Dirt
Stop by my house unannounced and unexpected, take a moment to look around and you’ll likely spot dust on the mantle, dog hair on the floor and, very probably, a dead box elder bug by the back door. Country livin’ at its’ finest.
Before we moved to Four Sticks Farm, George had started his own business, so we bought a small rambler in our hometown, with the understanding that after a couple of years to get established, we’d find a country place with land and room for horses.
Seven years later we found Four Sticks.
A house just big enough for the two of us, our three boisterous golden retrievers and one sweet little black lab named Dixie. The lot was heavily wooded, so we took much of two years to clear trees, move dirt, plant a pasture, and build a barn. I learned a lot about dirt during the process – who knew there is so much diversity in the world of soil? And you can believe we had the wrong kind in every spot.
So, we dug and scraped and hauled out and filled in and leveled up and tamped down. I use the term ”we” loosely, as there are people with powerful equipment who move dirt for a living. Thank God.
Twenty acres of mostly marsh land became my pastoral paradise. Dogs in the house, horses in the pasture, and cats anywhere in between.




Despite my repeated intention to keep barn shoes barn shoes, and other shoes not, most of my footwear eventually ends up with at least a bit of barn dirt stuck in the soles. And on more than one occasion I’ve crossed my legs at work and spotted specks of dried manure dotting the hemline. Barn jeans are barn jeans, good jeans are not. Sometimes.
No green thumb here, but I like the look of pots on the patio in the summer so have found a few independent varieties (shamrocks and succulents are my friends) that survive with minimal intervention and I plant a new perennial or two every year to add a little long-term interest. All of which means digging in the dirt, and because I find gardening gloves cumbersome, it’s often a deep dive with bare hands.
So, I have animal hair on my activewear, soil in my shoes, dirt under my fingernails, hay in my hair, and dust in my dining room – life when your backyard is a barnyard.
I think it keeps me healthy. I know it keeps me happy.
Dreams.





