Saturday, October 4, 2008
The Nose Picker Ring!
I remember being told that when you pull off the pop can pull tab you wear it on your finger and use it as a nose picker! Some were flat, some curled. I would sit and look at them on my finger and try to imagine why I would use that to pick my nose! I often bent them down so they looked like a real ring and I could put my hand in my pocket. In the '80s the pull tab was replaced with the flip tab, where you couldn't pull them out!
I hadn't seen one of those pull tabs in ages until I was hiking around Chilco Lake with my husband. I was on the trail behind him and stopped to look at the small lake from the rock I was on. I looked down at my feet and there was a NOSE PICKER RING!! I admired it, didn't move it, didn't touch it but captured it with my lens. It has been there almost 30 years, and it is still there today.
Saddled Up for St. Jude
Today a bunch of us Saddled Up to raise money for St. Jude's Children's Hosptial. All together with 30 riders, we managed to raise close to $1700.00 and there are a few late pledges of donations coming in by the end of the week. The weather was wet, cloudy but warm. The horses didn't mind at all and neither did the riders! The trail ride was located at Farragut State Park near Bayview, Idaho. The trail was a 10 mile loop, marked by a few of the 4-Hers in the group the night before, as well as camp. 5 girls slept in a tent in a horse trailer to ensure they stayed dry and toasty all night!
The riders set out at 9am in groups to trek through Farragut for the cause. With rain coats wrapped over saddles and around their legs, and the horses ready for the adventure they were off. During the ride there were a few helping in camp, cooking chili, setting up the lunch table and setting out the prizes for the riders that had the most money pledge for St. Jude's. I ran out on the trail after the first group came in to capture photos in the trees. I turned into a new obstacle for a few horses that had never seen a tree with a flannel shirt and camera! Never did I see an upset face, nor hear a complaint about anything, including the weather! When the riders went by me they all flashed a smile as their horses steamed with moisture.
The Saddle Up for St. Jude's is held at Farragut every year on the first Saturday of October. For more information for next year please feel free to contact the Kootenai County Extension office or the Farragut Information Desk.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Friday, May 23, 2008
A Son's Love
Spring flowers everywhere, including dandelions! My son preferred the purple ones that look like little balls on a stick. He brought me a handful of them! I do have a flower bed full of these Grape Hyacinth and at first was surprised, thinking that is where he got them. I asked where he found these and he said " In the grass part of the yard", and he pointed over towards the side of the house. There were more over there all scattered out with the grass! Then he says " you have some in the flower bed but those I can't give you." AAwwww!!!!
The Lone Tulip
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Rainy Day's Sunset
It has been a busy, wet, cold spring. Seems things are getting a start on renewal in a slow, round about sort of way. This weekend the local lakes and rivers are expected to crest from the winter run off, and they are already well above the flooding levels. Saturday, you can find me with my camera capturing the historical event for this past winter was a record snowfall here in North Idaho.
We have added a few new members to our family, you have already met our blued eyed horse and now it is time to introduce a dapple gray mare named Coco. She is 7 years old, and a quarter/arabian. She has been the one used most often in 4-H riding meetings over the past month allowing our daughter to learn so much and building her confidence on horseback. Coco is very headstrong and likes things to be direct and correct, and if you mix up the commands she has been trained to, she will let you know. Our daughter already went for a crow-hopping 20 second ride!
We have added a few new members to our family, you have already met our blued eyed horse and now it is time to introduce a dapple gray mare named Coco. She is 7 years old, and a quarter/arabian. She has been the one used most often in 4-H riding meetings over the past month allowing our daughter to learn so much and building her confidence on horseback. Coco is very headstrong and likes things to be direct and correct, and if you mix up the commands she has been trained to, she will let you know. Our daughter already went for a crow-hopping 20 second ride!
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Thee Ol' Milkin Barn
When my husband was a kid, his dad had cattle, dairy cattle and horses. He remembers having to do the milking twice a day, feeding all the animals before school. My husband claims he had to load 120+ bails every morning before school to feed the 50 head dairy, 50 head of horses and 150+ head of beef.
He told me all this when I was rummaging through the old barn, finding antique treasures about every 5 square feet! Now that is heaven to an antique collector, but trash to my husband. His dad had passed in 1999 and sold out the cattle and most of the horses a few years before that. His mother's family homesteaded on that land, and he was born in the old house that still stands, and passed in a home set up 40 to the east of it. You can say Stanley's roots were planted deep in Teton Valley!
The SURGE Milker canister has many stories, I can imagine them.. teenage boys pulling through the cows and probably playing a few pranks on each other in the meantime. I saw three wide canisters like the one above, complete with the lid that sealed on and has 4 ports each for a tube that ran to the teets of a cow with electric milkers on the end. There is also an upright canister. They no longer sit under cows collecting milk but rest on my front porch with annual flowers in them every summer. My husband thought I was 'off my rocker' when I asked if I could have them and hauled them 600 miles to our home now.
Along with my collection of Milker canisters I have two steel milk cans, stamped with their origin. I do believe one is stamped TETONIA. I'll have to post a later blog about them, when they are not covered with 2+ feet of snow as they are now.
I absolutely love antiques... for the mysteries they hold within!
He told me all this when I was rummaging through the old barn, finding antique treasures about every 5 square feet! Now that is heaven to an antique collector, but trash to my husband. His dad had passed in 1999 and sold out the cattle and most of the horses a few years before that. His mother's family homesteaded on that land, and he was born in the old house that still stands, and passed in a home set up 40 to the east of it. You can say Stanley's roots were planted deep in Teton Valley!
The SURGE Milker canister has many stories, I can imagine them.. teenage boys pulling through the cows and probably playing a few pranks on each other in the meantime. I saw three wide canisters like the one above, complete with the lid that sealed on and has 4 ports each for a tube that ran to the teets of a cow with electric milkers on the end. There is also an upright canister. They no longer sit under cows collecting milk but rest on my front porch with annual flowers in them every summer. My husband thought I was 'off my rocker' when I asked if I could have them and hauled them 600 miles to our home now.
Along with my collection of Milker canisters I have two steel milk cans, stamped with their origin. I do believe one is stamped TETONIA. I'll have to post a later blog about them, when they are not covered with 2+ feet of snow as they are now.
I absolutely love antiques... for the mysteries they hold within!
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