Friday, March 30, 2012

The Hills Are Alive

My hillside is waking up after sleeping all winter. We didn’t cut anything down last fall and it was looking quite scraggly. So we, okay Mark, went out and chopped all the dead stuff down. We decided to just leave it out there and not clean it up as sort of a mulchy, organic, hopefully helpful environment for all the new growth. I can see that the crown vetch and I will continue to wage battle against one another. There is a newer plant out there and although I have seen it in the past, it is much more abundant this year. I was pretty sure it was something that did not belong there, but when I see so much of one type of plant, I always have hope that it's going to bring me joy. But no. I pulled one up and brought it to my neighborhood Earl May and they assured me it was a weed that would never amount to anything. So I have my work cut out for me out there.

At first, I was a bit dismayed that my nemeses seemed to have a head start on everything else, but then I realized I could see them and start working on them before the other plants got bigger and filled everything in. So I took a look and I warned them .. "I will get you my pretty." Except they aren't so pretty and they are tough little *#@*!.

After a nice rain last night, it will be the perfect time to get out there with digger in hand this weekend and work on removing some of those unwanteds and check how everything else is going. I'm also starting to plan my garden, which always proves to be an adventure.

Weeds beware!

Friday, March 23, 2012

Pinterest Pick of the Week

Like about a gazillion other folks in Internet Land, I have become more than a little interested in the ideas on Pinterest at http://pinterest.com/.  First of all, I think it is very cool that the mind behind this idea is Brian Silbermann, a DSM native along with his Yale college buddies who I guess are not DSM natives, but still.... Young Mr. Silbermann’s parents are ophthalmologists here and I truly believe that having the opportunity to receive an extra measure of intelligence genes can lead to good things. But here is my favorite Pinterest find this week -- homemade laundry soap.

Here is the recipe and some other fun things on this young mom's blog someone might find interesting: http://beingcreativetokeepmysanity.blogspot.com/2010/11/homemade-laundry-soap.html#comments.

I had never heard of Fels-Naptha soap, but it was right there in the laundry aisle of my local Hy-Vee. I don't have a food processor so I had to shred this stuff with one of those hand graters. That was the most difficult part and I do believe there is a tiny sliver of finger skin in my laundry soap.

The cost of this was around $17.00 and after using it for a couple weeks, here is what I have left:

Of course we are a 2-person household so it doesn't go quite so fast as it would have, say 10 or even 15? years ago. Laundry day at our house is when the sun is shining and there is a hint of a breeze. On this day, however, there was more breeze than just a hint. Phew, just glad my clothes didn't blow into the next county. This picture does not even give justice to the strength of the wind that day.

I have to confess this all makes me feel so Laura Ingalls Wilder :).
Happy Friday.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Love This

I found this mom's blog today. She explains so beautifully what I want for my daughter and I wanted to share it. This is just a part; to read the rest of it go here

http://veronimitch.blogspot.com/2012/03/mothers-dream-in-pen-and-ink.html

Now I see her bent over her drawing, and I realize: this is what I want for her. The free time I give the kids, my determination not to schedule their lives any more than the public school already does, and the ready availability I make of art materials - these have become a habit that reveals a purpose. I want her to have the chance to throw herself into something she loves just because she loves it. I want her to know the thrill of leisure time spent lost in what fascinates, because too soon she will be grown and her leisure time will all but disappear.

I want to give her the gift of love. Not just the love I feel for her, but the love she discovers for something else.
Since she was born, we have made up stories for each other. My stories for her and her sisters are often princess stories, fairy tales that begin "Once upon a time" and end with "happily ever after." But I don't make marriage the happy ending. Some people long to get married and never get to, and if my girls have that life, I do not want to add to their heartbreak by building in them the belief that marriage is their mother's expectation for them. Instead, my princesses have something they love to do, - flying kites, raising dragons, digging tunnels - and the happy ending comes when they find a way to do that thing for the rest of their lives.

My stories whisper that I want them to find a vocation in life, a calling that satisfies something deep in their soul, whether that is marriage and motherhood or something else.

And I think of that when I tape her new drawing to the kitchen wall (our fridge ran out of space long ago), wondering if this will be her lifelong love, or if she is still waiting to meet it.

Tuesday's Recipe

Mark and I don’t go out to eat at a restaurant very often, which isn’t my idea, but instead I have taken this opportunity to try new recipes and avoid having the same darn thing all the time. Mark is pretty good about my experimental cooking. He isn’t effusive in his praise of the latest creation, but he doesn't run to the bathroom to throw up either.
Tuesday will be my recipe of the week day and here's one for Slow Cooker Chicken Taco Soup that I found on allrecipes.com.


1 chopped onion
1 (16 ounce) can chili beans
1 (15 ounce) can black beans
1 (15 ounce) can whole kernel corn, drained
1 (8 ounce) can tomato sauce
1 (12 fluid ounce) can or bottle beer
2 (10 ounce) cans diced tomatoes with green chilies, undrained.
1 (1.25 ounce) package taco seasoning
3 whole skinless boneless chicken breasts
shredded cheese (optional)
sour cream (optional) tortilla chips (optional).
crushed tortilla chips (optional)

Place the onion, chili beans, black beans, corn, tomato sauce, beer and diced tomatoes in a slow cooker. Add taco seasoning and stir to blend. Lay the chicken breasts on top of the mixture pressing down slightly until just covered by the other ingredients. Set slow cooker on low heat, cover and cook for 5 hours.
Remove the chicken breasts from the soup and allow to cool long enough to be handled. Shred the chicken breasts and put it back in the soup and continue cooking for 2 hours. Serve topped with shredded cheese, sour cream and crushed tortilla chips if you want.

Pretty eazie beazie, not too much that is eazier or beazier, and quite delish.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Precious Days

What a great couple of days I had with Cody and Elizabeth. As always, time slipped away too fast, but the time we had together was great. It was a relaxing visit with no agenda so we were able to do some things we like to do. Highlights:

No visit to Des Moines is complete without spending some time in the shoe department of the Von Maur department store. I'm not sure if any of us bought anything, but Von Maur always has the most fashionable and latest shoe styles. We stopped at Jordan Creek, http://www.jordancreektowncenter.com/ for some more browsing and then lunch at On The Border, http://www.ontheborder.com/, another must-do when Cody and Elizabeth are in town.

The next day we decided to check out some local places that I had heard about. First was the Cheese Shop of Des Moines. I will definitely be back here to do some more cheese shopping, http://thecheeseshopdsm.com/


Elizabeth checking out the vast array of the deliciousness of cheese. We explored the Roosevelt area a little further and then headed for West End Archetectural Salvage, http://www.westendsalvage.com/. If you are a repurposer or a reuser, this is basically an old grocery warehouse filled with 3 floors of high priced (I believe I can safely say over-priced) junk. I like to look at something and try to visualize where it was used before and what the people were like who had this particular item.

We were able to do some hanging around home, watch a lot of basketball and monitor our pool picks closely and then before I knew it, it was time for them to leave. I have so much fun when Cody, Elizabeth Carson or Carissa are around and then when they are gone, I just miss them so much. We have some family events coming up that I am eagerly anticipating. Can't wait.


Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Recycle, Reuse or Repurpose

Lately I have been intrigued by the idea of repurposing. My mom has long been at the very top of reusing and repurposing. After she finishes a loaf of bread, she washes up the plastic bag and reuses it. I am not quite at that level, but I do wash up and reuse my Ziplocs.

Here they are in my cupboard just waiting for their next use. There is usually a little pile of Ziploc bags ready for washing under my sink that will not get a picture here.
So I guess there is a difference between recyling, reusing and repurposing. Give us a definition you are saying? Okay ....
Recycle: To put or pass through a cycle again, as for further treatment.
Reuse: To use something again, often for a different purpose and usually as an alternative to throwing it out.
Repurpose: To use or convert for use in another format or product.
To me, reuse and repurpose are somewhat similar. But here is an idea for repurposing that I found probably on Pinterest.
This is deliciousness in a bottle and how I have my coffee without paying the high Starbucks price. No, it's not quite as good, but it works for me. Anyhow after I finish the White Chocolate Carmel Latte, I get the bottle all cleaned up and use it in a variety of ways:
I had a box of kosher salt that sprung a little leak in one of the corners and was becoming a source of frustration in that I don't need to clean up little salt particles every day. So wah lah, kosher salt in my coffee creamer jar. Here's another one:
A perfect little watering device for my herb seeds and my African violet that is overflowing its pot. Not too much water, not too little, juuuuuust right.
I think you could these creamer containers for little noodles. Oh but I can see this could be a perfect container for rice. So there we are, I think the options are endless and that, my friends, is repurposing. Or maybe reusing. Anyhow it's re'ing something.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

What's The Plan?

On December 1, 2011, Lori was going to come up from Fairfield and we were going to meet in Pella. At the last minute, I had to bail on her because we were having a meeting at work and it was too important to miss. I told Lori, dang it all, it looks like I have to go to this meeting or lose my job. Well the meeting was to tell us that Iowa Health was outsourcing all transcription statewide and our jobs were being eliminated. Merry Christmas from Iowa Health. We were all hired by the outsource company and I took that job, but actively (can we say now nearly desperately?) searching for something else. I knew this company wasn't right for me when we were told by our supervisor that we wouldn't get any time off for Thanksgiving, Christmas or New Year's. Okay, that's fun. As it looks now, I will work every holiday this year and that's not my style. So it's been an interesting ride I've been on for the last couple of months. I have had the same job for 20+ years, but now I'm starting to think about what kind of job would I like to have? What would make getting up and going to work a joy? Here are a few thing I've come up with.

Everything I want to do, I am highly unqualified for. I think greenhouses and landscaping businesses are really fun places to hang out so I sent an application to TimberPine, one of my favorite nursery/landscaping/greenhouse places and the application asked if I had experience with a skidloader, heavy equipment, landscaping, etc. and I'm like well no, but I like plants and gardening and I love to talk about it. They haven't called me yet. I would like to learn to sew so I asked Mary, my friend, who owns a quilt shop if she needed someone who didn't know a thing about sewing, but was friendly and nice and she didn't really answer me. So I think that was a no. I talked to Nancy, the lady who owns my favorite yarn/knitting store and told her I was available, but since every time I go in I ask for advice, she didn't make me an offer on the spot either. Lori is an interior decorator and that would be a really fun job, but I'm struggling to get my own house spiffied up and unfortunately I have no clue about decorating. I would like to be a secret shopper. I want to go on trips for Midwest Living and write about all the cool places I visit. Freelance writing would be interesting although after reading this, some might think Really??? I like the elderly and sick people, something might come up there. Most importantly, I would really like a job with a lot of vacation time because I have a lot of places to go. Anyone out there got anything for me?

I do have confidence that God has a plan for me and I rely on Jeremiah 29:11:
"For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not harm you, plans to give you hope and a future."

Personally, I can't wait to see how this all turns out.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Time To Write Again

I sort of have a love-hate relationship with this blogging business. I do like to write, but it's hard work and it doesn't always flow together so great. So I'm not going to overthink this thing; I will just try to write about my pretty ordinary life that I happen to love and document some memories.

I have to thank my friend, Lori there in Fairfield, for encouraging me to write. Her kind words got me thinking and here I am. Now that I've started, I really hope I don't stop. No, I REALLY hope I don't stop. I'm like a New Year's resolution -- Great intentions, but the follow doesn't always happen so with a deep breath and look of resolve I'm stepping off the easy path and into Blog World.