Der Bingle is here

Just a few minutes ago, the LaCrosse pulled into the driveway and Der Bingle arrived from Iowa. It was a sad journey for him, going out there to be with his brother as they said goodbye to Jody. But it was also a good trip – one that spoke of family ties and caring.

Last afternoon they barbequed in the late afternoon and then sat out long into the night around the firepit – talking, remembering and watching the flames.

And today Der Bingle drove for about six hours – out of Iowa, through Illinois and a long way across Indiana. He actually passed through farmland my grandparents once owned that is now the Indiana Toll Road. And on the way out on his route from Dayton, he passed just a few miles north of the place where my father grew up and is buried.

He is here now; it has warmed up and the sun is out. Not a bad latter part of the day.

He has a box in his trunk of old photos for us to sort and scan – one is of his grandfather’s family . . . when his grandfather was a boy. Another is of Floyd Akers. That would be Lydia Akers’ father and Lydia was Quentin’s great-grandmother and her maiden name is his middle name.

There are pictures of fellows in the Denver Masonic Lodge through the years. There is a picture of his dad in his high school football uniform.

I don’t know if anyone thought to take a picture of the faces around the fire last night, but it will be in their memories for a long, long time – because “to care and be cared for” is a camera of the heart.

Zee sun, it came out

Yesterday, after I went to a follow-up appointment about the colonoscopy with “the butt doctor”,  Summer and I celebrated the sun and rising temperature by mowing. She was on the Toro cart mower and I manned the Wheel Horse – we mowed for hours at Mother’s. We took the dogs and, of course, Shane did his constant barking at the mowers thing – so we stuck him in the house. HA! Try to learn from that, Furdog.

He barked from the enclosed porch at me as I chugged across the front yard. When we finished the front and east part, Summer went in to get him because I thought we could tie him to a tree out back and he could bark without bothering anyone. He strained at the end of the cable and barked. So she began to throw the Wubba for him and then we let him off his cable and he chased the Wubba and brought it back and didn’t bark. For awhile. Then he remembered he liked to bite at the wheels and I discovered a really sour-faced look  and a stiff arm, hand and finger point right at his nose made him back off.

I had my camera in my pocket, but I had forgotten the battery in the charger. No pictures. Maybe just as well because Summer might have captured the sour-faced point maneuver and, according to her, it ain’t a pleasant sight.

This morning I am looking at grey sky again. That might be a good thing since my muscles are aching from yesterday.

And as I sit here resting, I am wondering how these stories will translate into Summer’s retelling some forty years from now when I am long gone . . .