Halloween Fun

Having a project to work on has been motivating to me for as long as I can recall. Size does not matter, small or a larger one for the farm, are all exciting as I envision working them out and arriving at the finished effort.

I must give credit where credit is due though. I have my older sister to thank for this insight. We regularly have grandchildren visit us here on our farm. There are lots of things going on that entertain and keep them busy. Our fisherman grand boys can very nearly spend all day at the pond.

I must admit I have never really thought of doing special little mostly DIY projects with the children. There is plenty here to keep them busy, but often they want us to sit/play/listen to them. Talking this over with my sister solved the issue altogether. She showed me some real pretty crafts she and her grandchildren had worked up together. They made big, lovely snowflakes out of brown paper bags. So pretty!

A couple of our grands were coming for a day visit just before Halloween. I decided we would carve a pumpkin together and make buckeye candies from a cute recipe thanks to: http://onceuponachef.com

The fun and laughter we had together was more than I ever expected! “Granny,” my little grandson said without looking up from putting eyes on our candies. “Yeah, honey?”

“I love you.”

“I love you too!”

I sent the pumpkin and a plate of our yummy, mummy buck eye candies back home when his parents picked him up.

It was a fun, happy day for us. I now have cute Thanksgiving projects for us next week! Thank you, my dear sister.

The pumpkin face our grandson picked out.
Preparing chocolate to cover the peanut butter balls.
Dipping the balls in chocolate to make the buck eyes.
The laughs and giggles as we put on the eyes–oh my!
Our silly, yummy buck eye candy mummies! Boo!!

Five Minute Friday—Season

Well, as Christian bloggers, I do not know who would not think of Ecclesiastes 3 with this prompt. It truly is one of my favorite chapters in Scripture; To everything there is a season… Although I thought of 2 Timothy 4:2: Preach the Word; be prepared in season and out of season.

So the question for myself is—how can I be prepared in and out of season? What exactly does this look like? Golly, sometimes I am not even prepared to make dinner for us at the last hour! Yet when I think on this verse, I am reminded to always have my eye and thought toward Jesus. I know then He will establish my thoughts, for He promises that. I find it a wonderful thing to keep myself focused on Jesus, yet I fail to do just that.

I do like being prepared though, i.e. prepared for the day, putting things in order before I need them, and planning ahead. Though I may not always know just what I am going to prepare for supper one night, I endeavor to keep my eye on Jesus. For He shall keep me prepared both in and out of season by His good grace and love towards us, if we would just turn to Him. Glory!

My Husbands Birthday

My husband had his birthday not too long ago. Would you like to see what I bought myself? Battery powered power tools! I figured it was a great gift for him. Tools for me! Less work for him, right?

That’s I told him when he and I hauled them out to the car. I was real nice too. I let him be the first one to try them out. Actually, the only one he wanted to try out was the tiny chain saw. Imagine that. He had no interest in trying the dust buster, or the hedge clippers, only the little chain saw. Can’t say I blame him. It really is great fun! It trims branches up to 4″ in diameter.

They really are perfect for farm or garden women. Many little jobs can be done by me now without having to wait for my husband to get around to them.

I am thinking these are some of the best gifts I ever bought him!

The dustbuster cleans up those annoying little messes.
These little hedge clippers are perfect size and weight for me!
The most fun of all—this tiny chain saw!
I even let him be the first to try out the little chainsaw!

Five Minute Friday Writing Prompt—Strive

Strive. The word conjures up an image of hard work and effort, and rightly so, as that is it’s meaning. I am of retiring age so I do not feel the need to strive so hard at this stage in my life. Except for one thing very specific—strive to be more like Jesus.

I know folk like me far better when I example these traits Jesus showed us which we are called to live by and strive for: Honesty, dependability, giving others the benefit of the doubt, treating others the way we want to be treated, tender-hearted and forgiving, just to name a few. Would you agree?

Yet, Jesus is rejected by many of those He loves and came for. It seems rather like one dismissing a parent, yet at the same time selfishly taking and receiving all the wonderful benefits the parent has bestowed on the child. Does this make any sense to you, dear reader?

Old Churches and Churchyards

There is something comforting and lovely about old churches and churchyards. Don’t you think? Perhaps, it is because I am a Virginian. I have heard it said that Virginians take good care of their dead.

Maybe it is because many of our churches and churchyards go far back into our history? A thoughtful, reflective walk is a result from time spent in an old church and its yard. Members of these old churches are faithful in keeping their burial grounds neat and tidy. One can quietly walk around old tombstones and get a glimpse of the folk that came before us and hear part of their life story.

Exploring the Massanutten Mountain in the Shenandoah Valley on horseback is how I joyfully spent my youth. Kids on horses exploring. Packed peanut butter sandwiches for us, carrots for the horses when our hungry bellies stopped us. Many times we would ‘discover’ an old family grave plot in those mountains.

History tells us family folk lived far up on the Massanutten Mountain years ago. They were displaced to make room for the Shenandoah National Park, leaving only old, hardly noticeable family grave plots. Old abandoned farms along the base of the mountain left theirs as well.

We spent time trying to read those tiny headstones while eating our sandwiches with our horses grazing nearby. I do not suppose we were very reverent as teenagers walking all over those graves, but I can still recall the feelings they gave us when reading the stones of an infant, a two-day old child, or a young mother, or a six-year old child, or an ‘old’ 50-year-old father.

Years later clearing newly purchased mountain property in the backwoods of our Virginia mountains one fall, we came across a flat area with stones carefully laid out. It did not take long to see it was a graveyard. No headstones, no names. We kept it cleared out as long as we owned that property.

I still enjoy strolling through old graveyards. Would you like to join me through a few?

Mossy Creek Presbyterian church
Graveyards hold generations of families.
Old trees growing into old churchyard fences.
Galilee Christian Church
Beautiful limestone stonewall
Peaceful
The beauty and wonder…
Well kept old churchyard.
Books could be written on old churches and churchyards here in VA.
Headstones tell a story.
Sometimes hard to read.
Yet they still speak to us.

Five Minute Friday Writing Prompt—Anticipate

I love to anticipate. Do you? The days leading up to an upcoming party, trip or big event. To anticipate it for me has always added extra value to the event and even more time for enjoying it.

What will the weather be? Will this event be enjoyed by attendees? Are they looking forward to this event as I am? Would I ever want to do it again? I can say the biggest event I anticipate is meeting Jesus!

Sometimes even a rather frightful event can be made better in how we anticipate for it. Would you agree? Often those things I was not looking forward to turned out better than I anticipated!

How about you?