It may be a very white week with the heavy snowfall and the extra snow flakes being added this morning, but a sunset can provide a little different color.
A White Sunset
The Hereford cow is probably wishing it was a sunny, warm fall day, surrounded by yellow and red leaves, instead of damp, grey day like today.
Sometimes it is easy to overlook how tall some of the old mills were until you see a person or critter near one, but at least the Aermotor had a tilting tower so that the owners didn’t have to climb the tower every few days to oil the gearbox. The tilting tower models disappeared once the enclosed gearboxes were invented and only needed oiling once a year (and hopefully not on a winter day).
Hereford Grazing Beneath a Windmill
Corn might not remind me of summer, unless it sweet corn on the cob drenched in butter, but it might represent a warm fall day in the sun. But at least the corn is shelled with equipment and not hand-shelled or you might get warmed with sweat shelling this truck load of corn instead of being warmed by the sun.
Load of Shelled Corn
Even though it was cloudy yesterday, the temperature warmed up enough that the chipmunks came out of hibernation which made my cat very happy. It is the only time he has any patience. He can sit at the chipmunk hole for hours waiting for the critter to poke his head back up which he had to do yesterday since I scared the chipmunk down his hole.
I wouldn’t mind being a chipmunk who sleeps most the winter and just wakes up to eat and play on the warm days, but a cat staring down the hole might be a good reason not to be chipmunk.
Yesterday and today’s chipmunk hunt didn’t have the nice yellow flowers though and will be a while before they bloom again.
Chipmunk Hunt
The grey days of November are continuing into December so I might have to do a yellow theme this week just to have some bright colors to help pretend that it is not so cloudy outside. This picture might not have a lot of yellow but does make me think of summer.
The Taylor Falls Princess is 78 feet long and travels the St. Croix River near Taylor Falls, MN. And while the St. Croix River is very deep in some spots like the narrow basalt gorge of the Dalles area, the river does widen out once past the hard rocks and can get very shallow so the loaded draft is only 1.5 feet for the Princess.
Taylor Falls Princess