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I share many, many words here and on other social media sites and in my books. So can our words, especially in this internet age where we can so easily share messages.
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It’s a cheerful song that embraces being an encourager for those who might come along behind you on the same paths.īut it’s not just footprints that leave tracks.
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I like the lines about leaving happy tracks wherever you go along life’s road. The chorus of that song stuck in my head and these years later I still think about it whenever I see my tracks in the snow. A few of his songs hit the charts including “Happy Tracks” back in 1966. He was a big guy at 6’6″ and 300 pounds according to what I found on the internet and was called the “Round Mound of Sound.” He embraced his size and wrote comedy songs such as “The Heavyweight.” He was a regular on Hee Haw as the bass singer in the Hee Haw Gospel Quartet. So that makes me think of the song, “Happy Tracks” written by Kenny Price, a country singer from Florence, Kentucky. Whether we can see the tracks we leave or that others do, we do continually track up other people’s worlds. And I came along later and left my tracks across its trail Truth is, I don’t know for sure what it was except that sometime in the night or early morning it left tracks through the snow. These tracks might be a coyote’s since they are probably too big for a fox. Marley, while shorter than Frankie, has big paws. This morning I saw tracks that look like Frankie’s only smaller than his feet. Maybe they hole up in their trees until the snow melts away. Raccoons can go walking in the snow, but I have an easier time recognizing their tracks in mud. Squirrels might spend a few minutes on the ground instead of running through treetops, making daredevil leaps between branches. Sometimes a neighbor’s cat will be on the hunt for mice. Then there are other little tracks that I can only wonder about. Rabbit tracks are everywhere too as they hop around in the snow hunting out something to eat. So, I’m always on the lookout for tracks of those unseen critters that live on my farm but stay out of sight most of the time.ĭeer tracks that would have been rare when I was a kid are now common in snow or mud. Cows are confined to one field which leaves the others open to wildlife and my dog buddies, Frankie and Marley, and me. I live on a farm and that means I can see fields untouched by human feet, vehicles or livestock. One of the things I enjoy about walking in snow is seeing track trails. There is no person who at some time, somewhere, somehow, does not lead another.” ~Unknown “The footprints you leave behind will influence others.