90-year-old man and his mower care for small-town cemetery

251 MANS HAVE DONE DECIES TO beautify the LOCAL Cemetery. YOUR FAMILY HOPES YOUR SIMPLE BUT CONTINUOUS COMMITMENT TO THE COMMUNITY THAT WE ARE NEVER OVER OR OLD TO GIVE AGAIN. KETV NEWSLETTER JOEY SAFCHIK’S SEVEN HAS THIS NEW STORY FROM SHELBY COUNTY. IT CAN BE LIKE A STUNNING PLACE TO CHOOSE TO SPEND THE AFTER YEARS OF YOUR LIFE. I WILL BE 91 AGES IN ABOUT ONE MONTH, BUT BILL AARON HOLTZ SPEAKES MY OWN TIME TO PUT THE TREE AND CARE OF THIS Cemetery. WE WANT IT BEAUTIFUL. I guess that’s why we started taking care of it 30 years ago. BILL, YOUR LOUISE DRAW AND YOUR CHILDREN TREAT THE DOORS. NOW WE MUST FIND WHERE WE ARE GOING AND THE MOON TO Glorify the MISSED MOTHERS. IT DOES A LOT OF WORK WITHOUT GETTING ANY ATTENTION. YOU DON’T REALLY RECEIVE MANY THANKS FOR CUTTING THE cemeteries, BUT IT IS MORE THAN HOUSEHOLD. THAT’S FAMILY HISTORY. OUR PARENTS, Grandparents, FAIRY, FRIENDS, Grandparents, Grandfathers and Uncles are burying here. JUST MEMORIES. YEAH, THAT IS JUST A PART OF OUR FAMILY. Away from Haunting. THIS POVERTY AREA CELEBRATES LIVES. WE ALL WERE HERE AS CHILDREN, AND THEN OUR KIDS COME IN CELEBRATION OF PEOPLE WHO HAVE COME TO VISIT US. THE ROCK OF THE MOTHER AND GROSS CAN. AND THEN THE STORY STARTS. YES. AND YOU SHARE THINGS THAT YOU MISS ABOUT YOUR granny and grandpa. THEY HOPE THAT HIS SIMPLE WORTH Elevates OUR MORTH. NO PROBLEM IN OUR LIFE, I THINK A SMALL MEANING IN THE CENTER NOW IS A UNIQUE TYPE. AND. AND IT IS SURPRISE. A MAN AND HIS CUTTING MACHINE. YES. DO YOU THINK YOU WILL STOP AT ANY TIME? NO, NO, NOT A CUTTING MACHINE. CUT THIS SECRETS OF HEAVEN ON EARTH TO Glorify BEYO PEOPLE
90 year old man and his lawn mower tending to small town cemetery
It may seem like an odd place to choose to spend the last years of his life, but 90-year-old Bill Ahrenholtz spends his spare time mowing lawns and manicures for Union Town Cemetery in Defiance, Iowa, where has a very small population of only 250 people. “We wanted it to look good. I guess that’s why we started taking care of it about 30 years ago,” says Ahrenholtz. He, along with his wife and children, weeded and planted a flag in memory of the fallen members of this organization. army. Paulette Rasmussen, Bill’s daughter, says: “He does a lot of things without getting noticed or getting anything — you don’t really get a lot of thanks for mowing the cemetery lawn. Cemetery maintenance is more than just a family business; It’s family history. “Our parents, grandparents, great-grandfathers, friends, aunts and uncles are buried here,” Ahrenholtz said. Unhaunted, the cemetery honors the living, a Memorial Day destination that also remembers those who have passed away. “We came here when we were kids, and then our kids came,” said Nancy Kloewer, Bill’s daughter. “We’ll visit a stone that could have been grandpa and grandma, and then the stories begin. And you’ll share what you remember about your grandpa and grandma.” A man and his lawn mower, cut a small piece of heaven on Earth, in honor of those beyond. “I think a small cemetery in the middle of nowhere is a unique and surprising thing,” says Ahrenholtz.
It may seem like an odd place to choose to spend the last years of his life, but 90-year-old Bill Ahrenholtz spends his spare time mowing lawns and manicures for Union Town Cemetery in Defiance, Iowa, where has a very small population of only 250 people.
“We wanted it to look good. I guess that’s why we started taking care of it about 30 years ago,” says Ahrenholtz. He, along with his wife and children, weeded and planted a flag in memory of the fallen members of this organization. army.
Paulette Rasmussen, Bill’s daughter, says: “He does a lot of things without getting noticed or getting anything — you don’t really get a lot of thanks for mowing the cemetery lawn.
Cemetery maintenance is more than just a family business; It’s family history.
“Our parents, grandparents, great-grandfathers, friends, aunts and uncles are buried here,” Ahrenholtz said.
Unhaunted, the cemetery honors the living, a Memorial Day destination that also remembers the dead.
Nancy Kloewer, Bill’s daughter, said: “We came here as children, and then our kids came too. “We’ll visit a stone that might have belonged to a grandpa and grandma, and then the stories begin. And you’ll share what you remember about your grandpa and grandma.”
The family hoped Bill’s simple generosity would lift the spirits of all of us, no matter where we were going in life. A man and his lawn mower, cut a small piece of heaven on Earth, in honor of those beyond.
“I think a small cemetery in the middle of nowhere is a unique and surprising thing,” says Ahrenholtz.