View Full Version : Red Barn picture.....(smile)
Dana Grant
11th May 2007, 03:53 PM (15:53)
Wow, you should have seen the acres and acres I had to walk across to reach this red barn to take a picture of it!! Oh, I am so exhausted!!!
What do you think? Isn't it lovely???
9948
*snickering* Actually, it is a picture of a picture on my red barn calendar for MAY 2007.......HA HA HA HA HA
No red barns in Tucson that I can think of at the moment -- except the ones hanging just above my desk on the 2007 RED BARN Calendar.......
Did I fool you?
LOL
Cecil Wallace
12th May 2007, 11:08 AM (11:08)
Wow, you should have seen the acres and acres I had to walk across to reach this red barn to take a picture of it!! Oh, I am so exhausted!!!
Yeah, right!
It is nice alright. But you are gonna have to be careful. Are you trying to take NEB's place by posting this red barn?? :basic05
He may be verrrry jealous if you are infringing on his territory!
Did I fool you?
LOL
Yep, for a moment, until the truth came out.
Joel Merrill
12th May 2007, 03:15 PM (15:15)
It's sad but there are very few red barns left in the Midwest. Even in Wisconsin, America's Dairyland, most of the old barns are falling down and rotting away. Seventy five years ago you could make a living on eighty acres. Now larger farms have bought out small neighboring farms and those barns aren't needed. Farming practices have also changed dramatically and the old style barns are obsolete. Farmers don't want to maintain or pay taxes on a building they don't need so they tear them down or let them fall down. By the next generation there won't be any barns left.
Joel :basic04
Dana Grant
12th May 2007, 04:07 PM (16:07)
It's sad but there are very few red barns left in the Midwest. Even in Wisconsin, America's Dairyland, most of the old barns are falling down and rotting away. Seventy five years ago you could make a living on eighty acres. Now larger farms have bought out small neighboring farms and those barns aren't needed. Farming practices have also changed dramatically and the old style barns are obsolete. Farmers don't want to maintain or pay taxes on a building they don't need so they tear them down or let them fall down. By the next generation there won't be any barns left.
Joel :basic04
Ouch, that hurts my heart.
Marsha Gupton
13th May 2007, 02:25 PM (14:25)
Tennessee has Red Barns
Jim Franklin
15th May 2007, 01:42 PM (13:42)
Keep your Red Barn pictures in a few years they will be sold to museums for big bucks.
vBulletin® v3.7.4, Copyright ©2000-2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.