Thursday, June 30, 2016
Wednesday, June 29, 2016
Tuesday, June 28, 2016
Fox Meadows Creamery
While I was in Pennsylvania, Judith and the kids introduced me to Fox Meadow Creamery, a family-owned enterprise, where the ice cream is churned from milk produced by cows on the farm right down the road.
Monday, June 27, 2016
Sunday, June 26, 2016
Saturday, June 25, 2016
Julie
I tacked a couple of days onto my trip to Pennsylvania for Kendra's wedding. Julie and I managed to make the most of our vacation together. We attended church in Spanish, picked eight quarts of strawberries, hiked on the Appalachian Trail, dined at a cafe in Boiling Springs, shopped at a thrift store, watched dvds, and shared ice cream. It was a good visit.
Friday, June 24, 2016
Thursday, June 23, 2016
Double yellow
Pennsylvanians tend to have a less-literal interpretation of double-yellow lines than Michiganders.
Wednesday, June 22, 2016
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Monday, June 20, 2016
Sunday, June 19, 2016
Saturday, June 18, 2016
Charlie
Naomi shared this photo with me. Charlie always gets excited when he sees me, so I don't have any photos of him as a lazy dog.
Friday, June 17, 2016
Thursday, June 16, 2016
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
Man vs. nature
Take for example my pepper plants. Granted, the little plants that I started from seed didn't have much of a chance when I transplanted them outside. But, just to be sure, the rabbits polished them off.
So, I stopped at a greenhouse and picked out a pack of four thriving plants (25% off sale), which I tenderly set in my garden. Three of the four plants were later destroyed by a skunk rooting for a nightly meal of grubs.
I have one pepper plant.
There's also the saga of my tomato plants. I got a little carried away when I started the seeds indoors--I ended up with around ninety, small, tomato plants. I planted a few, saved a few extras and gave two flats to my parents. It's a good thing I saved extras.
To summarize the past two weeks: I planted; rabbits ate; I replanted, sprayed with rabbit repellent and erected cages; skunk rooted; I replanted; Charlie tangled his line in two tomato cages; I sighed and replanted.
I have five remaining tomato plants on my front porch, just in case.
Tuesday, June 14, 2016
Monday, June 13, 2016
Sunday, June 12, 2016
Saturday, June 11, 2016
Baling hay
There were four guys, two pick-up trucks, four tractors, a skid steer, a telehandler and multiple wagons in the field across the road from my parents' house when I returned from work yesterday.
I grabbed my camera, iPhone and a pair of earplugs and ran out to catch a ride in the tractor. Brian assured me that I would get lots of hits if I documented their hay operation, which is probably true once Joel and Austin discover this post.
Baling the 20-acre field across the road marks the beginning of first-cutting hay for the summer. It's also the testing ground for equipment that the guys pulled into the shop for maintenance during the winter.
The hay crew cut the field on Monday, only to have it rained on that evening. But, the weather was warm and breezy later in the week and by Friday the hay was dry. A few years ago, the crew would have spent at least two long, hot, exhausting days putting up the hay in the field across the road. Now, the accumulator, bale wagon and grapple, have reduced the amount that bales have to be handled by hand, allowing the crew to finish raking and baling the entire field in one afternoon and evening.
In this video, Dad is driving the Allis Chalmers 7045 with the New Holland BC5070 Baler. In the past, there would be a wagon hooked behind the baler and the crew would stack every bale. Now, the bales are baled directly on the ground and later picked up by the accumulator (not featured, since it broke before I returned from work) or the bale wagon (see the second video).
Next, Brian operates the Allis Chalmers 7010 with the New Holland 1030 Bale Wagon. After Dad bales the hay, Brian uses the bale wagon to pick up the bales and stack them in piles, which will later be loaded onto trailers and wagons (see the last video).
Finally, Logan uses the skid steer and a grapple to load bales onto the trailer, which is behind the Ford F250 pick-up truck driven by farmer friend Harry. All the bales will be stacked on wagons or trailers and pulled into one of the barns before the hay crew retires for the night.
I grabbed my camera, iPhone and a pair of earplugs and ran out to catch a ride in the tractor. Brian assured me that I would get lots of hits if I documented their hay operation, which is probably true once Joel and Austin discover this post.
Baling the 20-acre field across the road marks the beginning of first-cutting hay for the summer. It's also the testing ground for equipment that the guys pulled into the shop for maintenance during the winter.
The hay crew cut the field on Monday, only to have it rained on that evening. But, the weather was warm and breezy later in the week and by Friday the hay was dry. A few years ago, the crew would have spent at least two long, hot, exhausting days putting up the hay in the field across the road. Now, the accumulator, bale wagon and grapple, have reduced the amount that bales have to be handled by hand, allowing the crew to finish raking and baling the entire field in one afternoon and evening.
In this video, Dad is driving the Allis Chalmers 7045 with the New Holland BC5070 Baler. In the past, there would be a wagon hooked behind the baler and the crew would stack every bale. Now, the bales are baled directly on the ground and later picked up by the accumulator (not featured, since it broke before I returned from work) or the bale wagon (see the second video).
Next, Brian operates the Allis Chalmers 7010 with the New Holland 1030 Bale Wagon. After Dad bales the hay, Brian uses the bale wagon to pick up the bales and stack them in piles, which will later be loaded onto trailers and wagons (see the last video).
Finally, Logan uses the skid steer and a grapple to load bales onto the trailer, which is behind the Ford F250 pick-up truck driven by farmer friend Harry. All the bales will be stacked on wagons or trailers and pulled into one of the barns before the hay crew retires for the night.
Friday, June 10, 2016
Thursday, June 9, 2016
Wednesday, June 8, 2016
Tuesday, June 7, 2016
Monday, June 6, 2016
Sunday, June 5, 2016
Saturday, June 4, 2016
Friday, June 3, 2016
Tunnel park
While visiting Holland, Aunt Phyllis, Mom, Naomi and I ventured to Tunnel Park to dip our toes in Lake Michigan. Aunt Phyllis was a bit miffed at Naomi and I that we didn't "discover" the tunnel until after she'd climbed the flights of stairs up and over the dune.