Silos Full of Opportunity

by DanWolgemuth on August 15, 2025

In just a couple of hours, a small apartment living room became a sanctuary. My 94-year-old aunt, Lois Dourte, shared vivid, heartfelt stories from her teenage years and early marriage to my Uncle Vic. She stacked stones of remembrance, and the rest of us listened in awe, soaking in the grit and warmth of this remarkable woman.

At one point, I tugged on a storyline about my uncle’s unexpected venture into financial planning—specifically, how he became a stockbroker. It wasn’t the career path he’d initially studied for.

A friend from Vic’s local church had encouraged him to pursue it, convinced it would be a good fit. But there was a problem: when Vic committed, his friend already had all the potential clients on his own rolodex. The first few years were lean and difficult.

Then Vic’s strategy changed. His office might have been in the Twin Cities, but his clients didn’t have to be. He set aside the phone for cold calls and instead used his car, a map, and a keen eye for opportunity.

He drove quiet two-lane roads through Minnesota’s farming communities, watching for farms with multiple silos beside the barn—a sign, to Vic, of agricultural success and potential investable assets. Instead of dialing strangers, he knocked on their front doors.

I wish I could have seen it myself: Vic’s determination, his masterful salesmanship, the way he earned the trust of hardworking families. That trust was rewarded through his wise and diligent investments.

Lois told the story with joy and gratitude. She had been his companion, his advocate, his confidence booster in those uncertain years. She invested her love and support—and Vic found more silos.

He turned roadblocks into detours, rerouting his path toward success. Over the decades, he stewarded those relationships well. What began as a cold call became lifelong partnerships.

Vic had grown up around silos in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. He knew the work it took to fill one, and that shaped his deep commitment to honor the trust placed in him.

This was the first time I’d heard the full story. I knew Vic was a successful stockbroker, but I didn’t know it began with his ability to see what others simply drove past—including me.

Silos.

Behind every silo, a story. A farmer. A family. Waiting for someone to notice. For someone to care. For someone to stop. For someone to knock. For someone to listen. And yes—for someone to build a portfolio of trust.

Feeling stuck? At a roadblock? Out of prospects? Discouraged?

Don’t look for paychecks. Look for silos.

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In Season and Out

by DanWolgemuth on August 8, 2025

Palisade peaches.
Rocky Ford cantaloupe.
Olathe sweet corn.

Summertime! For four to six weeks each year, something special happens at our local grocery store: Colorado peaches, melons, and corn.

By late July, the anticipation crescendos—and suddenly, the reality is here. Stacked on display. For sale. Ready to savor.

I grew up eating all three of these summertime treasures, but there’s something extraordinary about the ones grown in Colorado’s mountain valleys.

So we wait—until we don’t have to anymore. And like this morning, when a bite of peach hit my palate, I’m reminded: this is how a peach was meant to taste. Maybe even in Eden.

Fruit.
The byproduct of so many unseen but vital ingredients.
Climate. Soil. Cultivation. Care.
All of it contributes to a bite worth waiting for.

The Apostle Paul understood something about fruit. In fact, something not unlike what Colorado farmers know. When I look at Paul’s list of fruit—produced by the Holy Spirit—I’m struck by how beautiful and powerful and telling the catalog of character fruit is:

“But the Holy Spirit produces this kind of fruit in our lives:
love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. There is no law against these things!” (Galatians 5:22, NLT)

As I read this, I’m encouraged by the richness and depth of what God can cultivate in me. But I also see rare fruit—fruit I can’t help but believe that “shoppers for hope and purpose and meaning” are still searching for.

Kindness.
Gentleness.
Goodness.
Self-control.

Yes, love, joy, peace, patience, and faithfulness are essential—but maybe they get more attention and acclaim, while these four often go unnoticed or undervalued or misunderstood.

Take kindness, for instance. How would this sound?

“Vote for Dan Wolgemuth—he’s the kind candidate!”

Or imagine a heated debate over an important issue. What if the person on the other side said:

“I don’t share Dan’s beliefs, but I have to admit—he was gentle in how he made his case.”

Too often, kindness, gentleness, goodness, and self-control are mistaken for weakness—a soft spine or a fading resolve.

But the truth?

Kind people are brave.
Good people are courageous.
Gentle people are confident.
Self-control is a sign of grit.

The world is waiting.
Harvest time is here.
And the fruit will tell the story—one way or another.

It’s time for Christians to become what God designed us to be:

Fruitful.

Love. Joy. Peace. Patience.
Kindness. Goodness. Faithfulness.
Gentleness. Self-control.
All of them. All the time. In season and out. 

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