Sunday, May 10, 2026

Caretakers of the land

 She looked around her at the land they worked so hard for together. She remembers the first time they saw it, sprawling hills and meadows, a stream running North to south, and fields as far as the eye could see. It was untouched land, free of humans and machines that would one day carve out a living for them. It was government-owned land to be auctioned off to the highest bidder, and on auction day, only a small group of potential buyers showed up.

He had saved every dollar he made as a carpenter and a government check from injuries he sustained in the war that never should have happened. She worked in town as a schoolteacher and did some sewing and any other work she could find. And in six long years, they were ready to begin a different kind of life, farming the land they hoped to buy when the land auctions were posted in the newspaper with pictures of every parcel being auctioned off. This year's postings were slim, with just three locations up for grabs.
The small group gathered around as the auctioneer began taking bids for the land they wanted, starting at $4,000. "Can I get four thousand?" he asked into the microphone. "Let's go, folks." Do I hear four thousand? He raised his hand, and the auctioneer acknowledged his bid, asking for five thousand, but no hands were raised. Going once, twice, sold to the man in the John Deere hat for four thousand dollars. An amount much less than they ever thought possible. The remaining six thousand they had saved would be put to good use: clearing the land, buying seeds and plants, building a house and barn, buying some livestock, and providing enough fencing to span a six-acre plot where the cows could graze without risk of predators.
In total, they purchased forty acres that really wasn't that much, considering they wanted to plant twenty of those acres with corn and another twenty with soybeans. But they needed a few acres for their vegetable garden, where several kinds would sustain them through the hard winter months. The house and barn would sit on three acres, with lush grass and a stand of ancient oak trees that would provide shade during the hot summer months.
The first year came and went, as did the second, as their dreams and hopes for their land continued to grow with every cut board and every nail pounded. He finished their house in late summer, giving them time to prepare for the harvest, the most important time of the year, as market prices for corn and soybeans were at an all-time high. Day after day, he would harvest the fields sometimes by using the tractor's headlights to guide him through the row upon row of crops. She would bring him his lunch and supper, making him stop long enough to rest a minute, but slowing down wasn't in his nature as he kissed her cheek, wiped the strawberry jam from his mouth, then climbed back on his tractor to continue until he was done.
Time passed, and their dreams kept growing as fast as the crops. The adjacent property, about thirty acres, came up for auction, and they were determined to purchase it if the price wasn't too high. As luck would have it, nobody was interested, and they were the sole bidder as the auctioneer asked to open the bidding at ten thousand dollars. He responded with a five-thousand-dollar bid, and by law, if only one bidder submitted a number and he had the cash on hand, he would be awarded the land. all thirty acres.
Their intentions were to let the land be until they decided the best use of it, and after two years had passed, they decided to separate the land into five-acre plots, which they would lease to other farmers and even a couple of city slickers, as it turned out, who wanted a place to grow vegetables and take them back to the city where fresh vegitables were scarce at best. This plan worked for everybody, and as time passed, they had fenced off even more acreage until all that remained of their corn and soybean fields were more five-acre plots and a waiting list to lease.
Eventually, all but five acres where their house and barn stood became fenced-off parcels containing dozens of varieties of vegetables and fruits. Harvest time became a steady flow of weekend farmers bringing in their crops, with some making a trip to the buyers to sell off all they had grown for a nice chunk of change. Others preserved their bounties by canning almost everything and storing them in root cellars, where they'd stay until needed, especially when they were the only source of fresh vegetables in the cold winter months.
Over time, the farm, which was mostly run by part-time farmers, became a tourist attraction as city folks stopped in to see what all the talk was about. They bought bags of everything and often needed more than one bag to hold it all. Not long ago, they took a ride on an airplane, looking down at row after row of fenced-in parcels, creating a sort of maze filled with the colors of lettuce, green peppers, tomatoes, and strawberries. Carrot tops and cabbage. pumpkins and watermelons, onions and sunflowers.
With hundreds of plots all bringing prosperity to both the lessee and the lessor. They had an average annual income of $2 million, plus a never-ending supply of vegetables and fruit. Now, after a long and often hard life, they sat back and waved to the city folks, most of whom they knew by name. But they still had one more surprise. Years ago, when they first got the land, they walked the tree line until they came across three acres left untouched, except for the Christmas trees they planted. Over one hundred trees, to be exact. And this was the year they would open the tree farm on the Saturday after Thanksgiving. People came from miles to find the perfect tree that they could cut down themselves, just another way a city slicker could brag to his buddies. As it turned out, they purchased another 5 acres and planted more trees.
Decades passed, and the two of them grew tired. They looked out over the many plots they had leased and the acres of planted trees, and a light came on when they talked about selling the individual plots rather than leasing them. The cost, based on her calculations, would bring in over $5 million, more than enough to sustain them until their dying days. And so it was that, when she passed away, with him not far behind, their land became a protected state park where, for many years to come, park employees would watch over everything, making sure the farm would never change. People would travel from miles away to see and purchase only the freshest produce and beautiful Christmas trees that grew right along with their dreams.                                               
Mike 2026


Saturday, May 9, 2026

Snow globes for Mom

 If I could design snow globes, each one would hold a memory of my Mom. I could shake one gently as tiny snowflakes began to fall, and there she was in her kitchen, a place she loved to be.

I'd shake another globe, and when the snowflakes all fell, there was Mom waiting for me at the school bus. She wore a smile, her face filling my heart with an endless love for her.

Another globe shaken, and there she was walking down a snowy field, her head upturned, catching snowflakes on her tongue.

There could never be enough snow globes to capture her style, her class, and her never-ending love for her family. I give thanks every day for having had her as my Mom. 

There will be no shortage of memories she would tell me as she hangs another picture on the walls with little space left. Those pictures and dozens of old-time photo albums told her life story, bringing laughter and sadness, joys and success, all neatly pressed into the pages of her life.

All of us hold on to memories, some just a little more vivid, but even in a fleeting moment of remembrance, it can take you back in time, to having just one more day together with your Mom.

Happy Mother's Day in heaven, Mom.                             


Mike 2026


Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Ladder to the attic

 He slowly made his way to the room where the magic of his life and memories became stored in a cloud. For over fifty years, that room was his sanctuary, filled with mementos he'd picked up along the way. A snow globe of a small-town Christmas, pictures tacked to the wall that gave him inspiration to write, and a family rocking horse that goes back one hundred years and was eventually passed down to him. His son would take the reins one day and lug it around from house to house, like he had done, because that's what you do with anything handed down to you.

It was a small room in the attic with exposed beams and a pull-down ladder in the laundry room that led up there. He referred to it as his stairway to heaven. He also knew it wouldn't be too long before climbing the steep ladder would be forbidden by his wife of sixty-some years. But for the time being, he made his way up the ladder to his writing room, where rays of daylight poked through the rafters and beams, welcoming him.
The attic held many memories for him. In a corner were a couple of bicycles his now-grown kids had ridden, their laughter ringing in his ears and putting a smile on his face. A red flyer snow sled, a push cart, and snow skis. There were boxes too many to count, mostly labeled with the names of those who had passed on from this life. But also boxes that held Christmas lights, Christmas decorations, grade-school homework, Halloween decorations, and more than one diploma.  He remembers the day he got a railroad set with all the cars and an engine, you put a pill-looking thing in the smokestack, and it blew out white smoke, and a whistle that never grew silent. He closed that box, hoping one day his grandson would find it and cherish it as he had so long ago. There were boxes postmarked between 1941 and 1945, letters of love and promises to come home soon.
Generations of forgotten or misplaced memories he tried to capture with written words. Some boxed up and labeled with his name, hopefully to be found and read when the rays of light sifting through the rafters and beams grow dim, and his stairway to heaven can only be reached with a red rope swinging in a summer breeze, just out of his reach.

Mike 2026                                                                          




Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Love remembered

 He didn't care if he fell asleep in his chair; the bed they shared for so long was half empty now, and all he could hold onto were memories. His days were just movements he'd learned over time, nothing of any importance, or so he kept telling himself.

He didn't take notice when his neighbor saw him dancing through an open window, his slippers gliding across the parlor floor to music only they could hear.
He didn't care when people said he had lost touch with reality, because when he lost her, reality became etched in stone. A constant reminder of a love that had a beginning but never an end.
He would still watch sunsets from the porch, slowly rocking in the swing he built for her decades ago, with memories of her bare feet rubbing against his work boots, her hand in his as the night creatures woke in harmony.
He didn't care that he was old as each passing second brought him one minute closer to holding her again in his empty arms, dancing to their favorite songs, in slippered feet, and mending his broken heart.

Mike 2026                                                                


Sunday, May 3, 2026

Picture perfect

 She sat alone, a look of anticipation on her beautiful face. She checked her watch every few minutes, looking at every opening and closing of the door. A fleeting moment of joy, scanning the crowd for someone she only knew from a picture he sent to her from the front lines. It all began when she answered an ad on the chalkboard at the USO asking for pen pals to write letters to scared and lonely servicemen who wanted desperately to hear from home. Most wanted a picture to keep in the lining of their helmets to look at when the battles grew quiet, so she had one taken last summer with her in a bathing suit, smiling a million-dollar smile. She found out later that the picture was shown to war buddies everywhere, and her face became the face of the United States Army sweethearts.

He knew it was her at first sight as her image was scorched into his head, and although it was wrinkled and mud-stained and had survived countless battles, the lady in that picture was sitting just a few feet away. He watched as she held his picture tightly to her heart as more military came and went, but not the man in the picture. He couldn't wait another second, so he slowly made his way to her table and asked her for a dance. Words wouldn't come to her as she wrapped her arms around his neck, and he handed her the picture he'd carried with him for such a long time." " It's really you," she whispered through flowing tears as he held her closer than any picture could ever do.

Mike 2026                                                    



Saturday, May 2, 2026

The farm revisited

 I've always enjoyed walking through fields of wildflowers. Letting the stems glide through my fingers and the scents filling my nose with a smell so slight but one that stays with me as I walk further into the meadow.

It's quiet here except for the concert of birds and the chirping of a happy frog on the edge of a hidden pond. My mind races back in time to when this beautiful place became a mecca of rock 'n' roll, and free spirits gathered in huge numbers, all a part of history now but never to be forgotten.

So many decades later, the farm has been reborn, with seemingly endless rows of crops and vast meadows I now walk through. The mud has dried up, and the huge stage is gone, and farmers' great-grandkids search with metal detectors for anything left behind and forgotten over time.

Those days of expression live on with others like me, as cars full of looky-loos stop to take pictures of the farm dressed in tie-died shirts bought at Walmart. One teen ran up to me and asked for a picture. Are you a real hippy? She asked. I removed a love bracelet and handed it to her as she placed it around her wrist and ran back to her group, claiming she had seen the real thing.

Soon, the light of the sun will say goodnight, and the people will go home. As for me, I'll hang around in the meadow and catch fireflies, putting them in mason jars that will give me light to read by as I write a song about longing to live right here in a meadow where my ashes will scatter across fields of wildflowers where birds sing the same soothing songs and fireflies guide me through the darkness.

Mike 2026                                                            


Moonshine express

 As a young boy, I was allowed to go exploring in the woods that surrounded our house. And in no way was I to go down the steep inclines where many a moonshiner crashed and left his car or truck to rust for all eternity.I followed the rules until I turned 16 and decided I was old enough to venture down the hillside, reaching the first car that seemed to be the remains of a 1932 Ford three-window coupe. The trunk was gone, but dozens of glass jars were left behind, some amazingly still intact, wrapped in heavy tarps that could have prevented them from breaking. I dared myself to open a jar and taste the moonshine that some say could fuel a car, as it was just that strong, but I wasn't sure if the shine was worth a potential bout of vomiting or worse. So I took one jar and put it in my backpack and continued on down the revine to find more treasure.

The next thing I came across was a police car that seemed to be from the same era as the Ford coupe. It was lying on its side with faded words I could barely make out, but my guess was that it said police, and that's it. I looked under the hood and found a rusty siren. I added to the jar, telling myself I'd get it working again and put it on my bicycle to scare everybody around me. I found an old wooden Billy club and wondered how many moonshiners felt its wrath after being stopped as the cops smashed their shine and carried them off to the county jail.

The day was wearing down when I abruptly stopped smelling burning wood and a sickening odor of corn mash, and god knows what else. I heard men's voices laughing and took shelter a few yards away, where I could see what was going on. I saw a copper vat with lines running through it. A gruffy-looking man stirred the concoction, tasted it, then jumped up and down as the shine burned its way down his throat. Yes, sir, I believe it's another good batch," he said. Let's get to bottling it and get it to town.

I'd always heard a good moonshiner would come up with secret ways to transport the shine, like taking out the floorboards of a truck and filling the truck with hay or straw or filling a false gas tank with shine. But let's face it, everything depended on the driver. Someone who started driving about ten years old, learning the curves and slopes of the mountain roads that he would eventually master, driving at speeds that would be deadly if he crashed. I watched from afar as they loaded the truck and the teenage boy sped off to make the deadline in town, where a buyer waited to receive his cases of shine.

It was now 1989, and most counties had lifted the dry county label long ago, allowing hard liquor to be sold but not shine. That had to be snuck in with souped-up cars and drivers with some extra-large balls. Unlike the 1930s, when shine cost two dollars a jar, the going price today for a single jar is twenty-five dollars a good reason to keep on shining.And to this day, bar owners keep a supply of shine behind the counter for those country boys to prove their manhood or a city slicker trying to win a bet with his buddies, which usually ended with projectile vomiting. Shine is not for everybody, but for many, it's etched into their heritage, with memories of rusted old cars and trucks scattered along the mountain roads and a ten-year-old behind the wheel.

Mike 2026