Showing posts with label Amish Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amish Christmas. Show all posts

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Amish Christmas Collection

How about some Christmas stories?
The men of Amish fiction would love to take you on a Christmas adventure.

My own horses have a set of Christmas lights on their barn.
Thomas Nye's Christmas story takes place on a farm like this one. The Holiday Harness Shop shares the happenings in an Amish harness shop during the week leading up to Christmas.
Winter in Amish country is picturesque. 
Action and adventure on an Amish farm don't slow down because of a little snow or cold.

Cozy up with a cup of cocoa, a blanket, and an Amish Christmas Collection this holiday season.
 
Or, to order directly from the author with a check

 




Monday, December 23, 2019

Amish Winter Wonderland

 An Amish buggy sloshes through the falling snow. I love seeing horse hoofprints between buggy tracks.
These pictures were taken over the past few years. I live near Kalona, Iowa and Amish farm country.
 Winter skies have a unique "blueness" that accents snowy scenes perfectly.
White Amish barns and houses are beautiful with a blanket of snow.

 Though everything looks cold... there is nothing quite as inviting as stepping into a straw-filled stall near a team of workhorses. Draft horses weigh about a ton each and you can only imagine how much body heat they emanate. 
 It is quite common for Amish to heat their homes with wood. Nothing can be as cozy as the crackling of firewood, and that sweet scent of smoke...add that aroma to freshly baked bread and/or cinnamon rolls...perfection!

 Hanging wash on a clothesline during the winter months would be the downside of Amish life.
 Keeping livestock fed and watered during winter months can be a full-time job.
 Fences and leafless trees line snow-covered farm fields.
 Horses wait for their humans to begin morning chores. They often whinny when they see someone step out of the house and head toward the barn.
 Days are short this time of year. Every drop of sunlight is appreciated.
 Gardens lay dormant, the ground is frozen solid.
 Silos are full of chopped cornstalks that were cut while still a little green. 
 Amish teens love to play ice-hockey. Amish children break out their sleds at the first snowfall and don't seem to notice the cold.
 Amish horses keep clip-clopping year-round. It's fun to see puffs of breath billowing out as horses trot down the road.

Friday, December 25, 2015

Amish Countryside in Winter



 If you want to step back in time, drive through Amish farmlands.

The views are so classic and beautiful.

Life seems so wholesome and healthy.

All of the glitz of flashing lights disappear.
 Let the beauty of nature paint its own Christmas display...
                                            And let the heavens provide the Christmas lights!


Sunday, November 29, 2015

Winter Scenes on the Amish Farm



There is something cozy about Amish farms during the holiday season, don't you agree?

I think it's that old-time, down on the farm quality of life that we all miss. We long for it all year, but the holiday season brings it out more than ever.

We long for the sweet, simple life. A time when people knew and cared about their neighbors.





A time when we knew the names of horses and cows instead of "cell phone aps." A place in history where little boys and girls ran and played in the snow, and also knew how to do chores.
 I love visiting Amish farms because all of this is still happening at this very moment... just as it did when my grandpa was a boy.

A few simple toys at Christmas were enough. They were toys that we enjoyed but didn't get "addicted" to. Instead of staring at a "little screen," or a "huge screen" all Christmas day, people sat and visited with each other.

Just as they still do on Amish farms.