Saturday, July 31, 2010

Larry's Tractor

Over two years ago, as we were driving back home from Mississippi, Larry spotted an old Farmall Cub tractor for sale on the side of the road. He had been wanting one for a long time since his grandfather had one just like it. We stopped and he bought it with the intention of restoring it. It's just been sitting around, first in the garage when we lived at Cherokee Lodge at WinShape, and then out in the open near the barn at Ton Tenga. Larry had really wanted to work on it himself, but that hadn't happened in two years and didn't look like it was going to happen anytime soon. Then a couple of months ago, he met a guy who restores tractors and decided to get him to work on it. Here's what the Cub looked like when he came to pick it up:





Now it's back home, and Larry is the proud owner of a beautifully restored momento of another Cox farm in Mississippi two generations ago. ckc



Monday, July 26, 2010

Shutters!

The "entry side" of our house has a new look! A word of explanation to those who have not been to our house: When we were building the house, we had to quit saying "front" or "back" because it was so confusing. What would normally be the front of the house and where you enter our house is actually on the back. And what you see when you're driving up the hill to the house is the back with huge windows to enjoy the view. So since the front is on the back and the back is on the front, we just say the "entry side" or the "view side". You'll have to come to see us to fully understand! Anyway, Larry has added shutters to the windows on the entry side. He made them, painted them (deep orange, to match the door), and then Marshall came out to help him put them up.





Don't they look great? Good job, Papa!
ckc

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Lessons from the Farm

A while back, Larry bought four new goats to live at Ton Tenga. They are pretty little brown goats -- very sweet and gentle, but not very intelligent. You know the old saying, "the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence"? Well, these little goats just cannot resist the grass that is out of their reach, and they very frequently end up like this:



They can easily get their heads through the fence, but then they're stuck because of their horns, and they make a lot of noise to let us know that they're stuck. Larry got tired of wrestling with them to get them unstuck, so he came up with a solution using a piece of PVC and some wire. They look so strange that the kids started calling them "alien goats".



So, the lesson from the farm (and the goats) -- to be content with what I have, where I am, and resist the temptation of that greener grass!
Philippians 4:11-13