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#farms
When I was growing up in Wisconsin, dairy farms were everywhere. It was always fun visiting my aunt and uncle's dairy farm, even though they put me to work. For many years the only bathroom they had was away from the house! I read an article today about people complaining about smells coming from dairy farms and pig farms. It reminded me when our family would drive the 3 1/2 hours to visit Grandma and Grandpa. Some farms hardly had any bad odor, but others reeked! This was especially horrible to us city kids. "Mom, what's that smell?" my sisters and I would ask every time. We asked Mom because she'd answer us. Dad would only laugh. Good times! Midwest dairy farms intermittent putrid stench- fun childhood road trips
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Nov 3, 2019
Nov 3, 2019 at 9:01 PM UTC
Childhood Road Trips
I take out a newspaper And I read it on my porch My porch consists of a deck chair and a paddock My back to my slanting house I read articles on the yellowing page And I read about how the world Has gone to the dogs It seems that all hath lost their minds In my solace, without companionship, I wonder if I have lost my mind too Its been so very long since I have had To make tea for someone I believe the last had been my brother Now I am the youngest sole Of brothers three Here on my farm, I am free By they near And they are dear To me their baby brother That’s why I keep them Near and dear To me Old stories turned to dust and ash Not even a legend, not even a myth After all, dead men tell no tales Especially not about Inglewood convicts Especially not when you put poison numb In their tea
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Jul 30, 2018
Jul 30, 2018 at 12:51 AM UTC
Untitled 125
Morning smells of Lilacs rapture me, Taking me back to Kinderhooks Chatham Street….June 21st 1961……not a cloud in the sky. Lying in bed I open my eyes to the hum of a window fan. And in the distance I hear a Hudson River barge blast its horn. This moment in time, well it brings tears to my eyes. Eleven years old, brown hair, hazel eyes, a toothy smile, Grins in the mirror, hoping to find a whisker or two… My cat Oscar sits there on the sink purring out his contentment. “Oscar” I say, “today I leave for the Freedom Farm” The Freedom Farm is the one place where I’m free to be me Without the fear of a negative comment or a boot in my *** I climb aboard the Greyhound bus with suitcase in hand, And looking down at Mom and Dad....I wave…. So Long Suckers!!               Walton NY, June 22nd, Dunk Hill Road, the smell of cow **** The land of Milk and Honey, Fields of four leaf clovers and 10’ corn stalks. It was here that all my friends lived, Shorty the horse, Mrs Blue the Holstein,                                                                               And there was Uncle Ike, Aunt Minnie and 9 Cousins. I loved them all! On this little dairy farm……my potential was unlimited, Uncle Ike taught me to drive the Tractor, water the heifers,   Milk the cows, shovel **** spread manure and have some **** fun! Hell Uncle Ike even let me try a piece of his plug tobacco... (Note to self…Just say No Thanks next time) A summer filled with character building experiences and an eight year olds understanding of work ethic. But we still had plenty of time for fun and cousin bonding. My Cousin Tom taught me to ride the cows and honed my spitting skills. And in my downtime I'd perfect the finer points of armpit farting, Four weeks of heaven on earth where nothing was impossible. *Once you work on a farm you get dirt in your shoes. And when you get dirt in your shoes, you can never get it out!"
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Aug 8, 2016
Aug 8, 2016 at 4:50 PM UTC
The Freedom Farm
Morning smells of Lilacs rapture me, Taking me back to Kinderhooks Chatham Street….June 21st 1961……not a cloud in the sky. Lying in bed I open my eyes to the hum of a window fan. And in the distance I hear a Hudson River barge blast its horn. This moment in time, well it brings tears to my eyes. Eleven years old, brown hair, hazel eyes, a toothy smile, Grins in the mirror, hoping to find a whisker or two… My cat Oscar sits there on the sink purring out his contentment. “Oscar” I say, “today I leave for the Freedom Farm” The Freedom Farm is the one place where I’m free to be me Without the fear of a negative comment or a boot in my *** I climb aboard the Greyhound bus with suitcase in hand, And looking down at Mom and Dad....I wave…. So Long Suckers!!               Walton NY, June 22nd, Dunk Hill Road, the smell of cow **** The land of Milk and Honey, Fields of four leaf clovers and 10’ corn stalks. It was here that all my friends lived, Shorty the horse, Mrs Blue the Holstein,                                                                               And there was Uncle Ike, Aunt Minnie and 9 Cousins. I loved them all! On this little dairy farm……my potential was unlimited, Uncle Ike taught me to drive the Tractor, water the heifers,   Milk the cows, shovel **** spread manure and have some **** fun! Hell Uncle Ike even let me try a piece of his plug tobacco... (Note to self…Just say No Thanks next time) A summer filled with character building experiences and an eight year olds understanding of work ethic. But we still had plenty of time for fun and cousin bonding. My Cousin Tom taught me to ride the cows and honed my spitting skills. And in my downtime I'd perfect the finer points of armpit farting, Four weeks of heaven on earth where nothing was impossible. *Once you work on a farm you get dirt in your shoes. And when you get dirt in your shoes, you can never get it out!"
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And… The farms are becoming housing Developments. Farewell to the Amber waves of grain. How long shall liberty still rain? Is the well spring of opportunity going to become dry? Will it leave us poor wretches to die? Dear Columbia I beg of thee Do not turn your glorious face from me! This is what the old heads say. “You must learn you make your way!” Broken memories of D-day or the Mai Kong haunting like spectres or a beautiful song. Staccato maxims, like bullets, sing a ****** truth as they pierce the red-hot idealism of youth. So do not forsake me, dear Columbia. I, your broken son, stand before you blinded by the future you promised. This night is illuminated by those burning Amber waves. And… the farms are becoming housing Developments.
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Apr 10, 2016
Apr 10, 2016 at 6:39 PM UTC
Dear Columbia
Dried pods rattled in the breeze, such a hollow sound, echoing deep emotions and driving a sigh from my lips as I stretch in the dim glow of early morning. I pull on my old white shirt, a dingy color much like the lightening sky. Stained and torn jeans follow, the jagged edge of a rip rubbing against my callused fingers reminding me of work ahead. I frown at the sight of my boots, crusted with mud, a chore that lies ahead and a longing for a day without shoes. I feel the flakes of dirt when they stick to my feet as I take to the kitchen grabbing coffee and biscuits. Breakfast in the field, lungs soaking in the cool air, watching the moon as it tried to hold on. A losing fight much like my own. The moon peeked between skeletons of plants past. The song of death sang once again as the breeze cut it’s path. I swallowed coffee letting the bitter taste and hot water replace bitter and burning memories. The sun was soon to rise though and I had life to live. Like a switch, my hat slipping on my head tucked away any distraction, and I was whole again. I gave a last glance to the moon, tipped my hat to the light that fought the dark.
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Nov 22, 2015
Nov 22, 2015 at 9:58 PM UTC
Another End
as soon as these blue speckled socks go, that's it. A new bright black death.A solemn weir on a stark horizon.Give me a reason to wear color. My hueless affidavit runs me into the Earth, where I sprout up a pallid keb- brain orf'd, you could drag my etiolated ebon body through the ovine fold or take me to the theater. When I was just a minor teg, I sheared my mim kip, I fuckinggave it to you outright. In this little cote my wan mien nigrifying; my calamitous black, quaffed full of congou in demitasse, of souchong & saucers. My atrous wethered body albicantly degenerating in the atrous sun. I'm crusting over with wanness and you, you're fortifying in the cwm where I used to yaff and stray. Your ovivorous hunger,something I never knew, when first you came for my jecoral flesh, just another bot digging through my soft toison. Like Dall's Prometheus being sheared from the flock-you cut me away. In this drab and achromic world, you put the wanness in my flesh, the gid in my heart. Still. Just these blue socks are left.
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Apr 26, 2014
Apr 26, 2014 at 5:20 AM UTC
Mew