The West Virginia Mountains
I would never have considered myself a mountain person. I
grew up vacationing at the beach; my family had a summer home on the bay and I love
the water. More than 10 years ago I
crossed the Shenandoah Mountain from Virginia into West Virginia and my soul
had a sense of home coming. Later my husband shared that he had that same
feeling that Sunday morning. We were looking for an affordable place to farm and
West Virginia stole our hearts.
West Virginians are proud of their mountains. Our state motto
is “ Montani Semper Leberi” which means “mountaineers are always free.” I know we
sometimes have had our name smeared with negative labels such as “hillbilly”
and “redneck”, but that is not our true nature. The flip side of that coin is a
simple lifestyle, old fashioned values, and a down home wisdom from years of “makin’
do.” Where life is slower, things are sometimes clearer. That’s not to say we
don’t live in the modern world of busy schedules and things fighting for
priority in our lives. We are still human and fall to the temptations of more
is better and the newest thing is the thing to have.
Something happens to me however when I raise my eyes to the
mountain tops. As my eyes go up, so my spirit lifts. I am reminded that my life
is short and the stuff I accumulate is temporary. My thoughts turn to our
creator as I view His magnificent world.
So I thought I would share with others the things I have
learned living here in these mountains, from others, from experiences, and from
mistakes. Farming here is not what I had imagined. I love John Denver’s songs
and we claim his Almost Heaven West Virginia as our own (even though he’s got
his geography a bit confused), but I think if I had him here I would shake him
silly for singing that line “life on the farm is kinda laid back”.
3 comments:
I never realized how great farming was until I worked elsewhere. Now, I can't wait to leave Nuclear Power, Engineering and the Navy in general to get back on a farm!
Gordon, you're crazy :) Farming definitely doesn't run through the entire family's veins thankfully.
Gordon, you're crazy :) Farming definitely doesn't run through the entire family's veins thankfully.
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