Free like a bird in the big blue sky
Not a cloud or a care for a million miles
I won't worry, worry 'bout a thing.
God loves me and He loved me first
He rescued me when I was in a lurch
And I won’t worry, worry about a thing.
To the left I’ll fly, fly, fly
To the right, I’ll glide, glide, glide.
No, and I won't worry, worry 'bout a thing!
Gonna scoop down low, low, low
Gonna soar up high, high, high.
And I won’t worry, worry about a thing.
***
I've chosen an unlikely theme song for harvest this year. Or maybe it chose me.
I have been singing snippets of the catchy, Calypso-style tune ever since I heard it at Kinley's VBS program
June 10. This past weekend, two little harvest helpers sang with me and even added in the actions during a trip to the grocery store for more harvest supplies.
"No, Grandma! It's like this," Brooke insisted when I didn't comply and do the actions, too.
It's a great message. But, if I'm honest, I've had a little more trouble actually believing it.
I'm in good company.
On the Monday after a fun-filled week of VBS, when Kinley was hesitant about returning to day camp, I asked her, "Don't you remember that song? The one that talked about letting your worries fly, fly, fly away?" She just looked at me with sleepy eyes, but maybe she'll remember the next time she's anxious.
I'm great at giving advice about not worrying. But
then we got home from Manhattan.
Randy went to the combine to do a test cut to see if we could get Wheat Harvest 2018 underway (way back on June 12). I thought I'd get a phone call from him, telling me it was a "go" or "no go." But I didn't expect the one I got.
"Well, we've had a disaster," he said.
My stomach clinched, and my heart went into my throat.
"A raccoon went through the radiator, the fan and the belts," he said, the frustration practically making the phone lines quiver.
"Can I do anything?" I asked
"No, I've been on the phone to Case, and I'm waiting for someone to call me back."
So what did I do? I worried. I asked God, "Why?" And I worried some more.
Maybe I should have had a week of VBS ... especially if the theme was Shipwrecked: Rescued by Jesus.
Though we're in landlocked Kansas, I needed my own sea rescue ... in a sea of amber waves of grain without a way to harvest it.
Thankfully, Case had all the parts. They spent all day on Wednesday, June 13, fixing the combine. It was a humid day, and we would have had to start late and quit early if we'd gotten to cut at all, making my farmer a little more relaxed than he'd have been otherwise.
We got a call about 7 o'clock that evening, saying that by the time we got to Hutchinson, the combine would be ready to go.
I would like to say I quit worrying then. I know the Bible says not to worry. However, knowing it and practicing it are two different things. There had already been two fatality accidents on Kansas highways that day. What if someone wasn't paying attention to the flashing lights on our slow-moving vehicle and crashed into Randy?
What if? What if? What if? My mind could come up with plenty of disaster scenarios.
After a few miles on busy U.S Highway 50 into the setting sun, Randy turned off onto country roads. Two hours later, he called me to pick him up at the field. He was home. None of the "shipwreck" imaginings actually happened. I said a "thank You" prayer and may have hummed that VBS song under my breath yet again.
We started cutting wheat on Flag Day June 14. Or so we thought.
It took awhile for Randy to get the combine adjusted. He was rolling ... and then, there was another breakdown ... and another call to Case.
Jill and Eric and the girls had planned to come out for a harvest weekend. We warned them that things were not in full swing, but they decided to come anyway. Though the rides had more stops and starts than a trip down a traffic-light-littered Main Street, they did a little riding.
And then we shared our bad luck with them. Randy has been excited to take the girls to a neighbor's enchanted forest he's constructed in a shelterbelt. Randy even started his own mini version across the road from our house (more on that later). However, the early Saturday morning walk had an unexpected encounter with all kinds of wildlife. A deer dashing and crashing through the shelterbelt sent Kinley running into her mom's arms.
And then, when we were almost to the end of the path, we made our acquaintance with a skunk. Brooke got the worst of it, but Kinley and I also had to take our turns ridding our bodies of the stink. Jill had a whiff of it, too, where she'd picked up Brooke to carry her after the "incident."
For the record, tomato juice is not the best skunk deodorizer. Hydrogen peroxide, baking soda and Dawn dishwashing soap are our recommendation. Thankfully, most of the odor was below the knees. After repeated scrubbings (and about an hour and a half later), we were deemed odor-free.
Since I did not get a photo of our wildlife adventures, Kinley drew a picture of our enchanted forest encounter. (Click on the photo to make it bigger and see the detail.) I hope we are not forever known as the smelly grandparents.
It literally took until the evening of June 16 to get the combine running correctly. Both Randy and I are dreading the bill from Case. The repair guy has practically become part of the family, he was out at our farm so often in the past week.
The other Randy, the Case repair guy, joined us for a harvest picnic Saturday evening. (He was offered meals at other times, too, but that was the first time he accepted the invitation.)
I think the girls enjoyed the picnic more than the guys, who were at peak frustration by that time.
Randy got the perfect Father's Day gift on Sunday, June 17. It was
literally our first full day of cutting since our first attempt on
Tuesday.
|
Bottom photos are by Kinley and Brooke |
He had some good helpers before they left to drive back home. (And to stop on the way home for new tennis shoes for Brooke, whose shoes had a pungent reminder of her trip to the farm.)
The girls were the perfect antidote to a frustrated farmer.
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Before the ill-fated walk in the "Enchanted" forest. |
They love the kitties just as much as Grandpa does.
They got to encounter less smelly wildlife in our hired man's vegetable garden on Sunday before church. Bunnies are definitely better than skunks!
They soared on the backyard swing, where Brooke - our little daredevil - was delighted with "under doggies" and "touching the sky."
I really have that had the "don't worry" song as an "earworm" for a week now. And I think it was probably a good thing - even when I don't always successfully follow its message. Maybe I should get the CD. The theme song says:
Through every storm of life
I know You’re by my side.
So I am holding on to Your promises
You are the God who holds
My future, all my dreams
So I am holding on
You’ll never let go of me.
We hope it's smoother sailing this week!