Something New Is Nearly Ready

One more chat before the porch light comes on.

There is a particular kind of anticipation that comes just before something good arrives.

Not the hurried sort.
Not the loud sort.
But the steady, warm kind — like setting an extra cup on the table because you know someone will soon be coming by.

That is where we are today.

Next Saturday — January 24The Hearth & Holler Gazette will make its first appearance here on The Writing Pages! And before it does, this felt like the right moment to pause, take a breath, and talk plainly about what it is, who it is for, and just as importantly, what it is not.

What’s Nearly Ready

At its heart, The Hearth & Holler Gazette is a weekly Saturday morning visit.

A small-town paper from a gentler place and time — filled with short pieces meant to be read slowly, smiled over, and enjoyed with a warm cup of coffee or tea for a moment before moving on with your day.

The Hearth & Holler Gazette is a fictional paper, created for enjoyment and relaxation, drawn from the characters and places of Little Red Bear’s Honey Hill Country.

Each issue will include familiar sections you can come to expect:

— lighthearted community tidings
— gentle humor and country chuckles
— a heartwarming piece from the Heart of the Holler
— and a closing reflection meant to leave you steadier than when you arrived

Nothing long.
Nothing demanding.
Just enough to feel like we passed a little time together.

Who It’s For

This Gazette is for readers who enjoy:

— quiet, comforting storytelling
— old-fashioned newspaper charm
— a sense of place and neighborliness
— kindness without preaching
— imagination without noise

It is for those who like to read with a moment, not race through one.

And What It Is Not

It is not a newsletter competing for attention.
It is not a commitment you must keep up with.
It is not something being sold to you, nor another thing to keep track of.

There are no subscriptions to purchase.
No ads or promotions to navigate.
No extras you must chase down.
No pressure to do anything at all.

If a week comes when you read it — wonderful.
If a week comes when you do not — it will be there when you return.

Continue reading

Porch Notes From Little Red Bear

Hey, folks —

Jim is up to his ears with work on the Gazette right now, so asked me to fill in for him today. And I’ve got a few minutes so thought – “Sure. Why not?” Hope you don’t mind.

Farmer Turner dropped by earlier for no particular reason. That’s what folks do around these parts. Stopping by to visit. Just bein’ neighborly, is all.

As usual, we got to talkin’ about the weather. Lately it’s been like riding a seesaw. We seem to go from way above normal one day to way below normal the next. We set a record for both a record all-time high temperature and another record 62-degree temperature drop all in the same day last week. From 80F to 18F. I started the morning in my overalls and ended up wearing three different coats by the end of the day, each one heavier than the one before. I hear the birds down south are flyin’ in circles, not knowing whether to migrate back up north or stay put where they are. They can’t figure it out either, it seems.

Anyway, that’s what Farmer Turner and I were talking about — the weather. I will say, if ever you feel like talking about the weather with someone, just go find yourself a farmer. Farmers love talking about the weather. For them, it’s not just small talk, of course. It’s an important discussion about crop yields, planting schedules, and their very survival. Weather determines a farmer’s livelihood, after all.

Well, I see Aunt Ivy coming up the way, probably coming to trade some cookies for some of the fresh herbs we still have growin’ alongside the cabin. So, I’ll be going now. She may need my help gettin’ to some of the herbs. That, and I don’t want Jim spottin’ her coming and dashin’ out the door to beat me to any fresh cookies.

‘Til next time then.

— Little Red Bear (and Jim!)

If you’d like to spend a little more time in Little Red Bear’s world, Jim has gathered some of the stories and books together on his Author’s Page. You’re always welcome to stop by.

Reflection and Renewal — Gently Finding Our Way Into the New Year

A gentle welcome for the year ahead — and an unhurried way to begin again.

January has a way of arriving with instructions already written for us, doesn’t it?
Begin again. Improve. Fix. Hurry.

But some years ask for something different.

Some years do not need to be conquered at all — only entered. And once inside, listened to. The quieter truths tend to reveal themselves that way, without ceremony or noise.

Here, reflection is not a reckoning, and renewal is not a contest to be won or lost.
What if it never needed to be?

Instead, it can be something simpler — an ongoing process of noticing what still matters, what has endured, and what might simply need a little tending rather than replacing.

If you have arrived here tired, or curious, or simply passing through, you are in good company. And welcome here.

Continue reading

A Fresh Stack of Mornings

A quiet New Year arrives in Honey Hill Country, bringing stillness, reflection, and the promise of days yet to be read.

The New Year has come quietly to Honey Hill Country.

A cold winter morning has settled in. Snow lies clean and unbroken beneath the trees, save for a line of rabbit tracks stitching their way across the yard and disappearing into the brush. Frost rests easy on the fence rails, and the woods hold the kind of silence that only follows a good snowfall — deep, listening, and kind.

No fanfare, no fuss — just the slow turning of the calendar page, with a fresh stack of new mornings waiting to be opened on the kitchen table. The old year folded itself away politely, and the new one stepped in like a neighbour removing their hat at the door.

Out here, the year always begins the same way — with a pause.

There is time to look back at what was carried, what was learned, and what, perhaps, is ready to be set down. There is time to stand a moment longer at the window and consider what might yet come walking up the lane. And there is time — always time — to say, You Are Welcome Here.

Honey Hill Country remains much as you left it — and Little Red Bear is still right where he has always been.

The paths are familiar. The front porches are swept. The kettle is warm — Little Red Bear is keeping it so. Your choice, coffee or tea. Fresh biscuits, always. The stories continue — some by the fire, some on the page, and some quietly, heart to heart.

As the new year unfolds, there will be small kindnesses, ordinary miracles, and a few good surprises tucked between the days. There will be laughter that arrives unannounced. There will be reflections that linger. And there will be new rhythms settling gently into place, one week at a time.

Later this month, something long-planned and much-loved will find its way into the light — The Hearth & Holler Gazette, a weekly visit of tales, tidings, and old-time country comfort, shared from Little Red Bear’s corner of Honey Hill Country and meant to be read slowly, like the morning paper at the table.

But for now, there is no rush.

This first week of January is for standing still just long enough to take a breath, to look around, and to remember that beginnings do not need to be loud to be meaningful.

So welcome — to the New Year, to Little Red Bear’s Honey Hill Country, and to whatever good may yet come.

The gate is open. The light is on.
Come in when you are ready.

— Jim  (and Red!)

“A new year does not ask us to be different people,”
Clara Thimblewick once wrote,
“only to listen a little more closely to the better parts of ourselves.”

Pen-and-ink illustrations created with the assistance of AI and lovingly styled for Little Red Bear Land.

My Year-End Reflection & Looking Ahead

On Writing, Story, and the Road Ahead

As the year draws to a close, I find myself less inclined to sum it up than to simply set it down — like a coat hung by the door at the end of a long day. Some years ask for that. Not a tally, not a verdict, just a moment to breathe before turning toward whatever comes next.

Earlier this week, I shared a few thoughts meant simply to steady the heart as the year turns. This piece is something a little different. Less about what has been weathered, and more about what has quietly taken shape along the way.

Continue reading

Critter Tales — “The Fence Post Carrot”

From the critters near home . . . to the wildlands beyond.

Critter Tales are small, gentle stories — meant to be read in a few quiet minutes, enjoyed with a smile, and written and shared simply for the fun of it.

The two brothers were not looking for anything in particular that afternoon.

They were doing what bunny brothers often do on mild days — wandering along the roadside, stopping now and then to inspect a pebble, a bent leaf, or a place where something interesting might have happened earlier and could possibly happen again.

That was when the younger brother stopped so suddenly the older one nearly walked straight into him.

They both stared.

Lying just off the road, half in the grass and half in the dust, was a carrot.

Not a carrot carrot.

A carrot the size of a fence post.

It was long and thick and sun-warmed, its orange skin dulled with soil, its green top snapped short as if it had once belonged to a wagonload of respectable vegetables that had not expected to lose a member along the way.

The brothers walked slowly around it.

They stood beside it.

They placed a paw on it, just to be sure.

“It’s real,” said the younger one.

“It’s ours,” said the older one, immediately and with confidence.

The only problem was getting it home.

They tried first to drag it.

They braced their feet, leaned back, and pulled with all the seriousness such a carrot deserved. The carrot did not move. It merely sat there, unimpressed and unmoved, as though it had been waiting for this moment and was quite prepared to wait longer.

They tried lifting one end.

That end rose exactly as far as the other end sank, and the carrot pivoted neatly back into place, landing with a thump that rattled their paws.

They rested, catching their breath.

“Maybe if we roll it,” said the younger brother.

This seemed reasonable.

The carrot was round, after all. Mostly.

They pushed.

The carrot rolled.

Not forward.

It rolled sideways, drifting lazily toward the road, as though it had somewhere else to be.

They scrambled to stop it, wrestling it back into the grass before it could embarrass them in front of any passing wagons.

They tried again, this time from the other side.

The carrot rolled the opposite direction, wobbling, curving, and clearly unwilling to be guided in a straight line.

“It doesn’t listen,” the younger brother said.

“It’s shaped wrong,” said the older one.

They studied it closely then — the thick top, the narrowing point, the subtle curve that promised cooperation and delivered betrayal.

They attempted to lever it with a stick.

The stick snapped.

They attempted to roll it while running alongside, paws scrambling, ears flapping.

The carrot rolled faster than expected, slower than hoped, and then gently pinned them both in the grass until they agreed to let go.

Eventually, they sat down beside it.

The afternoon was quiet. A breeze stirred the grass. The carrot lay peacefully between them, as though nothing at all had happened.

Their house sat below them on the hillside — not far, really, when one looked at it that way.

The younger brother tilted his head.

“What if,” he said slowly, “we don’t take it up to the house?”

The older brother followed his gaze.

The hill sloped gently downward, straight toward their front wall.

They looked at the carrot.

They looked at the hill.

They smiled.

Getting it started was easy.

Stopping it was not.

The carrot tipped, rolled, hesitated, and then gathered confidence, wobbling its way downhill with growing enthusiasm. It veered left. It corrected. It veered right. The brothers ran alongside, shouting helpful suggestions that the carrot ignored entirely.

The curve took over.

The carrot picked its own path.

The brothers watched, helpless and hopeful, as it rolled faster, straighter, and with increasing purpose — directly toward their house.

There was a sound.

A solid, unmistakable WHUMP against the wall.

Silence followed.

Then the front door flew open.

Their mother rushed out, apron askew, eyes wide — ready for disaster.

She stopped.

She stared.

Leaning neatly against the wall, as if it had always belonged there, was a carrot the size of a fence post.

The brothers stood very still.

Then their mother laughed.

She laughed the way one does when something is too unexpected to be annoying and too useful to be ignored.

“Well,” she said happily, “that’s carrot soup for a month.”

The brothers sat down in the grass, dusty and pleased.

The carrot did not move again.

It had arrived.

Pen-and-ink illustrations created with the assistance of AI and lovingly styled for Little Red Bear Land.

Why do I write these? Aw, I don’t know. Just thought it might make you smile.