Sunday, December 14, 2008

The Most Satisfying of All Cookies!


This is undoubtedly my most very favorite cookie!
It is sweet, it is salty, it's texture is perfect, and....it's Chocolate!

Chocolate Thumbprints

1 cup of sugar
1 cup of confectioners sugar
6 sticks of butter
8 cups of flour
Sprinkles
Fudge Icing (I use pre-made)

Cut butter into pats
Mix sugars
Cut butter into the sugars
Mix in flour until batter holds shape.
The only way to really do this is by hand as I have KILLED 6 food processors trying to make it easier.

Take a big handful of dough, roll it into a ball.
Roll into cylindrical shape about 6-8 inches long.
Roll log into a plate (oval platters work best) of sprinkles and press firmly so that they stick.
Cut log into 1/2 - 3/4 in slices (I like mine thick)
Place cut pieces onto a parchment lined cookie sheet about 1 inch apart and stick your thumb in each cookie to make a nice indentation.
Bake for 45 to 1 hour on 275
Cool completely!
Fill pastry bag with fudge icing and liberally fill in your thumbprint with a nice swirl of icing.
Let set completly before storing, as fudge will become firm and store and ship very nicely if left overnight uncovered.

You will have dozens of cookies that you can give as gifts and will become a family favorite!

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Being Sick Really Sucks


You know last week I wrote how sorry I was was that I wasn't keeping up to date my blog and I that I would get back into the swing of things.

So Much for that Intention....it's almost as bad as me not going to church for six months.

Earlier this week, my daughter and I started preparing to make Christmas cookies.
It took us nearly a day to procure all of the ingredients, but by the time we finally did, we were beat.
I then became ill, and she ended up doing most of them alone, and she did a beautiful job I might add, all with tips and advise from me from my room.

I promise that I will take pictures of the delectable creations and provided recipes for anyone interested.

They turned out really beautiful, and I am very proud of her for going through with this huge project and getting so many done.

I'll keep you posted

Monday, December 1, 2008

It's Been a Long Long Time...


I just couldn't get it together. The fam and I went away on a working vacation to Wyoming in September and were gone for the entire month.
Wyoming is a place that I could stay forever.
It is the Wild West alive and well. The mountains are so incredibly large and majestic that cause one to pause to just take it in. Just going to the grocery store can be a majic moment. especially, when a group of hangliders were cruizing over the parking lot of the store heading to their landing field.
It is so busy with interesting things that people engage in. People walk a lot, or they ride a bicycle, and in the winter, they cross country ski, every where they go that they go on their bikes in the summer they ski to in the winter.
There is a buzz of energy there, that inspires one to take part in all of the outdoor activities.

The sky is almost always blue, and when there are clouds they are large and volumonous, but the sky is so much larger than the sky that we se here, as we just can't see it all. With such low elevation, one doesn't get the sense of openeness that one gets in the mountains and on the plains.

The town where we stayed has a beautiful community center that boasts a 12 lane Olympic size pool that is also equipped with the diving platforms and low and high diving boards. They also have a water park inside as well it has 8 different slides and play areas for all ages including adults.
The Community Center also has a sauna and steam room, full gymnasium for all gym sports, a couple of racket ball and squash courts, and a full weight room and palates room.
Why am I telling you this? Because I was stunned when my son wanted to go and I took him in to get him signed up. I asked how much it would be for him to hang out in the pool and use the diving boards and water park and play in the gym if he wanted.
The Grand total.....$2.00 per day for out of towners! $12. per year per person if you ar a resident!
This is absolutely unreal. The place is beautifully kept, it is open every day all day long and close at 9 every evening.
We were staying about 1 mile from the center and with town being so pedestrian and bicycle friendly I allowed the 9 year old to ride his bike to and from the the Communtiy Center. Usually, his ride home pushed him over the edge as he played hard all day long that he didn't have much energy to attack the hill that our home was on. But he insisited on riding the bike and getting home on his own. He really enjoyed the leverage we gave him there, and liked his independance. He met some skate kids and they taught him how to skate hills. He also hooked up with some kids who are on the swim team and we hung out with them and he did the things that they did to train.
It was a beautiful time. In a place where I feel a huge sense of personal safety, and excitement to do more.

I would like to go back and make a home there. At lease a part time home.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Something Beautiful Emerges


I often ask myself 'How can anyone every question the realness of God'?
Everywhere I look; especially during the spring and the summer, I see his work at every turn! The other day, God was busy on my back porch bringing forth a new butterly from it's pupa.
The chrysalis must have been there for quite some time and I hadn't paid any attention to it. But then the other day when I witnessed the emergence of this beautiful creature, it brightened my day. It gave me assurance, that God was near, and hsi handiwork was so beautiful I found myself smiling outwardly.
It reminded me I need to slow down and look at all of the things that I am surrounded by. Even my old beatup Hoosier Cabinet, on your back porch that's just there.
Check it out you never know what you'll find!

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch

Sorry for not having made any updates in sooo long, but I have been a little preoccupied. So much so I couldn't even come up with anything to write.
You know your tired when your just brain dead before you go to bed.

Billy and I have a big auction in Jackson Hole, Wyoming in September, and we are sponsors of the Jackson Hole Fall Arts Festival. This sponsorship requires us to place banners promoting the event, while also being able to plug our event, in front of 36 participating Art Galleries in Jackson Hole.
Previous sponsors had silk screened duck cloth banners mass produced and hung, but the galleries nor the chamber really liked them. I decided I would go with something completely different. Cow Hide! Billy found an Auctioneer in the Midwest that was liquidating a gun holster factory, and we bought 37 of them. I am using the entire shoulder (which ways close to 20lbs). I designed several stencils and had them made and have spent the last week in production.
For those of you who have never been to Jackson, it is about 30 miles south of Yellowstone and the entire town has an 'Old West' theme that is carried continuously in everything. All buildings are either brick or log, the sidewalks are wood plank and the town square has four Elk Antler Arches surrounding the square. With this in mind I wanted to create a truly unique piece that would fit with surroundings but also last for years to come.
So here's my design, and this is what I have been doing. Thirty six of them! All by hand individually made with the extra added touch of a little gold leafing.
At this point I don't know whether I will be able to blog again, as my hand are sooo stiff, I can barely type.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Musical Revue at The Marva!

Don't Miss:

August 15, 16, & 17th: MUSICAL REVUE

A benefit performance, presented by The Community Players of Salisbury and directed by Lisa Robbins Moore. An all youth chorus featuring 30 musical numbers and skits of the 1950s era. The program will include a silent auction before and after the show and home made desserts will be sold during the intermission.

Tickets: $15, $12 Students & Seniors- available at the door or : Pocomoke City Hall and Chamber of Commerce, Country Blossoms and T's Corner in VA,
Performance schedule: Friday the 15th, Saturday, 16th at 8:00 PM Sunday matinee at 2:00 PM.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Life Go's On...

Wow, what a hectic few days! Sorry for no updates.
The cukes are pickled,
The honey is almost all put in jars
The puppy is now suffering from my neurotic obsession with fleas,
The grapes have been weeded,
The marketing letter is written,
The 9 year old has finished Vacation Bible School,
The hedge is trimmed,
The fish tank is clean, and
my hair is blond. Too Blond for my taste, and I'm going for a touch up in the morning.
My mother had a saying... 'You can never be too rich, too thin, or too blond' but I'm thinking I can be too blond. I spent the entire day in the hairdressers chair yesterday. I just wanted to have my color touched up, but I waited far to long. My stylist thought it was soo beyond that she would cover my entire head in bleach, then paint in dark streaks. Didn't work out.
She has been doing my hair for almost 20 years and hasn't screwed it up, so I am definitely going to give her grace. She blew it dry and painted in more dark. Didn't work.
Maybe it's me; but it just looks too blond. I will be in the chair again tomorrow morning to add more brown and hopefully when I'm done I will look like my naturally blond self.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

The Pickles are Pickling!

Yesterday I sliced up all of the cukes and put them in a large pot and started the pickling process.
I mixed the lime in the water, and dumped in the cukes.
They will be ready to be rinsed shortly.
If you are going to use this recipe be sure to rinse the cukes really really well. I suggest rinsing and dumping the fresh water at least 3 times and then filling the pot back up once more for the final soak.
The lime is so strong, that after handling it yesterday my hands are extremely smooth as it removed the top layer of skin on my palms.
Hmm, maybe I could work on a 'Summer Feet' foot soak. Mine feel like leather by this time of year between barefoot gardening and going to the beach, I need some emergency moisturizing.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Pickle Rescue


Thanks to my neighbor who knows how to grow cucumbers, I will be able to make my Grandmothers Sweet Lime Pickles this summer. After much lesson learning on how not to grow a cucumber, and Hubby throwing the Death Blow to my last remaining plant, I had nearly given up. But I was rescued yesterday when my neighbor met me in Southern Maryland with a case of cuc's that he successfully grew.

I'm going to get the lime today and start the pickles tomorrow.
Thanks Neighbor!
Here's Gran's recipe, it super simple and simply delicious...Enjoy!


Gran's Sweet Lime Pickles Recipe

2 c. hydrated lime
2 gallons water
7 lb. sliced cucumbers, 1/4 inch thick
4 1/2 lb. sugar
1 1/2 tbsp. salt
1 1/2 qt. cider vinegar
2-3 cinnamon sticks
1 tsp. whole cloves
1 tsp. pickling spice

Mix and stir lime in water. Add cucumbers and let soak for 24 hours. Stir often. Drain. Wash well in clear cold water. Soak 3 hours in clear water and drain.

Make syrup with sugar, salt, vinegar, cinnamon, cloves, and pickling spice. (Take bay leaves and red peppers out of pickling spice.) Add green food coloring (1 drop). Put cucumbers in syrup and let stand overnight. The next morning, put on stove and bring to a boil for 40 minutes. Put in hot jars and seal.

Friday, August 1, 2008

The Dog Days of Summer


Seems like just yesterday we were eagerly anticipating the coming summer. We were getting our seeds started on our window sills, and we just couldn't wait to get outside and feel the warm sunshine.
Not anymore!
The last few days have been stiflingly hot. With the humidity at 100% it's impossible to stay dry and functional unless your inside in the air conditioning.
I know, I know, quit complaining, but it's really hot.
I have plans of taking the decimated corn patch and transplanting the pathetic pepper plants into the area as it has more sun than where they are presently, but the heat is taking away my enthusiasm.
Heat makes me cranky too.
The other night one of my sunflowers was listing and I had been propping it up with a broken shovel, but I wasn't able to get the shovel deep enough into the ground so the plant wasn't pushing the shovel over too. I asked Hubby for some help, and he sweetly said that he would.
He took the shovel out of my hands and dug it deep into the ground, I was sooo happy. However, the bottom of the shovel was not visible to me through the leaves of the sunflower. I lifted them up to see how deep it was then I discovered that not only had he propped my sunflower but he had also severed the main stem of my ONLY producing cucumber! I snapped!
I had 4 cukes on the vine now the vine is dead.
Cukes have been the hardest thing that I have had to deal with this growing season. I started some from seed in the garden and just as they were coming up we had day after day of rain and they washed away. I did this twice. Then the fellow gardeners bought some that were in cups which I transplanted and they died ( they hate to be transplanted). Then a neighbor gave me another two cups of the cuke plants. I placed these in a little nursery bed right next to the back porch and it was here that one of them was thriving. One little plant that was going to town making cucumbers. Maybe I'm taking this far to seriously...but you know a lot of time goes into this stuff.
Anyway, my part time neighbor stopped by after I was done screaming at poor hubby and he heard my tale.
He sent me an email when he got back to his full time home, and said that he was overrun with cukes and that he would meet me at the auction we are having this weekend on the other side of the Bay and give them to me. He knew I really wanted to make some pickles so he took pity on my circumstances. Thanks Neighbor!

Monday, July 28, 2008

So Much for the Sweet Corn!

As you may have read a couple of weeks ago, I broke down and got a puppy. As you also know I am trying to grow a garden. The two don't necessarily go hand in hand.

The other day after being down at my grandddads I came home and as ususal upon arrival home I give the garden a once over to see how it is doing. But what do I find in the corn???

The Puppy of coarse and he was laying amongst a pile of torn down corn plants from the 4 rows that we had growing. My yard has tons of trees and there were corn stalks everywhere.
I screamed at the dog, I screamed at my kd, I screamed at my darling hubby. Neighbors came by to see what I was screaming about and I told them all that the dog was damned and for them to look at the terrible damage he had done.

Just at that point out of the corner of my eye I noticed something flutterng in one of my tall pines trees...it was a corn stalk!

How did the corn stalk get in the tree? Those very bad Squirrels did it! The squirrel town that lives in the parrell universe next to ours had crossed over into our realm and stolen the corn.

Poor Gunner. Poor Child. Poor Hubby. I had been so nasty to them about letting the Gunner get into the corn, and all along it was the squirrels. I couldn't believe it!

I went inside to get the camera so I could take a picture of the corn stalk in the pine tree. It took me as few minutes as I got waylay ed with my obsessive compulsive behavior. When I got back outside about 10 minutes later, the corn stalk was GONE!

They had taken the evidence so now I cannot even show you what these monsters did.

I will be borrowing the tiller from himself and transplanting some peppers that I have in spot that is a little too shady and they will be nice late peppers.

I'm also going to sow some collards and more onions, and possibly some turnips and rutabagas.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Granddad is Home from the Hospital


The prognosis isn't good. His will is strong and his spirit even stronger. I don't know how he will deal with this.
He has had 100% clogging of his curated artery for over 20 years and they told him years ago that he wouldn't last long.
He is going to have to take a lot more meds to keep the fluid from building up, and he's gotta keep lots of water in him to keep his kidneys working.
His biggest fear was kidney failure, and now the docs are saying that is what is eventually will happen.
He's always said that he was gonna die with his boots on, and I have always believed him.
My Aunt doesn't live here and doesnt' see him like I do.
If he can he's gonna get up and do what he wants, or he will just roll over and die.
I won't know until I see him tomorrow.
Hopefully the kids will be able to come as well, if not we will still bring the puppy.
He loves Beagles, and Gunner is so sweet he will cuddle right up with him.
To all of you Readers who are Believers; Please send up a few for my Granddad. He's been through soooo much, and while I might not be ready for him to go, I certainly don't want him to be ready yet either, I want him to put his boots back on for a long time.

Monday, July 21, 2008

The Harvest is Coming In!



After being busy with the bees last week I wasn't paying as much attention to the garden that I had in previous days. When my neighbor arrived home he said "Steph, your not watching your tomatoes the way I am" (He has been watching very closely waiting for a ripe tomatoe to sink his teeth into since his garden drowned in early spring). I grabbed my old wash pan and went out into the garden to check it out.
To my amazement not only did I have tomatoes, but also eggplant, onions and ton's of basil!
I planted two different varieties of eggplant a Chinese white, and a regular purple both of which have turned out beautifully.

I'm so excited with the harvest thus far with the small kitchen garden. The garden in the back however isn't making me so proud. My corn is only about chest high with tiny cobs, my cucs and zuc's have tons of blooms but no veggies yet. Then the peppers! Oh, I'm beside myself with my peppers. All of the hot peppers are going great, yet I have not had one single sweet pepper. I do as of this afternoon have a tiny little sweet pepper about as big as a marble on one plant, so it doesn't look like were going to have many stuffed peppers to eat.

Anyway, I will be grateful for what has come to fruition, and thought I would share the pictures of the garden and the harvest with you.

I can't wait to see the results of the artichoke plants!

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Happy Bittersweet Birthday Granddaddy


Today certainly didn't turn out the way I had pictured it.
I got a call from my Aunt who is visiting my Granddad from Florida this week and she said that Grandaddy had gone to the hospital earlier in the morning for congestive heart failure.
I'm so beside myself. She gave me his number and I called him.
He sounded in really good spirits. He even sounded better than the last time I spoke with him.
I told him this was a heck of a way to spend his birthday and I wasn't going to be able to make fried chicken as I had planned but we bring him a cake and celebrate anyway.
I was sooo proud of all my kids, each of them came to see him and we had a wonderful visit. My Aunt was their, with her granddaughter and we spent a few hours with him just being silly and telling old stories.
I picked up a bouquet of flowers for him, Billy and the kids got cards and we stopped at Food Lion and got a cake. The cake decorating person wasn't there and I had to write Happy Birthday on the cake myself.
He was really surprised to see us all and I think everyone was relieved to see him in such good spirits.
I'm not ready to lose him. I need him too much in my life, and I don't want to go through yet anohter grieving process. I'm scared for him and the things he has to deal with. I wish he would be honest in his communcations with the ones he loves and not let them think that they are getting over on him. It saddens me to think that he looks death in the eye everyday yet hee continues to allow things that make him nuts to continue.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

It's Birthday Month!

Yours truly celebrated my birthday with my family at Seacrets on the 17th. I'm getting old, and not liking it one bit.
It was my daughters suggestion to go to Seacrets as she was already in OC for the day. She promptly encouraged me to imbibe in their signature drink the 'Pain in the Ass' which is a Frozen concoction of Pina Colada layered on a frozen Rum Runner with a Myers Rum floater on top.
After two I couldn't feel the sunburn that I had incurred the day before.
Number 1 Son wasn't able to join us in the celebration as he was working and running around the nightclub keeping the club sounding great. He did stop by the table several times, but it wasn't the same.
We met there at about 5:30 and the 9 year old was having a great time exploring the grounds, although because of the state laws he wasn't allowed to go into the water or on the dock.

July is a big month in our home as Number 1 and my daughter were born 10 and 1/2 months apart. My son was born on July 29 of 85 and my daughter was born on July 9th of 86. Subsequently, they are the same age for 20 days every year. Funny thing is as much as they don't get along on a day to day basis they have become very very close over the last couple of years and it is a wonderful thing to see the love that they have for each other and for the nine year old.

I was out boating today with Himself and Himself's Herself on Himselfs new boat, when I received a call from my daughter telling me she was dropping by but wouldn't be able to stay long. I told her I probably would miss her as we were going to be a couple of hours. When I got home my dining room table was covered with presents. She bought me the most beautiful things. This from the daughter who we have always bought the presents and put her name on the tags for her family. Kids never cease to amaze me. She knows me so well as she bought me things that I would definitely buy for myself.

Tomorrow is my Grandfathers Birthday. We will be going to visit and make him dinner and a cake, and spend time with him. He is so independent, and so strong willed. He doesn't want or need anything, just time well spent with those he loves and those who love him. He will be 94 and he is absolutely amazing. I want to be like him when I grow up!

Sorry I haven't posted any pictures, my husband has had custody of the camera for the last few days, but I have lots to share.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Honey Day Was Huge Success!


Out of 3 honey boxes with 9 honey frames each (not all had honey) I was able to harvest 5 gallons of honey from the one established hive!

This great news, as last year I only got about a gallon from the same hive.

I didn't rob the new colony as I am letting them get established and let the Queen lay lots of worker brood to collect honey for the hive.

Remember every third bite that you eat comes from a Bee.

If you can and are interested in beekeeping please go buy the equipment and establish a hive.
If you care about your fellow man and yourself and your ability to continue to eat but don't want to personally keep bees; then sponsor a beekeeper.

Two Years ago 50% of the Honey Bee's Worldwide Dissapeared. Last year they are estimating about a 30% loss.

Each and every one of us has to do something to find a way to save the Bees, so please support your local beekeeper.

You can even buy a hive and give it to a beekeeper, they will take care of the bees and work them, and then they will give you 1/2 of the honey from it as an incentive to help.

Albert Einstein said that if the Bees ever dissapeared, mankind would only have approximately 5 years left.

Do your part!
Don't buy hybrid flowers and vegetables.
Don't use pesticides.
Plant lots of Sunflowers and open pollinated vegetables and fruits and let the clover spread through your lawn!
All of this will feed the bee's

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Robbing The Bees In The Morning


I talked to Karole today and she is getting the honey room ready for us for the morning.
I have 3 honey boxes that are brimming. The last time I had that many I had nearly 100 pounds of honey! I'm sooooo excited!
Karole didn't get such a good report as I from Dean. She has three hives with Colony Collapse Disorder.
While we rob honey from her healthy hives, I think that we are going to combine the three sick hives and see if they can get better. Feed them, and cover them in powdered sugar so that the mites won't stick to them as easy.

I'm going make my fabulous chicken taco's and my friend Judy's homemade Pork Tamales.
I spent the afternoon with Judy and her beautiful daughters yesterday.
We haven't seen each other in 30 years, and it was so cool, we just picked up where we left off.
My kids and darling hubby all insisted on coming with, and they all had a good time.
We had crabs and corn on the cob on the deck with entirely tooo much to drink. Later after the crabs wore off Judy pulled out these homemade tamales that she and her daughter Alexandra made, and they were out of this world! They were the best damn tamales I have ever tasted.

So busy busy day tomorow, I'll take pictures and let everyone know how it went.

Good night!

Monday, July 7, 2008

I Think Pack Ratting is an Illness...

Insomnia crept into my bed the other night and I found myself watching 'Clean House- America's Messiest House' at 2 in the morning.

The featured house and owners were absolutely beyond. Their entire lives were wrapped around what they had and not what they did and who they were. As a matter of fact what they had was who they were.

Why, in the name of all that is sane would someone call a TV show that does what they do, and invite them into their lives and home and want a makeover but not really want to change?
These people didn't want to get rid of anything!!
There house was nearly as bad as the womans house I have linked called 'My Mothers House' (Not mine) it was disgraceful.

The saddest part was that all of this stuff kept them from living an even remotely normal life. They just went out and bought more stuff thinking they were going to feel better and it never did.

I really wish they would do follow ups to these shows. I want to see this couple a year from now.
The entire design team were beside themselves because these people were sooo beyond comprehension. It is amazing they were able to do anything with there house at all yet they did a beautiful job! Yet in my heart of hearts, I don't think these two are gonna be able to handle living in a clutter free world. I just know they're gonna junk it up again.

It's funny, I think about why people would do things like this, and I think back on my own life.
When I was a kid and lived with my parents, my dad was a total neat freak. I even had drawer inspections once a week to make sure all my clothes were folded correctly. As an adult; I refuse to fold my underwear and pj's. It's like my little rebellion.
I have found as I get older I like to have less things. I used to have sooooo much stuff, but stuff is work, and I don't want to take care of it. I hate to dust, and clean!

So my solution has been to have as little clutter as possible thus giving the appearance of a neat house but not always clean house.

The good thing about less clutter when you don't like to clean is that when you do get around to cleaning, you have a lot less to move and deal with and it makes it much easier.

I really hope those people were able to get it together

Friday, July 4, 2008

The Almost Finished Mural



As I mentioned last week I rescued a friend who got over her head with a mural she was volunteered into doing. The Mural is on the side of a cinder block garage, that has window and a door on the side of it. Originally the Mural only contained a beach. During one of my dips in the pool to cool off and get a faraway perspective of the painting it was bothering me that there was window floating in the middle of a beach scene.
So being my bossy self, I told Kathy I was going to paint a Tiki Hut around the window. Thank goodness she liked the idea. Actually the homeowner is going to turn part of the garage into a pool house, so if they put a counter under the window both inside and out they could actually use it as a bar window. I hope the homeowner takes the suggestion and puts a couple of stools in front, and make use of it.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

I'm Such a Sucker!!



I did it, I finally did it. I gave in, I said yes, I so totally caved. I was completely manipulated into saying YES!

I told the 9 year old man child he could have a puppy.

His evil manipulative 21 year old sister took him to a friends house who had a mother dog with a litter and took pictures of the 9 year old with this puppy; named the puppy and sent the picture to me saying 'Mommy I need a Puppy'!

Is it wrong to call her a B**ch? In this case, I'm not sure it is.

I have successfully been able to ward off the Puppy agenda, by saying things like..."It's a lot of work", or "What will we do if we have to go away again"? And lots of other assorted reasons and sometimes simply resorting to just NO.

But they worked me over and I finally gave in.

Last night was the night. We went and got the dog. He was finally old enough, had been weaned had shot's and wormed the whole bit.
The creature is 'Cuteness in a Can', it is really adorable, but a feel like such a sucker.

The 9 year old was told that he was completely responsible for this animal. The animal is his and he is to take care of him. He is to read dog training books; take him outside every 15 minutes (because I'm completely neurotic about puppy pee on the floor)

The puppy's name is Gunner, he is a Beagle Terrier mix, with short fat legs and a Beagle face. White hair with brown spots and a squishy wet black nose.

The 9 year old stayed up almost all night with the Pup last night, and this afternoon I found him on the couch snoring, with his hand hanging off of the couch into the puppy's bed with puppy asleep on his hand. He was so exhausted!
He came up to me after dinner and thanked me for letting him have the puppy and also thanked me for saying no until now, because he said it was way to much work for him to do before.

I think we are going to do the crate thing so he can gets some rest. I'll go to Wally World in the morning to get one. We put the puppy monster in a box in the kitchen tonight and he yellped for a little while but finally got over it.

I just can't believe I said yes. I know he will grow up and be house broken and all that good stuff, but I avoided it for so long I almost feel like I had another baby.

Pray for me!

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Painting Murals

Kathy called me frantic saying she wasn't able to get a handle on this mural that Alwyn had kinda talked her into. Being that it was Thursday, it was Farmer Girl Day, I couldn't say no!
The Mural is out by an in the ground pool and we painted the garage wall that faces the pool in a beach scene complete with tiki hut and palm trees.
It was perfect work for the week as the temperatures were high and it was a great reason to bring the 9 year old with me to hang out and swim.

Kathy doesn't like to work around people, her creativity flows when she is alone or with one or two other people, but the first day we were there I think I counted 15 most of them being kids.
The second day was better only Kathy the 9 year old and myself.

We hit a few stubling blocks, but overcame them and the mural actually turned out quite good.

The bad news is that now the 9 year old is really sick with a temp of 102.5 this afternoon and 102.1 tonight. After doses and doses of tylenol, motrin and lots of ginger ale he spent the night puking his guts up.

I'm really hoping he's better tomorrow, and he doesn't get the swimmers ears started, I remember when I was a kid it would start like his is then I'd be a mess a few days and ready to get back in the pool again as soon as I could.

I'll show pictures of the mural when Billy get back from CA, he took the pics before he left but didn't download them for before he left.

Painting big stuff like a mural is sooo much fun. I hope the owners will love it when they get back from vacation.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

My Bee's Are Doing Great!!


Maryland Department of Agriculture Apiary Inspector and Master Beekeeper Dean Burroughs came and inspected my hives yesterday.
My 6 year old colony with a 1 year old queen is brimming with honey and Dean says they are doing great.
As I told you in an earlier story, my other colony which I had kept out at my Granddads in Stockton, had died last year. I didn't want to purchase another colony, I wanted to try to start a hive on my own so this is what I did.

I went into my old hive and looked in the brood boxes and found a frame that had two queen brood sacs attached to it. I took this frame which was also filled with dozens of worker bees and placed it in hive in which the former colony had died. I then took two more brood frames out of the old hive; knocked off the bee's and then placed those frames in the new hive as well.

My hope was that the worker bees would feed and take care of the queen sacs and hatch them, then also take care of the brood that I had transferred over from the other hive as well. And it worked!

This is totally amazing to me. From what I have been told this is very iffy and unreliable, but it worked for me and I am stoked!

Dean recommended I feed them immediately as since they are so young there are not yet enough workers to provide enough food for them all yet and the queen will lay more eggs if there is a consistent food source.

Honey robbing time is quickly approaching. Karole and I usually do it the week after 4th of July.
She has a spinner and I help her with her hives and she lets me spin my honey.

I'll keep you posted on how much honey I get.

For all of you who are interested in seeing the robbing and spinning process, email me and I'll be happy to make arrangements so you can come down and be a part. It is an all day event, that involves eating, laughing, maybe getting stung once or twice and at least one bottle of wine.
If your interested in coming let me know and I let you know whats on the menu and you can bring a side. It will be a blast.
With all of the honey we ingest on this day, I don't know what really gives us the buzz, the wine or the honey!

Monday, June 23, 2008

The Older You Get...


The more involved everything becomes. I had to have a CAT scan earlier this week because I have been experiencing great pain in my abdomen where I had a hernia and surgery to repair it several years ago. Recently the pain has been so bad I went to see the doctor once again, turn out the cat scan didn't show anything and he believes it to be some sort of neuropathology, so he's sending me to some sort of pain manager. What does that mean? Can they fix it or not? I don't want to manage anything else, let alone my side pain.
On another note another doc wanted to do some other things but because of my heart issues I have to have cardiac clearance.
Good grief I have to go to two docs to have who knows how many tests just to see if I am a candidate for such treatment.
I'm coming to believe that getting old really does suck.
Nothing is simple anymore.
Before you go somewhere you have to be sure you have all of your meds, when planning a trip you have to count your meds and possibly order more. These are things that we never thought of when we were young and beautiful and free of such maladies.
Do you think that we get used to being old? I don't want to ... I want to fight it, I'm not ready to be old yet.
My poor Granddad is having such a hard time. He's not feeling good and he is getting injections in his knees that is supposed to re-create cartilage for him. Tomorrow is his last treatment, and so far he says it's not helping.
This year he will be 94, and I am awed by his perseverance, I don't know if I could have gone what he has been through, I'm not even halfway there yet and I'm freakin out.

Friday, June 20, 2008

One of the Best Art Camps Yet!

As I told you earlier in the week the Worcester County Arts Council was holding their annual Arts Camp.
Each year the week after school is out about one dozen Artists of all kinds, and talents come to Berlin Intermediate School for the week to teach our children who have signed up to participate in the program a bit of their craft.
This year we had a Scupture class, Abrstract Painting, Art of the Islands, Drama, Dancing, Printmaking and Bookmaking, Pencil Drawing, Native American Arts, Leathermaking, Jewelery making, Paper Mache, basket weaving and loom Weaving.
Each child participates in three sessions per day where they work on one or several projects they have chosen in each craft.
This years work was a stunning, as we had so many talented children to work and share with.
On Friday the final day of camp we usually have the children who participated in drama and dance camps do a performance for all of the campers and their parents. We did this again this year, with the added bonus of a wonderful musical group that is from the US but have traveled and lived all over the world studying music and different cultures musical instruments all of which they brought with them today to share with us.
The Group goes by the name of Nada Bhrama (don't know what it means) and they performed great interactive musical numbers utilizing all of these strange instruments from alll over the world and getting our kids to play with them and actually sound good.
Needless to say every child and every adult had a great time with Nada Bhrama as our grand finale they were truly exceptional.
So don't forget next year when this time rolls around again, I have a link on this site to the WCAC, and get your kids enrolled in a great time!
You can also become a member of the Arts Council and when you do you will be included on our mailing list of featured artists who will be on display at the Galleries in Snow Hill and Berlin it is a wonderful organization and one that you can be proud of being a part of .

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Fried Green Tomatoes


My absolute favorite summer treat...Fried Green Tomatoes!

If you have never had this Southern Delicacy; you absolutely must try it.

Super Simple to make, and delicious enough to make you talk to yourself.

I pick the larger of the tomatoes that I have to fry as you get more for your efforts.

Slice the tomatoes between a 1/4 and & 1/2 inch thick and set aside and sprinkle with a little bit of Sea Salt
Prepare two large shallow bowls:
1 with a couple of eggs lightly beaten and
2 Italian Bread Crumbs

Preheat a skillet with the bottom covered in olive oil

Using a fork (or else your hands will be a mess) dredge a tomato into the egg, and then into the bread crumbs, liberally coating both sides.
Place in the hot oil.
You can get about 5 or 6 going at the same time and let them cook for about 3 to 4 minutes on each side before turning (if you don't you will loose your coating). Once turned cook another 3 to 4 minutes until dark brown, not burned, but close.

Remove from pan and place on platter lined with paper towels. Make a tower of them, as they will be the most popular dish on the table that evening.

I always have to cook twice what I am expecting as I can't keep them on the platter, so now I put the platter in the oven on 'warm' that way passersby don't see them and can't get as easily.

You may need a little more salt and some black pepper, and you want to add this right after you pull them out of the pan.

Sometimes, I sprinkle Parm on them.

These are great served with any summer meal that your making. Sometimes I make them a meal all in themselves with some watermelon for dessert.

This is a must try!!

Monday, June 16, 2008

First Day of Arts Camp

I'm writing this as I'm riding the bus to Berlin Intermediate School. Today is the first day of Arts Camp, sponsored by the Worcester County Arts Council.
This year we have 18 kids attending from Pocomoke and Snow Hill. Almost double what we had last year.

Grayson is really excited about his pottery class that he has signed up for, and also his cartooning class.

I'll be sure to take lots of pictures, and keep you posted as the week progresses.

Happy Day Everyone!

Friday, June 13, 2008

From My Friend Who Can't Have Enough of Them...Dogs


If I Didn't Have a Dog
I could walk around the yard barefoot in safety.
My house could be carpeted instead of tiled and laminated.
All flat surfaces, clothing, furniture, and cars would be free of hair.
When the doorbell rings, it wouldn't sound like a kennel
.
When the doorbell rings, I could get to the door without wading through fuzzy bodies who beat me there.
I could sit on the couch and my bed the way I wanted, without taking into consideration how much space several fur bodies would need to get comfortable.
I would have money .....and no guilt to go on a real vacation.
I would not be on a first-name basis with 6 veterinarians, as I put their yet unborn grand kids through college.
The most used words in my vocabulary would not be: out, sit, down, come, no, stay, and leave him/her/it ALONE.
My house would not be cordoned off into zones with baby gates or barriers.
My house would not look like a day care center, toys everywhere.
My pockets would not contain things like poop bags, treats and an extra leash.
I would no longer have to spell the words B-A-L-L,, F-R-I-S-B-E- E,,


W-A-L-K,, T-R-E-A-T,, B-I-K-E,, G-O,, R-I-D-E
I would not have as many leaves INSIDE my house as outside.
I would not look strangely at people who think having ONE dog/cat ties them down too much.
I'd look forward to spring and the rainy season instead of dreading 'mud' season
.
I would not have to answer the question 'Why do you have so many animals?' from people who will never have the joy in their lives of knowing they are loved unconditionally by someone as close to an angel as they will ever get.
How EMPTY my life would be!

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Great Past Salad Recipe


A friend of mine turned me on to a great pasta salad that she said that kids really liked a few years ago. It's true they do like her original recipe.
However, I'm a little bit of a Control Freak and can't follow recipes obediantly and I have added a few things here and there over the years.
I think it's a nice twice to the usual Macaroni Salad, with lots of protien and flavor that can be served as a main dish dolloped on green salad for easy summer dinners.

Steph's Tuna Mac Special

1 lb cooked pasta I like to use bowties or ziti
1 handful of chopped red onion
1 handful of chopped celery
1 can of tuna
3 pinches of fresh dill from the garden chopped up fine
3 big pinches of fresh lemon basil from the garden, chopped up fine
1 can of pineapple pieces or 1/3 of a fresh pineapple cut to bite size pieces
Too much cracked black pepper the bigger the bigger the pieces the better
2 good size pinches of 'Old Bay Seasoning' to taste
Pinch of salt if you must, but it you want more flavor add another dash of the Old Bay

Combine all of the ingredients together, and place in the fridge to chill. This will bring all the flavors together. If it still needs just a little something add a dash of cayenne pepper.

If you don't have the Lemon Basil, and Dill substitute Lemon Pepper instead.
If you add regular Basil, it will change the flavor and essence completely and the dish will head down a more Italian road.

This is a great summer dish on those nights it's just too hot to cook, but you know you and your family needs some sustenance.

Monday, June 9, 2008

Sweat Equity

I don't think anyone really expected the heat that came on Saturday. Maybe it's going to take me some getting used to but I was absolutely miserable!

I felt suffocated it was so hot.

My friend Carol had a beautiful Belmont Stakes Party at her house with a whole Pig and fabulous sides, and a delightful drink called a Belmont Breeze. I don't know all that was in it, but it was very punchy and fruity not too sweet, and the moment I felt as if the drink was going to my head, I prespired the very thought out of my mind.

After allllllllll of the rain we have had the garden plants didn't know what to do with themselves on Saturday either.
Once Sunday morning arrived the poor Brussell Sprouts were wilted, and droopy. They looked like they wanted a drink of water, but the ground had more than adequate moisture.
Thankfully, the temperature didn't feel quite as hot on Sunday as Saturday's oppression, and by day's end they looked like they felt much better.

I did have lots of weeding to do. As I mentioned last week, when I stepped in to pull a weed my foot sunk in almost to my knee!

I went through with the hoe and cultivated everything and it looks once again like a cared for garden. I am having some concerns for the leeks however, I think the rain was too hard on them as they were all fallen over and looking pretty sad. I took dirt and propped around them, and now today they look a little better.

I still have to cut the grass, as I have been cutting at it, and have yet to complete it.

It's just toooo darn hot.

Maybe after the sun goes down tonight I wack at it some more.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

I So Totally Caved In :(


So after eons of rain, sinking to my knees in my fabulously tilled earth, diligently picking and squishing worms & eggs I find on the Brussel Sprouts, and those pesky little flea beetles that have set up a small country on the Baby Eggplants; I found that I was fighting a loosing battle.

I sprinkled Sevin Dust on them...

I'm an organic failure!

I'm so disappointed in myself.

I'm sorry to my faithfull readers who I know were pulling for me every step of the organic way.

I was simply at wit's end and even with the suggestions from Swampy, my neighbor caught me at a week moment and waived the bag of Sevin in front of me and told how simple it would be, and I So Totally Caved :(

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Mental Health Day

Nothing went as planned today. Karole got called away to the beach by her boys and we weren't able to get together and make scrubs.
Having my plans cancelled allowed me to focus on things that I have been putting off here at home.
Only problem is every time I start one thing it seems to always be connected with another and task that requires my attention and I get frustrated and often end up neglecting the original task.
I have wanted to rearrange the studio for quite some time and as I had told you earlier I was embarking on the 9 year old's room who wanted the Harelequins.

None of this has gotten accomplished because I need to get his old loft bed out of his room. However the plan was to bring the 4 poster out of the studio to replace the loft bed. But I haven't been able to do this because my Granddad has been spending the night with us about once a week because he has had doctor appointments for his knee and at his age it is getting to be too much on him to go to the Dr., and the grocery store and back and forth from his house to mine in one day.
So, I have been picking him up the night before his appointments and he is having dinner with us, which we all have been loving, and he spends the night on the 4 poster in the studio (he doesn't do stairs) and in the morning after breakfast we go to the Docs.
This has been working out well, but has been impeding my renovations. Which is completely fine, as I enjoy the time we are able to spend together and the time my kids gets to spend with his Great Granddad.
With the oldest having flown the coup I'm looking at replacing the studio bed with his bed, but as earlier stated leads me into a whole other project.
Well I did get the studio rearranged and I got some other piddly stuff done. Maybe next week I will tackle the bedrooms.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

It's Time to Break Out the Ark Building Kit


Three nights in a row, and we have received over an inch of rain each night.
The Lettuces are digging it. The Radishes are splitting open. The Tomato's are hanging in there.
The Eggplants are have more flea beetles on them then I can smush. The Onions are doing OK.
The Leeks were laying on their sides today and needed propping. The Beans are poppin, and with all this rain the lawn needs a choppin.

As I was proppin the leeks today I sunk into the mud. I know our groundwater levels were dangerously low this last year, but I'm thinking they are probably OK by now.

Lets hope for a few days of dry weather, without much humidity so we can dry up.

Monday, June 2, 2008

Why Does This Work?

This is pretty neat
DON'T CHEAT BY SCROLLING DOWN FIRST!

It takes less than a minute. Work this out as you read .
Be sure you don't read the bottom until you've worked it out!
This is not one of those waste of time things, it's fun.

1. First of all, pick the number of times a week that you would like to go out to eat. (more than once but less than 10)
2. Multiply this number by 2 (just to be bold)
3. Add 5
4. Multiply it by 50 <>
5. If you have already had your birthday this year add 1758...
If you haven't, add 1757.
6. Now subtract the four digit year that you were born.
You should have a three digit number
The first digit of this was your original number. (I.e., How many times you want to go out to restaurants in a week.)
The next two numbers are
YOUR AGE ! ------ (Oh YES, it is!)

THIS IS THE ONLY YEAR (2008) IT WILL EVER WORK, SO SPREAD IT AROUND WHILE IT LASTS

Crazy for Edamame!



I just love Japanese food and love the ritual of eating edemame.
I'm going to visit the Southern States store and see if I can purchase some that aren't 'Frankenberries'.

I hope I can. They are so fun sit with a table of friends and enjoy!

I Finally Got My Seeds!


When I first started this Blog a couple of months ago, one of my readers referred me to The Great Sunflower Project
If you go to their site and register they will send you a pack of Sunflower seeds and a form for you to document Honey Bee Activity in your yard after your Sunflowers bloom.

According to their site they were overwhelmed with requests and people who wanted to participate, so it took them a little while to get everyones seeds out to them.

There is still time to take part in this project; especially if you have already started your own sunflowers.

Just click on the link above and print the form and conduct your own study and send it in to them so that they can calculate the data.

Remember... Bees: Responsible for Every Third Bite of Food

Friday, May 30, 2008

Farmer Girl Day


Yesterday, we ventured to Chincoteague to Danni's house where her daughter Molly taught us how to make sugar scrubs.
Sugar Scrubs are my latest obsession.
We all made our own flavors. Dani made a Rosemary Citrus, Karole made Rosemary Citrus Mint, and I made a cucumber melon, and another one of Gardenia.
I'm going to experiment with them some more this week and see what other concoctions I can come up with.
I made a couple of extra jars and am considery offering for special order sales, with my honey orders.
I have a super busy weekend but I will get busy on lables this week and if I come up with an label that inspires me, I will probably start a line of these products.
I just love them. They smell absolutely devine, make your skin soft and are simply fabulous.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Giving Up Wine...



I was walking down the street when I was accosted by a particularly dirty and shabby-looking homeless woman who asked me for a couple of dollars for dinner.

I took out my wallet, got out ten dollars and asked, "If I give you this money, will you buy wine with it instead of dinner?"

"No, I had to stop drinking years ago", the homeless woman told me.

Will you use it to go shopping instead of buying food?" I asked.

"No, I don't waste time shopping," the homeless woman said. "I need to spend all my time trying to stay alive."

Will you spend this on a beauty salon, instead of food?" I asked.
"Are you NUTS!" replied the homeless woman. I haven't had my hair don e in 20 years!"
"Well," I said, "I'm not going to give you the money. Instead, I'm going to take you out for dinner with my husband and me tonight."

The homeless Woman was shocked. "Won't your husband be furious with you for doing that? I know I'm dirty and I probably smell pretty disgusting."

I said, "That's okay. It's important for him to see what a woman looks like after she has given up shopping, hair appointments and wine."

Flea Beatles....Fiesty Little Things!


For the last week I have gone out to the garden every day to smush the little black Flea Beatles that have taken residence on the eggplants.
These little things must live in the ground and then jump back up on the plant after I leave.
Each time I go on my killing rampage, I'm able to anihalate about a dozen or so, but if I come back an hour or two later there are just as many back on them.
I have resigned myself to this being my lot in life until the eggplants come off.
Organic gardening takes much more effort than simply spraying the plant with a chemical to kill the pests.
As I'm out there squishing these damned tiny little things two or three times a day.
They are in a way easier to deal with than the cabbage worms. As the cabbage worms are the exact same color as the cabbage plant, and they look like the ribbing in the plants leaf.
I don't have a butterfly net, or else I would catch the little white butterfly's that lay the eggs that turn into the evil cabbage worm, so until I get one of those I have resigned myself to smooshing worms while I'm squishing beetles.
Oh what a glamorous life!

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

No Left Turns

I received this in my 'Inbox' today from a friend; I like it because of banter and familiarity it displays amongst family members, and I like it because it portrays the silly things we do to cope in our lives and how through the use of those coping mechanisms we get by, and we get by pretty well.

Hope you enjoy ...

NO LEFT TURNS

by Michael Gartner

This is a wonderful piece by Michael Gartner, president of NBC News.

In 1997, he won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing. It is well worth reading, and a few good chuckles are guaranteed.

'My father never drove a car. Well, that's not quite right. I should say I never saw him drive a car. He quit driving in 1927, when he was 25 years old, and the last car he drove was a 1926 Whippet.

'In those days,' he told me when he was in his 90s, 'to drive a car you had to do things with your hands, and do things with your feet, and look every which way, and I decided you could walk through life and enjoy it, or drive through life and miss it.'
At which point my mother, a sometimes salty Irish woman, chimed in: 'Oh, bullshit!' she said. 'He hit a horse.'

'Well,’ my father said, 'there was that, too.'

So my brother and I grew up in a household without a car.

The neighbors all had cars -- the Kollingses next door had a green 1941 Dodge; the Van Laninghams across the street a gray 1936 Plymouth ; the Hopsons two doors down a black 1941 Ford -- but we had none.

My father, a newspaperman in Des Moines , would take the streetcar to work and, often as not, walk the 3 miles home.

If he took the streetcar home, my mother and brother and I would walk the three blocks to the streetcar stop, meet him and walk home together.

My brother, David, was born in 1935, and I was born in 1938, and sometimes, at dinner, we'd ask how come all the neighbors had cars but we had none.

'No one in the family drives,' my mother would explain, and that was that. But, sometimes, my father would say, 'But as soon as one of you boys turns 16, we'll get one.'

It was as if he wasn't sure which one of us would turn 16 first.

But, sure enough, my brother turned 16 before I did, so in 1951 my parents bought a used 1950 Chevrolet from a friend who ran the parts department at a Chevy dealership downtown.
It was a four-door, white model, stick-shift, fender skirts, loaded with everything, and since my parents didn't drive, it more or less became my brother's car. Having a car but not being able to drive didn’t bother my father, but it didn't make sense to my mother.

So in 1952, when she was 43 years old, she asked a friend to teach her to drive.

She learned in a nearby cemetery, the place where I learned to drive the following year, and where, a generation later, I took my two sons to practice driving.

The cemetery probably was my father's idea.
'Who can your mother hurt in the cemetery?' I remember him saying more than once.

For the next 45 years or so, until she was 90, my mother was the driver in the family.

Neither she nor my father had any sense of direction, but he loaded up on maps -- though they seldom left the city limits -- and appointed
himself navigator. It seemed to work.

Still, they both continued to walk a lot. My mother was a devout Catholic, and my father an equally devout agnostic, an arrangement that didn't seem to bother either of them through their 75 years of marriage.

(Yes, 75 years, and they were deeply in love the entire time.)

He retired when he was 70, and nearly every morning for the next 20 years or so, he would walk with her the mile to St. Augustin's Church. She would walk down and sit in the front pew, and he would wait in the back until he saw which of the parish's two priests was on duty that morning.

If it was the pastor, my father then would go out and take a 2-mile walk, meeting my mother at the end of the service and walking her home.

If it was the assistant pastor, he'd take just a 1-mile walk and then head back to the church.

He called the priests 'Father Fast' and 'Father Slow.'
After he retired, my father almost always accompanied my mother whenever she drove anywhere, even if he had no reason to go along.
If she were going to the beauty parlor, he'd sit in the car and read, or go take a stroll, or if it was summer, have her keep the engine running so he could listen to the Cubs game on the radio.
In the evening, then, when I'd stop by, he'd explain: 'The Cubs lost again. The millionaire on second base made a bad throw to the millionaire on first base, so the multimillionaire on third base scored.' (a la Carte the Detroit Tigers-Ken)

If she were going to the grocery store, he would go along to carry the bags out -- and to make sure she loaded up on ice cream.
As I said, he was always the navigator, and once, when he was 95 and she was 88 and still driving, he said to me, 'Do you want to know the secret of a long life?'

'I guess so,' I said, knowing it probably would be something bizarre.
'No left turns he said.
'What?' I asked.
'No left turns,’ he repeated.
'Several years ago, your mother and I read an article that said most accidents that old people are in happen when they turn left in front of on-coming traffic. As you get older, your eyesight worsens, and you can lose your depth perception, he said. So your mother and I decided never again to make a left turn.'

'What?' I said again.

'No left turns,' he said. 'Think about it. Three rights are the same as a left, and that's a lot safer.

So we always make three rights.'

'You're kidding!' I said, and I turned to my mother for support. ’No,’ she said, ‘your father is right. We make three rights. It works.' But then she added: 'Except when your father loses count.' I was driving at the time, and I almost drove off the road as I started laughing. 'Loses count?' I asked. ’Yes,’ my father admitted, ‘that sometimes happens. But it's not a problem. You just make seven rights, and you're okay again.'

I couldn't resist. 'Do you ever go for 11?' I asked.

’No,’ he said. 'If we miss it at seven, we just come home and call it a bad day. Besides, nothing in life is so important it can't be put off another day or another week.'

My mother was never in an accident, but one evening she handed me her car keys and said she had decided to quit driving. That was in 1999, when she was 90.

She lived four more years, until 2003. My father died the next year, at 102.

They both died in the bungalow they had moved into in 1937 and bought a few years later for $3,000.

(Sixty years later, my brother and I paid $8,000 to have a shower put in the tiny bathroom --the house had never had one. My father would
have died then and there if he knew the shower cost nearly three times what he paid for the house.)

He continued to walk daily -- he had me get him a treadmill when he was101 because he was afraid he'd fall on the icy sidewalk s but wanted to keep exercising -- and he was of sound mind and sound body until the moment he died.

One September afternoon in 2004, he and my son went with me when I had to give a talk in a neighboring town, and it was clear to all three of us that he was wearing out, though we had the usual wide-ranging conversation about politics and newspapers and things in the news.

A few weeks earlier, he had told my son, ‘you know, Mike, the first hundred years are a lot easier than the second hundred.'

At one point in our drive that Saturday, he said, ‘You know, I’m probably not going to live much longer.' 'You're probably right,' I said. 'Why would you say that?' He countered, somewhat irritated. 'Because you're 102 years old,’ I said.
’Yes,’ he said, ‘you’re right.' He stayed in bed all the next day.

That night, I suggested to my son and daughter that we sit up with him through the night.

He appreciated it, he said, though at one point, apparently seeing us look gloomy, he said: ' I would like to make an announcement. No one in this room is dead yet'

An hour or so later, he spoke his last words:
'I want you to know,’ he said, clearly and lucidly, ‘that I am in no pain. I am very comfortable. And I have had as happy a life as anyone on this earth could ever have.'
A short time later, he died.
I miss him a lot, and I think about him a lot.
I've wondered now and then how it was that my family and I were so lucky that he lived so long.
I can't figure out if it was because he walked through life ... or because he quit taking left turns.'
Life is too short to wake up with regrets.
So love the people who treat you right.
Forget about the one's who don't.
Believe everything happens for a reason.
If you get a chance, take it.
If it changes your life, let it.
Nobody said life would be easy;
they just promised it would most likely be worth it.'

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Today Was ForePlay Day....

My husband is a salesman. He doesn't do stuff around the house. If something needs doing. I either do it, or ask my son to do it. If the two of us are clueless, we have a certain few that we will call and ask for help, and if they can't do it then we call in the professionals. I never like to get to that point.
I like it when I can do it myself.
The few very good friends I call in case of an emergency are always gallant in their efforts and are rewarded with good food and the beverages of their choice.
But today as he does on rare occasions Billy came out of the office and began doing yard work. He cut the hedge that runs the length of the driveway. Then cut the bushes on the other side. He also cut back a big holly tree that was hanging over the back porch roof. He used the ladder and got himself up there and had at it.
I alwasys tease him when he does these things for me because I get so happy that he is helping me with these tasks I know he despises, I go as far as telling him it's like foreplay. I find myself jealous of my other friends that their husbands have yard skills, building skills, plumbing skills, electric skills or autorepair skills.
And they all look at me with the same look on their face and say "Your husband brings you breakfast in bed every morning, Shut Up".
I then realize I have nothing to be jealous of and find when he does these manly things it is kinda like foreplay.

Friday, May 23, 2008

Sick Squash and Cukes, But Fabulous Artichokes!



I think it must be the rain, but my squash and cukes are absolutely pathetic! I'm so disgusted with them that I went out and purchased new ones today.
I have worked so hard on this garden that I just don't see the point of keeping these sickly looking things and possibly waiting too late to plant new ones and miss a great squash and cuke harvest.
Himself's Herself wants to make Lyme and Bread and Butter Pickles.
I made a couple of hundred thousand jars of them about 10 years ago and ate my last jar a couple of months ago. So I am willing to torture myself once again and make them.
Another, thing that we made all those years ago was Watermelon Rind pickles. These are made from the white part of the melon rind. They were soooo good that my daughter Raleigh entered them into the Worcester County Fair and won first prize for them.
I got the recipe from a neighbor of mine when I lived on Dividing Creek Road and decided I wanted to be an Organic Farmer.
Once I moved to town, I joined a CSA Coop in DE and had a wonderful time planting and growing sharing and eating the wonderful things that came from the garden their.
However with the price of gas these days, we are keeping the garden small and have several beds throughout the neighborhood where we are all growing something different.
Back to the squash... You know the weird thing about them is that they have blossoms on them but almost all of the leaves have died. They look mutated. I'm planting the new ones.
Meanwhile, this bottom picture is a pic of one of the Artichoke Plants, and I must say they are doing absolutely beautifully. I can't wait to harvest those babies!

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

New Colony, Calling Second Hive Home!



On April 15th I ventured into the beehive to check on their health, switch the positions of the brood boxes, and add honey boxes to the hive.
While investigating, I found a brood frame that had three Queen cells attached to the bottom of it. I thought "what the heck, I'll stick this into the empty hive, and see what happens".
I opened the empty hive box next door and stuck this frame into it.
I then went back into the full hive and took out two brood frames; knocked the bees off of them into the full hive and stuck the brood frames into the empty hive.
My thoughts were that the Bee's who were on the frame that held the Queen Cells were placed into a Queenless empty hive, they may get busy and groom one of the Queen Cells to be their new Queen and taking care of the brood that was in the cells of the other frame, thus creating a new colony.
Apparently, this has worked!
I looked into the formerly empty hive today and much to my surprise they are 'Busy as Bee's in there.
If they were not able to raise a Queen on their own they probably would have gone back into the old hive, but with a month having past and there still being activity within, I am guessing that my plan was sucessful.
This is Great if they continue. The empty hive was the victim of Colony Collapse Syndrome last year and they all dissapeared.
I am very hopeful for this emerging hive, and look forward to a full colony of brood and hopefully some honey stores by summers end.
If they don't have enough honey, then I will feed them over the winter, and if they winter over in good shape then we may have surplus honey next spring.
What an amazing process this is. If anyone would like to visit the Apiary let me know.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Don't Wash Your Car!


The Sun was out, bright and shiny this morning and I went out to piddle in the patch.
The other week, I found some grass seed and some lime that I had left over from last spring and I had left it right in the middle of the front of the garage so that I would deal with it.
Not having my own spreader I went and visited Himself to borrow his spreader to make the make the job easier. Himself informed me that Herself would be entertaining this afternoon to use her tax stimulus grill, and that I could return the spreader when I came back later with my hubby and kid, for burgers and dogs.
I thanked him and went on my way.
Back at the Ranch...
I fill the bin with the lime first and begin the process; figure out just what setting it should be on walked every walkable square inch of my property.
As came back around to the backyard to refill the bin for round two, I see my neighbor in his backyard doing the most obnoxious thing...
He was washing his wife's van!!!!
I yelled at him "Don't Wash Your Car!!! Haven't you had enough rain yet"?
Apparently, more people than my poor neighbor have simply not had enough yet, because as I was returning Himself's spreader, and bringing goodies from our house, I could feel a fine mist on my face. As the burgers and dogs were being pulled off of the stimulus grill, the rain started down in buckets.
I hope you all are happy!

Friday, May 16, 2008

Bunko Night


Tonight, I was host of the Bunko Girls. Karol was the Big Bunco winner. This was her first win in 2 1/2 years. Heidi and Alwyn played for the first time tonight and had a blast. Heidi even won Little Bunco.
As usual we all had a great time and we laughed till our sides hurt.
I have been tasked with creating a 'Biggest Bunco Loser' sign that the loser has to keep in their front yard for the month and now the girls want me to make a 'Biggest Bunco Winner' sign for the winner.
This should be fun!

Rain Rain Go Away!!!!!!

No such luck!
I woke up to coughing my head off and the rain coming down on my roof.
Our poor Garden!

I'm hosting Bunko tonight, so at least I wont get distracted doing outside work, and I'll just focus on cooking.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Sinking Into the Mud!

Today, I ventured into the garden it actually looked like I could walk into it without drowning.
Although I can't say that about my neighbors.
I thought I would thin out the baby corn plants again, and pass off the extras to the waterlogged neighbor.
I successfully pulled out about 25 plants and took them to the garden next door. Bending over and planting them (I'm a bender, not a squatter or kneeler) I suddenly feel one side of my body sinking.
I look at my right foot and it is completely covered in mud, and I continue sinking to my mid calf.
I couldn't believe it!
After digging my foot out, I continued my transplanting and they now have two rows of corn that hopefully will stay above water, unlike the last two rows I planted.

My bush beans are coming up sporadically, and I'm a bit disappointed in them.
Additionally, the squash and cukes are looking really bad. The squash had blossoms, but the stems are nearly as yellow as the blossoms.
We desperately need some sun for a few days to dry this ground up a little bit.
I'm really hoping that the rain predicted for tomorrow doesn't come.

Monday, May 12, 2008

The Most Beautiful Roses I've Had...


Every year for the last ten years it seems that when the Peonies are blooming we have a storm that tears them up.
The house across the street from me has the most beautiful Peonies bed, and each year it gets wiped out.
For two years the house was empty, and during those years I would harvest a couple vases to make a fragrant arrangement. When the house was purchased a few years back I told my new neighbors about the plight of the Peonies, and that I had been harvesting them so that they would be appreciated for years. I asked if I could continue to save them from their springtime peril if they weren't going to be home, and they said yes.

So yesterday the wind as the winds are whipping and the rain is pelting I looked at my husband and said "I bet the Peonies are blooming".
Sure enough I look across the street and many of them were in full bloom, so as usual in the rain I made my way across the street to cut wet Peonies in the whipping rain.
This year my darling husband followed.
As I am cutting he is taking pictures of me, and singing the tune 'Singing in the Rain', except he changed the words to 'She's Stealing in the Rain Stealing Flowers in the Rain'. You gotta love a smart ass.
So after my bountiful harvest we made our way back home and as I approached my arbor entrance to my front walk Billy told me to turn around so he could get a picture of me with the Peonies under the arbor that has more Roses on it this year than it has ever had.
I am so glad he took the picture, because at midnight I get a call from my son who said his friend had just driven by our house and saw the arbor laying in the street!
Billy went out and tried to put it back up but the wind was blowing so hard, as he was putting it up it blew down the other way. He decided it would probably be better to wait to put it back up tomorrow when the storm is over. He gave it a valiant effort, but it may need a little more work than just re-setting it. Fortunately, the Rose bush didn't break but because the ground was sooo saturated that it just came up out of the ground in a clump.
Thank you for the Peonies D & B they are beautiful, the purple ones haven't started blooming yet, so hopefully you will get to enjoy those.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Is it Time to Build an Ark?


Good Grief! This is a lot of rain. Thank God that I made mounded rows in the garden. My neighbors garden is under water with the baby corn plants just barely poking their little stems out of the water.
I have a separate bed for my cucumbers next to the porch and it has rained so much in the last hour, that I'm feeling guilty that I'm not out there trenching an escape for the water that is flooding them.
I hope everything makes it and if it doesn't stop raining tomorrow I will be cutting in a trench.
Good Luck everybody, I hope all your green babies survive!

Saturday, May 10, 2008

A Mothers Day Tribute


I have to say that I had a Mom that was unlike anyother mother I have ever met.
She was way before her time, and so misunderstood. She had me when she was 18 after being married for one year. She had been brought up to be a proper Southern Lady, yet lived in the tumultuous 60's that began to challenge everything she knew.
Fortunately she gleaned much from her parents, and took to heart her own life experiences and diligently shared them with me. Below are a few of the things that my Mother taught me.

She taught me to be brave.
She taught me to trust my instincts.
She taught me to believe in myself, and the God given talents that I had been given.
She taught me that my greatest job in life was to at all times possess integrity.
She taught me that if I did make a mistake to admit it and go on. Not to try to cover it up. Things covered up stay moist and fester, things uncovered dry up and blow away.
She taught me do my very best at whatever I did.
She taught me that mediocrity was not an option.
She taught me that the things that people don't want to talk about are always the most interesting and usually the most important.
She taught me it was always better to beg for forgiveness than ask for permission. Begging for forgiveness, meant that I had tried to do something and failed. Asking for permission meant I was second guessing myself and if I had to do that then the internal answer should always be NO!
She taught me that you don't have to be rich to be clean.
She taught me that to have a beautiful home was stimulating to your mind and to that of your family.
She taught me to surround myself with beautiful things even if it is simply a dandelion flower in a simple clear glass. It is good for the soul and makes you appreciate the littlest things.
She taught me that less really is more. As it leaves room for the really important and beautiful.
She taught me to find a partner who made me laugh, who made me smile and who loved me more than any other woman he had ever known. No matter what he looked like, no matter what he did for a living (as long as he was of honest means and integrity) that nothing matters more in a relationship than complete devotion and joy.
She taught me to love deeply with complete abandon.
She taught me to tell my family and friends how much they mean to me as often as possible.
She taught me to never be satisfied with all that I know.
She taught me to pursue new things each and every day.
She taught me to develop a broad vocabulary, so that I would always be able to effectively communicate my thoughts.
She taught me constantly question authority, because we can't trust someone just because they hold a certain title.
She taught me to ask as many questions as it takes to come to full understanding of any situation.
She taught me that stupid people always think every one else is stupid.
She taught me that while I may have many friends throughout my life, that my standards of loyalty would be so high that at the end of my life I would be able to count my true friends on the fingers of one hand.
She taught me to live my life like it was going be printed on the front page of the New York Times tomorrow and if I could live with that headline then I was alright.
She taught me that a mothers love is unconditional, just like Gods and that the day that she dies, you better know who you are and be good with it because there would never be another person on the face of the earth who loved you like she did.

I lost my Mom in 1986. She was 42 years old. She had a congenital heart defect which I apparently have inhereted from her. When I found her lying in her apartment I knew in an instant what she had said was true. I felt the void of that mothers love it was gone with her last breathe.
I married the man who made me happy and made me laugh and still does to this day.
I have taught my children all that my mother taught me, and I pray that they engrave it in their hearts as I have. Not all the lessons are easy, not all the lessons make you popular, but all of the lessons leave me with the ability to lay my head down every night and know that I have lived my life to it's fullest. That I have done everything that I know to do to make my world and my surroundings the very best that it can be, with the resources that I have available to me.

This being Mothers Day weekend take the time to remember the things your Mother taught you, and if you still have her thank her for these timeless lessons.

I would love to hear from you the things that your Mother taught you