My First born, Joline

My First born, Joline
Can you believe that this little girl has made me a grandpa almost 4 times now!!!


Joline and her Popcicle

Joline and her Popcicle

Joline's Senior Picture

Joline's Senior Picture

My kids Jessie, Joline, Krissy

My kids Jessie, Joline, Krissy
with my Mom and I

My Mom Happy and krissy

My Mom Happy and krissy


Mom, Jean, Fred and I

Mom, Jean, Fred and I
Mom's birthday

My little girl

My little girl
I can't believe she is almost 17 now. They grow so fast!!!



Rocky and Me

Rocky and Me
My neice Rocky and I enjoying a few toasts together

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

My new grand daughter Kiley

Krissy, Kari Jo, and Joline's crew

My girls and I-Krissy and Joline

This Kid's got something up there!

Treasure Hunting!


Now if I had a lot of time I would have photo shopped Jessie's finger up her nose too!!!

Britta, Krissy, and Tilynn aka "Charlie's Angels"


My niece, daughter and great-niece... Does anyone else sense TROUBLE!!

Long haired hippie freaks!

Check out the Snowmobile Gang!

Gett'n Dirty in the sand


Maybe you can remember what we did at my place. It always seemed it was more fun playing at your house! Here's another boring story that I know was fun at the time.

We were little kids, Larry and I, but old enough to play outside without supervision since everyone knew we were inseparable. Larry had this huge sandpile and lots of trucks and toys to play with.

There was a huge oak tree shading the sandpile all morning in the summer, so Larry and I played in it all morning while our dads were in the field harvesting something or other.

Larry had cranes and bulldozers and dump trucks so we built roads and cleared areas for home building and moved dirt from one end of that sandpile to the other several times. It was also back in the days when you had to "drive" all the equipment manually, none of this remote control stuff, so we always got good and dirty.

We used discarded chunks of 2x4s for buildings, a short piece of plank as a bridge over a ravine we'd dug. We'd stuck broken sticks by the buildings for yard lights, but there was no such thing back in those days as street lights on rural roads so we didn't put them in.

It took us a couple of days to get it finished, but it was a work of art to us. It, though, like everything else, passed on into memory.

The good ol' days & mushrooms!


We were little kids, Larry and I, maybe six and eight. It was combining time and our dads helped each other do their fields of oats. This was also in the days when it was safe for us kids to be pretty much on our own all day long. We knew better than to wander off and get lost, not to play in the road, not to go to the water. So long as we showed up for lunch and supper neither Happy nor my mom worried where we were, knowing together we'd be safe.

We'd been playing at all sorts of things all morning and had run out of things to get into. We decided to play Indians in the forest behind the house.

The forest there in those days was pretty brush-free, huge pine trees and stumps all over the place. As it had gotten pretty hot through the morning, this would be the ideal shadey place for us to play. We cleared the pine needles out away from this one good sized flat stump that seemed just the right height for a table to play on. Once we were down to the bare dirt around the stump, we sat there trying to decide what to do next.

There were some huge shelf fungi all over the forest, they might be interesting to check out. So we broke a bunch of them off and brought them back to our table. Then we saw a patch of huge white mushrooms that would be neat, too, and brought them back to our table, too.

I don't remember which one of us got the bright idea we should pretend to cook our "food" we'd just gathered on the table, but we went in the house and got some candles and matches. Don't worry, we knew better than to actually eat any of the mushrooms and fungi.

We melted wax onto the table and stood the candles in the dripped wax. They we held the mushroom pieces over the fire with sticks. Of course mushrooms are too wet to actually cook, but we were good at pretending.

When we got tired of this game, we put our candles and matches under some sticks for later use. When we got in the house, Happy just asked what we'd been doing while she put our sandwiches on the table. We told her all the adventures we'd had and that last we'd played Indians out in the woods. Since she didn't ask for details, we didn't tell her.

I still don't know whatever happened to those candles and matches. I know we played out there again the next day, since all the oats weren't harvested yet. Maybe Larry knows the answer to the mystery of the missing candles and matches.

More Grandkids!

These are Jessie's Kids: Tyler & Daisy