Minnesota Prairie Roots

Writing and photography by Audrey Kletscher Helbling

Driving through the southern Minnesota countryside on an autumn day October 16, 2024

We followed roads west of Faribault toward the Kilkenny and Montgomery areas. I gave up trying to keep track of where we were. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)

THE WHEELS KICKED UP DUST as our van moved along back gravel roads in Rice and Le Sueur counties on a recent weekday. Randy and I were on a fall color drive that took us past cornfields and farm sites, past woods and wetlands, past trees blazing orange and those still green.

This farm site sits along Leroy Avenue, just off 160th St. W. between Shieldsville and Kilkenny. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)

As we wound our way along winding roads and along straight grids west of Faribault, I felt what I always feel this time of year—a longing for the land. In this season of harvest, this season of leaves coloring the landscape, I yearn to connect with the soil, the earth, the agrarian heritage that roots me.

Corn awaits harvesting. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)

I miss the land. I miss the roar of combines harvesting corn and soybeans, golden grain spilling into wagons or trucks. I miss the distinct, indescribable scent of autumn rising from fields. I miss all of it. A country drive in October helps ease the heartache of one who grew up on a farm, but left it fifty years ago.

This curving gravel road took us past wooded hillsides and a wetlands restoration area. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)

This is the time of year, whether you’re rural, small town or city-raised, to take a drive into the countryside. Off paved roads. Onto gravel routes.

Some treelines were vivid with color, others not. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)
I am always drawn to barns rising above the landscape. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)
A rural intersection ablaze in color. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)

Gravel forces a slower pace, offers opportunities to stop and appreciate that which unfolds before you. On this drive, it was the coloring of trees, just beginning, aged farm sites back-dropped by woods or surrounded by fields. Just being here in the rural-ness honored my past, filled my soul.

A Czech church and cemetery west of Montgomery. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)

And then we paused at an historic country church nestled among cornfields near Montgomery. We walked the expansive cemetery. As I meandered and took photos, I heard the wind rustling the dried corn leaves, a comforting sound in the silence of the land.

Anna and John Frolik are among the early settlers buried at Budejovice. They were born in 1886 and 1887. Their photos adorn their tombstone. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)

I wondered about the Czech immigrants who settled in the area, built Budejovice Church in 1868. What were their heartaches, their stories, their hopes and dreams? I expect they longed for the Old Country, for the familiarity of home, for the loved ones an ocean away.

This machine shed, surrounded by cornfields, sits just across the gravel road from the church and cemetery. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)

Such thoughts filter through my mind whenever I am among the souls of the departed, my soles touching the land under which they lie buried. I don’t feel sadness as much as a sense of respect for those who came before me, who forged a new life in Minnesota with grit, determination and a whole lot of fortitude.

Cornfields flank a gravel road leading to a colorful treeline. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2024)

Driving the countryside in autumn evokes not only nostalgia and reflection, but also a sense of time passing. Leaves turn color. Crops morph to golden hues, ready for harvest, or already harvested. And dust rises from the land, carried on the wind, coating our van. Miles and miles and miles of gravel roads behind us, we arrive home. I’m exhausted. My shoes are covered in dust. But I feel content. Replenished. I needed this, this country drive that was about much more than viewing fall colors. It was also about filling my soul.

© Copyright 2024 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

 

12 Responses to “Driving through the southern Minnesota countryside on an autumn day”

  1. Ruth's avatar Ruth Says:

    What a masterful telling of longing to return to your farming roots, Audrey. My father (who grew up on farm in an Illinois) always said that people not knowing the earth today was a loss. Walking barefoot, digging in it, planting in it and harvesting its yield- we are removed from it in our world today. Thanks for taking us along on your ride.

  2. kathy hagen's avatar kathy hagen Says:

    Perfectly said. I feel those same longings. Thank you.

  3. Kathy Gwillim's avatar Kathy Gwillim Says:

    Oh so beautiful your drive in the country. I feel like I went along with you and enjoyed the dust of the gravel road and the serene feelings in the cemetery. The colors I do miss in the fall being in central Texas. thank ypu for the drive! and memories. lov kathyg

  4. Douglas Rutt's avatar Douglas Rutt Says:

    Thank you for the photos and the reminiscences. My family on my father’s side settled in the Montgomery and Kilkenny area and many of them still live there. Great to see the autumn trees. it is not quite like that in St. Louis yet.

    • Douglas, I really love the Kilkenny/Montgomery area with its diverse landscape of flat and rolling land. So pretty. The leaves are changing quickly here. We need to do another drive before they’ve all dropped. Enjoy your autumn when it arrives in full glory.

  5. vbollinger's avatar vbollinger Says:

    I agree. A drive in the country refreshes the soul, anytime, but especially in the fall. Looks like you had a lovely day.

  6. What beautiful pictures from your drive through farm country. It makes me want to go for a long drive and take pictures too. It sure has been beautiful even with the wind.


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