Saturday, December 14, 2013

Part 1, Green and Hayden Roads in Parishville

So far it's been a cold, blustery winter in spite of the greenery you saw in yesterday's belated post. Our terribly cold temperatures moderated a bit one Monday morning, but a big snowstorm was predicted for Tuesday. So I decided to take a driving tour and see a bit more of the countryside before the storm hit. I chose Green Road, just off of Route 11B. It was about as rural as they come, with picturesque old farms:

Old barns sat out behind friendly farm houses with just enough snow on everything to look almost like Christmas:

The corn had all been harvested and many acres of corn stubble stretched out almost as far as I could see:

Farm equipment and hay bales sat out in the snowy fields:

Old silos, barns and farm trucks created the classic American rural landscape:

Split rail fences, red outbuildings and leafless maples:

This play house was behind the house in the previous picture and I had to use a zoom lens to capture it. Don't you wish you'd have had one like that when you were a kid?:

Some see the winter farm landscape as harsh, barren and forbidding - but I focus on the warmth inside those homes and barns. Winter is a time for drawing together:

A modern modular:

Acres of hay fields, sheared of their tall grass, still showing hints of green through the snow:

A mobile home with an addition and a big pile of firewood. There was lots more to see on Green Road, though, and I'll post Part 2 tomorrow:

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