A post that begins by talking about harvest, but actually it isn’t about that at all.

Yes, combines are rolling! Woohoo!

They weren’t able to start yesterday until late in the afternoon – meaning the harvest crew all had their own lunch boxes for supper. We did help shuffle a few vehicles and deliver a few forgotten necessities (a phone charger!) but I don’t have pictures because…

We were in our bathing suits!

Shooter took a moment away from the big slides to pose with his siblings.

That’s right – it’s really summer now. We made our first trip to our YMCA’s water park.

Sploosh! This is Cowgirl's favorite part...the dumping bucket.

OH MAN it was so much fun.

Warming up on the sidewalk - I loved this when I was a kid.

You can see from the photos that Little Cowgirl inherited My Farmer’s lovely skin (I don’t know when in history his German ancestors were invaded and pillaged by Italians but that skin that begins browning under ten minutes of sunshine is something else!). My boys got my own two-choices-only (white or RED) skin.

I prefer to take them late in the day (we went over harvest supper delivery time) when the sun is less intense because I’m pretty careful and sparing with my sunscreen use. I have been reading for years about possibly harmful ingredients in sunscreens. Here is the Environmental Working Groups 2012 Sunscreen Guide.

In the past we have used sunscreens that are on the top of the list for possibly dangerous ingredients. I, especially, have slathered on some of EWG’s ‘top offenders’ since being told by one doctor that I was “skin cancer waiting to happen.” Over time my practices in skin protection have evolved to being exposed during less intense portions of the day and choosing safer sunscreens. This year we are using some Kiss-My-Face products and are pleased so far.

Fun in the sun...and look at that farmer's tan!

I’m sure we won’t make it back to the water park until harvest slows down again, but we are all so glad we squeezed in a quick visit. The children swam like fish and slept like rip-van-winkle. Have you been to the pool yet this summer?

Of Reaping and Weeping

Farmer Boy wants to grow up as quickly as possible. He is like a thirty-year-old trapped inside a nine-year-old body. Play for him always means work in a different way than it does for my other two children. Last September, as my mother-in-law lay dying of breast cancer in a hospice unit, Farmer Boy followed his father’s example. He sowed wheat.

When faced with crisis, sometimes people fall apart. Other’s pray. Some people turn to addictive behaviors to crutch through it (like drinking, smoking, eating or crocheting). I talk or write (and crochet. And drink a little).

My Farmer works.

When a situation beyond his control becomes emotionally unmanageable, he maintains equilibrium by getting his hands dirty, or wielding shop tools, or roaring into a field.

It reminds us that life goes on; the Earth continues to spin and the seasons will keep changing and there WILL be a tomorrow. I think working gives him a sense of the world being bigger than himself, and allows his personal tragedies to stay in perspective until he feels ready to deal with them.

I’m not certain that a person is ever ready to deal with their mother dying. They just eventually have to.

Last September, My Farmer’s mommy died. She was his friend. He saw her every single day of his life with the exception of college. Somehow they had managed to grow their relationship past the mother/child bond into an adult friendship (that’s hard to do). My Farmer harvested corn or milo or soybeans all day and then sat by the slumbering, failing body of his mother all evening. Sometimes he stayed all night, giving his father, brother or sisters a break. When we knew there was no turning back, when we had to help her face the idea of hospice, he planted acre after acre after acre of wheat.

His little son watched him. And he sowed his own.

Last wheat harvest, one year ago, was the final time my mother-in-law was healthy enough to participate in the activity on her beloved farm. She helped us shuffle equipment and people from field to field. When the children got tired of riding with Dad in the combine or Mom in the grain cart, she watched them at her house. She made or picked up supper sometimes. And we all felt bad every time she did because we could see (though not openly admit) that things were beginning to get rough. But she wanted to so badly; she loved the farm, loved the work. She loved to help; service was an essential part of who she was.

It should be no surprise that the planet has spun us back around to this same place, but it is. Today would have been their wedding anniversary.

Farmer Boy has been harvesting his wheat, just like Dad. In all things, there is a cycle of birth and death.

There is always an ending.

There is a proper time for everything, but we don’t always know when that is. We just try our best to be prepared and accept the unknown.

He came out of bed repeatedly last night with flimsy excuses. Finally I gave up my conversation with My Farmer and went to sit at his bedside; something was obviously bothering him.

“Mom? I can’t stop thinking about what happened to Grandma. I keep having flashes of being with her at the hospital, of how she looked and how she sounded. I keep remembering her funeral.”

We cannot always understand God's timeline.

“I just can’t stop thinking about when that is going to happen to me. Not cancer, but…you know…that one day I’m going to…perish.”

(I guess he’s like his mother – Sometimes my friends laugh at me because my texts contain un-textlike vocabulary.)

“One day it’s going to be me, under the ground like that. Like Grandma. I know that my ‘being’ will keep existing, but my body is going to be buried forever.”

"There is a time to every purpose under heaven."

We talked about heaven for a long time. He wondered what it felt like, and I told him to think of a time when his heart was so full of love and joy that it seemed to be spilling out of him – he said when Grandpa brought him a junker mower to take apart – I told him that heaven is like that, but even better.

We talked about making sure we don’t worry so much about dying that we forget to live – really live. About how Grandma never let dying get in her way of living.

“Some things about this life are so good, Mom. But it’s so sad that we can’t have a pause or rewind button. I don’t want to get old. But there are good things about getting old. Think about your Gramma, Mom – she’s so old and she is so healthy! She lives by herself and goes to the aquarium and picks up babies and cooks and cooks and walks to the pond behind her house. I don’t think I’m going to die until I’m very old. Most people in our family live for a really long time. But I wish there was a pause button.”

He finally fell asleep, holding my hand in both of his, pressing it to him to be sure I wouldn’t go away.

I wish there was a pause button too.

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Wheat Harvest 2012: A Pictorial Diary – Rained Out

The van was loaded with suppers to hand out to the harvesting crew and we were pulling out of the driveway when I received the following text from My Farmer:

"Must be wheat harvest."

We are used to violent late-spring weather. This is Kansas, after all. We weren’t the setting for The Wizard Of Oz for no reason, people. I had been watching the radar all afternoon, willing the storms to stay north of us and continue their due-east movement.

By the time I arrived with the food, the last desperate passes were being made as the drops began to fall with greater regularity. No one stopped – the food quietly grew colder as the combines (both finally working at once) ran a losing race with Mother Nature. Finally forced to shut down, My Farmer watched the sky.

It didn't look good.

That row of trees marked the divide between the 80 acres they just finished harvesting and the 50 acres they rolled into next.

Time to get everything under a roof.

Eventually, it all came down. I tried to come up with a metaphor to express what it’s like – the wheat was ripe and ready. The 70 mph wind and rain will have beat some of the grain right out of their heads onto the earth. The ground is going to be sopping wet, rendering us helpless to watch the remaining kernels dry too far, losing test weight (it will take more seeds to make a bushel this way – our overall yield drops). It’s especially depressing because our wheat this year was remarkably good. That happens once a decade or so in farming.

The best example I could come up with is getting a big anniversary bonus after ten years at the same job along with your usual paycheck. They give you all of it in $1 bills, laid out single file in a trail from your work place to your home. Whatever the wind blows away before you can pick it up is gone. So you gather up your friends and whatever helpful equipment you can come up with and start picking up bills as fast as you can. A storm changes everything.

We were really fortunate – everywhere to the north and west of us received a dose of devastating hail. Hail completely destroys a crop. We have friends who weren’t so lucky with the weather last night.

My Farmer is taking it in stride – that’s just how farming goes, he says (as he opens a beer). I know he feels sick, but he is also right. That’s just how farming goes. This, my friends, is where the wise saying comes from…don’t put all your eggs in one basket.

In totally unrelated news, my friend Mad Woman is raising money to fight breast cancer. I contributed this morning, in memory of my Mother-In-Law and I hope you will consider contributing as well. Breast cancer can suck it.

And I’ve been sharing how I created an almost-free curriculum when we began homeschooling over at Growing Your Homeschool.

While we wait to get back into the fields, I’ll be thinking of those farmers who won’t be going back in because there isn’t any wheat left standing.

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Wheat Harvest 2012 – A Pictorial Diary; The First Two Days

A combine broke down.

Any time you see the sides open like that, it’s not a good sign. That is like seeing a car pulled to the side of the road with the hood up. There is someone INSIDE the back of this beast…also a very bad sign.

The man inside the beast is My Farmer (H.O.T.T. people).

The breakdown required a four-hour round trip drive for parts, almost two full days of mechanic-ing (by the man in the picture) along with the help of four other people and a tractor at critical points. And lots of welding. As soon as he tightened the last bolt, My Farmer’s dad (who we partner with) pulled into the shop with the other combine limping along with a bearing that was out.

This forced My Farmer to stop for a beverage. It was either that or cry. There is no crying in farming.

All this breaking down afforded lots of ‘fun’ downtime at the shop with the kids (fun applies to the kids only in this sentence).

See the combine behind Cowgirl? Just out of major internal surgery. My Farmer was doing a quick bearing-dectomy to the other combine while I took this picture.

In the first 24 hours of cutting our wheat, there were three more troubles including the following: A pickup that wouldn’t start, a pickup that blew a brake-line (or something else I don’t understand that made it not work), A semi trailer that broke down (something to do with it’s brake drum) which required a run into and across town for a replacement part, and what you see below.

Yep, that's my van. I think this is why most farm families don't run minivans, despite their alluring cup holders.

Farmer Boy and I changed the flat ourselves, putting on the little donut spare, and the next morning I drove into town and paid *someone else* to fix my tire (you should gasp here as farmers don’t usually do those sorts of things). It was actually quite fun – I sat around with six old guys and shot the you-know-what for half an hour. We ruminated about the price of combines, the right color for combines (green – duh) the price of wheat and hay. Then we all speculated about my flat tire and argued about how fast (or slow) you should drive on a dirt road in order to avoid said flats.

I think I just need big motor-cross, monster-truck tires on my minivan.

Half way to becoming a legal adult

God help us all. This child is going to take the world and put it inside his pocket.

And farm it.

He turned nine yesterday in the same fashion he came into this world: all-of-a-sudden, even though I was expecting it…I was still surprised. He makes me angrier than any of my children, gives me pride enough to burst, and turns my heart into hot candle wax almost daily. I love him so much I want to zip him inside of me.

Nine is such a beautiful contradiction. He is old enough to ask for money instead of a gift because he is saving up with his brother with plans to buy a calf. They hope to raise and sell it, use the money to purchase more stock, and continue the process until they have enough for a horse.

But he is little enough to come running out of his room to tell us, on the morning of his birthday, that now his belt needs to go one notch bigger AND his t-shirt doesn’t fit overnight. Because yesterday he was only eight.

Hot. Candle. Wax.

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A kitten name update…I know you are all waiting impatiently!

The children eventually chose the name Barley-Patch for the little calico kitten, I think just because it was the only one that nobody had more to say about other than, “Maybe.”

I think she has become and official part of the cat family here on our farm. Look where I found her this weekend…

Snuggling under the bushes with the two siamese kittens!

As for the other name suggestions, Hespa *was* a very good character, in the book “Calico Bush,” which we read together during school this year. I would highly recommend it, either for reading as a family or just for yourself!

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A new furry family member

My Farmer went miles out of his way to bring me a little present two weeks ago:

Photo Credit: Shooter, who was allegedly working on science.

She was abandoned in the ditch, near one of the busiest roads in our area. I suppose she might have wandered away, but half a mile from anywhere is pretty far for a kitten this little to wander. I’m just saying. So on a mission of mercy My Farmer backtracked home. I was reading to the children in the living room when he dropped her in my lap.

Needless to say we didn’t get any more schooling finished that day.

She has been making use of our never-used dog kennel as her home base. She spent the first few days in the house, the next few on the back porch but in the kennel, and once the other cats in our family stopped hissing she spent her days following them around. She is still sleeping in the kennel at night and sneaking into the house every time the door opens.

There is debate over her name. The suggestions have been: Barley, Patches, compromise of Barley-Patch, Marguerite, Maggie, and Hespa (the last three are characters from recent books). I’ve just been calling her ‘The Kitten.’ Any ideas would be appreciated!

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How we know spring is *really* here

This appeared on our front porch late last week:

A first-time mommy; she is doing a wonderful job.

There are three black and two white babies.

One of the gifts farm life gives my family is experiences like this. My kids can identify which tom cat is the baby-daddy, and keep track of how often he is around. They have a feeling for the natural cycle of life and get to watch it play out before their eyes as the seasons spin past. There are things I wish we could experience that living in a neighborhood would offer, but there are wonderful and special things about living in the country as well.

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“Yard Work” according to My Farmer

A little over seven years ago (I know this because Little Cowgirl will be seven in September, ahem) we had a monstrous ice storm. No power for days on end, the entire area frozen to a complete and utter halt, branches crashing under the weight of the ice. I picked up those branches and their ridiculous sticks for three months. I’m not even exaggerating for effect here, people.

Five very old and large trees in our yard didn’t make it.

My plan would have been to cut them down, grind off the stumps, fill the hole and seed some grass. However, I am only qualified to perform the last two tasks on this list. Seriously, I own a hand saw (birthday gift from My Hott Farmer a couple of years ago) and have only nearly sawed off part of my person once a year.

So, by default and for the safety of all those involved, we went with My Farmer’s plan, which is as follows:

Cut down anything higher than 15 feet off the ground. Wonder why wife’s mouth is hanging open. Leave the remaining gigantic stump to ‘decorate’ the yard while it rots over a period of FOREVER. Give puzzled look when wife tries to plant clematis and other climbing vines to cover them up. Tell her “Why would you do that? We are only going to rip the stump out one day when it rots; the flowers will be ruined.”

Humor wife five years later by pushing on stump with loader tractor. Look puzzled when she is so frustrated it doesn’t budge that she tears up.

Seven years later, use same loader to grade driveway and push on stump “for fun.” This is a good time – invite Little Cowgirl to ride along. Push out all of the stumps in the yard. Fill holes and send children to collect root pieces. Haul humongous stump pieces to burn pile in pasture. Suggest having a bonfire party (for the seventh year in a row).

Look puzzled when wife almost bursts into tear and leaps into your arms. Isn’t this exactly what we had planned?

My yearly homage to Robert Frost and Spring

A Boy’s Will

To The Thawing Wind

COME with rain, O loud Southwester!
Bring the singer, bring the nester;
Give the buried flower a dream;
Make the settled snow-bank steam;
Find the brown beneath the white;
But whate’er you do to-night,
Bathe my window, make it flow,
Melt it as the ices go;
Melt the glass and leave the sticks
Like a hermit’s crucifix;
Burst into my narrow stall;
Swing the picture on the wall;
Run the rattling pages o’er;
Scatter poems on the floor;
Turn the poet out of door.

By Robert Frost