Time to deck the halls, etc., etc. Headed for church a few weeks ago, I knew it was time to start thinking holiday decorating. A couple of pickup trucks passed me, headed the other way, pine trees bouncing along on the backs. ‘Tis the season... Not that I wasn’t aware. Why, just the day before, I’d lopped off a few snippets of Norway spruce and hemlock, tucked them into a pre-used floral arrangement hol der and poked a single red candle down through the middle of the damp oasis base. Viola! Instant holiday centerpiece for the kitchen table. Inexpensive, too, since the candle was also slightly used. But seeing the Christmas trees flying by on the pickups was a reality check. I returned home filled with purpose and determina tion - and the realization that we only had two more weeks to get our children’s Sunday School Christmas program pulled toghe ter... that I hadn't done any shop ping.. or written a single card... or.. Phew! Behind schedule already. After lunch, I put in a request to use the pickup - which meant The Farmer had to juggle his plans since he also had need for the Good deal on a tractor? It’s the lease we can do. JDC' understands your need to have a tractor with an affordable Guaranteed Value Lease* Why lease? You get low annual payments that may be fully tax deductible. (See your accountant for details.) The value of the tractor at the end of the lease is guaranteed. When your lease is up, you may purchase the tractor or return it with no obligation. And JDC pays the property taxes, where applicable. For more details, see your John Deere dealer or call 1-800-362-8580, ext. 490. With the Guaranteed Value Lease, it’s your choice: Lease any new John Deere 8000 Series Row-Crop Tractor for Lease a new John Deere 70 Series four-wheel drive tractor as low as 14 cents per horsepower hour. K for as low as 11 cents per horsepower hour. A truck. Much as I love my little compact car, it lacks 4-wheel capability. And between home and my destination was a muddy field road. No need to go “mud bogging;” the pickup was dirty enough already. With a sturdy “limb-lopper” pruning tool, a smaller pruning shears and several plastic bags in my pockets, I trudged off in search of some holiday decorating inspiration. Winds which had rattled our neigborhood a few weeks before had not missed the tall, old pines. Small limbs lay tossed about the ground, their needles still green but slightly limp. While I wanted an armload of the boughs of soft, fragrant needles, they needed to be fresh-cut, not storm-downed and already wilted. Trimming from a few low branches, it took, but a few minutes to gather a large bouquet. More bounty was scattered across the ground. Fat pine cones, their edges iced with whitish sticky sap were plentiful. The plastic bags filled quickly as I crawled through the soft carpeting of old needles and dry leaves. A chilly December wind sang in the You Deserve Credit for Buying the Best™ t Subject to John Deere Credit approval Available at participating dealers Cost of lease may vary based on tractor options Offer ends January 31,1996 high limbs overhead and stirred the scent of fresh pine. Heaven must smell like a pine forest. The quiet peacefulness of the woods and the fragrance of the evergreens were exactly what I needed. It wasn’t necessarily the boughs of pine or the sweet, sticky cones, but that sense of peace away from the rush that prepares some of us to celebrate Christmas. And there it was, not in the stores, or the malls, or the lines - but in the woods. The pine cones are piled, along with some shiny red balls, in baskets around the house. (And after seeing them priced at twenty cents-apiece at a store recently, I’d found the mother lode, pine cone wise.) A bouquet of pine fills an old nail barrel on the front porch, with more of my pine cone wealth. The old grapevine wreath has a new wrapping of cherry paper - twist ribbon. Candles glow in the living room at night - when I remember to light them. We’re getting there. For us, holiday decorations are done in few simple, seasonal, natural things, If you’re still looking for Christmas, steal a few moments away from the glitz and the gauch e, the tinsel and the tinny, the high prices and the long lines. Go to the woods. Go for a walk. It’s a good way to get back in touch with the peaceful spirit of the season. DJOHIN DEERE CREDIT WESTMINSTER, Md. Those decorative plants that adorn your home for the holiday season are colorful and festive, but they also pose a hidden danger to small children and pets because their leaves, berries, seeds, or roots may Se poisonous. Although poison ings from plants in Maryland are rare and deaths from plant poison ings are even more rare, many plants have poisonous properties. Poinsettias, mistletoe, holly an Christmas-rose are a few of the poisonous plants identified in the Cooperative Extension Service’s easy-to-read bulletin, “100 Poi sonous Plants of Maryland.” This 55-page booklet is a handy refer ence tool that can help you identi ty quickly and easily the most the trees, pruning and shaping. Janet does most of this work her self but utilizes the help from the rest of the family when necessary. She adds that her daughters have yet to develop the “trained eye” necessary to do proper “shaping.” The area’s first major snow storm came a bit early this year— Janet had only finished all of the work with the trees two weeks pri or to the big storm. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 16, 1995-B3 Holiday Plants Have Hidden Dangers Plateau Farm (Continued from Pago B 2) common poisonous plants found in Maryland. This fully illustrated booklet lists the poisonous plant alphabeti cally by common name with a complete description. Where they are commonly found; why they are poisonous; and what symp toms they cause are explained in a nontechnical and concise manner. You can request your copy from the Carroll Extension Office, 700 Agriculture Center, Westmin ster. MD 21157. “100 Poisonous Plants of Mary land” costs $3.75 for Maryland residents. For nonresidents, there is an additoinal charge for ship ping. Please make your checks payable to the Carroll County EAC and send to the above address. All of the operations at the farm are a concerted family effort in some way or another. According to Janet, “the girls are learning ba sic skills when they have to take over more of the daily household responsibilities that enable me to do the necessary outdoor work.” Being outdoors is an added bonus for this energetic family. Janet feels that this accounts for the lack of stress in their lives.