Post A Photo, A Real Photo

Homesteading & Country Living Forum

Help Support Homesteading & Country Living Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
SAM_1934.JPG
 
Old fogie bush baby. Not new at all; just lived without modern conveniences like store bought food, TV, electricity, indoor plumbing, bicycles and cook books.

If we didn't dig it out of the ground or run it down and dispatch it, it didn't exist. Forget KD I didn't know what macaroni was. Later on in life I tried some KD and it was chemical grossness. Couldn't eat the stuff.
 
1731348606173.png

I've seen this around town a few times but always in traffic and was never able to get a pic. Finally we were both parked at the same time and I had to go get a picture. I did crosspost in the Car Porn thread as well. Had a couple more pics there. but the mini version is adorable. Love the blue color as well.
 
On November 1,today, I was making a delivery and seen this, just a random pumpkin hanging out on a rock in the bush, had to take a picture.
I had to look twice. Looks like a demon behind it - thought it was a black cat at first. Hope you didn’t stop and go closer.
 
These tracks are still visible, after well over a century.

Located about five miles west of Brule, Nebraska and about two thirds of a mile north of Highway 30 is a large hill known as “California Hill”. It was traveled over by thousands of covered wagon emigrants that were headed west between 1841 and 1860. Some were headed for Oregon however it was California that the majority were headed to after gold was discovered there in 1848.
After crossing the Platte River, the emigrants traveled northwesterly to the North Platte River via Ash Hollow. The hilly terrain limited the route wagons could take up the hill, causing deep ruts still visible today as shown in the photo.
wagon wheel ruts in nebraska.jpg

Prior to 1867 as many as a half million emigrants passed through this area or what is known today as Keith County. The corridor from Fort Kearny to Fort Laramie became known as “The Great Platte River Road”.
 
The handle for that furniture was broken so I remember there was that handle that was in
my mother stuff ...so I did screw that new thing that could be a handle ...

PS I am not sure what it is ...but its a handle of something
1731782374697.png
 

Latest posts

Back
Top