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In Adventures/ Country Life

My Daily Commute – Abandoned

I live in one county, work in another.  My drive is about 40 minutes in good weather and just over 50km.  Some people find it surprising that I drive that far each day, and thankfully I don’t mind the drive at all.  I pop on a podcast and cruise home. 

I usually travel ‘the back way’, which means nothing to some, but over Nuttby Mountain, through Earltown.  Part of the reason why I don’t hate my drive is because the roads I travel are very scenic.  I thought I might share some of the views that catch my eye.  And I thought I might start with some of the old, derelict buildings that sit, lonely and for the most part – unloved on the side of the road.  Most people don’t even see them, but I love them.

You may have seen my post over on Instagram of this beauty the other day.  A lot of people have photographed this house.  In fact, during the warmer months, it isn’t uncommon to see people pulled off the road, snapping pictures of it.  And the best was when someone taped a red paper heart to the front of it.  It made me smile every time I saw that fading heart, to know someone else loved this place, too, enough to stop and leave their mark in a subtle but meaningful way.  Eventually time and weather removed that heart, but I know it was there, like a gentle kiss.

I’ve shared this house quite a few times over the years on Instagram.  It begs to be photographed and shared.  So that we don’t forget.  At some point, people lived their lives here, did their day-to-day routines within these now weathered walls.  I’d love the hear the stories they could tell.  But bit by bit, those walls are coming apart.

I have no idea what this little round building is.  But I so enjoy it.  The laid-over tin roof, the weathered shingles….sitting alone.

Technically, this isn’t abandoned.  I know the owners so I could ask a few questions, but I don’t.  I drove past this place everyday on the bus route as a kid.  I don’t remember it.  The trees grew up around it.  But recently, the trees were cleared away and the building shored up.  So someone still cares!

That’s it for the abandoned buildings that I’m going to share.  I have a few other ideas about my drive to share so another day when I leave home a couple minutes early, I’ll snap some of the homes I love and community spaces that are along the drive, and maybe some pretty rivers, too!

Colourfully yours,

Lori

PS I took these pictures yesterday – today’s commute was slow and slippery!

6 In Country Life/ Life

Memories from the Farm

Last week I asked on Instagram what you guys would be interested in reading about on the blog.  And you gave me some great ideas!!  So, today I’m taking the advice of the one and only Peady, and I’m going to share some of the fun memories of growing up on a farm.

When I was a kid, we lived on a fully operational dairy farm.  My parents bought it and moved here in 1974 from Ontario.  So, with dairy farming comes a lot of work.  And when we were little, there was only so much we could do so mom and dad would hire help.  Usually this was some young guy from within the church we attended.  And as little kids can do, we ended up making buddies with these guys.

The various hired hands let us tag along to the fields, ‘help’ them unload wagon loads of hay, drive over to the cattle market, etc….basically if we weren’t given our own task, then we’d find a way to entertain ourselves.  But, the best was the water fights.  With lots of buckets at our disposal, we would have some epic water fights.  At the end of a hot summer’s day, there was nothing like chasing each other around the yard with a bucket of cold well water to cool off.   It wouldn’t matter if you didn’t want to play, one splash of a bucket made you a part of it.  I recall one hired hand, John, who would threaten us with a steady stream from the hose on our rubber boots and just. one. word…..Dance.  And if we didn’t, he thought nothing of soaking us.  But don’t feel bad for us, we started just as many water fights as any one else.  Who needs a water gun on a farm? Certainly not us.

Summers on the farm meant lunches in the field where we’d make an entire loaf of bread into sandwiches, pile into the farm pick-up and head out to whatever field they were haying in to bring the guys a meal.  We’d lug a huge Thermos of Kool-aid along and another filled with cold water and then probably whatever sweets mom or one of us { my sister and I loved to bake! } had made and everyone would gather around for a break and a meal.  The jugs would be passed around, one to another, not a thought of everyone drinking from the same jug.  There was skill involved in pushing that little button and getting the stream of sweet liquid in your mouth and not down the front of your shirt.  I don’t recall a single conversation or specific event about those meals, just that there was a sense of unity in the task at hand.  If it was a good haying day, then that was what everyone focused on, in whatever way we could.  Maybe Steve ran wagons back and forth to the fields and someone else milked so Dad could keep baling or stacking hay in the mow.  I was the littlest so my tasks were different, I’d help mom make meals or unload wagons or help whoever was milking.  But I also recall biking for hours up and down the drive way, down into the yard and behind the barn – so maybe I helped, too?  Funny how over time the memories blend and fade.

Haying when I was a kid was nothing like it is now.  The hay was cut, tedded and raked up, then it would get baled into square bales and stacked on the hay wagon.  Then that wagon would be pulled up to the base of the elevator, unloaded and carried up the side of the barn on said elevator and then stacked in the hay mow into neat piles all the way to the rafters.  Dad would come down from the haymow, shirtless, covered in sweat and chaff with jeans on to protect his legs from the prickly hay. You’d be hard pressed to find a hotter spot on the farm than the hay mow in July or August. He’d find the jug of water and take a long drink.  If he had to go into the house, he needed to brush off and get all the hay out of his boots and off his wool socks on the doorstep.  Of course, he was always tanned up because back then our tractors didn’t have cabs and certainly not air conditioning.  Those guys worked so hard on the hottest days of the years in ensure that the cows would have an adequate supply of good quality hay for over the winter.

As we got older and were able to do more, our roles fell into a pattern.  Saturdays were spent doing jobs around the farm and weeknights we took turns milking with Dad, or doing the other barn chores or staying in the house to help Mom clean up supper.  My girls recently asked me what job I preferred.  I think my answer is different now than it was as a kid.  Clearly doing supper clean up with Mom was the easiest task so that was probably my answer as a kid.  But now, as an adult who looks back at that time in my life, I would milk with Dad a hundred times over { no offence, Mom! }  It was in that milking parlour I learned multiplication, I learned about animal husbandry, I learned to that not every minute spent with someone else needed to be filled with chatter.  I learned which cows needed special attention and which cows to steer clear of.  I learned to work through a belly full of supper, too, even though I told Dad repeatedly that my food was expanding and I thought I was dying.  😉  There is something to be said for the hard, regular work of milking, of producing food for this country’s people.  { Don’t get me started on the Canadian Dairy industry but all I’ll say is be sure to buy products that sport the logo so you can be sure you are supporting your Canadian Dairy farmers!! }

It wasn’t all work and no play.  We had loads of fun, too.  Baseball games on Sunday nights after milking, sledding down the hill behind the barn, building hay forts, playing in the woods, walking to Strawberry Hill, biking for hours, sewing clothes for our dolls, riding our pony, sleeping in the tent in the back yard, eating yellow plums right off the tree, yes, those were the days.

I wouldn’t trade my childhood on the farm for anything.  And even though I may not have enjoyed doing the farm work, I have come to appreciate the life lessons it taught me.  So much so that we want our girls to have a taste of that in their childhood, too.  That’s why they have animals, too.  Yes, it’s fun and yes, I love having them around but I want my kids to grow up to work hard and to be responsible for someone who depends solely on them.  Our girls make sure the animals needs are tended to before they get on the school bus each morning and again before they call it a day.  I think those are important life lessons, I learned that on the farm as a kid.

As time passes, different things stand out to me about the way I was raised.  At the time, we were surrounded by other farming families so these things seemed perfectly normal.  But, I see that what we had was special, unique even.  And I wouldn’t trade one day for any of it, it made me who I am today, and for that I am so very thankful.

To be continued,

Lori

In Country Life/ Our Family

Why We’re a 4H Family

It all started in a tiny community hall on the side of a rural road way back 30 or so years ago.  There was this handsome boy across the hall, making eyes at me and I was ignoring him completely in my awkward 13 year-old way….

Fast forward to these days and we are a 4H family involved in that very same club – different community hall, same two lane road.  Yes, it makes our lives busier, but our girls are learning life lessons here that they couldn’t learn anywhere else.  And we wouldn’t trade it for the world.

Way back when I was a 4H kid, I took Dairy.  And yes, I grew up on a dairy farm, so it might seem like a logical choice, but if you knew me then, I was not the farmer in my family…..by any stretch.  But, what I was was too shy to go into a project that actually interested me so I tagged along with my siblings…as a little sister does! Ironically, had I taken something I was interested in like crafts or sewing, my mother-in-law would’ve been my leader 😉  That was not a stellar year by any means.  I hated judging cows, showing cows and talking out loud to strangers.  I’m not sure if I had to do speech or not, that has been erased from my memory completely.  I do, however, remember getting run into the fence by my calf and Dad showing her in the confirmation class and handing me a red ribbon.  There may have also been hiding in the cattle trailer and crying but who’s to say for sure 😉

So, if those are my 4H memories, why would we subject our kids to it?  Well, the handsome Mr. Byrne rocked 4H and loved every minute of it.  And now, as an adult, I see the value in the life lessons that 4H teaches.  And so, we are just wrapping up our second year as a 4H family.  And do you want to know how it went? Well, I’m going to tell you anyway!

Lena did Exploring 4H last year and this year moved on to taking 3 projects.  She is involved in Light Horse, Crafts and Foods.  And Hannah is a Cloverbud this year, her first year in it.  I volunteered to be the Crafts leader, along with Heidi as my second in command and I’m her second in command in Foods. { We like to hang out together so this works well for us }

Part of our club’s requirements are speeches or demos, which can be super stressful for the kids { and momma hearts, too } and it isn’t uncommon for adults to struggle with this!  Last year Lena’s speech prep was tough, I’m not going to lie.  There were tears, fights, and threats of quitting but she persevered and accomplished her speech and was so proud of herself.  And this past year she decided to do a Team Demo with her friend Abbie and they rocked it!  They ended up as one of the top 5 Junior Team Demo pairs in the province.  It was amazing to watch them practice, pour their hearts into it and to see them excel.  They learned so much about being a team player, about winning and losing with grace and the ins and outs of doing demonstrations.

Hannah owned her speech.  She didn’t want help writing it, she practiced it over and over and did a great job, considering the rocky start she had once she realized a line or two in that her cards were out of order!  She asked for help, and got back up there and started like she hadn’t had an issue.  Let me tell you, I am one proud momma!

Over the course of the summer, we did the various aspects of Achievement Day.  And for those who aren’t familiar with 4H, this is when the different projects are judged, not against each other, but against the standards for the age bracket and club requirements for each project.  The judges also comment on each project, making recommendations for improvements and/or noting aspects that were well done.  The girls both did well on their projects but have ideas of how to improve their projects for Exhibition.

At the Exhibition level, they will be judged against the other members’ work.  And based on how well they do at the Exhibition level, they may be eligible to move on to the Provincial Show where they would be up against the best of the best throughout the entire province.  Taking your projects onto Exhibition is entirely up to the member, Achievement Day is all that is required to complete the project for the year.  It’s amazing to see the level of skill these kids have, if you have the chance to check out your local exhibition, you need to check out the 4H projects.

The 4H Motto is ‘Learn to Do by Doing’  and it is fun watching the kids look to the leaders to learn from them and then take it and run with it and make it their own.  It’s hands-on, it can be dirty, loud, messy but fun as we build up future leaders, farmers, craftspeople – you name it, it can all start here!

I also want to take a minute to dispel the myth that 4H is only for farm kids.  It isn’t.  It is for kids who want to try their hand at wood working or welding, fine-tune skills in photography, sewing, cooking, or yes, those that want to show a rabbit, cow, sheep or even a draft horse.  The leaders will work with anyone who is willing to put forth the effort, who show up to the meetings, who takes part in the community events and who are all in.

We’re heading into our local exhibition soon.  Lena will be showing for Lighthorse 4H on Labour Day Monday and then both girls will be showing in various classes throughout the week.  I can’t wait to watch them.  And probably take a million pictures because that’s what I do, right?  There is something magical about watching your children in their happy place, to see the love and affection between a giant animal and a little girl in braided hair.  To see them excel or flounder but preserve through it all.  That is why we are involved in 4H.

To be continued,

Lori

In Adventures/ Country Life/ Meet Someone New

Zane Lambert – PBR Bullrider

Bullrider, Canadian, and soon-to-be dad – Zane Lambert is here on the East Coast for a competition in Halifax on the Monster Energy PBR Tour and I had the chance to chat with him.  We talked a little bull-riding, some country living and farm talk, too, all thanks to PBR Canada.

SOURCE: PBR Canada Photo by Andy Watson

Zane Lambert has a long list of awards and probably a stack of belt buckles just as impressive.  He has done all Canadians proud with his wins across North America but also around the world.    I asked him about his favourite win and last year’s PBR Canadian Title win topped the list.  His previous PBR title was won in 2013, so to remain competitive and at the top of his field, he trains hard, rides hard and keeps the passion for the event alive.  He has a competitive nature and loves that each ride is different, that bull riding is challenging and takes skill and athleticism.  He said he loves this lifestyle, being on tour and seeing so many different places across North America, even hitting Australia and meeting people wherever he rides.  And getting to compete for Team Canada at the inaugural Global Cup is a pretty big deal, I’d say, wouldn’t you agree?

SOURCE: PBR Canada Photo by Covy Moore/CovyMoore.com

I was curious about Zane Lambert after I read his bio.  Yes, it went over the impressive career of a young man that started bull riding at a young age, win after win after win.  He comes by the rodeo passion naturally, as the youngest of his siblings, he spent lots of time watching his older siblings doing their thing, whether it was barrel racing, roping, steer wrestling, so that he would find a sport within the rodeo circuit was no surprise.  His father was a grain farmer, country life was the life he knew. But what caught my eye was the fact that he does renovations in his down time.  So, I asked him about it, because, well, why not?

He had helped his dad build the family home and so with that experience under his belt, after college, he went to work for a framer who also had played on a farm team for the NHL, so Zane’s boss could appreciate the time it took to also try to build a career in an athletic field.  He chuckled as he said it would be hard to find any other boss that would let him off work on a Wednesday to hit the rodeo circuit to show back up for work the following Tuesday.  But, they worked together for years, doing anything from new construction to renovations, all the while, Zane was learning skills from him which he puts to good use around his own home.

I asked Zane about his biggest inspiration and I have to say, I loved his answer.  He didn’t name a single person, but instead said that he draws inspiration from so many different sources for many different things in his life.  It’s a series of little things from day to day.

You can follow Zane on Instagram HERE, Twitter HERE and the PBR HERE if you’d like to keep up-to-date on it all!

I’m excited to be ring side tonight at the Scotiabank Centre, watching this exciting sport.  And you know that we’ll be cheering pretty darn loud for Zane!  If you want to follow along, be sure to check out my Instagram stories later on!

To be continued,

Lori

Disclaimer:  I was provided the tickets and chance to interview Zane by PBR Canada but my take on it all is just that 😉  I was also provided by the photos by PBR Canada and the talented Covy Moore

In Clear Day Farm/ Country Life

Twig and Mocha

We have been waiting for a long time for lambs to arrive and this morning Sweet Willow had twins!!  And, boy, are they cute!!

Hannah owns the three sheep that live here with us at Clear Day Farm.  Sweet Willow is the momma and Sweetie and Lily are her twin ewe lambs from last year.  The sheep hung out at the farm, even after Dad sold it { which you can read about HERE } to be bred before they moved up to our place this winter { which you can read about HERE }  I chatted with the couple that bought the farm about what kind of sheep we should breed them to, and we decided Scottish Blackface because they are so cute – good reasons, right? 😉 I pick the breeds purely on how photogenic they’ll be!

Fast forward the five months it takes to grow a lamb or two and we arrive at lambing season!  I thought last week Monday Sweet Willow was going to have her babies but I was a little off….over a week off..but whatever!  You can read about that HERE.

Ruckus in the barn awoke me at 5 am on one of the few days I can sleep in, so I put on my rubber boots and coat over my pyjamas, because that’s how I roll, and headed out to see what was going on.  Sure enough, there was a lamb running around the pen with the other three.  I put Sweetie and Lily out in the big pen and ran into the house to wake the girls because I knew there was going to be at least one more baby, I could see a set of hooves making an entrance… And it never gets old watching a new life come into this world.

Shortly after the girls come to the barn, the second lamb arrived.  And in no time, she was up, trying to find her feet and nurse.

So, let me introduce you to Twig and Mocha!  Twig is the firstborn and a ram lamb.  He is also the bigger of the two and a real snuggler.  When you pick him up, he truly snuggles right in under your chin.

 

How cute is he? And that tongue!!!

Mocha is a ewe lamb and pretty feisty, she’ll try to escape your arms any chance she gets.  But that face!!

Sweet Willow is very tolerant of us, she is used to being petted and having us around in the pen and she is okay with us handling her lambs.  But not all momma sheep feel that way, some will try to run you off with a good head butt and other mommas will not love their lambs if they’ve been handled too much by people.  When Sweetie and Lily lamb, we’ll have to see how they react to us being around their babies and we will respect their wishes.

So, those are the two new lambs, we are expecting at least a couple more so I’ll be sure to introduce them to you when they arrive.  You can expect to see lots of pictures as they grow!

To be continued,

Lori