Early last Saturday morning found Elaine and I on the streets of Rochester Minnesota headed to the farmers market. The city itself is an island of concrete surrounded by fields of corn...lots and lots of corn...and multiple farms with multiple corn silos...and in the middle of town stands a water tower like many towns across this country...but instead of being emblazoned with the proud
"ROCHESTER" across the center...this one is in the shape of a giant corn cob...which means you can't get lost here...you might get disoriented (especially if you hail from a place with large mountains)(to get lost in) but if you keep your eyes open in Rochester you'll eventually spy this giant
effigy to the provider of high fructose corn syrup, partially hydrogenated corn oil, corn solids, corn flour and all of the other forms of the plant that gets added to our diets to make meal (I almost forgot corn meal) after meal more delectable...if a bit less digestible!

So it was with the corn phallus standing proud to our right that we headed off to get our fresh fruits and vegetables for the week...and this farmers market has a plethora of both....mostly strawberries and rhubarb this time of year for fruit but the veggies are coming into their own and some of them I failed to even recognize...beets of multiple color...orange...yellow...and our favorite was one that Elaine exclaimed "look at the size of those radishes!!"...which were actually the brilliant red and globe shape of a radish but the size of beet and had it not been for its position amongst it's brothers and sisters of red, orange, and purple beets...we would...in the days to follow...be telling everyone we know, about the size of the radishes in Minnesota! We met an Amish farmer with his Amish family (very pleasant people) who proudly displayed a varied offering of organic delicacies of which we purchased some beautiful strawberries to add to our morning smoothie and some white carrots...not snow white...but albino enough to be called white carrots and which proved to be quite tasty as an afternoon snack....with these and a couple of bars of goats milk soap in our bag of tricks...we headed back through the canyons of the city towards our home away from home.
The sun by now had risen to a point that it added drama to the city streets...Rochester has done a fine job of mixing flora and concrete...add the suns rays at the proper an
gle and you see yourself surrounded by man made beauty....through which we now found ourselves wandering with the giant cob on our left (exposing itself occasionally between the concrete canyons)...and as we came around the next corner I spied a familiar sight...a big red firetruck...with its occupants no where in sight...and as the thought crept and crawled through my mind "I know where the key is!!"...I realized that this object in front of me that represented what I was about for the last two decades...was what I feared I would languish about the most once I retired...but as I looked at it I came to the realization that what I miss the most...is me! The one thing that I am surely not anymore is me. This cancer has taken me away from me...I should be amongst the mountains I love...or wandering the country looking for some new adventure...or wading a stream stalking a Willey trout...or hiking a trail, breathing in the aroma that makes a mountain so alluring...and making the best of the situation, we have done many of those same things here...but with the tether of this disease wound tightly around what I know as me!
We may well be on our way home by the time you read this...the radiation treatments will have their final "blastoff" tomorrow...the nasty looking "J" needle will be pulled from my chest with the last drip of kriptonite glistening on its point...and I will be free to catch a plane back to familiar terrain. Elaine and I are excited about the prospect...to say the least...and we hope to see the many that have offered and given their support...oh...and did I mention we have a new grandson to lay eyes on for the first time! Life goes on...no matter what...life goes on!