is (hummm) MUCH COLDER than here!

Oh, well…I’ll take the cold, if I can have the sun, and we do have the sun today.

IMG_4764The morning sunlight reflected off the transmission lines marching along the edge of the Uncompahgre Plateau (Un-come-pah-gray).  That is the edge of our corn field in the foreground, our mesa then drops down to some house along the flat, which then drops changes into Roubidoux canyon.  The canyon separates that tiny flock of houses from the transmission lines on the west side of the canyon.

2014

Time is starting to dwindle (now) in a head long rush toward Christmas.  Just for Christmas day we will have all our children, their mates, and our three grandchildren for noon dinner.

I will work myself to a nub, hope and pray the food tastes okay, and spend hours before the meal and after the meal in the kitchen.

It will be nice.

The time won’t be long enough, it never is, but for a few hours I will have them here all gathered around filling my heart.

Christmas

 

The time is getting closer!  I can feel my heart starting to swell with joy–a cliche I know, but cliches do exist for a reason.

Your friend on a farm in Western Colorado,

Linda

The Poetry of Life–Thursday, August 14, 2014

We received a call from our daughter in Grand Junction, Colorado and her husband asking if we would like a small break to go on a Four-Wheeler ride on Grand Mesa. (Grand Mesa is the largest flat-topped mountain in the world)

Would we!!!?

Packing a lunch, our jackets, and my camera (of course 🙂 ) we were ready to go.

It wasn’t long before they arrived pulling a trailer which would fit three four-wheelers and the extra four-wheeler in the back of his pick-up truck!

WHEEE!  We were off!

Up-1Grand Mesa is a special place to me.  My brother and I grew up in Eckert, Colorado. Close to the base of Grand Mesa.  Many a time our parents and grandparents would ”head up the mountain’ for a day, or a couple of days and nights, or more.

PathSummers always included times on Grand Mesa.

OnwardToday there are many, many more people on this huge flat top mountain than when we were growing up.  But having more people enjoying ‘the mesa’ brings with it other things than just crowds.  It brings groups of people who band together to create trails for backwoods enthusiasts; off road vehicles, hikers, and fishermen. The winter has cross-country skiers and snow machiners testing their skills.

Rezacks(Cliff and Kimberly Rezak)

We ate lunch at Trickle Park Reservoir, after which we headed back to every day life.

Silly

My goofy husband!

Joy can be sparked by the most simple of delights, don’t you agree?

A day off from the ‘every day of life’ is just so —- well, refreshing.  Life isn’t about mastering everything in it…Life is an adventure.  Some days you just have to experience something vastly different from the ordinary, for the ordinary to be more than just idling along.

Here is my wish for you today—I wish that each one of you can experience that feeling of the wind in your hair, music blasting on the radio, you singing along at the top of your voice–not caring if you are in tune —just feeling the music, the wind and the simple delight of being alive!

Or anything that is slightly different for your regular day.  Something that lifts you right into that other place of refreshment and a feeling of great pleasure and happiness!

Your friend,

Linda

 

 

 

Monday, November 11, 2013

Way back here I promised to show you the photos and tell you a little bit about the Diversion Dam.

Dam

The Diversion Dam is where our irrigation water starts (and out potable water for our homes) out of the Gunnison River flowing through the Gunnison Tunnel.  This is the dam and the little house is sitting over all the ‘workings’ that move the water from the Gunnison to farms along the Uncompahgre Valley  (Un-come-pah-gray…accent on the pah).  We live in the lower part of the Uncompahgre Valley…the irrigation water starts flowing through farms in Montrose, then Olathe and finally Delta.  The water is used many, many, many times before it flows back into the Gunnison River on it’s way to California, Nevada, and Arizona.  Water in our neck of the high desert is not wasted.  Water in Colorado protected by law…we can not even catch rain water as all water must be allowed to flow back into the land.  This link will show you other people’s photos of the dam and the tunnel.

Of-the

Anyway, our water starts at Taylor Reservoir flows into Blue Mesa Reservoir and then starts it’s way down the Gunnison to Delta, through the Black Canyon.

Gunnsion-River

Only a portion of the river is diverted at the Gunnison dam.   The above photo shows you the water flowing onward after the dam.

HouseThe Uncompahgre Valley Water Users manage the water with senior water rights on the river.  This house is where the people live who take care of the Dam and the tunnel on this end of things.

More-Dam

The Uncompahgre Valley Water Users and Delta Montrose Electric Association combined forces to start a hydro project on the canal

Water-UsersYou are looking at the gate that takes the water to the hydro.

Water…always a fascinating subject for me… Since I grew up at the foot of Grand Mesa (my father and grandfather had big orchards) water was always a topic of discussion.  After getting married to a farmer we continued the water discussion …the one of — is there enough to farm with this year? Always a concern.

Anyway, I hope you enjoy your short trip.  It’s always a treat to take people to see where the ‘water’ comes from, water for drinking and for irrigation in our tiny spot of the world.

You Western Colorado Friend,

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.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

We are still cold here, but getting warmer every day.  Although, it IS still coat wearing weather, at least it isn’t layered coat wearing weather :).

Light-on-pole

Terry started working on the ditches yesterday, but the wind was just too bad. In fact it blew one of the yard lights off it’s pole, so he had to stop.

Storms-leaving

The wind blew the storm over Grand Mesa, which is how our storms go…in through eastern Utah, then over Grand Mesa to the Craig, Steamboat Spring area and on to where ever they go from there.  Sometimes they lose their steam along the way, but always they leave us by going toward Cedaredge and Grand Mesa.

Storm-Leaving-2

We will start work on getting the spot ready for the old grainery...this might take some time, but it has to be moved before the first cutting of hay.  Where it sits now is where the haystacks are going to sit.

I must be off…the sun has warmed the frost off of things and I need to be doing!

Have a nice day everyone!

Linda

 

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

8:00 this morning saw much warmer temps than yesterday at the same time….

Still cold, but I’ll take it.

The dry, powdery snow is just about gone except in spots on the north side of things.

But we have snow in the high places

This a photo of Grand Mesa at the front of our place

The snow along the Craig Crest Ridge on Grand Mesa.  This part is closer to the Cedaredge, Eckert area.

The snow along Green Mountain and the Ragged’s.  I wasn’t able to get a photo of the Paonia Mountains or the Gunnison Mountains or the San Juan Range because of a haze covering those parts of the mountains surround us.

But the Uncompahgre Plateau was looking good, with a little snow ridge in the higher parts of the Plateau

The canyon, that our mesa tops off, is called the Roubidoux…

No snow there, unless you look way, way, way at the top where you can see a tiny white ridge of snow.

A good start for the potential of water for next year!

Linda

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Once more we have been lucky to have family come visit.

Terry’s sister, Carolyn and her husband, Wayne came in a stayed a couple of nights.  We took them to Grand Mesa for the day and to my father’s lake.

(Since Tallen, was with us, she had to show Uncle Wayne and Aunt Carolyn the teeter-totter)

Fall is everywhere up there!

The day was perfect…bright blue skies, golden trees, and lovely sunshine.

Linda

Company

One really nice thing about summer is this is when people travel.  The days are longer, and warmer, and the  roads (or air travel) nicer.

Terry’s brother came for just one day.

Of COURSE the corvette had to go for a drive! 🙂 🙂

Then my brother came with his wife, her brother and her brother’s darling little boy.

We went to Grand Mesa for the day

Where the kids found the perfect natural

Teeter-totter.

That had us all laughing and having fun!

Jolene arrived from Canada and is still here for a few more days.  (I just adore her sunny smiling approach to life!)

This Sunday was the last day before school started in our area so Grandpa and I thought we would take everyone out for ice cream in Cedaredge, where we acted like tourists-

Summer, for those who go back to school, is over in our area.  Of course summer by the calendar is still going on.

Summer for the crops is winding down.

I, for one, am enjoying the cooler mornings and the not so extremely hot days.

Linda

Getting Ready for Winter

We’ve been cutting and hauling wood.  Permits are not expensive and you get 4 cords of wood.

Gradually we (meaning all of our kids and us) are getting our winter supply.

We mostly cut on the Uncompahgre Plateau, which is behind our farm.

It’s for sure I can’t haul out logs this size…. its a good thing our son can.  They (meaning Terry/ Evan / Kelly) have to cut the logs down so the rest of us can haul and load them. 🙂

This is a view coming off the top of Grand Mesa.  I grew up in that valley down there…which is the Cedaredge/ Eckert area.  Lots more people there than when I was a kid.  At the time of my youth it was mostly cattle ranches and fruit farms.  We had 36 kids graduate out of my Senior class. 

Everything changes as time moves on.

We saw another rainbow as we headed in from the plateau

You all might be getting tired of these gifts from heaven, but I sure am enjoying them.

Linda

Hollands Store

We are STILL Cold

It’s been raining for a week, I so miss the sun!  And we still are having to light a fire early in the morning to take the chill off.

I’m waiting for the snow to leave Grand Mesa….not until then will be free of chilling weather.

Linda