The blooms of summer …
22 Jun 2013 Leave a comment
My farm grandma grew all of these same flowers and put them in Mason jars filled with well water … exactly this way. My throat is choked with memories this morning …
The best-laid plans … or something …
22 Jun 2013 Leave a comment
Apparently, without meaning to, I’ve taken a summer break from blogging. It’s the heat, people. That’s my story and I’m stickin’ to it. I wander in, briefly look around, wander back out. I miss you all and entertain daily good intentions to catch up on your stuff … and next thing you know I’m in my recliner sipping an iced tea or a frosty Greyhound and playing Candy Crush on my iPad. Oh, the shame. Okay, confession over … I feel all better now! Thanks for listening. I’ll be back on the job soon … meanwhile, here are some delightful graphics for your viewing pleasure. Happy Summer, everyone!
It’s the little things …
18 Jun 2013 Leave a comment
The instant I saw this, my grandma with the enormous flower garden was by my side. I could smell the sweet pungent mix of peonies and roses and other blooms, and feel the cool texture of the crock in my hands. Spring lives on forever.
Memorial Day Reflections
22 May 2013 11 Comments
A nostalgia piece from my original blog, in honor of Memorial Day …
During a recent nursery visit to replace trees and plants lost to our western Kansas drought and heat, the greenhouse owner snapped off a king-sized rose bloom and handed it to me. Magically, as soon as I caught its scent, my grandma was there beside me and an entire era presented itself for review.
We grew up across a gravel driveway from my paternal grandparents, on a sweet little farm in the middle of a great expanse of wheat fields and pastures. There were cows and chickens and a big barn populated by sleepy cats, but the best part of the farm was Grandma and Grandpa’s garden. It spanned acres, and included nearly anything organic you could name — potatoes, carrots, onions, radishes, rhubarb, asparagus, sweet corn, peas, green beans, turnips (yucky), strawberries and tomatoes (both of which we were allowed to eat straight off the vine and warm from the sun, taking advantage of the salt shaker Grandma thoughtfully tucked under the leaves); fruit trees including apple, cherry, and peach — and every kind of flowering thing. Peonies, mock orange, baby’s breath, tulips, daisies, columbine, cosmos, daffodils, lilies, phlox, snapdragons … and roses. That list is by no means complete.
All of this was surrounded by hedges that my grandpa kept trimmed and orderly — a tall one across the back, with openings into the orchard beyond, and shorter hedges along the front and sides, with shaped entryways into the three main sections of the garden. Back in a corner, close to the cattle pens, grew watermelons and cantaloupe, sweet and succulent. And a half-mile away, next to an irrigation engine, was a colossal watermelon patch (which became infamous in its own right — a story for another day) that produced enough for all summer and into the fall, including a rollicking annual community watermelon feed.
Outside the confines of the hedges sat my grandparents’ imposing two-story farmhouse, filled with antiques and decades of living, surrounded by a cool green yard with a hammock stretched between two huge cottonwood trees and a rope swing hung from a sturdy branch. The clotheslines where we helped Grandma “hang out a nice wash,” as she invariably declared it to be, stretched across the lush grass.
There was a cement and brick milk house where our dad and grandpa filtered the milk from the cows, skimmed off the heavy cream, and left it all in glass jars to cool in troughs of fresh running water brought up by the windmill anchored next to the building. A battered tin cup hung on a pipe so anyone needing a quick pick-me-up could pump a fresh drink of water any time. That water was life-giving to the farmer coming in off the tractor, the farm wife with an apron full of freshly-picked veggies, or the farm kid tired and sweaty from a hot game of hide-and-seek in the yard. We (my sisters and brother and I, along with cousins and neighbor kids) spent long hours in that yard and garden, held countless tea parties under the towering twin conifers set in the middle of the garden proper, and built more than one fort among the acres of fruit trees and evergreens out back. And on occasion, we worked.
When I think of my grandparents, he shows up in overalls and she’s wearing a homemade housedress and apron, tied at the waist and pinned to the flowery cotton of her dress at the shoulders. And she never went out, hoe in hand, without a handmade sunbonnet. A real lady had creamy white skin, and although Grandma never managed to achieve that standard of beauty, having been born with distinctly olive coloring, she tried. Grandpa, too, protected his head with a well-worn felt cowboy hat that he sweated through in nothing flat.
Thus they went forth every day equipped for work, intent upon it, dedicated to it. Those luscious fruits and vegetables out there in the hot sun were life, and life doesn’t wait. They did their best to corral us, to slow our head-long summer romp through the garden, to foist sunbonnets upon us and thrust hoes and rakes into our grubby little hands. I remember thinking I really should help out more, take more of an interest, learn something while I was at it. But the fork in the big tree behind the milk house was calling my name, my book was still stashed there from the day before, and I was hot and tired and needed a drink of ice cold water from the well …. and I never quite found time to own responsibility and discipline in any discernible way.
There was one time of year, however, when we all pitched in and did our part. I’m ashamed to say, it had a lot to do with the fact that we got paid for our efforts, but, well ….
Every year in the days preceding Memorial Day, my grandparents would cut huge armloads of tightly-budded peonies, wrap them in wet burlap, and store them in crocks of well water in the cool and spacious cement-lined root cellar. Other flowers, too, found their way into crocks, awaiting that early-morning observance at cemeteries around the countryside. Our job as grandchildren was to take old paring knives and snip daisy bouquets in counts of twenty-five, band them and put them into jars in the cellar. It was always a treat to go from the sunny garden to the damp coolness of “the pit,” and Grandma and Grandpa paid us a nickel a bouquet. We were suddenly rich, and Woolworth’s, McClellan’s, and Duckwall’s were a mere twelve miles away.
We somehow gained a sense of having contributed to something very special. The day before Memorial Day, which was known as Decoration Day then, and very early the morning of, neighbors and strangers from surrounding areas started pulling into the drive to collect the big flower baskets and smaller bundles they’d pre-ordered. And many, knowing there was always plenty, stopped by to see what they might pick up. The air had a special freshness about it and people invariably seemed happy and intent on their mission.
I remember feeling proud of my grandma for her ability to grow and arrange flowers into spectacular gifts, and a connectedness to all those people coming to embrace her talents. I felt firmly tied to all the generations being honored on those Memorial weekends, and I still remember snippets of stories from the conversations I overheard.
After all the paying customers had retrieved their floral offerings, Grandma let us kids have the leftover daisy bundles to place on the graves of the nearly-forgotten babies from the 1800s in our small community cemetery a mile from the farm. It always felt like we’d done something amazing by honoring those brief little lives, and the yearly military ceremony conducted by aging war heroes in a sometimes haphazard and ill-fitting assortment of service garb lent added poignancy.
If my grandparents were here now and could somehow read my heart (which I always felt they could), they would be gratified to know how much I actually did learn through their example and the privilege of living in their shadow. Things like hard work, respect for the living and the dead, a certain acceptance that no matter what happens life goes on … these things have stood me in good stead over all the years since Grandma and Grandpa left us.
As with most farmers of that generation they never became wealthy. But the things they passed along to us are beyond price … and well worth consciously appreciating as another Memorial Day rolls around.
Daily Prompt: Feed Your Senses
18 May 2013 Leave a comment
http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2013/05/18/daily-prompt-senses/
Write down the first sight, sound, smell, and sensation you experienced on waking up today.
The sounds were the first to register on my barely conscious brain this cool, overcast SaturYAY morning — a raucous bird chorus on the other side of the sliding doors. The first wonderful sensation arrived when my baby-doll rolled over and pulled me into a delicious spooned-up embrace. I slid back under the heavy veil of sleep and he trekked to the kitchen to grind coffee beans; therefore, the only truly acceptable morning smell — freshly-brewed coffee — reached my olfactory receptors soon after. Sight was the last sense to join the party, since it requires the eyes to be open. Through the patio doors I glimpsed the grape ivy that four or five short days ago looked positively dead and gone. It’s just getting started and will eventually cover the entire wall with thick leaves, but it’s already a thrilling affirmation that life happens!
Mother’s Day …
12 May 2013 Leave a comment
Weekly Photo Challenge: Pattern
10 May 2013 11 Comments
In a new post, specifically created for this challenge, share a picture which means PATTERN to you.
http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2013/05/10/weekly-photo-challenge-pattern/
Photo by Kim Smith
My beloved conservatory grand piano. The pattern of the keys has been imprinted on my brain since the age of six.
A Mother’s Day Tribute
08 May 2013 4 Comments
Brought forward and adapted from my original blog …
My mom has been in my thoughts all week. It probably doesn’t have anything to do with the fact that Sunday is Mother’s Day, but there it is.
My mother was a complex contradiction in terms, as moms the world over tend to be. She grew up all tomboy with six brothers and two sisters, while at the same time evolving into an indisputably voluptuous young woman. She was born and raised in a small Kansas town, went to tiny schools, and was afforded the limited educational choices that generally attach to such an environment; but curiosity, intelligence, and EQ were in her DNA, so she was on a quest for learning from the start.
Mother graduated high school and then earned what was known as an Emergency Teaching Certificate through a six-week course at the nearest state teachers’ college, 150 miles away. This was during WWII and the times called for desperate measures. At 18 years of age, she taught for one year in a country school where most of the older boys were taller than she. Then she met my dad and that temporarily ended her teaching career. She married a few months short of her 19th birthday, and three weeks shy of her 20th she delivered her first baby – me.
Four more babies followed, one of whom she lost during delivery, and what with being a mother and a wife and filling countless other roles, she didn’t get around to college again for a decade and a half. There was never a time, however, when she wasn’t reading at least two or three books and filling journals with her thoughts.
Finally, when I was a junior in high school, she enrolled in the local community college and graduated with honors. Then she went on to the local four-year college and matriculated with highest honors. With those credentials she taught English, Drama and Yearbook for several years at the high school my siblings and I attended. My two sisters and brother all experienced the genuine privilege of having her as a teacher. Later, she taught EMR (old label which stood for Educable Mentally Retarded) classes, and was one of a handful of women who founded the Learning Co-op for this part of the state. I was thoroughly immersed in my own life by then and didn’t keep up with everything she was doing, but I knew enough to be very proud of her.
Somewhere in there, Mother earned a Master’s degree, and had family circumstances not intervened it’s highly probable she would have gone on to get a doctorate.
Because of Mother’s love of learning and reading, my sisters and brother and I grew up in a household of books. When we were little she spent a lot of time reading to us, and later on carted us to the Carnegie Library every week or so and let us choose our own stack of books to take home. She had a small office filled with books, and her end of the couch was surrounded by yet more books and notebooks. Each of us absorbed her priorities and ended up with our own love of reading and writing.
Sadly, we had to say goodbye to our mother far too early. A sudden heart attack took her from us when she was just 67 years old. I often find myself wondering what she might be like now in her 80s, but I need only remember what her mother – my grandmother – was like into her 90s — beautiful, intelligent, interesting, kind, thoughtful, fun-loving and funny. I miss them both, and therein lies another story ….
Get over it …
03 May 2013 4 Comments
“Grudges are for those who insist that they are owed something; forgiveness, however, is for those who are substantial enough to move on.”
― Criss Jami,
In Every Inch In Every Mile
From above because it’s all down undah …
03 May 2013 Leave a comment
Weekly Photo Challenge: From Above
In a new post specifically created for this challenge, share a picture which means FROM ABOVE to you!
Photos taken by Kim Smith

Garden rocks, patio table, rug designed by my son, lid to chiminea, door mat.
All below eye level every day and often taken for granted!
http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2013/05/03/weekly-photo-challenge-from-above/#more-23669
It’s the little things …
03 May 2013 2 Comments
in Daily Prompt, My Thoughts Tags: beauty, coffee, family, happiness, life, living, love, loving, marriage, music, relationships
Daily Prompt: Describe a little thing — one of the things you love that defines your world but is often overlooked.
The freshly-ground coffee my husband makes every morning before my eyes are open.
That oversize steaming mug, delivered with a kiss.
Hot showers, satisfying work, the quiet rhythm of my house.
Music, music, music, under over around all of life.
Joy because this: My husband. My son.
The little things are the big things and there could never be just one.
http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2013/05/03/daily-prompt-little-things/























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