Friday, December 12, 2025

If Barns Could Talk



My how time flies--5 years ago when I turned 65, I celebrated with the gift of a barn quilt.
You may have noticed that there are barn quilts all across Benton County  and the 
state of Arkansas.  We are on the Arkansas Quilt Trail.  

If barns could talk, this one on our farm would tell you it was built in 1957.
It has been a place for milking cows, storing machinery, providing housing 
for calves and hay storage.
Before the introduction of big round hay bales, the barn stored over
 8000 square bales during summer harvest. Even in those hot August harvest days,
 stacking hay in the Anglin Barn was not all bad when you were treated
 to a late-night supper and homemade ice cream prepared by Bonnah Lyn Anglin. 
The barn continues to be used as part of our farming operation.  

When we painted the barn this fall , we discovered that the barn quilt 
needed more than a fresh coat of paint. After 5 years of weathering, 
it required a new board and a fresh paint job. 

It was our good fortune to find the willing soul to paint a new board.
I am one lucky Mother to have two sons and their good friends that were willing
to  install it on the barn. 


Like many jobs on the farm, it takes communication, coordination
and a lot of craziness.
The boys started with one in the bucket and several on the ground.


To hold the painted board and get it on the barn,
it took two in the bucket.  It was a tight fit!


If barns could talk--I think she would be proud of her
new paint and quilt!


                                                         

                                                              Merry Christmas to me!!

Thursday, October 23, 2025

Fall Fun Down on the Farm


Did you know that farmers think there is fun in work?
We don't talk about having fun on the farm,
but part of our definition of fun  includes  getting the work done!

It's been a busy few weeks with harvesting the last of the hay crop,


and working cattle before winter.  
 Working  cattle includes giving vaccinations,  
worming the cattle, and castrating. 
That is a whole day of fun!


We also have the touch a tongue fun for our
youngest family members!


One of our best times this last month was welcoming
our newest member of the family.
Casey and Shelby became the parents of
Bristol Kristine.
More fun ahead!


Now you know, we do have fun on the farm!


"Everyday may not be good but there's 
something good in everyday."
                  ----anonymous

 

Sunday, September 7, 2025

Reflections of Summer


Where did summer go?
It's hard to believe that Labor Day has already happened
 and our local schools are humming with activities.


Here on the farm, we're winding up the hay season.
This field of hay grazer was cut Saturday and will be wrapped to 
make bailage--silage in a bale. The cows will think it's yummy!
Our end of summer days will include a little bit more hay cutting,
brush-hogging pastures and weed spraying where it is needed.
 
We have been blessed with  adequate rain
 throughout the growing season and not too many extremely   hot days. 
For Northwest Arkansas, I would say it was almost perfect! 


We celebrated a milestone birthday with our 
youngest son, Casey.  I don't know how he got so old
and I am still this young! 


The flowers must know their days are getting shorter
but my how they bring smiles on these last days of summer.

---------------------------
Find the joy in everyday.
                       ---unknown

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Thankful Thursday

Spring is filled with new beginnings.  
Welcoming new babies to the herd is a spring time event
that we look forward to and spend a lot of time
monitoring the expecting mama cows. 


                                   It's also been a couple of months filled with family celebrations--

                                                   Family gatherings that give us opportunity to

                                                   laugh at the fun the  grandchildren provide,

                                       


birthday celebrations


and Mother's Day.


                                      Our world changed on May 15 with the passing of
                                                     my sweet Mother, Mary.
                                Ninety four years is a very long life and yet it would
                                                 never seem long enough for me.
                                         She moved to the farm to be my next door
                                                     neighbor 10 years ago. 
                                      We had so many great times together just being
                                              on the farm and working in the yard.

                             I am thankful for her life  of loving and living and for everyday
                                                   she was with us on the farm.  

Sunday, March 30, 2025

New Beginnings

Hello Spring....
I'm so glad to see you!
Green is the color we see while driving across the pastures


checking for any new babies that have been
 born in the last few hours.


Spring has always been a favorite season because it 
is the beginning of a new growing year on the farm.

This year is filled with new beginnings for our family.
Hattie had her first mock  horse jumping  clinic.
She's been riding for almost a year and is loving the
experience so much.


We also participated in a "reveal party" 
for Casey and Shelby.
Welcoming a new baby girl in late fall is
pretty exciting spring news, too.


I'm thankful for all the new beginnings
that God supplies to us daily.

                                                                

                                                                     Happy Spring!

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Thankful Thursday

                     

                            It was a little easier to take those bitterly cold temperatures this month

                                                      when we received the gift of snow.


I am thankful for the beautiful snow days.
The blanket of snow makes everything look so pretty.
 Even though the daily  chores continue
regardless of the weather, there is  a joy in 
the beauty a snowy day provides.


The cows are fed a little more hay and grain  to
 meet their nutritional needs during extreme cold weather.

Big round hay bales are  unrolled to  provide a soft,
 warm place for cows to rest during snowy weather.  

Checking water hydrants and breaking ice on the ponds when
necessary are also part of the snowy day protocol.

                                            

                                             While I'm hoping for another snow day this year,

                                                               I'm thankful for this one!