About This Blog

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I have loved things Country and Western all of my life. I have loved the ranches and farms. the fields, the barns, livestock, and the food. I was born and raised in Kentucky where I learned to love and appreciate the beauty, hard work, and value of country living, Most of my family lived on farms and/or were livestock producers. I have raised various livestock and poultry over the years. I have sold livestock feed and minerals in two states. My big hats and boots are only an outward manifestation of the country life I hold dear to my heart. With the help of rhyme or short story, in recipes or photos, I make an effort in this blog to put into words my day to day observations of all things rural; the things that I see and hear, from under my hat. All poems and short stories, unless noted otherwise, are authored by me. I hope you enjoy following along.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

The Feed Man







Several years ago I sold livestock feeds for a living. My work took me to farms and ranches all over Illinois and Missouri. It wasn’t long after I started selling feed that I learned you couldn’t just lump everyone with land, tractors and livestock in a hasty generalization, and call them all “Farmers” or Ranchers”. There were plenty of folks that had all the usual equipment, buildings and animals found on a farm, but this ownership didn’t automatically make them a good producer. I found that true ranchers and farmers set a certain standard of measure before them. A code of ethics. A dedication to be a good steward of the land while it is in their possession. Fall short of that code and no amount of land or critters made you a true blue rancher in the eyes of others. I met and befriended some great livestock producers those years, and I ran into some terrible ones. Lets be positive in this writing and talk about the best ones.

No Other Home Than This

Bob and Isetta lived not too far west of the mighty Mississippi river, in the rolling hill country of Missouri. They were far enough off the beaten path that the road went from narrow blacktop to gravel to dirt and rock. The gate to the road leading to the house was aged oak and tensile wire, and swung on rusted hinges older than many of the big trees surrounding it. The fence was board and wire, upright and in secure order. The post the gate was mounted on bore an old MFA (Missouri Farmers Association) sign that was a third rusted away and an equally aged home made sign proclaiming “STOP AT THE HOUSE” . I took it to mean “Let us know you’re here. Don’t just wander around.” Good advice, if you prefer not to dig buckshot from your hind side. This old gate was the first indication to me that these folks were solid caretakers. The latch was well mounted and secure, and when I swung the gate it floated like a leaf in the wind. Old and rusty as the hinges and pins were, they were greased and cared for. I drove through the gate.

The driveway to the house was two gravel tire trails with a high center of grass. You didn’t drive a Cadillac to visit Bob and Isetta, but years ago a Model T would have fit the road just fine. After closing and latching the gate behind me, I noticed the blue/green pastures on each side of the drive. Years of seeding and maintaining had produced beautiful grasses, waving in the breeze, that the sheep and cattle were quietly feeding on. There were no saplings or unwanted growth of any kind in these fields. Just good, productive, deep green grass. As I came closer to the house and sheds I was greeted by two barking dogs. Not killers for sure, but alarmist who wanted the folks to know that a stranger was around. I got out of the truck and spoke to the dogs. The Australian Shepherds with their multi colored coats and blue eyes were friendly enough, when you got to know them, and as is typical of most herd dogs, they followed right at your heels. As I left the truck they uttered just an occasional bark to rouse the folks.

Soon I heard a “Hello!” from a shed door. I saw a lean man in his 70’s waving me over. He was wearing blue hammer-loop pants with the knees worn white and nearly thru, and a blue long sleeve work shirt buttoned to the top even though it was a warm summer day. The felt hat on his head had to be 30 years old. He was working on an old Ford tractor that had the front axel propped up on a stump of wood. “Wheel bearings” he said as he saw me looking at his work. “ They can be stubborn” I offered. He agreed, slid off a glove to shake hands, and we introduced ourselves to each other. I told him I was a feed rep and when I called him ‘Mister’ he said “Mister was my Dad, just call me Bob.” I smiled and said “Okay” as I glanced at the shed.

The shed and other buildings were nearly 100 years old and well maintained. The doors were all straight and sturdy. The metal roofs, though showing some rust here and there, were tight. The weathered gray board and batten siding was straight and solid. “How long have you lived here Bob?” “All my life” he replied “my Dad bought this farm in 1897. He raised us seven kids here, two girls and five boys. I guess I was the only one silly enough to stay farming.” He smiled and looked out across the fields, not really focusing on anything. He wore the look men do when they see many decades behind them... and their own mortality in front of them. “Robert ?” In the half opened screen door stood his wife Isetta. “ Ready for your coffee now?” “ Comin” he replied. Bob nodded in Isetta’s direction and smiled, “Let’s go up to the house.”

As we entered the closed-in back porch Bob hung his hat on a home made peg board, just hand carved dowels protruding from a slab of wood. The places that were worn smooth indicated many years of hung up hats and coats. I carried my hat in my hand as we entered the kitchen. Three mugs were on the table, each one advertising some event, though the letters were all but worn away. “ How do you take your coffee? Isetta asked. “Just like it comes out ma’am” I replied. She grinned as she poured and glanced at her husband, “Good boy. If God had intended for coffee to have cream in it he’d of had cows produce it.” Bob chuckled as he added cream to his mug. “She gives me a hard time over this”. “Only for the last fifty years” she said. The kitchen was old, with dated linoleum and wallpaper. The cabinets were layers of paint on wood, white this time around. Everything was neat and orderly, right down to the previous meals plates in the wire dish rack sitting on the white enameled sink . “Fifty years, is that how long you’ve been married?” I asked. “Give or take a few, all of them spent right here on this farm. We got married and moved in with Bob‘s folks. Our honeymoon was a movie in town and dinner ” she grinned “You married son?” And she placed her hand on Bob’s shoulder.

Isleta’s hands were slender and feminine, like the rest of her, but her calluses and short fingernails showed that these hands had done a lot of work. Her hair was tied back in a short ponytail that fell on her ankle length dress. Her apron was a plaid print showing wear around the collar and pockets. “Yes ma’am, I am, and I have two beautiful daughters” I said in answer to her question. “ Family is everything” she stated and smiled. Bob nodded in agreement as he sipped his coffee. Bob offered that I probably hadn’t just come to talk about my personal life to strangers and asked about my products. Isetta pulled out a chair and sat down with us. I had a feeling she didn’t take the backseat when they drove to town. She soon proved me right when I started quoting production figures and yield expectations from my brand of livestock feeds. She got up and returned with a calculator. Bob asked the questions, but Isetta did the numbers. They listened carefully and politely then Bob said 
"Kevin, the condition of my animals is my main concern. We have survived here all these years by maintaining the health of our animals and the health of our land”. He went on,"being the biggest producer or the fastest person to raise calves and get them to market has never been a concern for us. Having good strong breeding practices and not straining the livestock or the land to the limit is what we have tried to always keep in front of us.” “If you cherish the land…it will take good care of you”, said Isetta. Bob turned to me and asked “You got time to drive around the farm a little?” I said I would love to.

 We thanked Isetta for the coffee and headed out to an old beat up blue 1956 Ford truck. “Hop in son” Bob said. The door of the truck popped loudly as I climbed in. I noticed a faded photo of a young soldier in a World War II era uniform taped to the dusty metal dashboard. “That was our Charlie” was all he said, and we headed down a dirt road toward a creek bottom.



No Other Home Than This   ( cont.)

In the floor board  of the old truck was a can of rusty and slightly bent nails. Looking back, I realize that I never questioned then why a man would recycle nails. Pull them from discarded lumber and straighten them out for reuse. Saving nails was saving money. It's what many folks did back then. In today's disposable ( you could insert wasteful here) society a thing is bought and used without giving much thought to its longevity.  From push mowers to bicycles, repairs are seldom done anymore. It’s cheap, don’t waste the time or energy, just go to the nearest big-box store and get a new one. It hasn’t always been that easy. Years ago, straightening the crooked nail meant extended use and saving money... two  things that seem to have become old fashioned ideas.

The summer sun burned down on us as we made our dusty way along the road. Through the windshield I could see that the road was cradled in between a bluff of rock and trees on one side and a corn field green with knee high corn on the other. We soon came to an opening where a large barn stood. An old tire hung from an oak tree by a rusty old log chain. The tree limb from where the tire hung had grown over the chain long ago. Grass grew under the tree and showed no signs of the swing having been used for ages. We rounded the barn and the road dropped abruptly to a creek. A concrete bridge that also served as a dam allowed us to cross. The tires splashed through the running water flowing over the dam, throwing droplets on the hood and windshield.
 I pulled my arm back inside the window  of the truck  until we crossed. Upstream of the dam was a quiet pool of water that reflected beautifully the trees and sky above it. Under one tree along the creek bank was an old metal chair sitting on the flatrock, facing the water. The chair was red now, but spots of peeling paint here and there revealed the colors from its past. A single chair out here, so removed from the house? Bob must have noticed the quizzical look in my eyes. “ Isetta sits here often. For a couple of years she would sit in that chair for hours on end.” Then changing the subject he said, “there’s our best herd bull.”

The red and white bull was massive. His back was as straight as an aircraft carrier deck, his neck strong, and his muscles rippled as he walked. Bob told me they had saved up a lot of money and bought a good bull in Kansas City many years ago. This bull was an off-spring resulting from that purchase. I remarked that the cows across the fence were equally impressive. This was good stock.

“ Haste makes waste you know” Bob stated “ dad had good cows to start us, and we selected the best calves every year to build a herd. We've always kept good bulls before the cows, and Isetta keeps excellent records in her ledger.It takes time to build a good herd.” Bob gunned the old truck a little as we headed up a knob. Dust swirled in the warm summer air behind us.

A ballet of shadows and light danced on the hood of the old truck as we drove under and out of the shade of the trees along the road. The dirt road swept up and around the knob in its approach to the top. The view from the truck windows of the valley below was wonderful. The creek, pastures, and fields of varying hue spread out before us. The cattle grazed contentedly in the valley and half way up the knob. I was reminded of part of a biblical verse I have always loved,“ The cattle on a thousand hillsides are mine” the Lord said. Few things in this natural world are constant. Civilizations rise and fall, magnificent structures are erected, then decay away. But the view before me was as old as man himself. Gods creation, a masterpiece of animal and terrain, looking much as it has for thousands of years, throughout much of the earth.

“You own a beautiful place here, Bob” I said as we topped the hill. “Well” he smiled, "I've known no other home than this, but I don’t reckon I own it really. We don’t owe a red cent on it, and the deed says it’s mine, but really it’s only mine for a little while. There was my dad who owned it, then two fellows before him. I suppose the Indians laid claim to it and, before that, it was Gods alone. I’m old now, pushing 80, with a bum ticker, and it won’t be too long before it’s someone else’s. No... it’s just mine to care for while I’m here, and then I’ll pass it on.” Bob had stopped the truck and we were getting out. "To family?” I asked as I stepped on the grass hillside. He paused only slightly as he was stepping out of the truck and glanced at the picture on the dashboard. “No, I’m afraid not”.

We stood on the hill top taking in the view below. The shadow of a  large cloud passed slowly over us, turning the valley dark then light again. After a few seconds Bob spoke. “We had a son, fine boy, hard worker and smart too. We lost him when he was young.” “That picture on the dashboard, you called him Charlie, is that of your son?” I asked.

“It is” Bob started walking along the bluff. “ He enlisted in1941. He was too young without having us sign for him. He wanted to go so bad. Isetta and I agreed to let him go even though, since he was an only son, he could have stayed home. I had a couple of hired hands to help with things here so….He made it back okay, after about four years. Happiest day of our lives was seeing him walking down our road with his grips in his hand and a smile as big as Texas on his face.” Bob was smiling as he experienced that moment all over again in his mind. We stopped on a large rock protruding from the hillside. Bob reached down, grabbed a stalk of grass and began chewing on it.

“He was home about three months when he was in a bad car wreck.” Bob went on “Drunk fellow driving a log truck, of all things. Charlie made it out of the war and got killed by a drunk.” “I’m sorry” was all I could think to say. He looked out over the land with his hands in his back pockets and nodded, then turned and said “ that drunk almost took Isetta from me too. She spent two years not caring if she lived or died. Just went down to the creek where we all swam together, and sat in that old chair. Winter and summer, staring into the water. Eventually, I guess the waters there just kinda washed away the pain. One morning after breakfast she went to the shed and came back with her gardening tools. Started working in her flowers just like she used to. I knew then that she was on the mend.” We had turned around and were getting in the truck when he said “Well, whoever winds up with this place will find that we improved it. Isetta and I feel strongly that we’re put on this earth to make a difference. God gives you something, he has a right to expect you to treat it good. To build on it, not to waste it. A man's done good when he can say he left a thing better than he found it."

We headed back to the barnyard by a different access road. We discussed types of cattle, hogs and sheep. We settled on a couple of items that I sold that he thought would be beneficial to his operation. A fellow on a tractor mowing hay waved as we passed by and Bob pointed out that the fellow was his hired man. As we neared the house Isetta was exiting a white shed that I took to be a hen house. A basket under one arm, she smiled and waved to us as we approached. The chickens were nearby scratching in the pasture and yard. “My wife likes you son, I can tell. You’re honest, and she knows it.” "I try to always be” I said as we stopped next to the shed with the old Ford tractor in it. “Never stop trying, son" Bob said, getting out of the truck. He paused before he shut the door, smiled and looked me in the eyes “there is nothing more important in a feed man than honesty”.

 Words to remember and live by.

I saw Bob and Isetta  several more times before I moved on in 1985. The hog market reached historic lows and some producers back then didn't make it. Because Bob and Isetta were quite diversified they suffered no real or lasting damage.They were always such a pleasure to meet with. I had coffee and some wonderful baked items that Isetta provided each time I was there. These folks were never my biggest customer, but they were  one of my best customers.

They never failed in their belief that it was a solemn duty to protect and improve upon the land that God had given them. I loved talking to them, whether I sold a thing or not. Faithful stewards. That’s what they were. Honest, resilient, hard working, caring and kind. The sort of people that made you want to work more fervently, harder and smarter. They were of the stock that had built the west into the Western Civilization. I don’t know what happened to them after I moved. I hope they had a contented life to the end. 
With sparing uses of chemicals, good crop rotation practices and even the dedication to leave trees in fence rows to prevent wind erosion, Bob and Isetta protected their land. One  thing is sure, their farm was left better off because of their wonderful insight into land stewardship. And, without a doubt, so was I.
                                                                    
                                                                        K L  Dennie 2012

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Saturday Road Trip

Patty and I decided to go roadin’ Saturday. I’m not gonna be able to drive for a few days following a little surgery deal, so I wanted to get in a couple a hundred miles before I had to turn the reigns over to my bride. It promised to be a sunny warm day, so we decided to head toward the beautiful state of Missouri. We loaded up with a big cup of coffee and cappuccino, and a couple of snacks and pointed the car west . Didn’t have any real plans, just drive west, roadin’ through the scenic routes and wind up in Hannibal around supper time.

The sky was clear and the sun bright. Only an occasional stretched-cotton wisp of a cloud interrupted an ocean of royal blue overhead.. The air was spring-like and the sun felt warm through the car glass. We avoided the interstates, and took tree lined country roads on a winding path to the Mississippi River. We stopped short of the state line at the little town of Summer Hill in Pike County, IL.








The town is so small that there is only one sign saying ”Welcome to Summer Hill” and it says the same thing on both sides. All kidding aside, there are scant few houses and even fewer buildings in this little burg, but it does offer an antique shop and the Route 54 Drive-in. This movie stop is literally in a pasture. No concrete, no gravel, just speaker poles in the grass and big yellow and white screen. People come from miles around in the warm season to watch a flick in the field. They ain’t so far back that they don’t have a web site, however. You can check them out at
www.clark54drivein.com/. Our interest was in the antique shop today though.

We entered the 150 year old store through ancient metal and glass doors. The ring-a-ling of bells announced our entrance. The old wooden floor complained under our feet as we traveled aisle after aisle of shelves, looking at everything and looking for nothing in particular. There was, as you would expect, every kind of item from lanterns to quilt pieces. Books to wash boards,. Dishes of blue , green, red, and a combination thereof. I was surprised to see recent things such as lunch boxes from the time when I was a boy. Hardly antiques. Are they? Anyway, I stumbled on some “old” roadmaps from the 60’s for a great price and picked up a couple postcards from the 30’s and 40’s. Neat stuff to add to the den. Then, like Willie sang “On the Road Again”.

We ambled along and crossed the Mississippi at Louisiana, Missouri. The mighty river was low due to below average rainfall, but her wide waters pushed south on the long journey to the Gulf. The water reflected the blue sky as it passed the stony outcroppings along the shore, in no hurry today, but content to just ebb along. A flock of Sand Hill Cranes stood one-legged nearby, resting between flights and fish suppers. Cattle Egrets circled slowly below the bridge in search of a handout. A lazy day on the river it seemed as we crossed the bridge, then turned right to take Route 79 north along the west rivers edge.

Route 79 is a picturesque roller coaster ride through river bottoms and mighty hills. The black ribbon of road curves and dips, winds and climbs, on a beautiful path of travel along the Mississippi. It crosses creeks and lesser rivers that are intent on joining themselves with the boss of waters nearby. Even in Winter the wooded hills and flowing pastures, that are dotted here and there with gray weathered barns and farms, offer a striking, peaceful journey toward Mark Twains hometown. High on the top of the hills several scenic overlooks give you great photographic view of the wind river and its earthen surroundings.

On a our travel north we stop at a cemetery. There we quietly reflect on the life of a dear friend who left us too soon. We continue north and after a couple of scenic stops we find our way to Hannibal.

In Sam Clemmons’ hometown we locate a restaurant suggested by Verna Bowen, Patty’s sister. Drakes is tucked in the hillside along Route 61 and is a BBQ lovers dream. Their homemade sauce is sweet and tangy and pork is a specialty. We feast there and back across the river and home. Two hundred ad twenty three miles later we arrive back at the Chicken Ranch. Stomachs full of good food and minds full of beautiful pictures and good memories. We’ll do it again soon, but this time Patty’s drivin.


Picture on The Wall






My draft number, the most important number in an 18 year old boys life in the ’60s and early 70’s, had been 165. The call for troops had stopped well below that. I had no job. I didn’t know what to do with myself. Enlisting seemed like the thing to do. So, I had paid a visit to a recruiter I knew well.

I remembered the Army recruiter saying to me “look, Kevin, this mans war will be over in another year. We are getting out of ‘Nam, DC is already thinking troop withdrawals. It will be a fight to the last minute but, the truth is everybody wants out.” He rose from his chair, put out his cigarette  came around his desk, and leaned against it. He looked down as he exhaled “ there is no good reason to get your butt shot dead for a lost cause.” He held a stack of documents in front of me, “ I’ll keep your paper work for 30 days. If you still want to do this in a month...well it’s crazy, but I’ll process you. Come back then.” Not exactly what I expected to hear from the Army during wartime. But not much about the Vietnam war in 1971 was what one would expect. I shook hands with the Sergeant, then stepped outside the office into the humid Kentucky summer. Come back in a month? Well, okay.

I never went back. I got a call from an uncle in Georgia offering construction work at a great wage. I was young, just out of high school, and full of wanderlust, so I headed for Atlanta. The Vietnam war ended in a year, and I didn’t think about military service again. Until this year, 1990, when I had joined the U S Navy.

One wall near my den is dedicated to military photos of some of our family members who served. My family has fought in every American war since the war of 1812. My wife Patty’s father had served in Korea. All through the years I couldn’t shake the feeling that I hadn’t done my part. And I knew time was running out. I was getting old.

At 36 years, I was an old man by military standards. Some branches considered me too old. I talked to my cousin Mike, an Army recruiter, and since I was in construction, he felt the Navy Seabees would be the thing for me. I called a Naval Reserve Recruiter, took a series of tests and, because of my experience, I was enlisted at an advanced rank. In May of 1990 I had become a Navy Seabee.

All of this went through my mind in a flash when I took the phone call from Fort Belvoir, Virginia.

“Mr. Dennie ? This is Lieutenant JG B---- from Navy Mobile Construction Battalion 23 at Fort Belvoir. It is my duty to inform you that you have been recalled to Active Duty in support of Operation Desert Shield (later Desert Storm). Make sure that your affairs are in order. Your first destination will be Port Hueneme, California for indoctrination and field training. Probably within the next 2 weeks. Your orders will be forthcoming. Welcome to the war effort.” I turned to my wife, Patty, who sat at the kitchen table staring at a glass of iced tea. She looked like a woman looks when she is unhappy, fearful, or a little of both. I hung the phone back on its base.The Summer breeze disturbed the curtain in the window . Its flapping was all that broke the silence. After a few seconds,
“ I’m going to be gone a while” was the only thing I could think to say.

Patty was near tears. “You don’t have to do this” she began “you have two kids and a wife to support. A business to run. You could apply for a ‘Hardship’.” I listened to her arguments and knew she was right about a lot she said. I felt grieved, but found myself saying “ My family has served honorably for over a hundred years. I can’t be the one who takes the easy way out.” “But you could be killed over there” she went on. “I’ll be fine, but if something does happen, then at least I’ll die with some honor” I reasoned. “ If I stay home, I’ll feel like a coward for the rest of my life”. The same conversation or some variation of it took place over the next weeks. And then one night, before we turned out the lights, Patty said the words every soldier needs to here before he leaves his home and family. “We hate to see you go, but we are proud of you.”

Over the next few weeks I made the transition from Citizen Soldier to full blown ownership by Uncle Sam. I left in civilian attire and came home in uniform. Sudam Hussein had not heeded President George Bush’s warnings to leave Kuwait, and I had been told my orders would land me next door to the invasion. In Saudi Arabia, in just a few weeks.

I won’t say I was “gung-ho”, but I was ready for whatever I had to do. My family had served in wartime as recently as World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. Some had far away assignments during the Cold War. I wasn’t being asked to do any more than they had so honorably done. And even now, I had cousins in other military branches that were going to be wrapped up in this particular war too. Some of my good friends were facing the same things I was. All of us were as ready as you can be, to kiss your wife and kids goodbye for what could be the last time, and then blindly follow wherever destiny takes you. So, when it was time, we all did what soldiers do. We turned our backs to the comforts of home and set out for the unknown. As my plane left the small airport runway I could see my wife, kids, and nephew standing along the fence, waving goodbye. I wept silently. “Oh Lord,” I prayed, “watch over them. Don’t let this be a stupid mistake.”

After I arrived at the Seabee base in Port Hueneme California, I found that my battalion was shifted from it’s original mission. We were deploying to the Marianas island of Guam. We were ordered to fill in for another Seabee battalion who had already deployed to Saudi Arabia. We were also tasked with converting giant fruit hauling ships that had been requisitioned by the U S Coast Guard, into military transports. (These ships, once refitted, were loaded with 30,000 bombs a week to be dropped on Iraqi troops). We were only supposed to be on that tropical island a short time, but one thing led to another. One thing was that North Korea was making some suspicious moves. There was concern that this communist country would take advantage of a light Naval presence in the Pacific and cause some trouble for our ally, South Korea. In light of that the Marine Amphibious Force we were attached to stayed put. And so did I.

I was part of an advanced Air Detachment and twice we were hustled out to the steamy hot concrete of a Naval Air Station tarmac, to fly out on some undisclosed detail. Twice we waited for hours, only to be turned around and sent back to base because the mission was scrubbed at the last minute. I wound up spending all of Operation Desert Storm in Guam. The ground war, thankfully, was over faster than anyone could have imagined and our military’s mission to run Sadam Hussien out of Kuwait was highly successful. In seven months time I was back home, a citizen soldier again. After missing all the family birthdays, and Thanksgiving and Christmas at home, it was great to make it home just two days before my wedding anniversary.

So, while there is more to tell about my duty during the First Gulf War than I’ll go into now, the fact remains that I was able to answer the call when my country needed me. It was not my lot to experience combat like others did. Some of our military brothers and sisters didn’t make it home. Fate had led me in another direction. But, I did what was asked of me and contributed what I could. I served seven years after Desert Shield/Storm in the Navy Reserve before leaving “the Bees”.

It was hard to be away from my wife and daughters during the war. Very hard at times. And it was hard on them while I was gone. But, it had been something that I felt deep within me that I had to do. When I look now on the wall of photos where the pictures of my grandfather, uncles and others in military service hang, mine is among them. Would I do it again? I guess I can only answer with another question. What if my if my picture had never made it up there beside them?

Well, to me, the wall just never would have looked complete.





Spring Rain








We had a welcomed rain at the Chicken Ranch. Not a lot, but we’ll take it. This winter has been dry, with little snow or rain. And while we have enjoyed the mild temperatures and easy traverse here, we do worry about what affect the low moisture content will have on this years crops. Wheat, pasture grasses, hay, corn and beans are Midwest farming staples. All not very drought resistant. Although we are not declared a drought area yet, many lakes and streams are at very low levels.

This time of year typically finds creeks and rivers near the Chicken Ranch rain-swollen, if not outright flooded, from melting snow and rains. But, one oft flooded river could easily be crossed on foot at the time of this writing. Drift wood litters the river bed as it stacks upon the sand. Sand bars stick out of the waters, forcing the river to split into little streams. The thirsty waterway crowds the fish in to shallow pools, where the eagles and Sandhill Cranes exploit their vulnerability; they enjoy the fast food experience.

Ducks and geese along the flyway are crowded more than usual. Each species of fowl clutched together in segregated groups like delegates at a political rally. A variety of sizes, colors, and noises greet you along the river banks and eddies. The waterfowl welcome the rain with shaking heads and spreading wings as they lift out of the water to tiptoe across the surface and then light again.

The stream fed lakes await the return of rivulets of water that will raise the water level to its normal state. Dead trees in the lakes have whitened rings on the trunk that bear the usual watermark, a good six feet or more higher than the current ripples. Cracked and dried mud banks grow wider as each week goes by with no significant rainfall. The Old Farmers Almanac calls for a mild, dry spring in our area. Time will tell just how dry.

The trees and bushes however, are bursting with blooms. Each day brings new shades of green, pink, and more. As the 80+ degree temperatures trigger a natural response and the woods and grasses react. Stark and bare trees now wear the promise of shady foliage to come.

The birds of spring are beginning to arrive and stake out homesteads among the branches. Their cheerful chirps and tweets begin early, just before daylight, and continue into the evening.

Flowers grow more confident and every new day show a taller, greener part of their stems, and we await the coming blooms with happy anticipation. Tulips, crocuses, lillys and more are racing to the surface, hoping to be the first to dress in summer clothes.

We have planted the salad beds here at the Chicken Ranch. Hardy Swiss Chard, leaf lettuces, spinach, turnips, and more are seeded in the soil . We hope that any frost that may yet come will be light enough for these cool weather plants to ignore. When we plant its not the cold that we fear but the lack of nourishing rain. As any farmer/gardener does, we plant and gamble. Hope and wait. Time will we see how much mother nature cooperates.

Let it stay seasonably warm. Let the skies be kind and give us sun. But when plant and stream alike look thirstily toward the sky, then we hope the clouds will come, lightning will streak, and thunder will roll as Mother Nature answers the collective call “Let it rain, let it rain”.

Let it Snow...I think





Snow is falling on the Chicken Ranch. The powdered sugar coating has already improved the dulled winter appearance of the yard and fields. The white cottony fluff falls from the sky gently, quietly. The fox squirrel in an ancient maple tree near the house sits contentedly and doesn't seem to mind that the snow powders his red bushy tail white. Birds seek shelter in the bushes and hedge but are lively upon the branches.

The mild Midwest winter that we have had so far this year has produced no significant snowfall. We had blizzard conditions a few weeks ago because of the strong winds accompanying the snow, but the depth was minimal. This will not be a snow like the blizzard of 2011.That was a time when the Chicken Ranch saw a real snow. Well, for this part of the country anyway.

In February 2011 forecasters predicted accurately that a massive snowstorm was bearing down on the Midwest. Estimated levels of accumulation expected, depending on your source of information, were from 10-20 inches or more. Winds were expected to reach gusts of 50-60 miles per hour. Prudent citizens immediately made preparations for the storm by stocking up on groceries, bottled water, flashlight batteries and the like. Folks chattered to each other about the latest forecasts as they cleaned the store shelves of goods. And as seems to be the nature of these conversations, each persons prediction was topped by one more dire. " I just heard 20 inches by this time tomorrow..." " Channel 20 just said 24 inches with 65 mile per hour winds..." and so on. Simply bad will never do while terrible is available for use.

Out in the countryside livestock farmers pushed to bring in herds closer to feeding areas and made sure days of feed were close at hand. Everyone wanted to be settled in by the afternoon, when the weather was predicted to turn mean. At the Chicken Ranch I moved feeders to the inside of the hen house and added extra straw to the floor. The chickens were clucking excitedly as I worked. (It occurred to me that their conversation sounded a lot like the one I overheard in the grocery store in town). It was though the hens felt a significant change coming in the air around them. With the rest of the animals cared for, I began to split wood for the fireplace. Utility outages were likely and the fireplace would serve as both physical and visual comfort. After a couple of hours of splitting and carrying wood to the hearth, I felt ready for the storm.

Late in the afternoon the snow began to fall. Large fluffy flakes fell gently at first, then picked up speed as the wind began to blow. Before long, the snow was driving so hard it was not possible to see past 50 yards. The howl of the wind voiced the storm's intention of making this a winters night to remember. Soon everything was covered in white. The pines and cedars were bowing and swaying to the pressure of the pelting snow. The wind side of the trees was frosted like cupcake icing. The ground grew thick with snow cover. Then the drifts began to build.

As the moaning, swirling winds pushed from the northwest, the snow piled in behind spaces sheltered from it. In the light of the porch we watched as a drift 20 feet long erected itself minute by minute to a final height of 5 feet. On the south porch the snow had to be constantly pushed back from blocking the door, as the drift there reached above 36 inches high. This storm was determined to live up to its billing. As I stood outside, I watched and heard the effect of the wind and snow as limbs bent and cracked.Whirlwinds of snow blew from roof tops and formed drifts along the edges. Power lines swayed like swings.Then, later in the evening, the lights went out.

Kerosene lanterns were lit and placed in rooms.The fire in the fireplace was stoked. The room would softly brighten and dim with each flicker from the lantern and fireplace flames. The burning wood and faint smoke from the lamps filled the living room and den with the aroma of yesteryear, of a time when this form of lighting was common in homes. It was not an inconvenience for me. It was somehow peaceable, warming. I enjoyed the soft light in the rooms. Then the snow and howling wind finally began to slow, and after one more inspection of the doors, we headed off to bed.

The dawn found the Chicken Ranch under an average of 15 inches of snow and drifts over 6 feet high. Some of the drifts exceeded fifty feet in length. It took some digging, and a couple days of waiting for some assistance, to get things moving again. Mountains of snow piled high during removal efforts would last for weeks to come.

Yes, the “blizzard of ‘11” was a powerful demonstration of Momma Natures wintertime capabilities. This snow? Well, it's in the junior leagues. Pretty, gentle and quiet. And, really, this time, that's just fine with me.