Finally….Spring in the Ozarks

Of course, it doesn’t come in gradually. Today is in the mid 80’s, yesterday evening was 27 degrees. We had a family group from the Chicago area at the campground, so now they can say that they are officially below freezing campers! The grass is growing, the birds are singing, forsithia, firebush, serviceberry, and redbud trees are all showing forth their blooms, and the peacock is looking for a mate [along with a lot of our other animals]. We have 15 newborn goats on the ground just starting to jump and run, and the sheep are next. All in all, a great start to a new year.

Its all about changes…

The bird feeders are thick with finches until a red headed woodpecker barges in and scares them all away. In typical Ozark fashion the weather has gone from 65 degrees yesterday to 30 degrees and falling snow today. The crocus and daffodils are still standing in the snow, as Spring does an about face and heads back toward winter. Even the bird songs are spring songs, and seem a bit out of place in the new fallen snow. Yesterday we set corner posts for new fences, and had our first guests of the season staying at the Lakeside Log Cabin. Today we get to worry about the predicted single digit temperature freezing the water in the shower house! You have to love the Ozarks….if God is all about changes. then He [or She] is certainly all around us.

Hungry cows and frozen tractors….

I put the tractor in the hay barn to keep the ice storm from freezing the doors shut, but there wasn’t any electricity in the barn to plug the engine heater into. My thought was I will move it back to the power area before it got so cold it wouldn’t start. As happens many times, our assumptions and hopes don’t always work with the actual circumstances of life. We need the tractor every day to feed our cows and other animals during the winter. We unroll large half ton bales of hay out for them to eat, and for the young to have a warmer place to lay on. So this morning I sit here in the dark at the start of a new day, knowing i’ll have to head out in 15 below wind chills [in March yet!] to start a generator [that may not want to start either] so I can plug in the tractor engine heater and a battery charger, and let it all run for many hours to hopefully start the tractor. Ahhh…life and hope spring eternal! Have a great day and appreciate all you have, not what is missing. Personally, its now March and most of the winter is behind us, we still have electricity, and there is a beauty in the stillness of the very cold winter weather.