I grew up in a little Wyoming town and though I haven't actually lived there for 39 years, when I step foot into the front door of Mom and Dad's house I am "home". I love my parent's old house. It was built originally for a doctor and is probably one, if the not the biggest home in Cowley. It has tall ceilings, big rooms and although Mom and Dad have remodeled many things, there is still that vintage look about it. When they bought it, they had quite a large sized lot but have since sold one spot to my brother Jon and another spot to me. Wayne and I really thought we would be building a home on that lot 5 years ago but due to a need for health insurance and security, we moved to Utah. However we still keep in the back of our minds the idea that we may still do it one day. The things I love about their house are these:
Mom and Dad still live there after 50 years
It is a 2 story home and used to have a big porch all across the front but Dad remodeled it to accommodate a large living room. The giant cottonwood trees are no more. They served our family well and protected families of owls, robins and other birds but they also outlived their usefulness when they started to drop large branches that came close to the cars parked beneath so they were taken down. I miss them but Mom and Dad don't. They used to produce enough leaves to jump in for hours or to rake into the shape of my leaf house with divided rooms. I loved that!! Mom and Dad didn't.
Mom always has flowers. She had a row of marigolds that went the length of the lot but has since had to move them because Jon's house sits on this site.
These are the original light fixtures made from heavy leaded glass and brass. Now I ask you, how did they survive with my 4 brothers living there? Then along came my son and the other grandsons that were forever throwing things and (knock on wood) they still survive.
The top sides of the inside doors have this beautiful detail. (Probably hand carved)
The living room still has these wonderful leaded glass windows
The original bead-board and wood railings are still in place going up the stairs.
This is the back of the house which is surrounded by trees and bushes and a very large lawn. It was only in the last few years that Dad got a riding mower.
This is the side where you go down to a cellar and where Mom's home canned food is stored. It only has an outside entrance so in the winter it can be kind of tricky and pretty slick if it has snowed.
This is a decorative wooden element that Dad salvaged and painted and appointed to the top of the front door.
This is the side where you go down to a cellar and where Mom's home canned food is stored. It only has an outside entrance so in the winter it can be kind of tricky and pretty slick if it has snowed.
This is a decorative wooden element that Dad salvaged and painted and appointed to the top of the front door.
This is the yard in a typical Wyoming winter
The front porch of the home is a place where we all congregate when we go home for a visit. On a hot day, it really doesn't feel as hot as it is. For some reason the air currents rush through and keep it cool. You can see the birds and squirrels running around and the townsfolk driving or walking by and there is always a "hello". Life slows down just a little when you sit on the porch.
Am I sounding nostalgic? I am feeling it. Maybe it's the time of the year, or the fact that I don't get to go home enough any more, or most likely it's the fact that I still have two amazing people to call my parents and I miss them.
11 comments:
I miss them too...so very much! Reading this post made me homesick for Cowley. This time of year really is nostalgic for me because every time I smell someone burning their leaves in the fall, it reminds me of my childhood and my many visits to that small and peaceful town in Wyoming! Wes wants to know when you guys are going to Wyoming next? HA HA HA! (inside joke!)
I love that home also. One of my favorite things to do there is sit on the heater vent in the kitchen when its winter.
There's no place like home, there's no place like home, there's no place like home . . . Am I missing the ruby slippers or . . . we need to take another trip!
If you go, please stuff me in your trunk!
I miss them too, so much! We need to make sure that house always stays in this family! I could write a book about all of my memories in that house and that town! Sounds like another ladies road trip is in the works.
I was going to post a comment earlier and then Josh turned off the computer! Such a helpful little guy...
I loved this post. I have such strong feelings about the home I grew up in, in Missouri. Even though my parents don't live there anymore, a part of my heart will always be there.
I love the picture of you and Wayne. You guys are still beautiful!
Just Joan,
Love the new look on the blog. Especially the header. Amy looks so much like you. You two are still cute!
Always lovely to have wonderful warm feels of your home, so nice. I think you should move to WY, it is closer to MT;))))
I also loved you Halloween posts and the costumes. That party was always fun.
P.S. I want that shirt you are wearing in the black and white photo in your header! Sooo cute! I'm guessing you made it? Can we make me one?
I love those photos Joan - I can see why your childhood home brings back so many wonderful memories! I have always loved those small towns in rural MT ans WY for many of the reasons you discussed. My grandparents home is much the same way!
Reading this post made me feel very nostalgic. It's still hard to drive past mom and dads house in Cowley. My kids have a fit when I talk about selling our house in Colstrip and I understand where they're coming from. We're trying to talk one of them into buying it, but of course they want it at a bargain price. Ha!
I love this house too. I love to sit on the porch and visit with everyone, read or just daydream. It seems like stress just slips away when we go there. I am so glad you took pitures of all of the details. (I vote for a move to WY too.) :-)
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