October 23
It's been awhile, but to be honest getting the farm ready for winter is labor intense, especially when you are the laborer.
This morning there was dense heavy fog shrouding everything with a chill. I made a pot of coffee, gave the dogs their morning treat and settled on the sofa to watch my day begin. As always the birds came to say hello and eat their morning meal, I could hear the geese on the neighbors pond and the occasional ping of acorns as they dropped on the tin roof.
Most mornings I still shed tears, maybe I always will. The stillness and silence and emptiness of the dawn reminds me Rick is gone. I tried talking with the dogs, but they do not converse. So I sip hot coffee and remember, good times and bad as I plan the day. My old leather day planner is over 30 years old and it remains a good and steady friend. It has become my compass when there is darkness and a guide when life overwhelms me with its business of continuing.
After the fog lifts this morning the task of privet war begins. Privets, hedges if you will, have tried their best to claim my back fence. After a meeting with the saw today, they get doused with white vinegar and I dare them to rear their ugly faces again. It has become personal, this battle of who controls my back fence and I intend to win. My oldest sister battles them with a small torch and I warn them, I have one of those as well.
Fall is doing her best to appear, but she is slow to make an entrance down here in the south. I love her and I wait for her. I know that fall brings a calmer pace to the farm, and not only does the earth begin to rest but I get to turn my energies to my creative side. Finally with fall and winter, art and music get my attention and the labors of spring and summer wait for their turn sometime in the future.
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