I'm ready for spring now. A couple of weeks ago when the temperature was closer to 50 than it was to freezing, I bemoaned the loss of the snow and winter. I said I wasn't ready for winter to be gone yet, I hadn't had enough time to enjoy the snow. Well, I've changed my mind now.
Today I was going to go to church, eat lunch at a friend's place, and then drive down to Glenwood to a Christian gospel concert they are having tonight. But, I ended up sick this past week and can't seem to get over it completely, so I wasn't able to go to church or lunch at my friends. I was planning to go ahead and go to tonight's concert at the very least, but now it's snowing, and I don't really care to be out driving in the dark and snow! And then, to top it off, my older sister Janeane is back at the hospital and they don't know if she will make it. I'm now depressed!
...still a farmer's daughter
sharing my love of the country
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Friday, August 27, 2010
Summer's End
Summer has pretty much come and gone. The month of August is almost over, thankfully, with it's high heat and humidity, and this week we've had some cooler days that remind me of fall...Yay! Summer has it's moments with family reunions, hanging out with friends at the beach and all the beautiful flowers and vine-ripened tomatoes, but by the time summer's end is near, I'm ready for it. I'm ready to go back to school (although I took classes all summer so actually I never "left" online school), I'm ready for the cool days and nights, warm sweaters or a jean jacket, and colorful trees and leaves falling to the ground! I love the changing of the seasons!
Thursday, January 15, 2009
My accent...
| What American accent do you have? Your Result: The South That's a Southern accent you've got there. You may love it, you may hate it, you may swear you don't have it, but whatever the case, we can hear it. | |
| The Midland | |
| The Inland North | |
| The Northeast | |
| Philadelphia | |
| The West | |
| North Central | |
| Boston | |
| What American accent do you have? Quiz Created on GoToQuiz | |
Friday, October 31, 2008
Sunday, August 24, 2008
My beginnings...
I am mostly of Norwegian and English descent. My great-grandfather and grandmother on my Dad's side, Jens and Amalia Halvorsen, came over from Norway when my grandfather, Martin Halvorsen, was about 2 years old. They ended up settling in the Grand Haven, Michigan, area. You can read more about it at: http://www.halvorsenfamilynews.info/.
My grandfather married Flossie Hall Halvorsen and settled in the Decatur, Michigan, area and farmed for the rest of his life.
My great, great, great-grandmother on my Mom's side was a daughter of a Lord and Lady in England, but was disowned for marrying a commoner, an Underwood. Eventually, the Underwood family that my Mom descended from came over from England and settled somewhere on the eastern seaboard. My great-grandparents ended up moving to the Cassopolis and Dowagiac, Michigan, area, where my grandfather and grandmother, Myrtle and George Underwood, met and were married.
My parents, Hall Halvorsen and Beulah Underwood Halvorsen met at Glenwood Union SDA Church in Dowagiac, Michigan, where their parents were members. They were married June 22, 1940. My Dad was 23 and my Mom was 19. They are both now deceased and buried in Crane Cemetery, Dowagiac, Michigan.
I am the youngest of 10 children. My mother was an artist, musician, and writer who became a farm wife and mother. My father was a "Jack-of-all-Trades," but the love of his life, next to God, his wife, and children, was farming.
Before I was born, my parents ended up having to sell both of the family farms. I don't believe my family ever truly recovered from that loss. We lived as nomads for many years, not having a place to call home for any length of time.
Finally, when I was 13 or 14, my Dad got a job with Don McKenzie, (one of my Mom's cousins who is now deceased), managing a farm Don had purchased in southwest Michigan, not far from the family farms. For the next 23-plus years my parents settled down, my Dad was doing what he loved to do, and we had a place to call home.
Growing up I couldn't wait to leave the farm and find my own life in a city far away. So, I traveled to Arizona, Tennessee, Kansas, and other places, doing a lot of things, seeing a lot of places, and having a lot of fun. Eventually, I found myself wanting to go back home to Michigan, to my roots, where I have been since. The family farms will never be ours again and I will eventually move on, but the family roots live on within my heart.
This blog is a place to share my thoughts and feelings about my beginnings and my love of sitting on a country porch, looking out over a field of corn or alfalfa, while the sun is setting in the western sky.
My grandfather married Flossie Hall Halvorsen and settled in the Decatur, Michigan, area and farmed for the rest of his life.
My great, great, great-grandmother on my Mom's side was a daughter of a Lord and Lady in England, but was disowned for marrying a commoner, an Underwood. Eventually, the Underwood family that my Mom descended from came over from England and settled somewhere on the eastern seaboard. My great-grandparents ended up moving to the Cassopolis and Dowagiac, Michigan, area, where my grandfather and grandmother, Myrtle and George Underwood, met and were married.
My parents, Hall Halvorsen and Beulah Underwood Halvorsen met at Glenwood Union SDA Church in Dowagiac, Michigan, where their parents were members. They were married June 22, 1940. My Dad was 23 and my Mom was 19. They are both now deceased and buried in Crane Cemetery, Dowagiac, Michigan.
I am the youngest of 10 children. My mother was an artist, musician, and writer who became a farm wife and mother. My father was a "Jack-of-all-Trades," but the love of his life, next to God, his wife, and children, was farming.
Before I was born, my parents ended up having to sell both of the family farms. I don't believe my family ever truly recovered from that loss. We lived as nomads for many years, not having a place to call home for any length of time.
Finally, when I was 13 or 14, my Dad got a job with Don McKenzie, (one of my Mom's cousins who is now deceased), managing a farm Don had purchased in southwest Michigan, not far from the family farms. For the next 23-plus years my parents settled down, my Dad was doing what he loved to do, and we had a place to call home.
Growing up I couldn't wait to leave the farm and find my own life in a city far away. So, I traveled to Arizona, Tennessee, Kansas, and other places, doing a lot of things, seeing a lot of places, and having a lot of fun. Eventually, I found myself wanting to go back home to Michigan, to my roots, where I have been since. The family farms will never be ours again and I will eventually move on, but the family roots live on within my heart.
This blog is a place to share my thoughts and feelings about my beginnings and my love of sitting on a country porch, looking out over a field of corn or alfalfa, while the sun is setting in the western sky.
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