My parents are blessed with a wonderful neighbor whose parents originally built the home they live in. The children that now occupy the old homestead are continuing to instill fiscal responsibility in their children by keeping family tradition alive. To this family, pumpkins are more than an ingredient in pumpkin pies and the medium for sculpting jack-o-lanterns. They are a lesson in patience, hard work and fiscal rewards. The family’s daughters are responsible for planting and caring for the pumpkin patch and in the fall they haul the pumpkins out to the road and sell them: they get to keep the proceeds.
Last month when I was in Yakima visiting my parents the annual pumpkin sale was on. This time, it was the granddaughters that were offering up six bins of pumpkins that sold out in a couple of hours. The family’s tradition lives on and I could not resist purchasing a few pumpkins to make into jack-o-lanterns to greet the many trick-or-treaters that live in my Ballard neighborhood. I am sure the rewards for these girls’ hard work is much sweeter than any trick-or-treat candy they may have received on Halloween.
Last month when I was in Yakima visiting my parents the annual pumpkin sale was on. This time, it was the granddaughters that were offering up six bins of pumpkins that sold out in a couple of hours. The family’s tradition lives on and I could not resist purchasing a few pumpkins to make into jack-o-lanterns to greet the many trick-or-treaters that live in my Ballard neighborhood. I am sure the rewards for these girls’ hard work is much sweeter than any trick-or-treat candy they may have received on Halloween.