Gwen Stefani Calls Hubby Blake Shelton a "Dummy" After His Farm Update: "Onions!"
The former Voice Coach loves his farm life.
Blake Shelton is living his best life… planting onions.
In a February 23 Instagram video giving fans another inside look at what life on an Oklahoma farm is like, the former Voice Coach couldn't hide his excitement as he revealed to the world that it's finally time to plant some onions! Shelton really gave fans everything they could want in his farm update. He sang an impromptu song, relayed an old — and vulgar — saying his mom loved, and even showed off his gigantic orange Kubota tractor.
It was a big day in the life of the country music superstar, and we can't get over how genuinely happy Shelton is in the video!
"It's always EXACTLY the right time to use the KUBOTA for something…." Shelton said in a caption.
His fans couldn't get enough, with many running to the comments section asking Shelton to record an entire song about his love of planting onions. And let's be honest, with lyrics like these, why isn't Shelton running to his recording studio as soon as possible?
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I woke up this morning, and I flushed a big floater / And now I'm planting onions on my orange Kubota
The video was delightfully dorky (in the best way), and Shelton's wife, Gwen Stefani, couldn't help but chime in and give her two cents in the comments.
"Dummy 😂," Stefani wrote.
Don't worry; there's a lot of love behind that "dummy."
(And we'll see who's laughing last when Shelton inexplicably makes "Onions" into a Billboard Hot 100 crossover hit!)
Gwen Stefani says she's not "really a dirt person" in regards to farm life
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Believe it or not, Stefani — despite her online commenting objections — has taken a liking to Shelton's farm-centric lifestyle! In a 2023 PEOPLE interview, Stefani talked about how she's adjusted to appreciate spending time with Shelton on his Oklahoma ranch.
"I am not really a dirt person, a bug person, I don't like that much humidity," she confessed. "But you sort of get over it all because it's so beautiful [in Oklahoma], and you kind of feel like you're going into this vortex and it's just different here — I guess it's just nature, and God, is all right there."
Although there was an adjustment period, Stefani couldn't imagine her life being any different.
"When I was young, I'd walk home from school and see my mom in her shorts doing her gardening, and my dad would be cutting the trees and make me pick up the branches," she explained. "I'd be like, 'I'm never having a tree at my house.' It's just a different kind of work. It's probably what my mom was doing back in the day, and now I get it."