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  • Welcome, 1-1-11

    Did you know it has been 100 years since anyone said that?

    I have a new plan for blogging this year, at least to start out. I’m going to attempt to keep a daily journal of our lives on the farm. It may bore you (and me) but I want to give it a try. So, with no further ado, here goes:

    January 1 dawned clear and cold in the Ozarks, after a New Year’s Eve that was marred by tornadoes and storms in our area. Thankfully, we escaped and didn’t even have high winds. I feel sorry for those who are starting this new year with damage and devastation and loss. We’ve had that sort of loss twice before, and it is not something you can recover from….or clean up…quickly.

    Since it is Saturday and since it is New Year’s Day, the men only did the basic chores this morning. Cattle are being fed at all the silos now, and big round bales of hay are also delivered to several places. Stan, Theron, Phillip, Lee, Keith and Derek got started at daylight, just after 7:00 a.m. and so were finished by 11, in time to spend the first day of the year with their families.

    I spent the morning taking down and putting away Christmas decorations. When he came in, Stan helped me get our dry and shedding cedar tree out of the stand and into the back of my truck; it will go into our lake to become a place for fish to shelter, feed and nest.

    After a lunch of leftovers, Stan, my farmboy, is now watching football and napping and reading in his recliner for a while before we go out for an afternoon drive. I’m going to suggest we stretch our drive into a visit to the Oldfield Opry tonight. It’s a homegrown country/bluegrass music show about an hour from here. We know the banjo player and one of the two bass players and always enjoy the show. Sometimes, during this off-season, some of the musicians from Branson show up to jam with the regulars, and one of the comedians from the Baldknobbers’ show adds his humor in the winter months. It has been too long since we’ve been to Oldfield! A nice, scenic drive, a little music and comedy–a great way to start the new year!

  •  Happy New Year’s Eve!

    Isn’t it delightful to think of the fresh start of a new year? I am sure it will bring its share of sorrows and disappointments, but I anticipate most of its surprises to be happy ones. Change, though not always welcome, is certain; let it be positive!

    As I look ahead, one thing I am resolving to do is to keep a list of the books I read. How exciting to think about working my way through this stack on my bedside table.

                books for the new year

    This is the book I am finishing…

                sweet bookmark

    I think it is not Jan Karon’s best, but still good. And on top, notice the darling bookmark made by a literary-like-minded friend and given to me for Christmas. See the little key charm on the end? Isn’t that a perfect metaphor for how books unlock the whole world for us?

                coffee table

    Another treasured gift I received, from another bookophile friend, is the one atop this stack, filled with beautiful photographs of the Ozarks. When I placed it on our coffee table, I realized how much this group of books speaks of me.

                 scarflet

    Beside the coffee table is the chair and ottoman where I sit and knit at night, and here is a project I’ve just finished, a little scarflet. I’ve made three of these now and love them! A nice change from the long ones I usually make. I loved handling this soft, silky merino.

                 scarf

    Here is my current work-in-progress: a diagonal scarf knit with one of my favorite yarns, Noro Kureyon. I’ve used this pattern several times now and love to watch it work up, especially in a hand-dyed yarn like this one.

                sweet needles

    I’m using some of my favorite needles, a souvenir of a trip to Wyoming. I bought these darling size 8s in a shop in downtown Laramie, just before we headed westward over the Snowy Range. That range is aptly named; we got into quite a snowstorm crossing over, even though it was still late September.

                  knitting bowl

    Back to the present: see where the ball of Noro is resting? This was a thoughtful and delightful gift from my daughter, a knitting bowl! It sits on the floor beside my chair and keeps the ball of yarn from rolling under and around things. She was so pleased to find such a unique gift, one she knew I would love. I believe it was made by a creative potter and sold on an Etsy site.

                  quote

    The same daughter gave me this and applied it to the wall above our kitchen/dining window. I kept looking at it as we ate our Christmas dinner that day and hoped its prophecy is true, many times over, in the coming years.

    An author I love said, “But in this season it is well to reassert that the hope of mankind rests in faith. As man thinketh, so he is. Nothing much happens unless you believe in it, and believing there is hope for the world is a way to move toward it.” Gladys Taber

    Looking forward with faith and hope….

    P.S. Wish I could say Gladys was a cousin, but alas, I haven’t found her in farmboy’s family tree. Kin, nonetheless, in spirit….

  • I have recently spent HOURS trying to make some changes to my xanga site and have been completely frustrated with it–probably my own ignorance, but there are so many glitches that are irritating. So, I’m starting a new blog, and I’d like to invite you over. If you’d like to follow me there, sign up and you can get email notices if there is a new post.

    I’m wanting to do something new and different this coming year, so we’ll see how it goes. I really DO NOT want to lose you so I’ll come back here and perhaps copy my blogspot posts here.  And I want to continue to follow you, too, so I really won’t go away. Just want to see if a different site is easier to work with.

    Do any of you have experience with blogspot??? Here is where you can find me:

    http://withpensandneedles.blogspot.com/

    Please come visit!

    Your friend,

    American Janet

  • How I wonder…

    who would read it…the story I keep mentally writing? The Line Sisters is modern, yet old-fashioned, and it stars some characters who delve into things I enjoy: genealogy, quilting, farm life, mystery. These people are alive in my head, and I love them all…but would anyone else love them and care about them as I do? It’s scary to think about introducing them to the whole wide world, when the w.w.w. can be so critical and cold and judgmental. Perhaps they’re better off staying where they are.

    what will the new year bring? It’s almost here; I can almost feel it peeking in my window, looking over my shoulder, ready to pounce! Twenty-eleven. Sounds like a little child, learning to count.

    when will we have snow this winter? It seems as if everyone else, even those who NEVER get it,  have been getting snow. I think I need a little snow to make me know it is winter, one of my four favorite seasons.

    where I can find the willpower to commit to a more disciplined daily routine? To ALWAYS start my day with prayer, to always make good choices, to always remember to smile, to be kind instead of critical, to…

    why a rooster would crow eight times at 12:36 A.M.? And why am I wide awake listening to him? I thought tired people…and chickens…are supposed to be asleep at that hour. 

    …if I can remember how to sew? If I simply walk up the stairs, turn on the light in my sewing room and sit down at my machine, will it come back to me? I want to find out the answer to this question, and very soon.

    I keep six honest serving-men,
    They taught me all I knew;
    Their names are What and Why and When
    And How and Where and Who.
    ~Rudyard Kipling

     

  • It’s my birthday–Happy Birthday to Me!

    Don’t think I’ve ever said that before–and now that it is almost over, I can truthfully say this has been a very happy birthday. Church this morning, many wonderful, touching wishes from all sorts of friends, lunch with family, back to the church for a presentation of our little community’s Christmas cantata, and then home for some quiet time before we start another busy week. Yes, it has been a good day all around!

    When I was a little girl, having a birthday right before Christmas sometimes gave me the opportunity for an extra-special way to celebrate. We always cut a cedar from Dad’s farm for our family Christmas tree, and quite often it happened that we made the trek on my birthday. It was easy to pretend that the whole affair was done JUST FOR ME! I always loved the ritual of cutting the tree and bringing it home, getting it into a stand and then decorating it with tinsel, strings of big, colored lights and shiny ornaments. All that preparation was almost better than the gifts that later miraculously appeared on Christmas Eve. 

    When I was about 12 years old, someone had the !!!bright!!! idea of creating an aluminum Christmas tree, the first fake tree I ever knew of. Some of my friends’ moms got one, and in one home the tree sat on a revolving stand, with some sort of changing colored light beamed at it to illuminate it as it slowly turned, creating a very elegant (to my 12-year-old way of thinking) display. (I think it might have been lethal to string electric lights on such a tree.) But my family never had an aluminum tree, and although I admired them, I never really had aluminum-tree-envy. Now I sometimes see them for sale in antique malls and I wonder at the idea that they have become retro-cool. I haven’t bought one.

    As for me and my grown-up house, we still choose a cedar Christmas tree. My farmboy also grew up with this tradition, and we are in accord in our continued preference. We load up whoever wants to go along and head for the far reaches of the farm where cedars languish, escaping the wrath of the bulldozer or brushhog. The best ones are a deep, rich green, fragrant and lush. And if there happen to be some blue berries decorating the branches, it’s all the better.

    We bring our chosen tree home and stand it in a bucket of water on the garage overnight, letting it take one last, long drink before bringing it inside. Then it receives our old-fashioned adornments. There are strings of colored lights, intermingled with bubble lights just for Stan. Our ornaments are an unmatched, motley collection, most given to us by family and friends and some that were made by our children in their elementary school days–quite fragile by now but still displayed because of the memories they evoke. And on the top goes a blue and white angel, purchased the first year we lived in Mississippi–35 years old now but still pretty and sweet.

    Fresh-cut cedar makes the whole house smell festive and good; the fragrance greets you when you walk in the front door. We make sure to keep water in the stand, so that the cedar stays fresh till past Christmas Day. And when we remove it after the celebration is over, it will go into the lake, creating new nesting places for fish…a fitting way to recycle our home-grown Christmas tree.

    We haven’t gone out to find this year’s tree yet–we’re waiting until next Friday so that a special little girl can go along. That is when Addie Dear comes to stay for a few days. It will be the first time she has helped look for our Christmas tree, and I know she will enjoy riding in Poppy’s truck, looking and looking until we find just the right tree, not too big and not too small, but perfect. It may not be the perfectly-shaped, stately tree that adorns Christmas cards or stars in holiday movies, but it will be just right for us…our cedar tree tradition, one I remember many birthdays ago.

  • Sunday night wisdom: “There is no pleasant activity so good that it cannot be improved upon by popcorn.” (Quoted from the works of the sagacious and determinedly verbose J.E. Taber)

    I love our Whirly-Pop and my favorite: Amish Country Popcorn’s Rainbow Blend. Popped on the stove with some olive oil, which imparts a delicious touch of added flavor. I eat a big bowlful and feel no guilt.

    Speaking of guilt, wow–what a wonderful Thanksgiving feast we had! Now that the holiday is over, I’ll be sad to finally remove my beautiful pumpkin from its bench.

                         pumpkin

    But as we look into December, I realize it is time for orange to be replaced with red.

    Speaking of red, I love it. I love red and look for it, especially in the winter. Bright spots of color against winter’s subdued landscape are so welcome.

                        rose hips  

    Red rose hips against a brilliant blue sky…

                        red barn

    Faded red barn boards framed by a stacked stone fence…

                        red squirrel

    A red squirrel carefully watching me from his tree…

    Speaking of trees,

                        bare sycamore

    I love how the white branches of a sycamore look against a blue backdrop…so dramatic! Although winter’s landscape is sometimes seen as drab, I love a cold, bright day when the sky is a brilliant blue, even early in the morning, before the moon has set.

                                moonset

    Dramatic? Our Addie is that!

                       addie

    She can be a real drama queen and a friend to the camera … when she so chooses.

                       crafting

    Her cousins and brother choose to spend a good bit of their time together making things. Paper, glue, scissors, crayons, beads, buttons, markers, paints….these are their favorite toys.

                       girls

    And these are some of my favorite girls: my mom, daughters and oldest granddaughter, Emma.

                        sus wins

    The girls’ favorite game of the weekend? Bananagrams! Sus won this round….

    Even though we came home from church today thinking a nap sounded good, a clear and bright Sunday afternoon, as always, lured us outside for our favorite activity. The back roads called and off we went.

                        cabin

    The simplest rustic abode, on a remote back road, may not contain many comforts but it looks homey, doesn’t it?

                        moss

    I thought about bringing some of this moss home with me–isn’t it pretty? Such a deep, rich green…

    Rich is how I feel when I reflect on the blessings of the past few days….

    And deep is how I hope to sleep tonight, as a busy week looms just ahead. Hope yours is off to a good start!

  • I would maintain that thanks are the highest form of thought,
    and that gratitude is happiness doubled by wonder. 

    G. K. Chesterton

                     late fall beauty

    It’s Monday morning of the week of Thanksgiving. This month is close to being over, but the best is yet to come. My lists are made, my days are ordered, and I’m happy to think about my family all being together in just a short time. The house, so quiet on this cloudy morning, will soon be brightly filled with the laughter of children and the noisy conversation of adults trying to be heard over the little ones. We’ll share a bountiful meal and express our grateful hearts.

    There will be games, long walks through the fields, and late-night cups of tea and conversation. We’ll make visits to the henhouse to gather the eggs, and the horses will be petted and brushed. Chip will be thankful, too, for getting so much more than his usual daily dose of love and affection. Neighbors will stop in for a piece of pie and coffee and to see how much the children have grown. We’ll sleep well each night, tired but satisfied from being together.

    I’m so ready for all of this, the time we set aside to come together for being thankful. This holiday is icing on the cake–the cake of our lives. And it truly is sweet. Sometimes the cake isn’t perfect–it can come out of the oven a little crooked and sometimes it doesn’t rise up just right, or it won’t come out of the pan like I’d hoped. But the icing smooths out the edges, fills in the cracks and uneven spots and covers all its imperfections. Icing on our cake is that extra sweetness, that finishing touch. Thanksgiving and other special, set-aside times are like icing in our lives. They bring out the best in us, put the shine back in our tired eyes, help us see things in the best light.

    Thank you for icing, Lord.

     

     

     

  • I’m wondering if I made the right decision. Sure, it was long ago, and I know it doesn’t do a bit of good to look back and question now…but, today I started to wonder again…did I do the right thing?

    It was twenty-five years ago, and I was still a very young wife and mother. In fact, my youngest was only six years old–yes, I was still setting up booths at Halloween carnivals and going to junior high basketball games and hosting sleepovers for preteens and driving my children back and forth to school every day. We were raising crops and cattle back then, on a flat-land farm, far from family. I was a fulltime go-fer for my farmboy, and he kept me hopping. Life was busy, to say the least.

    And I was faced with a big decision. Should I or shouldn’t I? No, it wasn’t some earth-shattering, life-changing decision I faced, even though lots of women I knew were making those. This was a bit more elemental. To color or not to color–that was the question!

    I’m talking about hair here. There I was, at the ripe old age of 33, going gray!

    I read somewhere that there is no such thing as gray hair. A dark hair doesn’t begin to fade, gradually losing its color. It simply falls out as dark and comes in as white. Sometimes lots of one’s hairs lose their color at about the same time, and the bearer seems to suddenly wake up with a head full of white hair. Most of the time, though, it is a gradual process, slowly changing from dark to white, giving the appearance of gray during that transition time.

    For me, it happened quickly, though not overnight. And most women don’t start at 33. But I did. In fact, by the time I was 35, I was half white. And by the time I was 45, I was almost fully white. Now that I’m–older–I’m still almost fully white, but I’ve retained this dark fringe at the nape, as a faithful and constant reminder of the good old days. My hair was really dark. So the contrast was obvious.

    But back to my decision. I don’t think there was ever that fateful moment, a single point in time when I said, “No, I’m not going to do it. I’m just going to let nature take its course.” For me, it just happened. Like I said, I was busy–too busy to think of Lady Clairol or L’Oreal or whatever other brands there are. Who knew that my particular head of hair would turn more rapidly than the heads of my friends? I just went on, doing what I did, and my hair just went on doing its thing, and soon ten years had passed, and by then the whites outnumbered the darks, big time.

    When I looked in that mirror-that-doesn’t-lie at 45 and saw mostly white, I gulped. Forty-five is still young! Too young for white hair? Maybe….but who says? By then my life had changed. Two kids were now out of college, and the youngest was on her way. One girl was even getting married…which meant that grandchildren (!!!!!) might not be too far in the distant future. At that point, at least I’d feel that I’d earned the white. So I did what I do best…just went with the flow, doing my life-thing and letting my hair take its course.

    Fast forward a few (quite a few) more years, and we’re up to today. I got up this morning, showered and dried my hair. Got dressed–put on my uniform (jeans and long-sleeved t-shirt) and looked in the mirror. And saw white. White hair, white skin, white t-shirt. And that long-buried doubt reared its ugly head again.

    I looked at myself and tried to imagine: what would I see looking back at me if I’d colored my hair, all those years ago, at 35? Would my life be different? Then I faced the hard, cold truth. Knowing me, I’d be looking at roots growing out, wondering when in the world I’d find the time for a touch-up. Knowing me, I’d have been really dark-dark this week, really faded and washed-out last month, never the same, always a hair mess. Nope, hair color never was for me.

    So, I smiled at myself (smiling makes everything look better, even white-haired women of a certain age), chose a brighter shade of lipstick, put on a touch more blush…and convinced myself, once again, that  I’d done the right thing, all those years ago. That’s me I see in the mirror–the real me. Take it or leave it.

    There’s one real upside to my no-color commitment: think of all the money I’ve saved through the years. I hear a hair-color job at the beauty shop can be $75 these days. How much yarn would that buy??? Enough to keep my hands busy for a good, long while…and I’d much rather knit than worry about roots.

     

     

     

     

  • It was a great morning for…

    OZARK COUNTY RELAY’S BREAST CANCER AWARENESS 5k

    registration

    Everyone started out all bundled up because of the cool start.

    morrisons

    Blakely was already warmed up–she went to the deer woods early on this first morning of the Youth Hunt, and she bagged her first!

    Faye Hampton, BCS, is ready to walk!

    Faye, a breast cancer survivor, had the biggest smile of all–lots to be happy about!

    a short warm-up run

    Wearing pink doesn’t bother this guy–David has even been known to don a tutu for such a good cause!

    starting instructions

    April gave instructions at the starting block…

    heading out

    …and they were off!

    fans cheering for participants

    Adoring fans watched and cheered.

    3 sisters walking together for a good cause

    Three sisters walked together.

    sweet finish!

    A sweet finish!

    Wardens

    Marty should have won a prize–she pushed these three the WHOLE WAY, up hill and down!

    Rackley wins his division

    Rackley wins first in his division.

    all the winners

    Here are the winners…

    but, truly, EVERYONE was winner today. Thanks to the dedicated volunteers who planned and to all the participants and supporters who showed up, to walk, run and celebrate the fight against cancer! 

    Get your pink on!!

     

     

     

     

     

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