a glampin’ we will go

Here’s Shery Jesperson, our Ranch Farmgirl blogger, and her ‘Cabin in a Can’. (More pics of glamorous, fabulous, tricked-out, gorgeous, stunning, and stupendous glampers coming soon.) This is the spot where we’ve enjoyed more than one delicious cup of coffee, as well as banana, chocolate and cinnamon bread of all sorts. Shery, THANK YOU and your glamper girlfriends for your Wyoming-style hospitality (hearts as big as a washtub) …

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  1. Laurie Dimino says:

    Lucky gals!!!!!!!!!! Drooling over here in New York! Enjoy

  2. Pingback: tricked out trailers | Raising Jane Journal

  3. CJ says:

    At the same time Robin and I were glamping it up in Flagstaff, Arizona in our “laced up” tent and totally glammed canopy with all kinds of accessories. We were photographed, videoed, visited, cheered, complimented galore . . . by women and men! A man from England came by and visited with us and said that he’s camped all over the world but our campsite was absolutely the best he’s ever seen. It was such fun!
    Hopefully, some day we can glamp in the same place at the same time . . . that would be Glamping Farmgirl AWESOME!
    Love everyone’s trailers and decor!
    CJ

  4. michelle reid says:

    Loving the fun you are having and wish I could be there~~am enjoying it from MA. near Boston!!!! Keep glamping girls!!!

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en fuego

What kinds of clouds are these bubbling above the Big Horn Mountains of Wyoming?

Ominous ones.

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  1. Terry Steinmetz says:

    Gulp!! Be safe!

  2. Lynne says:

    Frightening . . . The dangers from fire seems to be increasing wherever we live!

  3. Laurie Dimino says:

    Stay safe MaryJane! Prayers going out to those in the afffected area- safety for all of the people and livesstock and wildlife! Very scary sight indeed-just looking at it in pictures- cant imagine actually being there in person.

  4. Ann Marie says:

    We lived in Montana a number of years ago, and our first view of forest fire was one that was burning around us on three sides at the same time as the Yellowstone Fire was scorching its grounds two hundred miles from us. It was a terrifying sight to see ash fall around us, the sun blood-red in the sky, and to know that at any time the wind may change. Ominous “clouds” is a good description.

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