Sunday, December 29, 2013

The Many Faces Of Snow

Snow, for all of its inconveniences—driving challenges, shoveling, and slippery walking—also has a lot going for it.  The obvious of course is the beauty of a snowfall and the wonders of the countryside transformed from the drabness of late fall’s browns and grays to a world of white. Snow also provides an opportunity to ski and snowshoe and go sledding.  And a chance to build a snowman or a snow fort or maybe even experience a friendly snowball fight.

I did a little digging, no pun intended, into the characteristics of snow, and came up with some interesting information, at least interesting to me.

Snow is not always white.  It may also appear blue especially on a cold winter night when the moon is out.

Most of us have experienced how sound changes after a fresh snowfall.  Sound is absorbed by snow, muffling it.  But when the snow becomes hard and crusty, the opposite happens. Sound bounces off the snow’s surface and travels farther.  Of course we all know the sound packed snow makes when we walk on it, especially on cold days when it creaks and crunches, and sounds like it is protesting our presence.

Snow is also a great insulator.  Fresh snow is made up of from ninety to ninety-five percent air.  Many animals know about snow’s insulating qualities as they burrow into snow to keep warm.  Farmers know this as a good snow cover protects crops such as alfalfa from “winter kill.”  A good snow cover also keeps my septic system from freezing—not a good thing as it happened a few years ago when we had a stretch of below zero weather and no snow.

Snow also stores water.  Ten-inches of snow may equal one-inch of water.  Or ten inches of snow could contain as little as one-tenth inch of water.  It depends on whether a snowfall is enhanced by moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, or comes from the dry plains of Canada.

This is probably more than you wanted to know about snow, but I find it all interesting as we plow on into the new year with many more snowfalls to come.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Let it snow, let it snow. Nothing much we can about it anyway.

UPCOMING EVENTS:

January 8, Downtown Madison Rotary, Noon.  Limping Through Life

January 15-16.  La Crosse Farm Show, Convention Center. Winter on the Farm featuring stories from THE QUIET SEASON.  Speaking each day at 11:00 and 1:00.

January 19, 2:00 p.m. Gard Theater, Spring Green.  Showing of Winter on the Farm with questions and discussion.  Followed by book signing of THE QUIET SEASON. Sponsored by Wisconsin Public TV and Arcadia Bookstore.

January 22, 6:30 p.m. UW-Eau Claire Woodland Theater (in Davis Student Center). TV show with live presentation. (Winter on the Farm) Book signing of THE QUIET SEASON.


Sunday, December 22, 2013

Winter Solstice

The official start of winter 2013-2014 was December 21, 12:11 p.m., the date of the winter solstice.  It’s the shortest, darkest day of the year.  From now until June the days grow longer, and as my dad often said, “As the days grow longer the cold grows stronger.”  I always wanted to ask him why June, with its long days, wasn't the coldest month of the year, but I never got around to it.

Winter really arrived back in November, the week before Thanksgiving, when temperatures dropped well below freezing and stayed there into December.  Madison’s Lake Mendota froze up earlier (December 16) than it has for the past three years.  Last season it didn't completely freeze over until January so in 2013 the lake froze over twice in one year—one of those important pieces of trivia that’s worthy of sharing when Holiday conversation lags.

On this first full day of official winter, mother nature decided to wallop us with a snowstorm to remind us that yes indeed winter is here and we’d better get used to it, and enjoy it for it will likely be around until March.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: For all its inconveniences, winter is a beautiful season.

UPCOMING EVENTS:

January 8, Downtown Madison Rotary, Noon.  Limping Through Life.

January 15-16.  La Crosse Farm Show, Convention Center. Winter on the Farm featuring stories from THE QUIET SEASON.  Speaking each day at 11:00 and 1:00.

January 19, 2:00 p.m. Gard Theater, Spring Green.  Showing of Winter on the Farm with questions and discussion.  Followed by book signing of THE QUIET SEASON. Sponsored by Wisconsin Public TV and Arcadia Bookstore.

January 22, 6:30 p.m. UW-Eau Claire Woodland Theater (in Davis Student Center). TV show with live presentation. (Winter on the Farm) Book signing of THE QUIET SEASON.


Monday, December 16, 2013

Thank You

With Christmas but a few days away, and the New Year approaching, it’s seems appropriate to take time out and thank people who have been so gracious and helpful as I have traveled around the Midwest from Minneapolis to Chicago, from Green Bay to Hudson, from Milwaukee to Park Falls and many places in between.

  First of all, a huge thank you to my wife Ruth, who has traveled with me and who has heard my talks so many times that she could deliver them better than me.  To the fifteen libraries we've visited this past year, the ten bookstores and ten historical societies—thank you.  A special thank you to Kent Barnard and his staff at Patterson Memorial Library in Wild Rose, my home town, for his gracious support of my work and the wonderful way they have organized launches for my books and TV shows. 

 Thanks to all who attended special events where I spoke from a homeless group in Madison, to a DTS Alumni meeting, the Winchester Academy in Waupaca, the Riveredge Nature Center, a German Heritage group in Wausau, the Monroe Art Center, and many more.

 Thanks to the organizers of four book festivals where I spoke: Egg Harbor, Grafton, Mineral Point, and the Heartland Festival in Chicago.

 A special thank you Mike Schneider and his wonderful staff at The Clearing in Door County, where I have taught creative writing for 22 years and continue to teach there.

 To Jim Massey and his staff at The Country Today that runs my bi-monthly column—thank you.

A special thank you to the folks at Wisconsin Public TV, especially Mik Dirks, who takes my often rambling stories and makes something of them, and to Jon Miskowski who, at this late stage in my life, is teaching me once more the power of live TV.

To Larry Meiller, of Wisconsin Public Radio, where I have done radio shows for more than twenty-five years, and to the folks at KBRW, Barrow, Alaska where I do several programs a year.

And finally, to the many, many people who have read my books, listened to my talks, heard me on radio and watched me on TV, thank you so much.  It really means a lot to me.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: You can never say thank you enough.

UPCOMING EVENTS:     

January 8, Downtown Madison Rotary, Noon.  Limping Through Life.

January 15-16.  La Crosse Farm Show, Convention Center. Winter on the Farm.  
Speaking each day at 11:00 and 1:00.

January 22, 6:30 p.m. UW-Eau Claire Woodland Theater (in Davis Student Center). TV show with live presentation. (Winter on the Farm)


Monday, December 09, 2013

Winter Arrives

                In the morning, the land was a collage of browns, tans, and grays—the last remnants of fall that had most of the color drained from it as the countryside quietly waited for the return of winter.  The sky was heavily overcast, the wind was down—and the feeling was that something was going to happen, something important.

                At noon it began, a few tiny flakes of snow, light and fluffy but persistent.  And then more and still more as the snow accumulated, stuck to the roads and walkways, and turned boring browns and tans to a wonder world of white. 

                On the farm, winter does not arrive according to the calendar.  It arrives with the first serious snowfall.  So winter is now officially here, with all of its beauty and challenges, its inconveniences and its joys.

                “A Farm Winter” the hour-documentary that public TV did with me (based on my new book THE QUIET SEASON) couldn't have been aired at a more appropriate time as the snow fell over much of Wisconsin.  A big thank you to all who viewed the show and told me they appreciated it.  If you've not yet seen the program, you can watch it online by going to http://video.wpt.org/video/2365119687/

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Better to watch the weather than the calendar for the changing seasons.

UPCOMING EVENTS:

December 14, Fireside Books, West Bend, 10:00 to 2:00 p.m.  Presentation and book signing.

January 8, Downtown Madison Rotary, Noon.  Limping Through Life.

January 15-16.  La Crosse Farm Show, Convention Center. Winter on the Farm.  Speaking each day at 11:00 and 1:00.


Saturday, November 30, 2013

Northwest Wind

At 6:30 a.m. the air was still and the temperature was eight degrees. I sat on the bench at a deer stand deep in my woods.  My coffee thermos was on my right, a book to read at my left, along with some note cards and a pen to capture an important idea (they usually arrive when least expected).

About 7:00 a.m., after two cups of coffee, no inspiring ideas to note, and hands too cold for book reading, the wind came up.  A stiff, serious, “winter is on the way” wind that blew out of the northwest.  It roared through the tops of the naked oaks and maples. It shook lose the still attached oak leaves.  It caused this old hunter to pull up the hood on his jacket and tuck his cold hands in his pockets. No book reading.  No note taking. Not even any more coffee drinking.

 By 7:30 a.m. the wind was howling through the treetops, reminding me of winter days on the farm, when the wind, this northwest wind, tore around the barn while I was tossing down hay from the hay mow for the comfortable cattle below.  Screeched around the corners of old farm house, sending a chill to the corners of the kitchen and dining room where the heat from the wood stoves didn't reach. Caused my brothers and me to pull up the collars of our wool Makinaw coats, pull down the ear flaps on our wool caps, and hurry us along our snow packed road to the country school a mile away.

 By 10:30 the wind was a near gale, shaking the trees, making a mournful sound as it rushed through the naked branches, a sound that I remember so well in years past.  Enough is enough.  I gathered up hunting equipment, my thermos, my untouched note cards, my unread book and I headed back to the cabin, poured a cup of coffee and crowded up to my wood stove.   And I tried to think of what I would tell my hunting partners when they learned that “a little wind” had sent me seeking a warmer place.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS:  Oh, the great mysteries of the wind.

SPECIAL EVENT: December 4, 7:00 p.m. Premier showing of “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps.”  All Wisconsin public TV stations.  

UPCOMING EVENTS:

December 7, Velveteen Rabbit Book Store, 20 Sherman Avenue East, Fort Atkinson, 10:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.  Book signing.

December 8, Barnes and Noble West Madison, 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.  Book signing.

December 14, Fireside Books, West Bend, 10:30 to 2:30 p.m.  Presentation and book signing.

December 23, Larry Meiller Show, Wisconsin Public Radio, 11:00-11:45 a.m.



Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Annual Deer Hunt

In 1946, when I was twelve years old, I bought my first hunting license with the legal right to hunt rabbits, squirrels, ruffed grouse, and most importantly deer.  Deer hunting was on the top tier of hunting adventures.  Since I was old enough to know what was going on in the world I remembered Pa and Bill Miller, our neighbor, sharing tales of hunting deer.  And what wondrous tales they were.  Now, at age 12, I could join in. 

 I don’t recall I even saw a deer that first deer season when I was a legal hunter.  I lugged a double barrel 12-gauge shotgun, which if I had fired it, would have felt like a horse had kicked me in the shoulder.  But deer hunters, no matter what their age, don’t worry about such things.

Now, some 67 years later, I am still deer hunting—sort of—for I mostly enjoy being out in the woods, and deer hunting is one more reason to do it.  I have never missed a deer season since the first one—some kind of a record but a long way from the one Pa held as he hunted until his was 92.  Nothing got in the way of opening day of deer season for him.

In addition to being out in the woods, deer hunting has long been a family tradition for the Apps clan.  My brother, his sons, my son, and this year my Colorado grandsons, Christian and Nicholas—their first time—all hunt deer.  And eat together and tell tall tales of earlier hunts and what was seen and not seen.

For the Apps family there is much more to deer hunting than bagging a deer—it is a tradition filled with memories, stories, and high adventure.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS:  Deer hunting is one more excuse for spending sometime in the nature.

SPECIAL EVENT: December 4, 7:00 p.m. Premier showing of “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps.”  All Wisconsin public TV stations. 

UPCOMING EVENTS:
December 7, Velveteen Rabbit Book Store, 20 Sherman Avenue East, Fort Atkinson, 10:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.  Book signing.

December 8, Barnes and Noble West, 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.  Book signing.

December 14, Fireside Books, West Bend, 10:30 to 2:30 p.m.  Presentation and book signing.



            

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Wild Rose

Hats off to my home town community of Wild Rose—located in central Wisconsin and a goodly distance from any major city.  And a special thanks to the staff of Patterson Memorial Library, its Friend’s Group, and Director Kent Barnard.

On an evening when the leaves had mostly fallen from the trees, the grass was dead, and it felt like winter was just around the corner, people gathered at Wild Rose High school to enjoy cookies and cider, and to see a special premier showing of Wisconsin Public TV’s new documentary, “Winter on the Farm with Jerry Apps.” More than 300 people watched the show, chatted with each other, asked questions, and shared their stories.

It was a wonderful example of groups cooperating in putting on the event: Wisconsin Public TV, Wisconsin Historical Society Press (publishers of The Quiet Season on which the show was based), and the village of Wild Rose--its high school, the Kiwanis Club and of course Patterson Memorial Library.

Much thanks to all for a very special evening for my wife and me.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: For those of us who grew up in the north, winter is a season that never leaves us.

SPECIAL EVENT: December 4, 7:00 p.m. Premier showing of “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps.”  All Wisconsin public TV stations. 

UPCOMING EVENTS:

November 21: Wisconsin Historical Society Museum (On the Square). 6:30 p.m. The Quiet Season.

December 7, Velveteen Rabbit Book Store, 20 Sherman Avenue East, Fort Atkinson, 10:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.  Book signing.

December 8, Barnes and Noble West, 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.  Book signing.

December 14, Fireside Books, West Bend, 10:30 to 2:30 p.m.  Presentation and book signing.


Sunday, November 10, 2013

Second Saturdays

Thirteen years ago the Sheboygan County Historical Research Center began offering a special series of lectures they called “Second Saturdays.”  The Center is located in Sheboygan Falls and for many years, the programs were held in the community room of the Sheboygan Falls public library.

 I was one of the first speakers for “Second Saturdays” and I remember the day well.  It was a blustery fall day and I was scheduled to talk about Barns of Wisconsin, the title of one of my books.  It was an experiment—who would turn out to hear some guy from Madison talk about barns?  But the room was full (coffee and sweet rolls certainly helped to swell the crowd).  Ruth usually travels with me and sits in the back of the room.  She heard a couple of farmers talking.  “Too wet to work in the fields today anyway, so thought we’d come and hear something about barns—and drink some coffee.”

This past Saturday I appeared on the program for the thirteenth time.  The program has outgrown the Sheboygan Falls Library for many of its offerings.  We met at the Plymouth Art Center and one-hundred-thirty people turned out to hear about Limping Through Life—my memoir describing my bout with Polio back when I was 12 years old.

In many ways, it was like coming home as many people in the audience had been there as many years as I had.  I told stories.  People laughed—they  enjoyed coffee and sweet rolls—and I hope  learned just a little more about a disease that ravished this country and Wisconsin, especially during the years 1945 to 1955.  To learn more about the research center go to: http://www.schrc.org/events-and-programs/second-saturdays/

SPECIAL EVENT: December 4, 7:00 p.m. Premier showing of “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps.”  All Wisconsin public TV stations.  This hour-long documentary is based on Jerry’s new book, THE QUIET SEASON.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Never forget your friends.

UPCOMING EVENTS:
November 13: Wisconsin Public TV Documentary Screening, “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps” and book signing. Wild Rose High School Auditorium, 6:15 p.m. Free and open to the public. (In cooperation with the Patterson Memorial Library, Wild Rose.)

November 17: Lebanon Historical Society.  Fire Hall, Lebanon, 7:00 p.m.  Letters from Hillside Farm and Limping Through Life.

November 21: Wisconsin Historical Society Museum (On the Square). 6:30 p.m. The Quiet Season.

December 7, Velveteen Rabbit Book Store, 20 Sherman Avenue East, Fort Atkinson, 10:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.  Book signing.

December 8, Barnes and Noble West, Madison, 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.  Book signing.

December 14, Fireside Books, West Bend, 10:30 to 2:30 p.m.  Presentation and book signing.
FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN PURCHASING “A FARM STORY WITH JERRY APPS” DVD

DVD Jerry Apps: A Farm Story List $16.95 The Patterson’s price only $15.00 ($20.00 shipped)
Special Bundle Offer exclusively by the Patterson:
Tamarack River Ghost & Jerry Apps: A Farm Story – List $43.90
The Patterson’s Price Only $35.00 ($43.00 shipped)

Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division St. PO Box 305
Wild Rose, WI 54984

(All items are sold by the Friends of the Patterson Memorial Library. They will accept checks or cash, they’re sorry but they don’t have any way to accept credit or debit cards, checks should be made out to the Friends of Patterson Memorial Library.





Sunday, November 03, 2013

Telling Your Story

With the maple leaves at The Clearing in Door County still in prime bright yellow and brilliant red.   Cool invigorating early November temperature surrounding the place.  And yes, with the occasional spit of rain, forty of my writing students gathered to learn about stories and how to write them based on personal memories and experiences. 

How to craft a story so people keep reading.   How to write about joy, and loss, how to use humor and appreciate the power of it.  How to write about the weird uncle and a bullying aunt.  How to write about the place where people grew up.  How to write about a person who made a difference in their lives.

            How to write about the ordinary and make it extraordinary. How to shape a memory into a story.  How to release the creativity that is inside each of us.  And above all, how to have fun while doing it.

People came from Iowa and Illinois, from Wisconsin and Michigan.  High school age and octogenarians and all ages in between.  Husbands and wives.  Brothers and sisters.  People who had been in my classes before, and many who were new and were at The Clearing for the first time.   Accomplished writers and those who were just beginning—trying to figure out where to start. 

All writing their stories.  Lots of laughter.  Some sadness.  A reflection of life itself with its peaks and valleys.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Never forget the power of the story.

UPCOMING EVENTS:

November 6, 3:30 UW PLATO group, Oakwood West, (Mineral Point Road), Madison.  Quiet Season.

November 7, 7:00 p.m. Baraboo Public Library. Ringlingville U.S.A.

November 9, 9:30 a.m.: Sheboygan County Research Center, Plymouth, Limping Through Life.

November 10: 3:30 p.m. Books and Company bookstore, Oconomowoc, The Quiet Season.

November 13: Wisconsin Public TV Documentary Screening, “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps” and book signing. Wild Rose High School Auditorium, 6:15 p.m. Free and open to the public. (In cooperation with the Patterson Memorial Library, Wild Rose.)

November 17: Lebanon Historical Society.  Fire Hall Lebanon, 7:00 p.m.  Letters from Hillside Farm and Limping Through Life.
November 21: Wisconsin Historical Society Museum (On the Square). 6:30 p.m. The Quiet Season.

December 4, 7:00 p.m. Premier showing of “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps.”  All Wisconsin public TV stations.

FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN PURCHASING “A FARM STORY WITH JERRY APPS” DVD

DVD Jerry Apps: A Farm Story List $16.95 The Patterson’s price only $15.00 ($20.00 shipped)
Special Bundle Offer exclusively by the Patterson:
Tamarack River Ghost & Jerry Apps: A Farm Story – List $43.90
The Patterson’s Price Only $35.00 ($43.00 shipped)

Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division St. PO Box 305
Wild Rose, WI 54984

(All items are sold by the Friends of the Patterson Memorial Library. They will accept checks or cash, they’re sorry but they don’t have any way to accept credit or debit cards, checks should be made out to the Friends of Patterson Memorial Library.







            

Monday, October 28, 2013

Read the Wood

“Read the wood,” my dad would say when we were splitting huge blocks of oak wood and my splitting maul would stick in the block.  It was usually this time of the year and more times throughout the late fall and winter that we spent many hours splitting wood for the ever hungry wood stoves in our farm house.  The cook stove in the kitchen and the Round Oak heater in the dining room, and the stove in the pump house that kept the pump from freezing in below zero weather.  And the stove in the potato cellar that kept the potatoes from freezing until they were ready for sale in January or February when the prices were a little better than in the fall.

“Read the wood” meant to study the block before taking a swing at it, looking for the direction of the grain, looking for any knots.  A few seconds of study saved several minutes of embarrassment as I tried to extract the splitting maul from a block that I had not read—or had read incorrectly.

My son, Steve, has become quite a good wood splitter, as we continue to heat our cabin with wood stoves.  Steve has learned how to read the wood, and he has taken the idea a bit further.  He says learning how to read the wood is similar to working with people.  Take a little time to “read” them before reacting can often avoid many difficulties.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Read the Wood

UPCOMING EVENTS:

November 2, 9:00-4:00. The Clearing, Door County. Writing From Your Life Workshop.  Workshop is filled.

November 2, 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m., Book signing.  The Clearing, Door County.

November 6, 3:30 UW PLATO group, Oakwood West, (Mineral Point Road), Madison.  Quiet Season.

November 7, 7:00 p.m. Baraboo Public Library. Ringlingville U.S.A.

November 9, 9:30 a.m.: Sheboygan County Research Center, Plymouth, Limping Through Life.

November 10: 3:30 p.m. Books and Company Bookstore, Oconomowoc, The Quiet Season.

November 13: Wisconsin Public TV Documentary Screening, “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps” and book signing. Wild Rose High School Auditorium, 6:15 p.m. Free and open to the public. (In cooperation with the Patterson Memorial Library, Wild Rose.)

November 17: Lebanon Historical Society.  Fire Hall Lebanon, 7:00 p.m.  Letters from Hillside Farm and Limping Through Life.

November 21: Wisconsin Historical Society Museum (On the Square). 6:30 p.m. The Quiet Season.

December 4, 7:00 p.m. Premier showing of “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps.”  All Wisconsin public TV stations.

FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN PURCHASING “A FARM STORY WITH JERRY APPS” DVD

DVD Jerry Apps: A Farm Story List $16.95 The Patterson’s price only $15.00 ($20.00 shipped)
Special Bundle Offer exclusively by the Patterson:
Tamarack River Ghost & Jerry Apps: A Farm Story – List $43.90
The Patterson’s Price Only $35.00 ($43.00 shipped)

Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division St. PO Box 305
Wild Rose, WI 54984

(All items are sold by the Friends of the Patterson Memorial Library. They will accept checks or cash, they’re sorry but they don’t have any way to accept credit or debit cards, checks should be made out to the Friends of Patterson Memorial Library.





Monday, October 21, 2013

Frost

Twenty-six degrees at the farm this morning.  White frost on the woodshed roof, on the cabin roof, on the bench outside the door, on the green lawn.  Peak fall color is past.  The maples in the woodlot, beautiful reds and yellows last week, are now bare branches, their colorful leaves on the ground, mixing with the oak leaves and aspen leaves, creating a collage of color, and a rich stew of smells that only autumn can create.

            As I travel the trail through my woodlot, I hear a hint of the winter wind moving through the bare branches of the trees, creating a sound that takes me back to the home farm and the wind on October nights reminding me of ghosts and goblins and the fright of Halloween, as well as the fun of it as there were no trick or treats—only tricks.

            The maple tree in front of the cabin, the one my children gave me for my 60th birthday is a special a tree of course, and it is bright red this morning, as if it was waiting for me to see it (I have been in the far north doing book talks this past week).

            Rain is predicted for this afternoon and evening, so most of my birthday tree’s brilliant red leaves will drop as well—but so good of it to wait for me to see it in all of its fall beauty before it once more begins looking like the rest of my woodlot.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Take time to “read” a block of wood before you swing the splitting maul.  Take time to “read” a person before you open your mouth.

UPCOMING EVENTS:

October 22, 3:00 p.m. Brillion Library. Rural Wit and Wisdom
October 23, 2:45-3:30, Wisconsin Library Association, Green Bay. Letters from Hillside Farm
October 26, 10:00-2:00 Grafton Book Festival, Liberty Memorial Library, Grafton. Limping Through Life.
November 2, 9:00-4:00 The Clearing, Door County. Writing From Your Life Workshop
November 2, 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m., Book signing.  The Clearing, Door County.
November 6, 3:30 UW PLATO group, Oakwood West, Madison.  Quiet Season.
November 7, 7:00 p.m. Baraboo Public Library. Ringlingville U.S.A.
November 9, 9:30, Sheboygan County Research Center, Plymouth, Limping Through Life.
November 10: 3:30 p.m. Books and Company bookstore, Oconomowoc, The Quiet Season.

FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN PURCHASING “A FARM STORY WITH JERRY APPS” DVD

DVD Jerry Apps: A Farm Story List $16.95 The Patterson’s price only $15.00 ($20.00 shipped)
Special Bundle Offer exclusively by the Patterson:
Tamarack River Ghost & Jerry Apps: A Farm Story – List $43.90
The Patterson’s Price Only $35.00 ($43.00 shipped)

Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division St. PO Box 305
Wild Rose, WI 54984

(All items are sold by the Friends of the Patterson Memorial Library. They will accept checks or cash, they’re sorry but they don’t have any way to accept credit or debit cards, checks should be made out to the Friends of Patterson Memorial Library.




Sunday, October 13, 2013

More Than One Meaning


            When I talk to groups about early farming activities, I've learned to be careful and share the meaning of the some of the words I use.  For instance, I was talking to some young people about farming with horses and mentioned hitching a horse to “singletree.”   An alert young fellow asked, “Did you only have one tree on your farm, and why did you hitch a horse to it? (A singletree, also known as a whiffletree, is a wooden device to which the harness tugs are attached.)

            I also talk about a walking plow, and again, some kids believe the plow is walking when in reality the walking is done by a team of horses and the plowman, who holds onto the plow’s handles, trying to keep the plow in the ground.

            The confusion over the meaning of words extends beyond farming.   A little girl was on her way to visit her grandfather in the hospital.  When they arrived at the hospital she entered the room before her grandmother, and walked up to her grandfather, looked at him and asked, “Can you make a sound like a frog?”

            “Why should I do that?” answered her grandfather.

            “Because Grandma said that when you croak we’re going to Disney World.” 

            The little girl obviously did not know that “croak” had more than one meaning.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Sometimes the words we use can be confusing.

UPCOMING EVENTS:

October 17, 7:00 p.m. Park Falls Library, Park Falls. Limping Through Life.
October 20, Noon. Rib River Ballroom, Marathon City. German-American Group. Limping Through Life.
October 22, 3:00 p.m. Brillion Library. Limping Through Life
October 23, 2:45-3:30, Wisconsin Library Association, Green Bay. Letters from Hillside Farm
October 26, 10:00-2:00 Grafton Book Festival, Liberty Memorial Library, Grafton. Limping Through Life.
November 2, 9:00-4:00 The Clearing, Door County. Writing From Your Life Workshop
November 2, 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m., Book signing.  The Clearing, Door County.
November 6, 3:30 UW PLATO group, Oakwood West, Madison.  Quiet Season.
November 7, 7:00 p.m. Baraboo Public Library. Ringlingville U.S.A.
November 9, 9:30, Sheboygan County Research Center, Plymouth, Limping Through Life.
November 10: 3:30 p.m. Books and Company bookstore, Oconomowoc, The Quiet Season.

FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN PURCHASING “A FARM STORY WITH JERRY APPS” DVD

DVD Jerry Apps: A Farm Story List $16.95 The Patterson’s price only $15.00 ($20.00 shipped)
Special Bundle Offer exclusively by the Patterson:
Tamarack River Ghost & Jerry Apps: A Farm Story – List $43.90
The Patterson’s Price Only $35.00 ($43.00 shipped)

Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division St. PO Box 305
Wild Rose, WI 54984

(All items are sold by the Friends of the Patterson Memorial Library. They will accept checks or cash, they’re sorry but they don’t have any way to accept credit or debit cards, checks should be made out to the Friends of Patterson Memorial Library.



Sunday, October 06, 2013

End of Garden Season

The sun was bright, the day was cool, the maples, (not all) were in full fall color as we put our big Roshara garden to bed for the winter.  The process is simple.  We started by cutting the remaining corn stalks into small pieces, using a corn knife that my father used on the home farm sixty years ago.

A couple weekends ago, Steve and Natasha dug the remaining potatoes, picked the late ripening tomatoes, dug the carrots and beets, cut the last heads of cabbage, picked the pumpkins, squash and gourds, and chopped up the early sweet corn stalks into small pieces.  They also removed all the tomato vines from the garden site (keeps down potential disease).  Likewise for all the dead pumpkin, squash, cucumber and zucchini (they plug up the disk).

Today we wound up the electric fence wire and pulled the fence posts—not an especially easy job, but a necessary one as the tractor needs room to work.  With the fence put away, Steve hitched the tractor to the disk and a half-hour later, the garden was transformed to a field of freshly turned soil, with all of its rich smells.

Once the garden was disked, we broadcast (that’s a word that means flinging grain kernels by hand) winter rye and wheat to cover the soil, which we worked in with yet another pass of the tractor and disk to cover the kernels.


And the thus the 2013 garden season came to an end.  The garden, with its cover crop of wheat and rye will rest the long winter, waiting for the tractor and plow in April when we do it all over again.


THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Gardening has many seasons.

UPCOMING EVENTS:

October 13, 1-4 P.M. August Derleth Celebration, Circus World Museum, Baraboo.
October 17, 5:30, Park Falls Library, Park Falls.
October 20, Noon. Rib River Ballroom, Marathon City. German-American Group. Limping Through Life.
October 22, 3:00 p.m. Brillion Library. Limping Through Life
October 23, 2:45-3:30, Wisconsin Library Association, Green Bay. Letters from Hillside Farm
October 26, 10:00-2:00 Grafton Book Festival, Liberty Memorial Library, Grafton.
November 2, 9:00-4:00 The Clearing, Door County. Writing From Your Life Workshop
November 2, 4:00-6:00 p.m. The Clearing Door County.  The Quiet Season
November 6, 3:30 UW PLATO group, Oakwood West, Madison. Winter on the Farm, TV show with talk..
November 7, 7:00 p.m. Baraboo Public Library. Ringlingville U.S.A.
November 9, 9:30, Sheboygan County Research Center, Plymouth, Limping Through Life.
November 10: 3:30 p.m. Books and Company bookstore, Oconomowoc, The Quiet Season.

FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN PURCHASING “A FARM STORY WITH JERRY APPS” DVD

DVD Jerry Apps: A Farm Story List $16.95 The Patterson’s price only $15.00 ($20.00 shipped)
Special Bundle Offer exclusively by the Patterson:
Tamarack River Ghost & Jerry Apps: A Farm Story – List $43.90
The Patterson’s Price Only $35.00 ($43.00 shipped)

Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division St. PO Box 305
Wild Rose, WI 54984

(All items are sold by the Friends of the Patterson Memorial Library. They will accept checks or cash, they’re sorry but they don’t have any way to accept credit or debit cards, checks should be made out to the Friends of Patterson Memorial Library.



Sunday, September 29, 2013

A Walk in the Rain

I walked in the rain yesterday, the quarter mile down the hill from my cabin to the pond, just before dark.  I wore my knee high rubber boots, a decent rain coat, and my old Filson hat.  Soon water dripped from it, and the sound of the rain drops on that old hat reminded me of the many nights I spent in a tent, with raindrops drumming on the canvas.

As I walked through the falling rain I spotted woodbine, a brilliant red vine that had crawled all the way to the top of several trees along the wet trail, a reminder of the many fall colors to come.

When I arrived at the little field just west of the pond, I spotted a flock of turkeys, a half-dozen or so.   Mama turkey and this year’s brood ran like racehorses through the wet grass when they spotted me, into the dense brush near the pond, and disappeared, one by one.

A few of the aspen leaves showed yellow, and a scattering fluttered to the ground around me, dislodged by the rain.  They added to the smells of fall that I so much enjoy.

Arriving at the pond, I watched the raindrops on the pond’s surface, each one made a subtle little tinkling sound, and each one created a little circle that widened and then disappeared.  One circle after the other, appearing and disappearing; nature’s magical artistry.

And through the mists I spotted a maple tree on the far side of the pond, in full fall splendor—a brilliant red among mostly green leaves.  Turning red early this maple, avoiding the competition from all the other maples in my woodlot that will soon follow with brilliant yellows and reds. Showing off.

A glorious walk in the rain, when the landscape offered a special set of sights, sounds, and smells.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Take a walk in the rain; you won’t melt

UPCOMING EVENTS:

October 1, 6:00 p.m. UW Memorial Library, Room 460, Wis Public TV “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps.” Book signing, A Quiet Season. Free and open to the public. Parking in Lake St. Ramp.
October 4-5, Heartland Fall Forum (Book Festival), Crowne Plaza Hotel, Chicago. O’Hare.
October 13, 1-4 P.M. August Derleth Celebration, Circus World Museum, Baraboo.
October 17, 5:30, Park Falls Library, Park Falls.
October 20, Noon. Rib River Ballroom, Marathon City. German-American Group. Limping Through Life.
October 22, 3:00 p.m. Brillion Library. Limping Through Life
October 23, 2:45-3:30, Wisconsin Library Association, Green Bay. Letters from Hillside Farm
October 26, 10:00-2:00 Grafton Book Festival, Liberty Memorial Library, Grafton.
November 2, 9:00-4:00 The Clearing, Door County. Writing From Your Life Workshop
November 6, 3:30 UW PLATO group, Oakwood West, Madison.  Quiet Season.
November 7, 7:00 p.m. Baraboo Public Library. Ringlingville U.S.A.
November 9, 9:30, Sheboygan County Research Center, Plymouth, Limping Through Life.
November 10: 2:00 p.m. Books and Company bookstore, Oconomowoc, The Quiet Season.

FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN PURCHASING “A FARM STORY WITH JERRY APPS” DVD

DVD Jerry Apps: A Farm Story List $16.95 The Patterson’s price only $15.00 ($20.00 shipped)
Special Bundle Offer exclusively by the Patterson:
Tamarack River Ghost & Jerry Apps: A Farm Story – List $43.90
The Patterson’s Price Only $35.00 ($43.00 shipped)

Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division St. PO Box 305
Wild Rose, WI 54984

(All items are sold by the Friends of the Patterson Memorial Library. They will accept checks or cash, they’re sorry but they don’t have any way to accept credit or debit cards, checks should be made out to the Friends of Patterson Memorial Library.



Sunday, September 22, 2013

The Quiet Season: Remembering Country Winters

MY newest book, The Quiet Season: Remembering Country Winters, is now available in bookstores, and also may be ordered from my website, www.jerryapps.com.  Wisconsin  Historical Society Press is the publisher. 
One writer said this about the book.“[Jerry] shares stories of growing up and keeping warm on a farm in central Wisconsin in the 1930s and early '40s. His memories are of a quieter season, a winter world that existed before electricity when farmers milked cows by hand by the light of a kerosene lantern. It was an era when a major part of every winter's work was 'making wood' to heat drafty farm homes and rural country schools, and when a lack of indoor plumbing meant every morning began with a rousingly cold dash to an outhouse.  Wisconsin winters then were also a time of reflection, of planning for the next year, and of families drawing together, a "quiet season" that profoundly influenced those who grew up with harsh northern winters]
The Quiet Season book is the subject for a hour-long TV documentary produced by Wisconsin Public TV and will be aired for the first time on Wisconsin Public TV stations December 4, 7:00 p.m.
For those who want a preview of the show, stop by the UW-Madison Memorial Union for a showing on October 1, 6:00 p.m. or the Wild Rose High School auditorium, on November 13, 7:00 p.m.  I will speak briefly at each showing and answer questions.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Different from what many say, winter has a lot going for it.

 UPCOMING EVENTS:
September 23, 6:30-7:30 Mount Horeb Public Library. Limping Through Life
September 26, 5:30 p.m. WPT, Premier Showing, “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps,” Green Bay, Rock Garden, 1951 Bond Street.  Book signing, A Quiet Season. Tickets required, includes dinner.
September 28, 1:00 Barnes and Noble, Wausau, Book Signing. Limping Through Life and Quiet Season.
October 1, 6:00 p.m. UW Memorial Library Commons, WPT “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps.” Book signing, A Quiet Season.
October 4-5, Heartland Fall Forum (Book Festival), Crowne Plaza Hotel, Chicago. O’Hare.
October 13, 1-4 P.M. August Derleth Celebration, Circus World Museum, Baraboo.
October 17, 5:30, Park Falls Library, Park Falls.
October 20, Noon. Rib River Ballroom, Marathon City. German-American Group. Limping Through Life.
October 22, 3:00 p.m. Brillion Library. Limping Through Life
October 23, 2:45-3:30, Wisconsin Library Association, Green Bay. Letters from Hillside Farm
October 26, 10:00-2:00 Grafton Book Festival, Liberty Memorial Library, Grafton.
November 2, 9:00-4:00 The Clearing, Door County. Writing From Your Life Workshop
November 6, 3:30 UW PLATO group, Oakwood West, Madison.  Quiet Season.
November 7, 7:00 p.m. Baraboo Public Library. Ringlingville U.S.A.
November 9, 9:30, Sheboygan County Research Center, Plymouth, Limping Through Life.
November 10: 2:00 p.m. Books and Company bookstore, Oconomowoc, The Quiet Season.


Saturday, September 14, 2013

Southwest Wisconsin Book Festival


                I've just returned from the Southwest Wisconsin Book Festival in Mineral Point. People attending came from as close as across the street from the Mineral Point Library where the Saturday morning events were held, to Rockford, Illinois, Cedarburg, (the fellow said he left home at 5:30 a.m to arrive on time), New Glarus and many points in between.  Most of those who were attending were interesting in publishing their writing—a notable goal, and a rather confusing one as well.
                I served on a panel:  “The Many Paths of Publishing.”  The four of us on the panel, each a published author, had quite different approaches.  One of the panelists was a highly successful self-published E-book author, which means her books were mostly sold on line and not in print.  Another panelist followed what he called a hybrid approach where he paid to have his book published, but the publisher helped with publicity and promotion (something many self-published authors must do themselves).

                The third panelist followed the more traditional approach, obtaining an agent, and then publishing her book as a paperback original with a New York publisher.  I explained how I do not self-publish and work almost entirely with regional publishers without a literary agent, although I did have one at one time.  I was the old timer in the group, reminding them that the type for my first book, which came out in 1970, was set with a Linotype machine—something the younger members of the group had never heard of.

                I sure those in the audience went away totally confused about which way to publish their books—but that’s the nature of the publishing industry these days.  More than a little confused itself.  But bottom line—people are still buying books.

                Hats off to Kristin Mitchell, Director of the festival and owner of Little Creek Press in Mineral Point for organizing the event.
               
THE OLD TIMER SAYS:  Writers should be most concerned about their writing.

 UPCOMING EVENTS:
September 16, Winchester Academy, Waupaca Public Library, 6:30 p.m. Limping Through Life
September 18, Riveredge Nature Center, Newburg, WI 7:00 p.m. Farm Story
September 21, 12:00-2:00 p.m.  Old World Wisconsin, Book Signing.
September 23, 6:30-7:30 Mount Horeb Public Library. Limping Through Life
September 26, 5:30 p.m. WPT, Premier Showing, “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps,” Green Bay, Rock Garden, 1951 Bond Street.  Book signing, A Quiet Season. Tickets required, includes dinner.
September 28, 1:00 Barnes and Noble, Wausau, Book Signing. Limping Through Life
October 1, 6:00 p.m. UW Memorial Library Commons, WPT “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps.” Book signing, A Quiet Season.
October 4-5, Heartland Fall Forum (Book Festival), Crowne Plaza Hotel, Chicago. O’Hare.
October 13, 1-4 P.M. August Derleth Celebration, Circus World Museum.
October 17, 5:30, Park Falls Library, Park Falls.
October 20, Noon. Rib River Ballroom, Marathon City. German-American Group. Limping Through Life.
October 22, 3:00 p.m. Brillion Library. Limping Through Life
October 23, 2:45-3:30, Wisconsin Library Association, Green Bay. Letters from Hillside Farm
October 26, 10:00-2:00 Grafton Book Festival, Liberty Memorial Library, Grafton.

November 2, 9:00-4:00 The Clearing, Door County. Writing From Your Life Workshop

Sunday, September 08, 2013

Garden Info


                For those who might be interested in a follow-up of my grape vine story last week, the results are in—35 jars of grape jelly. All prepared in Ruth’s kitchen.  For those on our list for Christmas presents, expect some jelly.  Pretty good stuff, too, I might add.

                We are in the middle of the tomato harvest, an average crop this year.  So far we've picked about a bushel and a half.  Ruth is in the midst of making tomato soup, one batch of salsa already in jars.  Tomato juice to come.

                I picked the last of the sweet corn on Friday.  The early varieties were quite good, the late variety not so much as the recent dry,  hot spell has caused partially filled ears, and in a few cases ears devoid of kernels.

                The green beans continue to yield well, although the peak was probably in early August.  The beans seem to tolerate the dry and hot weather better than some of the other garden crops.  The broccoli was off to a slow start, but then perked up and has been yielding a quart or so every week.  Broccoli does not like hot and dry, but it continues to do well.  Same for the early cabbage.  It likes cool, yet I've had some of the best early and late cabbage that I've ever grown.  And for some reason, I've seen not one cabbage worm this year.

                We've harvested all the early red potatoes, an average crop. Maybe a bushel.  We've begun harvesting the late variety and so far it appears to be one of our best crops.  Cool and wet spring helped the late potatoes.

                Pumpkin crop struggles with the dry weather, crop will be light.  Same for the squash, yield will be average.  A half row of sunflowers are eight feet tall and nodding toward the sun.  Broom corn is pushing towards maturity.

                A respectable garden year, given the roller-coaster weather.  Cool and 
wet in early season, hot and dry from mid-season to now.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Gardening like life: you win some, you lose some.

 UPCOMING EVENTS:
September 9, Byron Historical Society, Eden Community Center, 7:00 p.m.
September 11, DTS Banquet talk, Deer Valley Lodge, Barneveld
September 14, Mineral Point Book Festival. 8:30-9:30 Writing Workshop, Mineral Point Library.
September 15, 10:00-1:00 Book Signing, Machine Shed Restaurant, Waukesha.
September 16, Winchester Academy, Waupaca Public Library, 6:30 p.m.
September 18, Riveredge Nature Center, Newburg, WI 7:00 p.m.
September 21, 12:00-2:00 p.m.  Old World Wisconsin, Book Signing.
September 23, 6:30-7:30 Mount Horeb Public Library.
September 26, 7:00 p.m. WPT, Premier Showing, “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps,” Green Bay, Rock Garden, 1951 Bond Street, 7:00 p.m.
September 28, 1:00 Barnes and Noble, Wausau, Book Signing.
October 1, 6:00 p.m. UW Memorial Library Commons, WPT “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps.”
October 4-5, Heartland Fall Forum (Book Festival), Crowne Plaza Hotel, Chicago. O’Hare.
 FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN PURCHASING “JERRY APPS: A FARM STORY WITH JERRY APPS” DVD

DVD Jerry Apps: A Farm Story List $16.95 The Patterson’s price only $15.00 ($20.00 shipped)
Special Bundle Offer exclusively by the Patterson:
Tamarack River Ghost & Jerry Apps: A Farm Story – List $43.90
The Patterson’s Price Only $35.00 ($43.00 shipped)

Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division St. PO Box 305
Wild Rose, WI 54984

(All items are sold by the Friends of the Patterson Memorial Library. They will accept checks or cash, they’re sorry but they don’t have any way to accept credit or debit cards, checks should be made out to the Friends of Patterson Memorial Library.