Sunday, December 8, 2013

{Pretty, Happy, Funny, Real}~ December 8, 2013

Happy Advent!  Alas, I have no Thanksgiving pictures to share.  We were traveling for my nephew's wedding, and I didn't bring a camera.  Actually, I forgot it.  Actually, it never crossed my mind to bring it.  I'm such a failure as a photographer . . . So let's just move on to Advent, shall we?

{Pretty}


My parents gave us this nativity set in the first few years of our marriage.  I have always loved it for its understated elegance and simplicity, and every year it occupies a prominent place in our home. Baby Jesus will make his appearance on Christmas Eve.


{Happy}

Hannah knitted this lovely shawl for my birthday.  It's a beautiful deep teal.  Since I couldn't model it *and* take a picture at the same time, this will have to do.  I really like the fringe!




{Funny}



Our new phone book came in the mail this week.  Here it is in all its diminutive glory.  (The Altoids tin is for scale.)  It measures 5.5 x 9 inches and boasts a whopping 64 pages, white and yellow.  There are some inconveniences to living in a small town, but there are also many advantages.  For one, I have never lived in a place with more community spirit. For another, it's the safest place we have ever lived.  Also, I never knew the wonders of a farm store till I moved here.  No, that's not sarcasm.  Ours is a great place, carrying everything from guns and ammo to animal feed to clothing to canning supplies.  Big R, where have you been all my life??


Visit Like Mother, Like Daughter to see more {phfr}!


*~*~*~* Thanks for stopping by! *~*~*~*

Sunday, November 17, 2013

{Pretty, Happy, Funny, Real}~ November 17, 2013

It's time for {phfr} again! After my dismal photographic efforts the past couple weeks, I made sure to take more pictures this week.

{Pretty}


What you see before you are some of my birthday presents.  The canning jars are from my dearly beloved.  (Yes, he knew just what I wanted!)  One is gallon sized and holds coconut flour.  The others (there are six of them! :) ) are half-gallon and hold a variety of items~ popcorn, oats, brown sugar, and other essentials.

The butter dish is from Elizabeth, Justin, and Arane.  I love its round shape!  They bought it when we were visiting last summer and sent it home with Dave, unbeknownst to me.  He safely and secretly squirreled it away until it was the proper time.  Isn't it pretty?

I neglected to take pictures of the beautiful shawl Hannah knitted for me.  Maybe next week?

{Happy}



I was happy to find a low-carb banana bread recipe at Elana's Pantry.  Though we aren't paleo, I try to keep things fairly low-carb for Dave, who gets migraines otherwise.  I had a couple bananas that were beyond just eating as they were, so I went in search of a recipe in which I could use almond or coconut flour.  This recipe is moist and not too sweet.  I only had two bananas (the recipe calls for three), so I used two extra tablespoons of honey. It came out great!  Hannah liked it too, so this recipe is a keeper.

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

The last of the turnips (a low-carb alternative to potatoes)~


These were the last things in the garden, and they had to come out because we were forecast to get some of this:

{Real}



Yep!  The first snow of the year, even before all the leaves had fallen.  It wasn't much and it didn't last long, but it sure was pretty while it lasted.  And now today, we have high winds and temperatures in the low 70's . . . That's life in the Midwest. :)

Thanks for stopping by! 

Sunday, November 10, 2013

{Pretty, Happy, Funny, Real}~ November 10, 2013

Linking up with Leila again this week for {pretty, happy, funny, real} . . .


{Pretty}

I forgot to show you this.  I put this together last spring using Cottage Thoughts free printables. I just printed it, trimmed it, and cemented it to scrapbook paper I already had. I already had the frames too, and I painted them with leftover black paint.  This favorite verse from a favorite hymn is a daily reminder to live in God's grace.

I used scrapbook paper because the printables are not a standard size and
needed mats to fit my frames, but I didn't want to spend money on mats.
These are hanging in our windowless hallway.  It's so hard to take a decent picture of them!  (Obviously, I failed.)  The walls are really not bright yellow.

For your edification, here is Fernando Ortega singing "Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing."




{Happy}

Dave did some work with the compost pile not long ago.  It's hard to believe that anything is ever really happening in a compost pile, but when he dug below recent layers there was all this lovely dirt, full of worms, which he has been working into some of our garden beds.



 {Funny}

I dug sweet potatoes last week.  Goodness, do they ever taste good!  Some of them are puny and scrawny, but there have been some whoppers too, like this one:

The quarter is for scale.
This is the record-holder for the year. Someone said it looked like a chubby critter with an eye and a nose!



Sunday, November 3, 2013

{Pretty, Happy, Funny, Real}~ November 3, 2013

I know it is pretty pathetic that I can't seem to post regularly except for {phfr}.  It weren't for Leila and her intrepid band of daughters, this blog would probably be completely dead.  As it is, it is merely on long-term life support.  So for my family members and the two or three faithful friends who are still reading, here goes. :)

{Pretty}

It had been so long since I'd sewn anything that when I found myself with a spare hour last night, I hied myself directly to the sewing room and shut the door.  I'm not a very accomplished seamstress, but I do enjoy it.  It was so good to cut into fabric and hear the whir of the sewing machine again.  Since I didn't have much time, I opted to make a couple potholders with fabric I bought a year ago.  These can be whipped out in practically no time following instructions from Kelly, who appears to be no longer blogging.  A few years ago she put out four issues of a perfectly delightful digital quarterly magazine for young girls called Seasonal Delights.  The instructions were in the first issue.  I printed all the magazines, thankfully, since I don't think they are available online anymore. These hotpads were the first things I made and launched my slow and un-illustrious career as a seamstress. But I needed some new ones and last night was the perfect time to make a couple.

Aren't they pretty?




{Happy}

I know, I know, more jars of stuff I've canned.  Ho hum.  This time it's homemade vegetable/beef soup.  We were out, and it  makes me happy to have jars of homemade soup on the shelf for lunches or for supper on busy days.  And the little popping sounds the lids make when they are sealing properly are very cheerful!

I'll just show one picture of my jars because, well, let's face it~ once you've seen one, you've
 seen 'em all.  I did add vinegar to the water, but I got water marks anyway . . .

{Real}

A few weeks ago we got the last of the fall raspberries.  I'm always so struck by the beauty of the red berries in my blue-and-white bowl, especially in the sunshine.  So I stuck my bowl on top of a stack of books near a window to take pictures.  In the pile of otherwise erudite books is the first from the dreaded Left Behind series.  Dave is reading it because it's being made into a movie and he wants to be prepared for parishioners who have seen it or want to make a church field trip to see it.  The Lutheran view of the end times is not what is found in Left Behind, hence the need for advanced prep.  Otherwise, the picture is quite pretty, don't you think?


Too pretty not to post!

Thanks for stopping by! 

Sunday, October 27, 2013

[Pretty, Happy, Funny, Real}~ Oct. 27, 2013

Happy Reformation Sunday!  I'm joining Like Mother, Like Daughter for {Pretty, Happy, Funny, Real}.

{Pretty}

Last fall, Hannah planted a leftover, bedraggled mum in her garden.  This spring it came back and grew and grew, and now it is a two-foot-high sunburst of color.


Turnips are the only things left in our gardens.  The rest succumbed to frost this past week.  I can't say I'm very sorry because I was weary with trying to keep up with it.  In fact, I haven't been doing a very good job of it the past couple weeks.  We are learning to like turnips because they are low-carb.  They don't have much to recommend them in and of themselves, but they are the easiest things in the world to grow, and if you cube them, coat them in oil, sprinkle them with garlic, oregano, and parmesan cheese, and roast them, they are quite good.  You can't even tell they are turnips!



{Happy}

A new stove hood that works!  Yippee!  The light is brighter and~ joy of joys!~ the fan works!  Thanks go to my wonderful husband for installing it.



There is a little cornfield across the street at the back of our yard.  It's fun to mark the seasons by the activity in the field.  Last week was harvest time.


I realized not long ago that except for the meat, everything we were having for dinner was prepared by our own hands~ sweet potatoes, green beans, and applesauce.  Okay, the apples for the applesauce actually came from a friend, but we picked them and processed them.  Does that count?



This is sugar hand scrub.  Elizabeth gave me some for Christmas and when it ran out, I made more.  It is the best stuff for getting off garden dirt that has been ground into your palms and around and under your fingernails.  Fill a jar with sugar and then put in as much Dawn with Olay as you can.  That's it!  Then just scoop some out, add a little water, wash, and rinse.  Just don't do like I did and use a jar that you can't actually reach down to the bottom. . .


{Real}

The tomatoes this year were disappointing.  Because of the cool, wet spring, they were late getting started, and then mid-summer they developed some sort of fungus (so we've been told) that caused about 2/3 of them to rot on the vine.  Everyone around here had that problem.  We got 15 to 20 jars of sauce and a couple dozen small jars of juice, but we will have to buy tomato sauce this year eventually.  This is what's left after Dave pulled the plants up yesterday.  They look good, but trust me, you don't want to eat them.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

{Pretty, Happy, Funny, Real}~ October 13, 2013

Last week, we met our older daughter and her family for a quick getaway at about the halfway point between us, which happens to be the Cincinnati area.  We visited the Creation Museum and the Newport Aquarium (and had lunch at one of our favorite restaurants, The Claddagh).  It made for a busy time, but it was lots of fun, especially since Arane is in what I call the "Wonder Age," the years between about one and seven when children are exploring the wide world, and small things, such as fuzzy catepillars and dandelions and snowflakes, still cause them to marvel.  I think it's my favorite time of childhood.  I strive to maintain a sense of wonder as I grow older because there is so much in the world that is "wonder"ful!

{Pretty}

My pretty grandbaby with her pretty mama.  At the Creation Museum.

And with her pretty aunt.  (Also at the Creation Museum.)

{Happy}

Grandpa's walking stick was a source of great fun!
Aunt Hannah was happy to take her little niece to look at the displays.
Very happy just hanging with Daddy.

{Funny}

Some sort of funny breed of chicken at the petting zoo.
{Real}

Arane wasn't too sure about the goats.
She was even less sure when Daddy took her inside the pen!

Join Like Mother, Like Daughter for more {phfr}!

Sunday, September 29, 2013

{Pretty, Happy, Funny, Real}~ September 29, 2013

I was so busy this week that I neglected to take pictures most of the time.  There was little time to think about the camera.  That is the {real}ity of September, when the garden is still producing and school is in full swing.  Being a homeschooling mom, a part-time teacher, and a student of Greek while gardening, canning, etc. means extra activity. I'm ready for a frost to bring the gardening to an end for the year!

So. . . this week I'm going to share a few of my favorite quotations from my commonplace book that fit each category interspersed with a few favorite, random pictures.

{Beautiful}

Tomatoes and mint from our garden are beautiful even in an ice cream bucket.

"To live within a just order is to live within a pattern that has beauty.  The individual finds purpose within an order, and security~ whether it is the order of the soul or the order of the community.  Without order, indeed the life of man is poor, nasty, brutish, and short."~ Russell Kirk


{Happy}

"I am still determined to be cheerful and happy, in whatever situation may be; for I have also learned from experience that the greater part of our happiness or misery depends upon our dispositions and not upon our circumstances."~ Martha Washington




{Funny}



"Scientists have odious manners, except when you prop up their theory; then you can borrow money of them."~ Mark Twain

{Real}ity

"If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world."~ C.S. Lewis



Visit Like Mother, Like Daughter for more {phfr}!


Catching Up

Lake Michigan--gorgeous! It really has been two months since I last made a blog post!  This summer has been full of traveling, gardening...

Popular Posts