Showing posts with label pictures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pictures. Show all posts

Friday, July 11, 2008

Air Traffic

We don't get much traffic around here. Last week Jeff saw a pickup with a trailer load of junk, so he called it into the sheriff's office for illegal dumping (which it was). Occasionally we see a horse trailer go by with some folks working cattle a few miles from here. Very rarely we get someone who is lost. And even a Jehoviah's Witness or two. Sometimes a feed salesman or a bolt salesman. The UPS guy knows us by name,

but he is a rare visitor, too, since we just don't get many packages.



No, most of our traffic comes from the skies. Like this cropduster.


That's one of our neighbors, Dink. He was spraying some stuff to kill the mesquite bushes growing so thick in the pasture by the house. Too bad they were the only green thing out there! LOL!


Made some pretty close passes, but it made the excitement for our day.

We get alot of air traffic from the local bombing range (go ahead Katie, laugh it up! Your cousin not only tries to FARM in the DESERT, but lives close to the Melrose Bombing range). I forget what these ones are called, and I grabbed the camera to late to get a good side picture of them. They are the ones with two rotors on top. Dad or Buck: what are they?

A C-130 went by the other day, too. But the camera was no where in site for me to grab. I sure don't mind being by the bombing range. The occasional sound barrier breaking kinda got my heart pumping as I searched the house to see if a lone car crashed through or if a heavy piece of furniture fell over. And I enjoy listening to the machine gun fire or the bombs they are practicing with. As long as they don't start any more fires. LOL! But seriously, Jeff and I are proud of everyone who is in or was in the military and what they have done for our country. They can come bomb our backyard anytime!

Saturday, July 5, 2008

4th of July, 2008

Our village hasn't done anything for 4th of July since...well, since I've been around here! Jeff said he remembers when he was little someone used to do something. So this year, the fire department and the Lion's club decided to do something. A community event centered around food, fireworks, and good ol' American country music!

First the food had to be cooked. The fare was simple: hamburgers, hot dogs and chips. Served with iced tea and lemonade.

Followed by some homemade ice cream. This ice cream maker should make enough for this crowd.


Some good ol' family fun and games on the track, too. Drew is ready for the stick horse race, while my niece Gracie is getting some last minute tips from her mother, Amanda.


And their off!! Chance (middle boy in red) was ready to go! My nephew, Brantley, was too (2nd on the left). Unfortunately, Chance went down in the middle of the race, injured with skinned knees. He made a trip with daddy to the waiting ambulance to get cleaned up and said, "Daddy, please no needles. Ok?"


The girls had their turn, too. Ch'ree on the far left, Shelby on the far right.


It didn't end there! Even the big boys got a turn. Jeff, right in the middle. I think the high schoolers were having fun, even if they won't admit it.


Other races like the sack race, a dunking booth, and egg toss, went on until sunset.

Break here. I didn't have a chance to take any pictures of the fireworks because Drew, aka Hodini, kept trying to escape my sights. He loved the fireworks, just felt he needed to find another seat to view them. That seat being away from me. So, I held onto him and not the camera. But the fireworks were awesome. Some said they were better than the one in town the night before (Portales had to do their show a day early due to some problems with the pyrotechnic company being understaffed. We tried to make it to see them on Thursday, but was detained by a vanful of senior citizens that had run out of gas on the highway. Jeff, being the good sam that he is, stopped to help them out. We pulled up to the house we were crashing to watch the fireworks just as the last one was lit. Oh, well). Jeff and I spent all week pouring over all the songs on our iTunes library to pick the perfect ones to dance to. We tried to get just the right amount of songs from several decades. A little Bob Wills and Johnny Cash and a couple other old artists, a bit of 70's, 80's, 90's and the latest to keep everyone happy. Even a bit of the new hip hopped version of Cotton Eyed Joe and the Cha Cha Slide for the teens. There was much Alan Jackson, because you can't go wrong with him. He's traditional enough for the older folk, but new enough for the younger ones. The playlist we narrowed it down to would have took 7 hours to get through, so we didn't get to hear it all. Maybe next time.


There's Jeff working the playlist. Not sure if he was actually working on songs, or playing Spider Solataire. LOL!


Even Drew got in on the dancing! I think he's the cutest thing with his boots and wranglers on, but what happened to his shirt?


40 Years of wedded bliss for Don and Linda (Jeff's parents)


Ch'ree stealing a dance with Granddaddy

I know Jeff's mother took many pictures with her camera, and if I had some of those, I might be in one or two. But I don't, so you won't see me. haha!! Maybe if she sends me one or two, I MAY post them.

If I had to take a guess, about 150 people came for the festivities. I don't think Floyd has that many people, so a few probably came from town that had ties to the community (family or school). It was alot of fun, at least for our family. We didn't come home til 1am. Hopefully next year we can do it again!

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Photos, 6-27-08

We took the kids swimming the other day. No, not to the city pool in town, not to a friend in the neighborhood that has a pool (HA!!). Nope, we just took them down to one of our brand new stock tanks!! It's not too deep, but big enough for many kids. It's not going to get torn up by wind or dogs with sharp toenails. And if you don't mind the bottom being a bit rough from concrete, it's just right. Jeff's sister and her family were here for the weekend, so we had those two kids in there as well. Drew wasn't into the water. He was actually in another pickup off camera having fun honking the horn and hitting other buttons.


They appear to be having a good time.


You may have noticed a few dark clouds in the picture of the stock tank. Well, we got a little rain out of that. When I say a little, I mean about .10 inch. Very little. But made some neat pictures. Like this double rainbow south of us.


Or this of the rain coming off the roof. Here in the southwest, we don't need raingutters, it doesn't rain enough for them! But I thought the picture was kinda neat.


Drew is SO BIG! He loves to wear his new boots with shorts. And hey, at least my grass is green (I've also watered it alot this year. Benefits of having a well instead of city water with bans and restrictions on such things).


This is the scariest picture of them all. My laundry room. With no less than 5 loads of laundry. This should keep me busy most of the day. Washing, drying, folding, and maybe some ironing. Doing laundry with my washing machine requires a bit more supervision than most. The valve on the cold side sometimes doesn't shut off. So if I don't keep an eye on things, the result is a flood in the laundry room. So, I have to hang out, cut off the water from the wall if it doesn't shut off, then come back around in about 20 minutes to turn it back on again for the rinse cycle, repeat. And I have forgotten about it. Alot. Which results in ANOTHER load of laundry of the towels I used to clean up the flooded mess.

Monday, June 23, 2008

Happy 9th Birthday, Ch'ree!!

My baby girl is 9 today! Seems like just the other day she was born (drug free, I might add, thanks to a nurse who, even though I was 9 days overdue, didn't believe me that I was in labor!). The next day she was airlifted via helicopter to UMC in Lubbock because she was spitting up blood and spent the next few days in NICU. She looked huge next to all the preemies in there, weighing in at 8lb 4oz. Luckily it was just some acid reflux and after a couple weeks of Tagament there were no more problems.

She has grown up so much! Such a girly girl, she loves sports and is pretty smart too. But don't have a TV on anywhere near her, she just zones out. LOL!



Newborn, June 23rd 1999



One year, 2000



Age 2, 2001



Age 3, 2002


Preschool, 2003



Kindergarten, 2004



2005, 1st grade



Cheering, 2006

Spring 2006

8 years old, 3rd grade 2007

June, 2008


Thursday, June 19, 2008

Cute puppies, a rant, and a Meme

First the rant:

Some town people think it's perfectly acceptable to dump unwanted puppies on country folk. I guess because it looks like we have tons of room for them to run around and we have nothing better to do, right?

If you have a dog and don't WANT puppies and there is a chance that this dog could get knocked up or knock up some other dog, spay or neuter them. The country is not a place to dump your dogs. If we had a need for mass quantities of dogs, or any dog at all, we will go get one ourself, you don't need to choose for us. Take some responsibility for your pets, please.

Dogs that get dumped end up running in packs if not adopted by a loving family. Then they go wild. And wild dogs attack other dogs, or calves, or horses, or people. And can carry rabies.

My mother-in-law was the target of puppy dumping the other day. And while these chocolate lab mutts are cute as can be, we don't need more dogs. Tex is quite enough dog for our family. We don't need them to start running around chasing calves. Now it appears I'm responsible for finding homes for these darling puppies. She and I have both tried all week to find homes for these two, to no avail. I stopped by her house to take them to town for her to the pound.

And I apologize for those that I have called or visited the past two days trying to find a good home for these innocent pups. They didn't ask for this, neither did I. But please forgive me Julie and Buck and Rossi and anyone else I have pestered. LOL!

But on the way, the girls had to hold them and fell in love. And while I still have no intentions of keeping them, I just couldn't take them to the pound.

So, I brought them home. My good friend Lisa down at KSEL (the country station in town) said she will try to mention them on the air and we will try to find a good home for them.


I put them in this pen so that Tex wouldn't maul them to death. He's never been around another dog since he left his own litter mates. I wasn't sure how he would react. He barked and sniffed them abit while the fence stood between them. And so far I think he may be ok. I may try to put them in the yard in a bit where they will have more room and shade. Tex can also come and go as he pleases, since he can jump the yard fence (but the pen fence is too tall for him at 6 feet).

All I ask for is a good home for these puppies. They are cute as a button. They are free. Very friendly and loving.


And now the Meme. Buck posted his workspace, who was tagged by someone else, etc. So, here is mine.


It was stipulated that you couldn't clean it up first. Oh, dear. Well, there is the McDonald's Quarter pounder and coke I had for lunch. Under the box for the burger are phone books and farm journals that came in this weeks mail. There are McDs toys from the kids' happy meals today (Thursday is $1.69 happy meals!!), a Power Ranger 4-wheeler, cup-o-pens and pencils, some other various things I have printed, stapler, a set of allen wrenches from fixing the treadmill the other day, some Bath and Body Works Wild Honeysuckle lotion, the 2006 tax returns (?!), school catalog from ENMU and my degree plan, creative memories picture/paper cropper (what do you mean you can't see all that? It's just buried a little bit). On top of the printer are some CD-ROMS and my mother's day present from Ch'ree. Under the printer are some stackable organizers that look like chaos but I know what's them all. And mail. Yes it's a mess. Maybe today I'll clean it up some (uh, I'll shove everything I can in a drawer).

Hey, 5 people use this desk and computer. I'm not the only one who messes it up!!

Saturday, May 24, 2008

May activities, 2008

We had Shelby's Birthday Party. She requested Cheesecake for her cake and Stuffed Shells for dinner. We had nearly 20 of our friends and family over, and between myself, my SIL Amanda and a friend Karen, we killed many a margarita that night. We later broke out the musical instruments, Amanda and I on our guitars, while Jeff played bass and Don on the fiddle. We are becoming quite the musical family.

Last Monday was Chance's Preschool Tea. The 2nd year preschoolers always wind the Maypole. Chance is so ready for Kindergarden!


Shelby and Ch'ree both had awards assemblies. I missed Shelby's because I was on Chance's field trip to the Clovis Zoo. But she received 7 awards, including A/B honor roll for each of her subjects and perfect attendance.

Ch'ree cleaned up as well. She was almost the only one in her class on A honor roll, but one of her grades slipped down to a B. I give her an A for effort, though. She received 6 awards (missed Perfect Attendance by one day when she was sick). With her is her best friend, Mercedes. (Buck, this is Consuelo's daughter. C. was sitting in front of me at the assembly and asked me where these nerdy kids came from).

And mom, these pictures were taken with my NEW lens! Not bad, eh?

And we have had wind the past few days. Here are the poor cows trudging along in a sand storm.



I went out to feed with Jeff one day. I think this is the cutest calf out of the bunch this year.


Hey, somebody help me get this cactus off my chin, please!

This baby caught my eye, too! He's so new, his umbilical stump hasn't fallen off yet!

Tex was on the prowl for rabbits. I though this was a cool picture because we were bouncing around in the feed truck when I took it, and it wasn't a smooth trip. I think it shows what a decent camera can do. I have a Nikon D50 and I absolutely LOVE it! The rains have finally helped our grass and it's starting to green up, as well as the mesquite.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Shelby turns 11!!!

Happy Birthday, my brown eyed baby girl!!!











Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Case IH Red


We don't drive John Deeres on our place, so we really aren't "John Deere Green". But we are Case IH Red! And Heston Red. And Versitile red/orange. And Crustbuster grey? And Lord only knows what other colors of implements we have. Actually, I think we do have an old set of John Deere wheat drills that we don't use anymore.

And I was just having more fun with Photoshop here. My stepfather learning to drive a tractor here.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Introductions

I realize that since I moved to blog format that everything I had on the old website is gone. I know, I've said this before. So periodically, I try to post things that were up on the old site.



One thing that I should do is introduce my family to all of you.


This is Shelby. She is our 1997 model. Eight pounds, 8 ozs. Twenty-four hours of labor, 3 of which was pushing (TMI?). Our firstborn, the oldest, the bossy one. She is in 5th grade (which is middle school at our small rural school). Most of the time she gets along with her younger sister and she and our youngest adore each other. But she and Chance just clash. All the time. It's mostly his fault. Anyway, Shelby LOVES to read, she started reading before she started Kindergarten (her teacher said she was the first student she ever had that started the year reading!). She has read every single Harry Potter book (after me, of course). She also enjoys horses, reading, listening to music, reading, Hannah Montana (and all things that have to do with Miley Cyrus), writing stories, reading, singing (and she is pretty good!). She does not enjoy watching Chance and cleaning her room. She cheers and plays basketball. As she is entering the world of tweens, she is adding talking on the phone and emailing friends to her list of things to do. Her foot is one size smaller than mine and I catch her in my closet drooling over my shoes and boots that she plans on wearing next year. Girl, you better stay away from my Ariat Fat Babies!!!



This is Ch'ree. She is our 1999 model. Eight lbs, 4oz. 12 hours of labor, 10 minutes of pushing with NO DRUGS! She spent a few days in Lubbocks NICU because she decided to spit up blood. I think she just wanted the helicopter ride to Lubbock to make her daddy jealous. Ended up she just had some acid reflux. She is the drama queen. She can cry at the drop of a hat if she needs to. She thinks it will get her out of whatever task I have assigned her. It doesn't work. She and Chance DO get along. Drew not so much (his preference, not hers). She also enjoys reading and writing stories. Except she likes to start many books and finish few. She also likes pretty things, she is kinda a frilly girl. She cheers and plays basketball (both girls have also dabbed around into soccer and baseball. They both enjoyed soccer. I didn't enjoy two different teams with all different times of practices and games in town). She can also stare at a TV and tune the entire world out around her. At any given time. She may not even like what's on or know what it is, she is mesmorized by the glowing box (Dad, does that sound familiar?). Like her sister, she also enjoys music. I think she is the most low maintenance of all the kids, though.



This is Chance. Our 2002 model. Nine lbs, 9ozs. Six hours of labor with an epidural, which after the last birth experience, I demanded as soon as I walked into the hospital. Even though he is three years younger than Ch'ree, he is the same size as she is (except she wears slim clothes and he regular). He's a tough boy. He shows his tough side to his sisters all day long. But when he is at school, he is the most compassionate kid there. He seldom gets in trouble at school (home is quite another matter). He can play the PS2 like there is no tomorrow (I have to work hard to beat him at many games). His biggest enjoyment is to get under Shelby's skin. He is on the verge of getting reading down. He talks about underwear alot. He likes to wear nothing but his underwear, alot. He wants to be in the middle of everything. He loves Power Rangers and Spiderman, and now rides a bike with NO training wheels. He also loves riding his 4-wheeler. He has a cousin who is 6 days younger than him. They are the same size, both blonde, both blue eyed, and when they get together, we call them Nitro and Glycerine.




And Drew is the baby. Our 2005 model, he was nine lbs, 3 ozs, 12 hours of labor. And the epidural guy did a WONDERFUL job with this one. After Drew was born, I was ready for more! Totally painless experience. He idolizes his big brother and Shelby. He loves Thomas the Train, Power Rangers and anything with dogs (currently Scooby Doo is a fav). He shuns underwear, prefers diapers (much to my dismay, as I want him potty trained). He loves apple juice, cartoons, his dog Tex, and the horses. He's quite fond of his daddy and mommy, and never have I seen a child that HAS to be snuggled as much as he. Like his mommy, he feels he must have shoes on his feet as soon as he wakes up and doesn't take them off til he hits the sack. And he hates hitting the sack. He would stay up all day and night if given the chance.




And this is Jeff and myself.


Jeff is 6'4". He's a 1973 model who was born and raised right here in Floyd. He farms and ranches, is on the volunteer fire department (and is almost done getting his EMS-Intermediate license. Watch out, he can put an IV in you!), the Lion's club, and on the school board. He works hard farming 1,300 acres and ranching another 1,200. He has put up with me and my Irish temper for nearly 15 years (13 1/2 wedded). He enjoys playing some old country tunes on his bass guitar, watching various Star Trek shows, wrestling with the kids, and pranks (his favorite is a remote controlled fart machine).


And me. Y'all know me. I'm a 1974 model troublemaker from Georgia who somehow found herself in New Mexico. I may not have been born a country girl, but I sure wanted the part all my life and now I have it. I love animals, especially my dog and the horses. I love being a farm wife. I've always been a tomboy, I grew up playing softball and on the swimteam and joining the neighborhood boys playing football and seeing if I can land on both wheels after jumping a ramp on my bike at the bottom of the hill (I didn't, it was a hard landing). I enjoy yardwork and gardening, I just wish I had a green thumb for it. I fear wasps. I'm learning guitar, I claim to be a scrapbooker and quilter (but haven't had the opportunity to do either in a long time). And recently I have found I love photography. I'm working on the basics of exposure right now with my digital SLR (a Nikon D50). I coach the elementary girls cheerleading squad (and no, I was never a cheerleader in school, but I wanted to real bad), and have coached the kids' baseball teams before. I love the Atlanta Braves, but haven't watched a game all year since TBS took my Braves away from me. I used to love to read books, but can't find the time for it anymore. Hmmm, maybe if I quit reading blogs....


We are a pretty close family. My life revolves around the kids and their activities, and around Jeff and what he needs me to do on any given day (get parts, rode machinery, get lunch, etc). I may go days without adult conversation. My MIL, FIL and SIL are my best friends, next to my husband. For fun we like to go camping (in the 5th wheel of course. I may be country, but I like my modern conviences) or just visit with family.


And now you know everything more than you probably ever wanted to know about us.

Saturday, May 3, 2008

Playing with Photoshop

It usually takes me a while to decide what to spend money and gift cards I get for Birthdays and Christmases. But this week I finally spent the combined checks from last October and December.

First, I bought a new lens for my camera. It's a 55-200mm Nikon zoom lens with VR (Vibration reduction). It's supposed to be REALLY neat. It doesn't get here til Wednesday, but I'll let you know how it goes!

Second, I bought a photo editing program. Not Photoshop CS2 or whatever it is. That puppy costs about $600!! No, I got Photoshop Elements 6.0. And this morning I had a bit of fun with it.

You know how when you get pictures done somewhere and they are always doing some fun things to make you want to spend an arm and a leg? Like selective coloring, when you can pick one color or something to stand out in a black and white photo? Well, here are my attempts at it:




What do you think? I wouldn't do it all the time, but I think it's kinda cool for the right photo.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Tampoline!

With Shelby's 11th birthday approaching in the next couple weeks and Ch'ree's not far behind that, Jeff (never one to keep or wait around for a surprise) decided while he was in town to get the girls an early birthday present.

A trampoline.

Now Mom, I know you said you don't think they are safe, but it's pretty big and lots of padding. And it will help them with their cheerleading stunts. Ok? Feel better now?


Here is the crew putting it together. Drew especially wanted to help. There were a few little glitches (one of which is Jeff not reading the instructions in the right order, then not listening to me when my common sense told ME how to do it, and I backed it up with the correct order in the instructions). But, he is a man and who needs stinkin' instructions? Not him!


Eventually it was all put together. Drew isn't quite sure what to do. So he just likes to sit there and let everyone else bounce, therefore bouncing him in the air.


Ch'ree's got the jumping down, though!

And wow, Shelby! Look at that toetouch!!

Chance likes to get in everyone's way. Especially Shelby's. What else is new?


Drew needed a break from all the bouncing, so he decided to sit on the brown drought stricken grass that I can't water til my well is fixed and pick his nose.


And his toes.

"Here mom, want some boogers and toe jam?"

And yes, I have been jumping on it, too. It's really alot of fun and a good aerobic workout. Which is exactly what I need to lose these last few pounds.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Ridin' the horses

I've always been passionate about horses. Always loved to go riding, or just brush and look at them. My first ride I was probably 3 or 4. It was in someone's house. Not sure why. Hope that little pony didn't make a mess. When my daddy took me to San Diego to visit some family, someone took me riding then. I remember when I was about 6 years old and my grandmother took my cousin to a riding stable that rented out rides. And I wanted to go SO BAD. But, I was forced to wait in the car (because I was having a huge temper tantrum). I was dusty and dirty and remembered wiping my dirty tears on the white bed sheet that Grandma used to protect the upholestry in the car. I didn't get a ride that time, but later that summer after I had calmed down, I did. I collected Bryer model horses, watched dang near every horse movie and read many a horse book (Black Stallions, Misty, Black Beauty, etc). I love horses.

When my father and stepmother first started getting their horses, it was one of the highlights of weekend and summer visits, just to brush them. I taught myself how to french braid on their tails, and enjoyed just clipping them with the electric clippers and brushing their manes and tails. I didn't even mind cleaning their stalls that much (really, Dad, I didn't. Some of my fondest memories are cleaning stalls and listening to the radio).

My father gave me my horse that I still have now. He was one of the first horses whose parents he owned and bred. His name is Dude, and I've had him since I was about 13. Everyone calls him a circus animal, and rightly so. He has a "spirited" streak in him. But he is my baby. I remember when he would be asleep in his stall and I would quietly walk in and lay down with him. He had a way of letting us know if he was out of water in his stall. First he would tear the 5-gallon bucket off the wall and stick it on his head. Then he would run it up and down the slats of his stall making a huge racket. When he would hear us enter the barn, he would then toss his head so that the bucket would fly over the walls of the stall and into the hallway so we could see that it was him out of water.

His spirited side wasn't always so cute. There was an incident with my father and the manure pile that Dude dragged him through. And the time when he tossed me into a fence. I think one time my dad threatened to shoot him with his .38 Special. LOL! He also used to have symptoms of colic about every 6 weeks or so and we would spend hours day and night walking him around praying he would be ok. Oddly enough, once I dragged his butt to New Mexico back in 1995, only one such attack occured.

Today for the first time in about 10 years, the kids and I talked Jeff into letting us ride the horses. It's always been a fear to let the kids ride. After all, why would they need to? We gather our cows with 4-wheelers and a feed truck. Jeff has no intention of letting them rodeo or show them. Then there was the local little 3 year old boy whose horse got spooked by a rope and drug him to death a few years ago.

Mundy is my father-in-law's horse. He's old. He's so old, he's been fitted for armor. He's so old, he's been shot with arrows before. He's so old, Coronado rode him into battle. He's so old...well, you get the picture. Really, he's about 28 years old. He had an accident shortly before Jeff and I were married (13 years ago) and messed up his hind feet. He's enjoyed a retired life out to pasture since.

Being that old and half crippled, Jeff finally decided that he would be gentle enough for his precious children. So we caught him, brushed him and saddled him up. Then Jeff led them around (just in case. Not taking any chances here).

Chance and Ch'ree had a turn

Then just Ch'ree. Mundy kinda has a mind of his own. He runs in two speeds: slow and stop. Here he had decided to stop. Dude was also nickering back in the pens. They weren't too sure of what was going on.

Then Shelby got a turn.


Shelby and Drew together

Drew and Chance. Drew has discovered that he LOVES horses!


After Mundy had his turn, I decided to try out Dude. We had a bit of trouble catching him. When you haven't had a halter on in years, guess you really don't want to get caught. But we finally did. First I brushed him, then lunged him a bit on a line. Then I wondered if I remembered how to saddle a horse. I had a little trouble with straps. Dude and I were raised riding English (he's a Tennessee Walking Horse, not a Quarter Horse like everything else around here), and the hardware and buckles are a bit different than our Western gear, but Jeff set me straight. Dude didn't object too bad with the bit, and I lunged him some more. Finally, I decided to just get on him and see what happened.

Had this been Dude 10 years ago, I'm sure he would have bucked or spun (in fact, I think that's what he did do last time he was ridden, 10 years ago). But I guess age must have mellowed him, and we just walked around for a bit. I even got him to trot a little, but that's it. It was nice just to be on a horse again. It's sad that he is about 22 years old, think of all the years of riding I've missed (doing silly things like birthing and caring for children).

And for a reward, they got a nice big bale of alfalfa. This is Mundy. And he has ALWAYS been this skinny. No matter if he has been wormed and on grain and unlimited supply of good hay (all of the above we have done). He's just a skinny horse. Dude has the exact same treatment and he's kinda fat. Go figure.

"Alfalfa? Alfalfa!! Why do THEY get alfalfa and all we get are cubes and unlimited pasture and haygrazer. We want ALFALFA!!!!" Look at the dust they are stirring up! No, they didn't get any alfalfa. Guess they are mad at us now.

"Where is my alfalfa?"

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Cheerleaders

Earlier this month, our school's varsity cheer squad went to Albuquerque to compete in the State Spirit Competition. And this year they came away with the 1st place trophy!

We decided to surprise them as they came home that night by meeting them at the county line with almost all the village's fire trucks and the ambulance, lights on, sirens wailing, and gave them an escort to the school, where many parents and students were also waiting for their arrival. It was pretty cool to have a 1st place trophy at the school again. There have only been 2 in the last 10 years, and this is the 1st for cheering at our school (though we have had 2 second places before).


Sidelines during a boys basketball game.


Taking a breather after halftime
Timeout cheer
One thing that makes these girls so special is that over half of them are also basketball players. On game nights, those 5 have to go out and give there all for their game first (most of them are starters, too, not benchwarmers. One, a freshman, consistantly scores the most points as well. On Varsity. That same girl is also the only girl on the Varsity baseball team. She got a grand slam a couple weeks ago. These girls aren't wimps), then they have 20 minutes to clean up, change into their cheer uniforms, and come cheer the boy's game. See the girl with the leg brace on the right? She was hit by a TRUCK 2 years ago (before she moved here). In fact, points were deducted during their routines at State for the brace. And we STILL won!! Most of these girls are also in FFA (Future Farmers of America). The State FFA contest was held in Las Cruces the same week as the State Cheer competition. So some of these girls had to go to Cruces first, do their judging, then get their hineys up to Albuquerque for the cheer competition. Whew!!
What's really good is that none of these girls are going anywhere. No seniors, one junior. The rest are all 9th and 10th graders. There were 7 other schools in our division (1A).



And while we are on the subject of cheerleaders. These are the older half (4th and 5th grade) of the elementary squad that I coach. Well, some of them. There are about 12 girls, but I was focusing in on Shelby (cheerleader in the middle).

And here is the younger squad I coach (preschool-3rd grade). Ch'ree is in the back row, on the right.

Congratulations on winning State, Broncos!!!

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Elida Tournament, 2008

Last weekend was the Little Dribbler Tourney in Elida, NM. This is our school's first year doing Little Dribblers. Some of the kids have played on city leagues for years, and many have never played at all.

Shelby doesn't get to play a whole lot. She is on a 5th-6th grade team, and her being a) a 5th grader, b) it being her first year playing and c) 12 girls on the team, 4 of which are 6th graders, she doesn't get alot of playing time. But I did catch a couple of shots that she was in the game.


Getting the rebound!

Here she is hustling.
And here on the bench. LOL!

Ch'ree gets a bit more playing time on her team. It's a 3rd-4th grade team. But there are only 7 kids on the team: 2 4th graders, 3 3rd graders (including Ch'ree), a 1st grader and a 2nd grader.
Ch'ree holding onto the ball.

Hey, I got the ball!! Now, who can I pass it to?


She actually dribbled, too.



Drew had a good time in the concession stand. Here is Terminator Drew, checking out the brackets with his nachos and my sunglasses. He'll be back.

The Waldrip Visit, Spring 2008

Recently my mother, Judy, came for a visit with my stepfather (Wayne) and grandmother (Gram) in tow. They got to stay for 6 days, but of course it wasn't long enough. There just isn't enough time, plus it was a super busy week in our lives. The Floyd Jamboree was that week (which was part of the reason they came), and we also had a Little Dribbler tourney in Dora for the girls. And it was Spring Break (thank goodness, because my mom probably would have barely saw the kids if they had been in school that week!).

One thing Wayne wanted to do while he was here was to learn how to drive a tractor and plow. Of course, there is more to plowing than just jumping in the tractor and going, especially when it's the first time for the season for the tractors to get out. There was servicing, changing the oil, fixing various little things that were wrong from the previous year, welding stuff back together, cutting with the cutting torch, and other manly stuff with tools. Wayne got to see alot of this side of farming. Plowing was the break from all the fixing! LOL!

Jeff's not used to having a "hand" while he's plowing, so it involved some fixing up an additional plow. Now that he has that done, I guess he's going to expect me and Drew out there on this tractor.


Smile for the camera, Wayne!

Jeff got the bigger tractor, of course.




The visit also was an opportune time to catch some blackmail photos of Wayne. Like this gem of liberal Wayne unsuspectingly drinking out of Jeff's Rush Limbaugh coffee mug.


Or Wayne dipping a ritz cracker into a 5 pound tub of Sunland crunchy peanutbutter that he and Jeff had bought out at the peanut mill on Hwy. 70. Well, it was voted by Better Homes and Gardens as the best peanut butter last year, guess he had to try it out.

But we had a great time with them. Did some shopping for the girls, drank a few margaritas, watched a couple of movies, saw more than enough little kids playing basketball, and the Jamboree. And ate more than enough, too. LOL!

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Floyd Fire, November 2005

This post is an old one. I'm going back in time almost 2 1/2 years ago. There have been several fires recently, and this was content off the old site that is now gone. So just bear with me as I recount the events of that day and what happened afterwards.

It was Wednesday, November 30th. The week after Thanksgiving. I had just had another baby boy, Drew, 11 days before. My mother and family had been here for the birth and Thanksgiving and had left on Monday morning. We were getting back into a normal routine (well, as normal as life can be with a newborn). The girls were off to school, and I was sitting at home with the boys. Jeff was in town hauling hay from one of our fields to a dairy in Clovis.

Jeff called and asked me where that smoke was coming from. Smoke? What smoke? So, I went to all the windows in the house til I found a puff of smoke in the distance.

I'm a horrible judge of distances, so he asked me to load up the boys in the pickup and check it out. So, I travel down some dirt roads a bit and go as far west as I could go. The signs that say "Air Force Property: KEEP OUT" stopped me from going any further. I had reached the east border of the Melrose Bombing Range, the fire was on the range. But no big deal, they had their own fire crews and the wind was blowing to the North-East, away from us.

On my way back to the house, Jeff asked me if I could check on the cattle's water. We had recently moved the cattle to a different field a mile from the house. He told me I should be able to see the water float in the tank from road. Well, I couldn't see it. I didn't want to go in the pasture, it was a really hard gate for me to close (just a barb wire gate, but you have to put alot of pressure on it to get the wire loop over it). I had just had a baby and knew I didn't have the strength to get it shut. So, I called my father-in-law, Don, to see if he could check it for me. And I went back to the house.

Apparently the water tank wasn't working, because he called a pump guy to come out and work on it with him.


By that time, the wind had shifted. It was now blowing to the South-East, the smoke was coming towards the house. The wind not only shifted, but had picked up to about 40MPH. The sky and ground was a really eerie shade of brown and orange. Of course, I took pictures. LOL! But I felt safe because the fire was way out on the bombing range.

Then Don came to a screaching halt to the house and switched to Jeff's feed pickup. I thought he must be having problems with his truck. I fixed a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, a glass of milk, and sat down to check email. Then the pump guy came up and said, "Let's get y'all out of here!". By the time I got the baby into the carrier car seat, he already had Chance in his carseat in the truck. I left my lunch at my desk, and was wearing my oldest, holiest, most worn out pair of sweatpants I owned (because I did just have a baby and nothing fit me. I was going for comfort, not style. I may have brushed my hair that day, but I know I had no makeup on). Great, I'm getting evacuated and I look HORRIBLE and can't go back to get something better.

I didn't know where to go. Jeff told me to head to his parents house. But how could I go there when I don't know what's happening at MY house!


The fire was west of my place. So I went to the Mesa road, 2 miles south of the house. I drove up and down it (pacing in a pickup). All I see is a wall of smoke. Dang it, I wish I had thought, as I was being evacuated, to grab the video camera. And my digital camera battery was nearly dead, too. I have crappy clothes, few diapers, and no batteries! I always thought that if I were evacuated I would grab my scrapbooks, important papers, my computer, and as many clothes as I could throw into the camper, hook up and take off. My evacuation plans had gone out the window.

I looked north to where I should see my house and this is what I see. Smoke and flames! I have no idea if I still have a house now, everything could be gone, all my clothes, furniture, stuff for the baby. At one point I saw a huge burst of flames in the air, and I knew I had lost my home.

Well, I didn't. It was the abandoned house up the road 1/3 a mile. The old Feland place.


I shamelessly steal pictures, too. This is from news footage from when the TV station in Albuquerque got here. I think this is the road west of the school. The video actually showed tornadoes of fire jumping across the road.

The smoke was getting closer to the Mesa road, and suddenly my phone rang. Somebody told somebody who told my mother-in-law that the school was being evacuated. I raced that way, and just in time got my girls off the bus. They were fixing to take the whole school on an emergency "field trip". They actually did go to a local dairy, then when the fire got closer to that, took them all to a church in town to wait for parents to get them. And here I have to pause and say that we have some of the best kids at our school. The high school kids came down to the elementary and preschool and helped the teachers out with those little ones.

I finally went to my inlaws house and waited. There was nothing else to do. Of course, my mother-in-law took pictures (since my camera had died) and got me in my grungy sweats. I'm not going to share them with you.

About 4pm, the suspense was killing us! What was going on! Cell service was down, we had no information (had I known that a local radio station was reporting most of the whole thing, I would have made sure we had tuned in. But most stations here are live only in the morning and a satelite feed the rest of the day). So I fed the baby, and left all the kids with Linda and ventured out.

I went straight to my house and was relieved to find it still there. But so much was burned around it for miles! I went back to the inlaws and gathered my brood and went home. My lunch was still sitting by the computer. I threw it away. The whole place smelled like smoke.



The fire burned about 35,000 acres.


Here is the town of Floyd. The WHOLE town. The highway goes right thru the middle of it. The fire came to the back door of the Baptist church (you can see the steeple to the left of the middle). It burned thru the cemetary. It was even at the back door of the old gym at the school!

It got so close to this teacher's house, it melted the vinyl siding!


If you know where to look, you can see most of our ranch (but not our house). It's almost all gone. Remember back when I said Don came and got the feed truck? We had cows in that field. The cows followed that feed truck like a lifeline to the recently vacated summer pasture. He said that he saw the last cow come out of the gate, then saw the flames sweep across the gate itself. That's how close it was. He then had to evacuate the cows AGAIN when another branch of the fire went thru the summer pasture. The cows were moved to the pens by the house. Thankfully the firefighters were able to keep the flames away from the house and the pens.


This is our neighbor's place. In fact, they hadn't even moved in yet. They had just bought it and were remodeling. They lost 2 or 3 outbuildings. There is a bit of land towards the top of the picture (but not all the way to the top). If you know where to look, you can see a bunch of little dots all the way to the left of the picture. These are our hay bales, they weigh about a ton each. They were all in a neat line thanks to the handy dandy accumulater the baler has. But now the fire was using the line to jump from bale to bale of hay! Jeff had raced home and was using his pickup to break up the line of bales to keep the fire from burning it all! The hay was already sold and paid for, but he saved all but about a semi load.

In all, the damage was one habited house, several abandoned ones and outbuildings. No injuries, but several cattle had to be put down. And many, many miles of fence. As I drove my crew home that night, our road was lit by the cedar fence posts that were still burning.

There were dead rabbits everywhere. Even in the road. One neighbor said he would see rabbits on fire running as fast as they could to get away from the fire, and therefore causing more fires! The school smelled like smoke real bad. There was no school on Thursday or Friday so the cleanup people could put their Ozone machines in there to clear it all out.

The fire was bad. But the long dry winter was to be miserable. That was the year we had no snow. And the rain was turned off from October before the fire until about June. Jeff says, "It was dryer than a popcorn fart!". It was also WINDY. It was probably just normal. But with no vegetation to hold the ground, the dirt just BLEW. One day it was so bad, that Jeff actually MISSED our driveway as he drove home!

The sand was horrible! The fence that wasn't burned was getting covered up by the sand dunes.
This used to be a fence post.

This is the parking lot for the community building and school busses. The Lion's Club storage shed was burned, as well as the sound equipment for the annual Jamboree and their grill.

More of the bus parking, and the preschool playground. The sand was all the way up to the bottom of the kids' swingset. Not pictured is the monkey bars in the Elementary playground. Put it this way: they didn't hang from the bars anymore, they just walked across.

Some friends of ours moved to town. This is there front yard on moving day.


And here is Chance playing on the sand dunes in the yard.

Of course, we are VERY thankful that no one was hurt, and that our home was saved. I think 14 fire agencies worked on this fire, and over 200 fire personel. We suffered about a 700 acre loss, including our entire winter pasture. When the claims people arrived, they asked why we had let the grass get so tall. Well, it was to feed cattle all winter! Duh!! We also lost about 7 miles of fence that had to be rebuilt.

But out of the ashes...or however that saying goes. Even though we had no rain until summer, after a year or so the grass was back better than before. You can never tell now where the fire was. Jeff sooned joined the volunteer fire department and is currently working on his EMT-Intermediate license. But whenever we see smoke in the distance, we remember our fire.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

The kitchen is done!!

I'm busy moving into the new kitchen, reorganizing, and of course trying to clean the rest of the house (which looks like a bomb has hit it, not to mention the laundry piled up since the washer and dryer were on the patio for nearly a week). But here are a few of the finished pictures of our new kitchen!


This is the granite tile we chose.


New microwave and cooktop


new dishwasher
north wall
old snack bar now more work space and storage!



Believe it or not, the pile of trash was bigger! The kids and Jeff had already hauled off one trailer load of it. The rotted board just to the right of the middle was the base of my sink cabinet.

I'll try to do some before and after pictures sometime this week, but for now I have some work to do!!