Friday, September 16, 2011
Thursday, September 15, 2011
A Little Making
When we first decided to homeschool, I was so excited be the prospect and couldn't wait to make for our classroom. I was going to make a felt calender, a wall pocket organizer, a reusable schedule with velcro, not to mention a first day of school skirt and other lovelies. But then I got bogged down and stumped by the lesson planning part and lost my steam.
I did get a chance to make a little pencil holder for my school girl though. I used the pattern from The Creative Family and substituted fabric and batting for felt. I also purchased a brand spanking new set of colored pencils (a set for her and one for me). And it just feels so sweet and special. This little girl, her colored pencils, and me.
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Yarn Along: 14 September
Joining Ginny again this week...
Oh just how many pictures can one take of just one knitting project? I really wish I had something else to offer on the knitting front, but.. well.. I don't. It's not that I am not knitting. I am. It is the slow and methodical click clacking of needles, though, rather than a fast, more purposeful knitting. This cowl will make its way off of my needles, maybe even by next week. If it doesn't, I may just bow my head in [no-posting] shame and reappear when it is done.
Unlike my knitting, the reading has been quick, varied, and fun. I Am Cute Dresses arrived at my doorstep a couple of days ago and it. has. the cutest.dresspatterns.EVER. I am actually scared to make any of them for fear that the book will fall from grace. They look so simple and so easy to put together, but I feel quite confident that I can find a way to complicate them. I have nearly finished A Charlotte Mason Companion and I have found it tremendously helpful in developing a plan for our first year of homeschooling.
I missed all of you last week and can not wait to see how you and your knitting and reading are!
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
First Day of {Homeschool} Kindergarten
We have a big day ahead of us tomorrow, me and my little girl. It is a start of a little (or long) journey together, one little step at a time (for me and for her). Off to sleep now...
Monday, September 12, 2011
Nature Study Monday: Amanita
That was a completely unintended week-long blog vacation that proved to be much needed. I am so happy to be back though!
Are you a forager? With all of our walks in the woods, I have recently become very interested in the many different mushrooms that peek through or pop their heads out of the fallen leaves or that stand at attention on decaying logs in the forest. Today on a walk in the Delaware Water Gap, we came across a couple foraging and learned a little about what they found. I learned, for instance, that a toadstool is not a specific kind of mushroom, but a generic name for one.
I have much much more to learn about these forest creatures before I venture to eat one. A friend walking with us pointed to this mushroom as Amania bisporigera (or the Eastern North American Destroying Angel--yikes!), a fungus so toxic that it accounts many or most of the mushroom fatalities worldwide. Upon further investigation, I am no so sure that we classified it correctly. Most of this classification evidently are found growing on the forest floor (this one is on a log) and are found in the spring.
Nevertheless, I will surely not be eating anything looking like it in the near future.
Friday, September 2, 2011
{this moment}
{this moment} - A Friday ritual. A single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Yarn Along: 31 August
Joining Ginny again this week...
Do you take Yarn Along pictures of the same project for weeks on end just like me? I really hope others are knitting as slow as I am. This truly is the Summer 2011 Cowl because it is nearly the one and only thing I have knit through the summer. Here's hoping that it will be done by summer's end.
My reading has varied a bit though. I finished Rhythm of Family by Amanda and Stephen Soule this week and thoroughly enjoyed it. Like others have said, there was not a lot that was new to me in the book, but the photography was beautiful and I appreciated the reminders I took from each of the authors.
Now I am working my way through the bundles of peaches that we picked last week, trying to find just the right way to preserve them for the year. Any ideas?
Now I am working my way through the bundles of peaches that we picked last week, trying to find just the right way to preserve them for the year. Any ideas?
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Blight!
Oh our tomatoes! I think the gardener's heart in me might just be breaking.
This year we built a large, very large by our standards, bed for these babies of ours and in the late spring, I faithfully transplanted all (or most) of our volunteers to their permanent {summer} home. Because I have never grown tomatoes from seed before, I knew that this year would be experimental for me {and that there might be some casualties) but I never dreamed of this!
Nearly all of our tomato plants are dead! Ack! AND to add insult to injury, the hens are pecking away at the few that are indeed ripening! It feels like such a sad climax to what has been an only mediocre season in our garden.
The late coming of spring, the extraordinary amount of rain, the hens, and my relative inexperience have ensured a pretty poor showing from the garden this year. I suppose I have learned a few things (note the grumbling and arms crossed) and have made some mistakes that I won't make again (keep the hens out of the beds, for one). Most importantly, though, it is another lesson in relinquishing control (for me). Some years will be good; others won't.
Monday, August 29, 2011
Nature Study Monday: Coneflower
Do you have any of these growing around your home?
I planted Coneflowers early this spring and anxiously awaited their arrival throughout the summer. Butterflies supposedly love the flower as much as we do, but I have not noticed many surrounding ours. They, instead, flock to the nearby butterfly bush (which I only learned later is not a native plant and therefor not a host to many of our native butterflies).
Coneflowers (Echinacea) are native to eastern and central North America and do not mind some drought. They like full sun but can handle some shade, and once they are established they live a long while and attract all kinds of good native species to your garden.
Friday, August 26, 2011
{this moment}
{this moment} - A Friday ritual. A single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Yarn Along: 24 August
Joining Ginny again this week...
Is the weather cooling where you are? It is here. I have actually opened the knitting bag containing my hub's sweater to peek in. No knitting yet, but it is coming... The cowl though is filling out quite well and I just might meet that end of August deadline. Still just a couple of rows a night, but they are adding up.
In reading news, The Egg and I has been retired for the moment in favor of some homeschooling reading. The new school year is upon us and I don't really know what we are going to do with it. Karen Andreola's words are giving me some comfort though. And my copy of Amanda Soule's new book arrived last week. The photographs are lovely as is the writing.
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Making for a Birthday
Our littlest one recently turned two. We had a small family celebration for him with a peach crumble pie and two little handmade gifts.
This third child of ours is so naturally balanced, so sure, and yet so open. It was a wonder to watch him on this special day of his. I imagine he feels himself a part of and inextricable from our larger whole and is comfortable with his place in the family. I pray that the balance remains with him as he gets older.
Our eldest daughter made her littlest sibling a books about his very favorite thing in the whole wide world--TRUCKS. And his Mama sewed up a little birthday crown that he absolutely refuses to wear so it had to be modeled by his older brother!
Monday, August 22, 2011
Nature Study Monday: Carpenter Bees
I am very interested in all the sorts of bees that we have humming about our yard over the past three months. Documentaries like this one have me especially interested in the fate of our dear honeybees. To fight the anxiety drummed up knowing just how dependent we are on our yellow and black friends I study those that are flying about my yard and dream of the hives that we will get next year. And I am finding out so much more each day (thanks Julie for pointing out that this is actually a yellow jacket).
Carpenter bees, or at least the species that we have in our own backyard, are a great deal larger than honeybees. As you may have guessed (or already know), they make their homes in wooden structures or decaying trees by boring holes and creating tunnels. The bees, however, do not eat the wood, although they might use it to create divisions within their nest. They are primarily solitary nesters although in some species some females and their daughters nest together.
They are good pollinators of open-faced flowers, like our bee balm, pictured above.
Friday, August 19, 2011
{this moment}
{this moment} - A Friday ritual. A single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Quilted
I put Harvey's garden-inspired quilt across his bed to stay a few days ago and, I have to say, I am pretty proud of myself. The quilt is far from perfect (quilting in the ditch is something that takes practice evidently), but this four year old's little eyes don't notice any of the imperfections. He lit up so when I gave it to him that I felt truly awed and, at the same time, anxious in anticipation for the time when he won't want these handmades any more.
I started the quilt in May when the weather here in Northern New Jersey began to warm and all I could think about was what was growing then, what would be growing soon, and what might be growing after that. So the garden was on my mind when I dipped into the greens, browns, and yellows in the fabric stash.
I used a very simple pattern found here and paced myself throughout the summer. Like knitting, quilting takes time, patience, and the ability to undo and redo (not a strength of mine). In the end, and despite its flaws, it is a little piece of our summer and of our garden that is keeping our son snuggley at night.
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Yarn Along: 17 August
Joining Ginny again this week for her yarn along...
The Egg and I is providing some closing hours entertainment--I do actually laugh out loud with this one which is just so refreshing. I have slowed a bit though as my homeschooling reading is picking up. I am going to start teaching our 5 year old in the fall using a loose interpretation of the Charlotte Mason approach and I am getting the jitters about it. For those of who who have homeschooled using this method, do you have any experience with Living Books Curriculum? Last minute, I am considering a curriculum purchase.
I almost used the same picture for the third week in a row as the knitting (especially the knitting) and reading have not changed that much. I still have hopes of finishing my mom's cowl by the end of the month which means that the project is going to start coming with me (that is if I ever leave the house!).
The Egg and I is providing some closing hours entertainment--I do actually laugh out loud with this one which is just so refreshing. I have slowed a bit though as my homeschooling reading is picking up. I am going to start teaching our 5 year old in the fall using a loose interpretation of the Charlotte Mason approach and I am getting the jitters about it. For those of who who have homeschooled using this method, do you have any experience with Living Books Curriculum? Last minute, I am considering a curriculum purchase.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
The Summer Rains
On this very rainy Monday, we~
~biked around the block to move our muscles and our minds
~played a whole lot together
~puzzled, painted and drew
How about your Monday? What it rainy too?
Monday, August 15, 2011
Nature Study Monday: Tiger Swallowtail
These beautiful butterflies flit about our butterfly bush in the early morning and each time I see one I pause and watch until the moment passes, and up and away it goes.
The Tiger Swallowtail, like the Eastern Black Swallowtail, has a long tail on the end of each wing (hence the name). The Tiger Swallowtail can be found throughout most parts of the United States and Canada and is native to North America.
Tiger Swallowtails lay their eggs, one per leaf, on Sweet Bay Magnolia and Tulip poplar trees. Once the caterpillar hatches from the egg, it eats its shell and then begins to munch on the host tree's leaves. It changes color as it sheds it skin, from brown to light green to dark brown again (just before it pupates).
These yellow beauties prefer the nectar of coneflowers and Petunia and especially love shades of red and pink. I have found ours (like the one pictured above) drinking the nectar from purple butterfly bush flowers as well.
What kinds of butterflies are flying about in your life?
Friday, August 12, 2011
{this moment}
{this moment} - A Friday ritual. A single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Home Cooking
I grew up in Texas. I don't live there any more. Aside from very close friends and family, the thing I miss the most about it is the food. The saucy sizzle that permeates nearly all "Texas" dishes is just something that I have not found anywhere else. Other places that I have lived like San Francisco and New York City and North Carolina sport some yummy food (and I am certain that someone from any one of these places--or from anywhere else for that matter--could write this post about the food coming out of their home), but my taste buds are still loyal to the Lone Star State.
I have learned not to try to get Mexican on the east coast. I leave the establishment so sad and homesick and totally unsatisfied. There is one chain restaurant, On the Border, which I frequent in desperation but even its food is vastly inferior to its On the Border cousins in Texas.
Over the years I have started making more of the food out of my home state. Typically I am a recipe user, but the funny thing about making this food for me is that recipes were totally irrelevant. I added and subtracted and remembered and enhanced to turn our meals into something that said home to me and from me to my kids.
On the table this week:
: fajitas with sauteed Cubano and red peppers and onions
: black beans
: jalapeno poppers
: guacamole
: slow-cooked pork ribs
What foods remind you of home?
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Yarn Along: 10 August
Joining Ginny again this week for her yarn along...
Oh August, how much I love you. The reading and the knitting so far this month have been very neat, very planned, very to the point--all things that August just is not. This month is just a little messier than its predecessor, a little sweatier, and just a little more fun. I don't know if it is because my birthday falls during this eighth month of the year, but I just love everything.about.August. There is not much that is predictable about it for us {and I like that} and I look forward to what is {my knitting and reading}.
Each sweltering night, I look forward to my one (or two) rounds of knitting (or purling) my mom's Christmas cowl. I am slowly but surely finishing this one. I hope to have it off the needles by the end of the month and I am enjoying it while it is on them.
And after those couple rounds of knitting (in between a whole lot of this), I read a chapter of The Egg and I. This reading is so light and funny--just what I need and want in this moment, this month in time.
I am really looking forward to reading more knitting and reading adventures this week!
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Harvesting
There is so much coming from the garden right now. We have:
:edamame: pulled the plants along with the beans out of the ground. Can't wait to serve them with some sea salt tomorrow
:Cubanelle peppers: think I might be the only one in the house who likes them. More for me!
:tomatoes: a garden visitor got to our first one before we did!
:jalapenos: these I have to share. Jalapeno poppers. Yum!!!
:cucumbers: slicing and pickling. Now I just need to get my courage up for some canning. Does it make you nervous too?
and so much more... Life is good.
:cucumbers: slicing and pickling. Now I just need to get my courage up for some canning. Does it make you nervous too?
and so much more... Life is good.
Monday, August 8, 2011
Nature Study Monday: Toadstool
On a long hike through the woods of the Berkshires this weekend, we saw a whole handful of these funny little creatures. Have you ever seen a toadstool in person? For me, they are the stuff of fairy tales and not for the average hiker. But there they were, in all of their magic, right in the middle of our trail, one after the other. A classic case of the more you notice, the more you notice. I wonder how many times I have passed mushrooms like these on walks in the woods...
Amanita muscaria, the scientific name for toadstools, are found in coniferous forests throughout the Northern hemisphere. They have both poisonous and hallucinogenic properties. Both humans and animals have been known to seek them out for the latter.
For me, it is magic enough just to spot this small in a romp through the woods. What a wonder this world is to behold...
Thursday, August 4, 2011
{this moment}
{this moment} - A Friday ritual. A single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Camping with Kids
I have always wanted to, but found some excuse as to why it could happen. Too hot. Too cold. Too tired. Too much. Enough with these excuses, I say!
We took the plunge into the kid camping waters over the weekend, and it was... just perfect. Not perfect in the perfect sense. There were some unexpected elements like a (blaring) outdoor movie after dark and more blaring music following that. Not exactly the camping experience that I remember from yesteryear. Oh, and then there were the portable satellite dishes for campfire t.v. viewing.
But perfect in every other sense. Clear night skies, a babbling brook, s'mores, and fresh water swimming, fire sticks, and fire chats, and time together outside without the pull of the garden, or the house, or a myriad of other things.
This camping thing, we can do it. We really can.
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
Saving Seeds
Seeds have always been such a mystery to me--I mean, where and how do they materialize? I remember looking inside a not yet bloomed sunflower last year for the seeds it supposedly had. Yeah, as I suspected, no seeds. These seed thingys, I thought, are for someone else to hold, behold, and plant. Not for me.
But this spring, I bought some of these thingys to plant in my own garden, to plant from seed. Our first go together indoors was not so great. My seed trays that I faithfully brought in and out of doors each day (until I stopped remembering) didn't like my forgetful ways or the the cold spring we had this year. Direct seeding, though, worked! What fun it was for us to put a little pellet, or flake, or tiny ball in the ground and watch it turn into carrots, peas, spinach, and lettuce.
Seed saving is the next logical step for me on this path, but back to one of the original questions--where and how do these seeds materialize? Lo and behold, and again with nature's unpredictable predictability, there they were hanging off one of our dill plants, which had evidently gone to seed. Wow!
What a truly cool world.
Monday, August 1, 2011
Nature Study Monday: Honeybee
If last year was the year of the garden, and this year is the year of the chickens, next year will most certainly be the year of the honeybee. We don't have a hive yet (that I know of), but these buzzers are humming all over our flowers (and yours too, I hope).
I have a lot to learn about our endangered friends before they move into our backyard. I do know that our food crops are dependent on them and that all of us need to everything we can to keep them safe, healthy, and happy. This documentary helped give me a better understanding of how essential honeybees are to our planet.
Honeybees have fuzzy bodies and shiny abdomens accompanied by thin wings. They live in colonies of up to 25000. Females can sting only once, and males cannot sting at all. They are generally calm and not aggressive.
Friday, July 29, 2011
{this moment}
{this moment} - A Friday ritual. A single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Around the Farmette
Inspired by Farmama...
There have been some successes, some failures, and some question marks in the garden so far this year:
: what I thought was going to be a small green bean harvest is turning into a huge one. We could feed our family of five heapfuls every other night. Yum.
: unbelievably (to me), we have at least one cantaloupe. Yum. Yum.
: not sure what is going on with the broccoli again this year. Last year it didn't come in until September. It looks like that is when we will be harvesting it again this year (or not at all)
: pickling cucumbers are coming in all over the place and when these plants are done, we have a second and third round at the ready.
: our edamame plants have beans all over them but I am still unclear about when to harvest. Have you grown edamame before?
: of our nine (albeit young) blueberry bushes, I think we might have harvested ten berries. I love those catbirds but next year I am not going to share all of my berries with them.
: our lovely lettuce has only just now bolted so we have been eating a fresh salad nearly every night this summer.
: our raspberry bushes did not flower this year. They are only a year old. I am hoping this will be different next year.
: carrots are growing strong and coming out about 8-10 inches long tasting of the earth, their green, brown and orangeness is awe-inspiring.
: our cauliflower hasn't come to a head yet. Hmmmm.
How does your garden grow this summer?
There have been some successes, some failures, and some question marks in the garden so far this year:
: what I thought was going to be a small green bean harvest is turning into a huge one. We could feed our family of five heapfuls every other night. Yum.
: unbelievably (to me), we have at least one cantaloupe. Yum. Yum.
: not sure what is going on with the broccoli again this year. Last year it didn't come in until September. It looks like that is when we will be harvesting it again this year (or not at all)
: pickling cucumbers are coming in all over the place and when these plants are done, we have a second and third round at the ready.
: our edamame plants have beans all over them but I am still unclear about when to harvest. Have you grown edamame before?
: of our nine (albeit young) blueberry bushes, I think we might have harvested ten berries. I love those catbirds but next year I am not going to share all of my berries with them.
: our lovely lettuce has only just now bolted so we have been eating a fresh salad nearly every night this summer.
: our raspberry bushes did not flower this year. They are only a year old. I am hoping this will be different next year.
: carrots are growing strong and coming out about 8-10 inches long tasting of the earth, their green, brown and orangeness is awe-inspiring.
: our cauliflower hasn't come to a head yet. Hmmmm.
How does your garden grow this summer?
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Yarn Along: 27 July
Joining Ginny again this week for another Yarn Along...
Slow and steady goes the knitting and the reading this week. At the end of the day, I am left with very little time for each and every last second of it is wonderful. The cowl knits up so simply and takes very little concentration, which is exactly what I like (too much detail interferes with the close attention I must pay to all of those Project Runway episodes). When the weather cools, I plan to get back to the sweater at hand but for now, this is just fine.
This Life is in Your Hands is due back to the library soon so my pace has got to pick up a bit. I love the book and would read it until it was done if it weren't for all of the life that has to happen in between those chapters. I appreciate the different perspective it offers on homesteading, and in particular, on the Nearings--what information they chose to share and, perhaps more importantly, not to share. By next week, this one should be off the nightstand...
This Life is in Your Hands is due back to the library soon so my pace has got to pick up a bit. I love the book and would read it until it was done if it weren't for all of the life that has to happen in between those chapters. I appreciate the different perspective it offers on homesteading, and in particular, on the Nearings--what information they chose to share and, perhaps more importantly, not to share. By next week, this one should be off the nightstand...
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Making for Baby
We have a dear friend who recently had a baby girl and I have been itching to make her something since she was welcomed into the world. Sewing is still something I am learning to do despite a couple of years of practice.
In looking for patterns to sew for this new and dear one, I came across the baby kimono in Weekend Sewing. I was a little concerned as sewing for a newborn seems so, well, tiny. And I feel like a bull in a china closet around all of that sewing tininess.
But I took the plunge and cut into that Liberty of London fabric and out came this tiny top. I had some bias tape issues (as usual) and I still haven't really figured out tension on my machine, but all in all, I am pretty happy with it.
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Nature Study Monday: Angelica
I think I might dub 2011 as The Summer of Garden Herbs. We have so many growing this year and I have so much to learn about them. Some are very familiar to me, the sites, smells, and feel of them, like chamomile and lavender, for instance. Others like Jerusalem Artichoke or Angelica are totally new.
Each time I visit a nursery, I go straight to the section on herbs. It seems that they all have the basics--sage, thyme, basil, etc... but there might be one or two obscure ones that I happen upon. This is how I came upon our new Angelica plant. I had heard of it before, but had no idea why I might want it in my garden. I did notice that it likes some shade and I had that to offer so we were in business.
Angelica is a biennial. If the plant is left to flower, it will die in its second year. I am hoping that mine will drop seeds and then reseed itself. We will see. It likes moist soil and "speckled" shade and is native to northeastern North America (another great reason for me to plant it).
For medicinal purposes, the roots, leaves, and seeds (I believe) are used to lower fevers, quell coughs, and soothe colicky babies. The stalks of the plants are candied and sold as sweets.
Hmmm... I think I will save that last bit of information from my little ones!
Have you had any experience with Angelica? Please share!
Nature Study Monday: Angelica
I think I might dub 2011 as The Summer of Garden Herbs. We have so many growing this year and I have so much to learn about them. Some are very familiar to me, the sites, smells, and feel of them, like chamomile and lavender, for instance. Others like Jerusalem Artichoke or Angelica are totally new.
Each time I visit a nursery, I go straight to the section on herbs. It seems that they all have the basics--sage, thyme, basil, etc... but there might be one or two obscure ones that I happen upon. This is how I came upon our new Angelica plant. I had heard of it before, but had no idea why I might want it in my garden. I did notice that it likes some shade and I had that to offer so we were in business.
Angelica is a biennial. If the plant is left to flower, it will die in its second year. I am hoping that mine will drop seeds and then reseed itself. We will see. It likes moist soil and "speckled" shade and is native to northeastern North America (another great reason for me to plant it).
For medicinal purposes, the roots, leaves, and seeds (I believe) are used to lower fevers, quell coughs, and soothe colicky babies. The stalks of the plants are candied and sold as sweets.
Hmmm... I think I will save that last bit of information from my little ones!
Have you had any experience with Angelica? Please share!
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Yarn Along: 20 July
Joining Ginny again this week for her yarn along...
The knitting and the reading (and the living) have gotten so much better since we conceded and turned on the AC. How much I was hoping to spare our energy bill (and the world) of it but, alas, we were baking in this house of ours. No amount of cold showers helped.
My mom's cowl has already been ripped once. Luxe Alpaca is a cushy, squishy soft and dreamy yarn to knit with, but it really shows mistakes (as does the cowl pattern). I am in no hurry though, just enjoying the knitting.
Besides lots and lots of books about trains for our littlest, I have started reading This Life is in Your Hands based on a Amazon recommendation and I fear it is another one of those books that I can not put down. Drat! They make me so tired! Pining to go upstairs and read it right now as a matter of fact. Just one more of Netflix's Project Runway episodes before I can get to it...
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Garden Herbs
Our garden this year is filled with herbs of all kinds: some that love sun, some that like shade, some that creep, and one that can get over six feet high! I am still learning of the culinary and medicinal benefits of each of them. Here is a sampling of what is growing and how we are using it:
Lemon Balm: makes a lovely addition to chamomile in a tea; I have been adding it to
salads with a lemon vinaigrette
Oregano: used it tonight to make this
Lemon Verbana: going to make an oil using this one
Lavender: drying the flowers for tea and sachets at the moment
Dill: feeding it to our caterpillars and holding onto it until our cucumbers come in
What herbs are growing in your garden this year and how are you using them?
Monday, July 18, 2011
Nature Study Monday: Roman Chamomile
My most favorite tea in the whole wide world is chamomile. While it is much too hot right now to enjoy the relaxing effects of it, I am still loving all of the flowers.
I have never grown chamomile before. This year I grew most of my plants from seed and bought one for insurance. It is growing splendidly underneath and next to our blueberry bushes.
Chamomile is native to Europe and likes full sun. Ours started flowering a couple of weeks ago and I am looking forward to many more flowers this season!
Friday, July 15, 2011
{this moment}
{this moment} - A Friday ritual. A single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Thursday, July 14, 2011
On the Farm(ette)
Farmama has gone offline for a while, but I think I will continue the Thursday postings for a while. It is so much fun...
We have hit a momentary lull in the vegetable harvesting this week. Our green beans are not producing quite as fast or as much as they did a couple of weeks ago, neither is our lettuce, our strawberries are decidedly done, and the birds are getting to our blueberries faster than we can.
Each year I am learning more about growing our food. Last year was my first real year in the garden. I learned spacing, and hilling, and staking, and so much more. This year I am dabbling with companion planting--I just underplanted carrots by our tomatoes. Our strawberries, too, are going to have to get friendly with another round of beans due up soon.
Last year I planted all seedlings and this year most of what we are growing was started from seed. This season I have also done second (and third) plantings of some veggies. Next year? Oh the list of what I want to learn/know/practice goes on and on and on. Think I'll start with extending the season with a cold frame.
What are you doing differently in your garden this year?
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Yarn Along: 13 July
Yarning (and sweating) along with Ginny again this week...
This year my determination to keep the air conditioner off as long as possible is getting in the way of sweater progress. I have turned to this cowl, a present for my own mama (who refuses to read this blog). This project will accompany us to the beach for the rest of the season, as it is nice and light and just what I need.
Reading has been sporadic at best, but I am determined to overcome that lack of focus. I am loving The Egg and I. Have you read it? It is quirky and funny and light--again just what I need.
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