Chris Hardie

stories, corn

Finding and telling stories is not a science

Whether it was at Grandma’s or Aunt Sara’s, I’ve always loved hearing stories. So, it should be no surprise that I was drawn into a career of hearing them and telling them.

iron wheels, farm treasures

Wisconsin’s farm treasures still exist

Bit by bit, the smaller homestead farms disappear a little more each year as houses and buildings are torn down or left to decay. But if you look closely while driving through farm country you can still spot one legacy of farming that still exists in many places — the treasure troves that some may call junkyards.

hail

Hardie tells a hail of a story

Severe weather goes part and parcel with summer — and this year is no exception. Recently, tornadoes and severe thunderstorms swept through the state of Wisconsin, capping several days of unsettled weather.

woodchuck

Woodchuck war heats up again

If my long-running battle against woodchucks were a Hollywood sequel, I think we’d be at “Groundhog Strikes Again Chapter XXIV.”

analog summer

Recalling ‘analog summer’ memories from years gone by

The idea behind analog summer is we’re turning back the clock to simpler times — when our lives were not dominated as much by digital devices but by human interaction and natural experiences that don’t come from liquid-crystal displays.

falling branches

Beware of dangerous falling branches

It was a peaceful Sunday afternoon on the farm the day after a much-needed late-June rain. Suddenly, the sleepy midday was shattered by two loud bangs. The source of the noise? Two large limbs from an oak tree in our yard suddenly and violently plummeted to the ground.

hay

Hay harvesting goes old school

Chris Hardie’s first cutting of hay is complete but without some rain soon, prospects of second or third cuttings are not very promising.

Wisconsin Newspaper Association