I love this time of the year. It has been documented in other columns I have written. Cooler nights are upon us. Soon the weatherman will be warning of a chance of hard frost in the 鈥渙utlying areas.鈥 That鈥檚 where I live.
When the air is bordering on frost, it has a certain 鈥渇eel鈥 to it. The air will soon have that 鈥渇eel.鈥 I can hardly wait. It is exhilarating.
This is the time of year to think of wool socks and pants, flannel shirts, vests, sweaters, lined jackets and warm caps. It鈥檚 also time to try to remember where you stored the long underwear last spring.
My late father was a great believer in long underwear. He wore them from the first of August until the end of May. He wore the white thermal-knit kind. And he wore them until you could see through them. When he was finished with a pair, they weren鈥檛 even good for dust rags. He literally wore them out.
He loved a good, warm wool cap, too, the kind with ear flaps. When the weather starts to get cool, I think of him.
My grandfather Brim warmed his house with a wood fire. In the earliest days I remember the fireplace was big and open. It required a big backlog. I recall popping popcorn over that fire. The popcorn popper was a screen-wire box about the size of a cigar box. It had a solid bottom made of tin. The box was attached to a stick much like a mop handle. You poured the popcorn in the popper and heated it over the flames. I鈥檝e popped a lot of popcorn over an open fire. It was not the best popcorn, certainly not buttered. But it would go down mighty fine with a Nehi orange or grape.
Every fall my grandfather drove from Riddleton to Willette in Macon County to get a load of cook stove wood. A sawmill owner there cut hardwood slabs into eighteen-inch pieces for him. He would return with his 1951 GMC pick-up truck bed stacked high.
I have watched him for hours as he took his 鈥渓ittle鈥 ax and split those pieces of slabs into two-inch wide sticks of wood. It made for ideal fuel for my grandmother鈥檚 wood stove.
About this time of year I get a hankering for splitting some wood. I don鈥檛 know, I guess it鈥檚 in my bones. I suppose I鈥檝e spent too much time warming by a wood fire.
I like everything about a fire 鈥 getting one started, keeping it going, the smell; and the 鈥渇eel鈥 of the fire on my face.
And when the weather starts getting cold, I look forward to the feel of a good, warm bed. I like a cold room and lots of covers. The thought of that takes me back to winters when I slept in a feather bed in the Brim Hollow. The room was cold and the quilts lay heavy. You could lie in bed and see your frosty breath.
I鈥檝e waked up on many a morning feeling sore from the weight of the bed covers. Talk about a cold room 鈥 my nose felt like an icicle. I鈥檝e also waked up to find a narrow line of snow lying on the floor from where it had blown in around the window frame.
I鈥檒l say this. It made for getting dressed in a hurry!
Cold rooms make you appreciate a warm bed. When I got out of bed I hurried to the kitchen and the warmth of the cook stove.
So, get out those extra blankets and quilts and all those things that will help keep you warm in the coming days.
Speaking of keeping warm, there鈥檚 hardly a feeling that compares with feeling nice and warm when it鈥檚 cold outside. It makes me think of the coming holidays 鈥 Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year鈥檚 Day 鈥 a time to gather with friends and family and share the warmth of their love.
The Holidays will be here before you can turn around!
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