A Walk Along the Chattahoochee River
I'm taking a brief interlude to my posts around Florida today to remember a brief moment on a normal routine day.
One of my largest categories of posts, these are posts about living life and being alive in this world today. We celebrate life, and that's the goal with these posts.
I'm taking a brief interlude to my posts around Florida today to remember a brief moment on a normal routine day.
We have been working super hard on the van conversion over the last few months in anticipation of getting to go.
I have posted a lot of different photos of a lot of different things on my site over the years.
Today is something a little different for my Throwback Thursday post and includes a bit of family history.
It is that time of year around here where the sun doesn't come up until almost 7am.
This year I have made an attempt to get better at posting more often to my various weekly series posts, so today.
A historic winter storm recently blanketed the Gulf Coast, delivering 4 to 6 inches of snow in the Auburn-Opelika area.
In the early 20th century, Macon County, Alabama, struggled with poor soil affecting African American families.
In Zone 8, summer temperatures are rising to 100°F, prompting the planting of seedlings.
Years after planting a fig tree, it now provides numerous figs daily, prompting their use in making strawberry-fig jam.