title explained

Onward and upward! something that you say in order to encourage someone to forget an unpleasant experience or failure and to think about the future instead and move forward.

My e-mail: jjmiller6213@comcast.net

Friday, July 28, 2017

Delightful Day #2

I don't know if I can stand all this delight and happiness.

I was getting real homesick for my "people's land" and needed the quietness and checking out the crops, so I headed north up to The Farm(s).

Just north of Howell, a small town to the west of me, I saw acres and acres of Sunflowers.

IF YOU CLICK ON THE PHOTOS THEY WILL BE LARGER AND LOOK BETTER.


The nearer I got to home, I saw acres and acres of Corn and Soybeans.  Out there we are serious farmers and wouldn't waste even a small patch of field for Sunflowers.  Also fields of golden stubble, left from the wheat harvest and the straw put into bales.  We wouldn't plant anything that wasn't going to be a good cash crop!



Soybeans
I was going to stop at Pam's house after my visit with sister, but decided to pull in on my way and see how it looked with her big barn gone.  It was falling apart, so she had someone removed it--for the barn wood.

She has a great view now, south, clear to the woods.


along with the always open view west to the woods 

Just as I was looking around, I saw her pull into the drive.  "Hey!  Who's walking around my land?"

"My land first!" I replied.

"I was coming up the road and wondered who the heck was pulling in my driveway."



Remember me telling you about the long perennial garden I had along the front of my yard.  Can you see where it starts to slope to the road?  From the spot where I am standing, to that dead tree, I had a 4' wide perennial garden.  It was gorgeous.  People would drive in and ask if they could have a "piece" of the many plants.


Here's what the house and barn looked like when we lived there and raised our kids.

I left there and up 1/2 mile to the corner, turned left and 1/8 mile to the Ancestor's Farm, where sis and hubs live.  Gravel roads still exist out in the country.



You can barely see their pond, across the road, by the barns.


My camera was acting up and everything turned out too light.
The big rock has a metal ring on the right side for tethering up a horse. 

Everyone has loads of gravel brought in and dumped to make a perfect driveway.
Last year, Chuck wanted the drive to look like it would have in the old days with grass going up the middle.  So, being an engineer, he measured and then worked up the center of the drive and planted grass.  I love it!!


This is what the house looked like before they moved in.

They had to tear down the little house, across the drive--the original 1st house, to add their new family room.  They took the ice house that shows behind the house and moved it over for a garden shed.




The view of Susan's rose garden, off the deck that Chuck just built.


The horse barn across the road is about the only decent barn left.  So they put a metal roof on to help save it and are painting it.  They got the white fence all done and now, Susie is painting the bottom of the horse barn, Chuck the top.



The other big barn is starting to gradually collapse, so they will probably get someone to come in and take it down, just like Pam did with hers.

Turn left out of their drive and back up to the corner.  This is the farm where I was born and where my son Mark, now lives.


Turned right and back passed Pam's on my way to the cemetery...1 mile east and 2 miles north.



Turn left and drive in a little and........there is all my family

 Moved the Angel Dog over to the other corner.
I hate that the marker gets discolored underneath
where the cement dog is.
Nothing much under the sod--a small trunk with Fred's ashes, 
his dog Tootz ashes
and this photo of them in a zip lock baggie.

Mother and Daddy--mine to the left
The two smaller markers at the top,
Great Grand Parents

 My beloved Grandma and Grandpa.
The two smaller stones at the top,
Great Great Grand Parents


A short distance away--My BFF
Over her name, it shows the location of their cottage on Houghton Lake, MI
Over Dick's name is a picture of their barn on their farm
On the bottom left, a rock that says "Love" with a butterfly, because she 
said she was "coming back" as a butterfy


On the way out, I noticed this dead tree with several Shelf Fungi attached to its left side. 

All of my Daddy's family and so many of my friends, all resting in the same cemetery.  Waiting for that "Day of Reunion".
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When I got home, at nearly 7:30, I found this photo Pam had sent me of Evan, when he stayed overnight with her,  standing beside my Daddy's little rocker.  That would be Evan's great grandpa.


What a blessed day!  The local weatherman predicts we are going to have the "best weekend of this summer".  YAY!

13 comments:

  1. I'm so glad you had a great and blessed day, Judy. I love seeing the pictures. It's so pretty out there at the farms.
    About all that my cousins plant now are soybeans and corn. Of course they have lots of hay fields too.

    That's a sweet photo of Evan! :)

    xoxo

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  2. I love to see all the photos. Yes, we are supposed to have perfect weekend weather in this part of Ontario too.

    Judy

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  3. Looks like you had a great day. I love coming on a field of sunflowers when you don't expect it. Just makes me happy all over. The price of seeds must be going up because I've seen more and more in recent years.

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  4. So very happy for you, Judy! They're all beautiful places.

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  5. With these posts, you have put "Lovely Days In A Bottle." And you can take them out, whenever you want, and 'relive' them. Isn't that a nice thing, about blogs?!?

    Now, for the dense-among-us (me), who is Pam? What kind of relation, I mean? Just can't keep your family names straight. Sorry...

    Gentle hugs,
    Luna Crone

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  6. What a wonderful post, Judy. Thank you for sharing your family, friends and some of your roots with us. It looks like it was a beautiful day. I absolutely love the driveway with the grass down the middle and the pretty homes and barns. Country living is the best!! Enjoy your weekend. It's a bit chilly and cloudy here in NY right now. No complaints from me. The heat is returning next week. Yuck!! xoxo

    ~ Wendy
    http://Crickleberrycottage.blogspot.com/

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  7. Explanation: My children, Mark, Pam, Karen, Jennifer.
    Mark lives on the farm where I was born. Pam lives 1/2 mile east on my Grand parents farm, where we moved to in 1967 and raised the kids. I gave her the farm and left in 1988, when I remarried- stupidest thing I ever did!
    Sister Susan lives on the farm where the ancestor's settled in 1857--1/8 mile south of Mark and 3/4 mile west and south of Pam. Got it?

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  8. Hey, just trying to catch up on my blog reading! I know how much you enjoy visiting your peoples land! I wish I could go and visit my peoples land too without getting shot, or going to Italy! Enjoy this beautiful weather we have been having the last few days!

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  9. What a wonderful day. I enjoyed all the photos. It's all beautiful. So glad you enjoyed your day. Susan's rose garden makes a pretty view from the deck. Love that white fence. Fred was such a good guy.

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  10. What wonderful photos and a walk through your family history and the changes to the family property over time was really interesting. you're very blessed to have such a rich long line of family history that you can share. Sounds like you had a great time.

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    1. Theresa, I can do your genealogy, if you ever want. Send me an e-mail, with your mailing address and I will send you a brochure of what would be included.
      jjmiller6213@comcast.net

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  11. I can feel what it feels like there, and smell it and hear it. Awesome, such peace. xoxo

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  12. So very happy for you, Judy! They're all beautiful places.


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