If you read this blog by receiving it in email, there is another step involved to see the Index Page. At the end of the post, see the word Cousins which appears in blue because it will link back to the home page. Once on the home page, notice four tabs at the top of the page.
Home Photo Album About Me Index Page
Click on Index Page, read introduction, select a post to review or two or three. All titles are set up to link directly to their post. Might there be a glitch? Is this technology? Let me know if a broken link can be found. Actually, let's make this a contest. Who can find a broken link?
Tomorrow, I am going to do a review of the Photo Album. It will include the direct link on that post for your convenience.
Showing posts with label cousins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cousins. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 8, 2015
Wednesday, August 5, 2015
Wordless Wednesday
I was keeping ahead with my pre-post drafts and then I started falling a little behind. The slow down was due to life. Amazing how it seems to get in the way sometimes. Although, life is what is important. Remember, enjoy each day - tomorrow may not come your way.
Among other interrupting life events, I have been digging into the Phillips line whose first family immigrant sailed to the New World in 1630 aboard the Arabella. This has involved reviewing my early American history. What fun! The discovery process is extremely addicting, but I need to get back to what I already know and want to share with my cousins.
So, you might wonder why this post is labeled Wordless Wednesday when I am going on and on with words. Wordless Wednesday is a blogger prompt which features a picture, drawing, or other visual which could stand alone with no words needed.
I think I will have a few Wordless Wednesday's while building up my pre-draft inventory. Today's photo should prompt some giggles from a few cousins.
Among other interrupting life events, I have been digging into the Phillips line whose first family immigrant sailed to the New World in 1630 aboard the Arabella. This has involved reviewing my early American history. What fun! The discovery process is extremely addicting, but I need to get back to what I already know and want to share with my cousins.
So, you might wonder why this post is labeled Wordless Wednesday when I am going on and on with words. Wordless Wednesday is a blogger prompt which features a picture, drawing, or other visual which could stand alone with no words needed.
I think I will have a few Wordless Wednesday's while building up my pre-draft inventory. Today's photo should prompt some giggles from a few cousins.
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| Bill, Thelma (Pat), Jean, John |
Monday, August 3, 2015
Mondays With Mary #10 (Walking Beans)
As a teenager in the early 1960's, I "walked beans". Walking beans was a way of life for farm kids back then. Today the soybean crops are sprayed with herbicides that keep the weeds at bay. There is not a more beautiful sight than acres and acres of green soybean rows with not one stock of corn or other invasive weed sticking up above the tops of the leaves. Years ago this sight also reflected hours and hours turned into days and weeks of hot, dirty work. We would start very early in the morning. Sometimes the dew was still on the bean leaves and we would get soaking wet. We would walk down the rows from one end of the field to the other end; then, turn around and walk back on a different set of rows. Sometimes the field would be one half mile long. Each walker was responsible for the two rows to the left and the two rows to the right. We would be looking for cockleburrs, milk weed, and volunteer corn that had seeded itself from the year before when these acres had been planted to corn. If there were too many weeds, we would just take two rows. This would then take us FOREVER to get a field done.
My primary bean walking buddy was my second cousin and dear friend, Kathy. Our first customers were our dads, but eventually we were hired by other neighbors or family friends. Sometimes, our crew grew to Lynn, Nancy, and maybe Margo. At first we made 75 cents per hour. We were really excited as the summers went on and we made $1.00 per hour. Kathy and I both have bean walking scars on our legs and arms. Sometimes we pulled by hand, sometimes we used a corn knife which looked a little like a machete, and sometimes we used a bean hook. It was that bean hook that occasionally did the damage.
I wish Mom's journals went back to those days, but they don't. Instead, I found some entries from 1966 that give a little idea of how the beans were walked when I was a college student.
Sunday, July 10, 1966
hot again
rested all day went to
beanfield for two rounds in evening
Monday, July 11, 1966
canned 9 pts beans
(This would be green beans not soy beans)
cleaned 3 chickens
Vern raked hay hot
1 round in bean field
drove up to Scranton to cool off
(in the margin it says "bought a fan")
(remember, no air-conditioning)
Tuesday, July 12, 1966
hot-hot-hot Dorothy A came & picked beans (Again, green beans)
Vern baled 243 bales of hay
watered down hogs all day
Wednesday, July 13, 1966
hot yet
went to bean field
awhile
drove over to Carl's & Bert's
in evening McLaughlin losing cattle from heat
Thursday, July 14, 1966
got well fixed
washed in p.m.
started to cool off
Carl's over in evening
3/10 of rain
Friday, July 15, 1966
cleaned 3 chickens
went to bean field
for a round-stopped at Carl's
Saturday, July 16, 1966
worked in bean
field all day
Jane & Sharon Tolsdorf &
Margie to help
Sunday, July 17, 1966
hot
Vern & Margie did
2 more rounds in beans
Took Margie to Ames in
evening-Stopped in Boone on way back
Here I must interrupt and say that I undoubtedly was thrilled to go back to summer classes in Ames.
These daily entries continue until July 31 when she writes that Imlers finished the beans. I don't know who Imlers were, but my guess is someone who walked beans for pay like Kathy and I used to do.
I wanted to add just a couple more abbreviated entries for a few special readers.
Tuesday, July 19, 1966
Dave and Mary came
went 2 rounds in beanfield
Wednesday, July 20, 1966
Dave to beanfield
Thursday, July 21, 1966
Vickies & Tolsdorf girls
in beans in morning
and on and on and on and on..........
I am hot and tired just from reading about it.
My primary bean walking buddy was my second cousin and dear friend, Kathy. Our first customers were our dads, but eventually we were hired by other neighbors or family friends. Sometimes, our crew grew to Lynn, Nancy, and maybe Margo. At first we made 75 cents per hour. We were really excited as the summers went on and we made $1.00 per hour. Kathy and I both have bean walking scars on our legs and arms. Sometimes we pulled by hand, sometimes we used a corn knife which looked a little like a machete, and sometimes we used a bean hook. It was that bean hook that occasionally did the damage.
I wish Mom's journals went back to those days, but they don't. Instead, I found some entries from 1966 that give a little idea of how the beans were walked when I was a college student.
Sunday, July 10, 1966
hot again
rested all day went to
beanfield for two rounds in evening
Monday, July 11, 1966
canned 9 pts beans
(This would be green beans not soy beans)
cleaned 3 chickens
Vern raked hay hot
1 round in bean field
drove up to Scranton to cool off
(in the margin it says "bought a fan")
(remember, no air-conditioning)
Tuesday, July 12, 1966
hot-hot-hot Dorothy A came & picked beans (Again, green beans)
Vern baled 243 bales of hay
watered down hogs all day
Wednesday, July 13, 1966
hot yet
went to bean field
awhile
drove over to Carl's & Bert's
in evening McLaughlin losing cattle from heat
Thursday, July 14, 1966
got well fixed
washed in p.m.
started to cool off
Carl's over in evening
3/10 of rain
Friday, July 15, 1966
cleaned 3 chickens
went to bean field
for a round-stopped at Carl's
Saturday, July 16, 1966
worked in bean
field all day
Jane & Sharon Tolsdorf &
Margie to help
Sunday, July 17, 1966
hot
Vern & Margie did
2 more rounds in beans
Took Margie to Ames in
evening-Stopped in Boone on way back
Here I must interrupt and say that I undoubtedly was thrilled to go back to summer classes in Ames.
These daily entries continue until July 31 when she writes that Imlers finished the beans. I don't know who Imlers were, but my guess is someone who walked beans for pay like Kathy and I used to do.
I wanted to add just a couple more abbreviated entries for a few special readers.
Tuesday, July 19, 1966
Dave and Mary came
went 2 rounds in beanfield
Wednesday, July 20, 1966
Dave to beanfield
Thursday, July 21, 1966
Vickies & Tolsdorf girls
in beans in morning
and on and on and on and on..........
I am hot and tired just from reading about it.
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