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Winter used to be my favorite season

Life Is Simple: These last two or three winters have become a lot less enjoyable.

Jerry Crownover

November 27, 2019

3 Min Read
sunset

We live in an area of the country where, in most years, there are four distinct seasons. Call me crazy, but up until the last couple of years, winter was always my favorite.

For me, spring is always too unpredictable to really enjoy — cold one day, warm the next and, in my part of the world, the never-ending chance for tornados or flooding rains. Summers are always hot, dry and seemingly last forever. You can only take off so many clothes to stay cool before the neighbors start to complain. In the fall, all the grass and trees take on a look of dead, which is really depressing to me.

Winter, however, had always been my season. As a kid, bundling up in warm layers of clothes to build snowmen, having snowball fights and going sledding were big treats. Even as a young man, I enjoyed the colder temps, just knowing how good it would feel to come in by the fire and warm all the extremities, once the outside jobs were completed.

I remember visiting with a farmer friend, from the very northern tip of Wisconsin, a few years ago, and him telling me that where he’s from, they really only have two seasons: winter and the Fourth of July. Even though he was exaggerating (I think), I thought to myself that it must be a wonderful place to live and farm. I could even imagine myself moving there.

A lot of my cattlemen buddies disagreed with my past love of winter, especially when it comes to raising cattle, but I have always taken great pleasure in caring for cattle in cold weather. When you’re feeding hay in frigid temps and chopping ice on the ponds, the cows seem to appreciate you more.

But, alas, all good things come to an end. These last two or three winters have become a lot less enjoyable for me. Even though the recent winters haven’t been extremely cold or snowy, it seems that my toes, fingers and ears react much more negatively than they did just a few short years ago. And, now, when I slip and fall on snow-packed ground or ice-covered ponds, I don’t seem to jump right back up like I used to … at least, not without assistance.

As I write this column, I’m staring out the window at the ground that is beginning to turn white. We’ve had freezing rain, sleet and snow this morning, and the TV weatherperson is predicting temperatures in the single digits tonight, with the wind chill below zero. A few years ago, I would have looked forward to getting up earlier than usual and getting out to check the cows and make sure everyone was OK, but I have a feeling I’ll have to drink an extra cup or two of coffee before I find the fortitude to do so tomorrow.

Given my newly found distaste for winter, I can only conclude two things: I guess I really am getting old, and the only time I need to go back to northern Wisconsin is on the Fourth of July.

Crownover lives in Missouri.

About the Author

Jerry Crownover

Jerry Crownover wrote a bimonthly column dealing with agriculture and life that appeared in many magazines and newspapers throughout the Midwest, including Wisconsin Agriculturist. He retired from writing in 2024 and now tells his stories via video on the Crown Cattle Company YouTube channel.

Crownover was raised on a diversified livestock farm deep in the heart of the Missouri Ozarks. For the first few years of his life, he did without the luxuries of electricity or running water, and received his early education in one of the many one-room schoolhouses of that time. After graduation from Gainesville High School, he enrolled at the University of Missouri in the College of Agriculture, where he received a bachelor's degree in 1974 and a master's of education degree in 1977.

After teaching high school vocational agriculture for five years, Crownoever enrolled at Mississippi State University, where he received a doctorate in agricultural and Extension education. He then served as a professor of ag education at Missouri State University for 17 years. In 1997, Crownover resigned his position at MSU to do what he originally intended to after he got out of high school: raise cattle.

He now works and lives on a beef cattle ranch in Lawrence County, Mo., with his wife, Judy. He has appeared many times on public television as an original Ozarks Storyteller, and travels throughout the U.S. presenting both humorous and motivational talks to farm and youth groups.

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