Monday, May 25, 2026

The Color of Amethyst

So many purple flowers are blooming now.
             These are in the ditches. 

           Can you smell this purple iris? 
     I don't  know the name of these flowers.
              Are they wild geranium?
Even the Creeping Charlie is beautiful up close, but it takes over in a yard or garden.

My friend, Dawn Ledeboer Sheward, loved the colors lavender 💜 and purple. 

All the flowers are blooming for you, my friend.  

In Heaven Dawn skips on streets of gold with her sisters, Judith and Beverly. Maybe she has met Pearl India, our granddaughter, and twirls her around and catches her in the air. 

And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.  
Revelation 21:4 KJV

There shall be no night there. 
Revelation 21:25

The foundations of the wall of the city were garnished with all manner of precious stones. 
The first foundation was jasper;
the second, sapphire; 
the third, a chalcedony;
the fourth, an emerald;
the fifth, sardonyx; 
the sixth, sardius;  
the seventh, chrysolite; 
the eighth, beryl; 
the ninth, a topaz; 
the tenth, a crysoprasus; 
the eleventh, a jacinth;
the twelfth, an amethyst.
Revelation 21: 19-20

Friday, May 8, 2026

To be perfectly honest

I am not a fan of taking off down a lane beside a fence line in the hopes of observing wild life or scenery. In our past there has been some major harm done to various vehicles when we indulged in this activity.  

Wednesday, in an attempt to be very brave and curb my tendency to have an excellent memory of long ago days, I kept my mouth shut. Then I started recording what we saw and asking Ellis questions about the various birds and animals that hopped up here and there all around us.

All the while trying not to clutch my arm rest or tramp on the imaginary brake on the floor in front of me, or gasp at inappropriate times... let's just say, these activities kept me occupied. Prayers were also speeding heavenward and then I tried extremely hard not to fall into The Silent Treatment Trap that I usually somersault into.

After writing everything down and posting it on my blog I realized there were no pictures of prairie trails. The road to Clear Lake is quite a nice road and even  maintained by a road grader. So the pictures today were taken by Karla Harshbarger and shared with us.

And now you know "The Rest of the Story" as Paul Harvey used to say.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Prairie Trails

After a delightful breakfast with Ivan and Karla we packed the jeep and started on our way. Ellis wanted to get a picture of a western meadowlark sitting on a fence post.

We turned south on the prairie trail that heads toward Clear Lake.

The meadowlark didn't cooperate for picture taking. We took another prairie trail and found coots, mallards, pin tails, blue wing teal or were they cinnamon teal?
Two antelope looked at us as we drove past.
Now heading east on another trail, the grass swished under the jeep. We eased carefully between two swampy areas. If MT were having a wet spring we would not get through this wetland without getting stuck.

There was a tree row off to the left. Ears poked up, pointed noses sniffed the air and up jumped ten or twelve mule deer. They bounced away, springing across the ground, boing boing boing. Their morning rest was disturbed. 

The last we saw of them they were walking single file up a hill and then silhouetted against the sky and the next thing we knew they had disappeared. 

Our windows were open. Out of the corner of my eye I saw a ball of feathers shoot straight up into the air, and the explosion of wing beats startled us. Ellis looked through the rear view mirror and saw a Sharp -Tailed Grouse fly away.

To end the adventure a bunch of white-tail deer showed up. We finally got to a gravel road without grass growing in the middle and from there to a highway.

Through the day we drove beside many  pastures where cows were grazing.This is the chorus I thought of, a song we used to sing in Sunday School.

He owns the cattle on a thousand hills
The wealth in every mine,
He owns the rivers and the rocks and rills
The sun and stars that shine.
Wonderful riches more than tongue can tell
He is my Father so they're mine as well.
He owns the cattle on a thousand hills, 
I know that He will care for me.

John W. Peterson 

Psalm 50:10
For every beast of the forest is mine,
And the cattle upon a thousand hills.

Now we are safety home to the little shack in the boondocks. 

Monday, May 4, 2026

Travels

A finished puzzle at Mom's house. We can go to the library, borrow a puzzle, put it together and then take it back. I should count all the puzzles we've done this winter. It's a  phenomenal amount. 

May 1st I was scheduled to take a bus full of 5th graders to the MN Zoo. Thankfully, I could follow another bus from Blooming Prairie driven by a skilled bus driver who has made this trip to the zoo several times. 

I thought about my dad many times through the day. He drove many grade school field trips over the years before his death in 2014. Now I've been asked to go on field trips and I found out I enjoy this part of the job. 

This time, if I hadn't signed up to take 5th graders to the zoo on Friday, Ellis and I would have gotten an earlier start on our travels to MT. 

Instead, I drove to the zoo in the morning,  drove back to the bus garage in Blooming Prairie that afternoon, climbed aboard bus 7 and drove the afternoon route. When I got back to the bus garage I parked the bus. It was now approximately 4:00 pm. I had been up since 5:00 am. because we needed to be packed and ready to leave Blooming Prairie immediately after the afternoon route. 

Ellis readjusted the seat in our jeep and we were off!

I was not much help with driving or keeping the driver awake. We drove to Jamestown ND and stopped for the night at Norway Inn.


Tillie's funeral was at 11:00 MT time at Coalridge Mennonite Church. Very fortunate for us. Because we gain an hour when we travel west. 

As we were speeding along on our way to the church we were stopped...
by a train. It was a mile long -- sitting perfectly still. Now what? If we turned around and tried a different route we would not arrive in time. 

We were impatiently waiting when I saw the train move very slowly, then pick up speed,  then at last I said, "It's not my imagination! It's moving!" We met approximately 25-30 vehicles who were backed up on the other side of the tracks. 

We arrived at Ivan and Karla's place at 10:07.
Changed clothes, brushed teeth, combed hair and drove to the church which is just a hop, skip and a jump down the road. So close we could have walked except for the wind. The wind was blowing 40 mph. (just as a guess) 

Tillie Drawbond
photo credit: Sharon Drawbond Wengerd


At the Coalridge Mennonite Cemetery the wind was still blowing. Many family members rest there at the top of a hill, no trees in sight, only prairie grasses for miles around. 

Back at the church lunch was served -- there was a baked potato bar with all kinds of lovely toppings and cookies and bars for dessert.

Also there was the delight of visiting with people we haven't seen for years.

Because we had to rush to drive to MT we have taken some days off work and won't be back to MN until Wednesday evening. 

(The dates on my blog posts are confusing because I wrote the last one April 28th. Then I noticed a mistake so I corrected it and the date changed to May 1, 2026.)

Friday, May 1, 2026

1963

         Pictures from an old photo album

My family in 1963.
We are posing in the living room of our friends, Mark and Florence Harshbarger. 

Every Sunday we drove to Montana for church, leaving our home in North Dakota at 10:00 am and arriving in Montana for a 10:00 church service. 

The Drawbond farm where Dad worked that summer was in the north western corner of North Dakota while the Harshbarger farm was in the north eastern corner of Montana. 

Two states divided by a time zone .... a person is continually doing math in one's head. Will that event be ND time or MT time?

Today it's better to have a watch when we visit instead of trying to rely on a cell phone for the time. A cell phone keeps on searching for cell service. Sometimes it picks up service from  a tower in MT, other times it will find service from across the line.

I  wish someone in my family would  have kept a journal. Did we take some furniture along for the year in ND? Maybe the two houses we lived in were furnished and we only took clothes and basic necessities packed into this trailer. 

Or was this a later trip?

Piecing together the interesting events of that year reminds me of the puzzles we've been working on at Mom's  house this winter and spring.



Asking questions of people who remember,  looking at old pictures, and coming  up with even more questions...
This picture was developed in 1966. Ladina and I are older than one and two. Were we on a family camping trip? Going west to visit friends? 

When I asked Ellis he wondered if we were traveling to Glendive MT for North Central Conference summer meetings.

You can still visit this friendly cow today if you take the right exit off I94 as you travel across ND.

I'm sort of surprised that we didn't stop and take pictures with our family when we traveled the road back to visit Grandpa and Grandma Harshbarger. 
It's sort of hard to believe that Ellis and I met when we were infants. He was three and I was two that summer. 

After the seeding, summer work and harvest was finished at Emmett and Tillie Drawbond's farm we moved to the town of Grenora and rented a house. Dad worked at a gas station pumping gas. 

We moved back to Graceton in the spring of 1964. The reason I know this fact is because Trenda was born May 5, 1964 in Baudette MN.

This morning I  found  out that Tillie Drawbond went home to sit at the feet of Jesus. She was 102 almost 103.

We will be making a flying trip to Coalridge MT this weekend for Tillie's funeral.