Tag Archives: Pecans

THE NEXT GENERATION

My father would have loved to have raised a farmer.

And he did

Sort of.

My sister Ann has taken his pecan grove

To production heights that would amaze

And fill him with pride.

I garden at home and in the community.

We are definately not the farmer he was

But we do our best.

I now understand the desire to pass along

My love for the land.

So last week when my son, Elliott

And his children were visiting

We spent time in the garden

And at the farm.

John drove us to different farms

Pointing out details

While I sat between H & H as we call them

Sharing my memories.

It was when Elliott

Insisted we stop to watch a combine

Harvesting wheat,

Then take a few wheat heads

To show the kids how to make “wheat gum”,

And then asked

H & H if they wanted to see the oil in the tanks

That I realized we were really on

The Henry Bellmon Farm Tour….the Next Generation.

My dad took anyone who was interested

On a tour of the farm.

He would spend hours telling his passenger about

The cattle and the land

Especially the farm where his dad lived in a dugout

In the late 1890’s.

And then

He would likely head to a battery of oil tanks.

Where they would climb the rickety stairs

Open a lid

And check on the production.

So when I saw Elliott doing the same thing.

It took me back to those days

And thrilled my soul.

The summers Elliott spent on the farm

Are deeply ingrained in who he is.

But he, too, is not a farmer.

It is unlikely there is a farmer

In the next generation.

But daddy would be happy

That his farm tour lives on.

Through John & Elliott.

Hope you enjoy these sunny days.

Gail

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Filed under Grandchildren, The Farm, Uncategorized

A LEGACY OF LOVE…AND A WHOLE LOTTA NUTS!

My father loved pecans

And pecan trees

And my mother’s pecan pie.

I remember in college

Coming home for Thanksgiving

Going to the creek to pick up pecans.

There was always a bowl

To crack and pick

As we sat by the fire

In the winter.

Pecans even found their way

Into campaign brochures.

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Daddy planted a pecan grove

Rather late in life

We celebrated that fact

On his 85th birthday

With family

And former staff members.

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Now if you don’t know

You don’t just plant a pecan tree

And reap the harvest.

It takes at least 7 years

To produce.

So daddy must have known

That he would not live to see

The trees grow to maturity.

That someone would have to take up the mantle

And love it like he did.

And he did love it.

He loved, nurtured and respected

The land

And the life of a farmer.

But passing that to the next generation

Can be tricky…at best.

Thankfully, when the farms were divided

Among the three of us

My little sister Ann

Got the pecan grove.

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She has worked hard over the last nine year

To improve the pecan grove

To prune, mow and fertilize it.

Like daddy she has loved, nurtured and respected

The land.

She has gotten a good crop

About every other year.

Then came the rains last spring.

I mean RAIN.

Over 30 inches in a month.

Resulting in a bumper crop.

Over 7,000 pounds of pecans!

She’s been harvesting and processing pecans

Continuously for over a month.

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This week she’s coming to town to spread the love around.

Friends have pre-ordered hundreds of pounds

Of pecans

That will be turned into all kinds of treats

Over the holidays

And beyond.

Daddy & Mother would love what she has done.

And so do I.

Gail

PS

When Daddy was in office pecans were the standard gift for visiting dignitaries and Mother’s pecan pie was served at more dinners than I can count.  She would make a dozen or so at a time.  She was amazing.IMG_4132

This recipe was first printed in “Recipes from the Campaign Trail” .  A little campaign brochure with recipes from Mother’s kitchen and Daddy’s “recipe for good government”.  My how campaigns have changed over the years!

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SHIRLEY BELLMON’S PECAN PIE

3 Eggs    1 C. white corn syrup   1C. brown sugar   1 C pecans

1 unbaked pie shell

Beat eggs.  Add corn syrup and brown sugar to eggs and mix well.  Add this mixture to the pie shell.  Sprinkle pecans on top.  Bake at 350 for one hour.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Filed under Campaign, Pecan Pie, Pecans, Uncategorized