Category Archives: hobbies

Wordless Wednesday

 

Tomorrow I am off to the conference.  Thought I leave you these pictures to enjoy in my absence.  I’ll post Monday. 

Short work on the pond

 

     I went to backwash the pond filter today.  I turned it off, set the filter to backwash, turned it on and nothing happened.  I mean nothing, zilch, zip, nada.  Crap.  I fiddled with the plug, turned the switch off and on, still nothing.  Double crap.

     I went inside to the basement and checked the circuit breakers.  They were fine.  Triple crap.  Now, I had to drag DH outside.  He’d just gone up for a nap.  DH wasn’t happy.  He fiddled with the plug, had me turn the switch on and off, and then was going to send me to check the breakers.  I told him I’d done that already.

     He knows electrical work but for him to do it, it isn’t easy.  He checked the wire going to the plug and found a short he fixed that.  However, we had to run an extension cord because there is also a short between the outlet by the waterfall and the switch on the side of the shed.

     I love our pond but I have a feeling that if anything happens to the Koi again we will fill it in and turn it into garden.

A weakness for plants

 

     Saturday I received one of my favorite spring treats—the flyer from a local farm and greenhouse operation.  ‘They offer thousands of healthy bedding plants, annuals, and perennials.  Vegetables including over 75 tomato varieties and 68 pepper varieties and large selection of herbs and scented geraniums.  They have blueberry and raspberry bushes along with 52 hosta cultivars and 48 different hemerocallis.’  In other words, they are a gardener’s paradise. 

     G and I will pay a call there after the Pennwriters conference next month.  By then, we can safely plant tomatoes, peppers, watermelons, and the many other floras we’ll buy that day.  We will load the rear of her hubby’s SUV to overflowing. 

     Last year I spent more than she did.  We’ll see who gets off cheapest this year and I’m betting it won’t be me.  I have a weakness for plants, an addiction if you will and not unlike my addiction for books.

     I’ve perused their lists and marked what I want.  This year the gardens will have, vegetable plants intermixed with flowers.  The tomatoes I tried that way last year grew well.  I’d sure like a nice variety of vegetables this year.

Bullfrogs can draw blood.

 

     Yes, I do think that most of the people around here are convinced I’m crazy.  You should have seen the looks I got from a few cars that passed me tonight when I was picking up night crawlers in the alley.  Hey, I’m a gardener.  I also have fish and bullfrogs that love worms.  Who am I to pass by the hordes of huge night crawlers that were wandering out onto the street because we had rain?

     One person understood.  A woman about my age pulled her car up even with me and rolled down her window.  “For your gardens right?”

     “Well, yes.  And for the frogs and fish—free food you know.  Commercial Koi food costs plenty.”

     She pointed back down the street from the direction she’d come.  “I saw a bunch of huge ones back there.”

     “Thanks.”

     She waved and headed on her way.  I went looking for more night crawlers.

     Goliath the bullfrog was pleased with my midnight snack offerings.  Although, at one point, he thought my index finger was more food.  Ouch!  I actually bled.  Ungrateful sod.

     The Koi were happy too.  I only gave them a few worms and then the rest went into the garden.

With heavy, duty gardening comes…

 

     Sore muscles like you wouldn’t believe.  It probably wouldn’t be too bad if I hadn’t done twice the work today.  Tonight I have sore muscles that I didn’t know I had, and in places, I haven’t thought about since the weather got cold. 

     That’s okay though, since it felt wonderful to get outside and do things again.  I do hate winter because it turns me into a real couch potato. 

     Today I did a lot of over head work trimming vines back on the arbor.  Tonight, all that work is making its presence known in my neck, my back, and my shoulders.  Well, you get the idea.  You know what?  Growing older isn’t for sissies.  Nope, it’s not for sissies one bit.  Even five years ago, I probably wouldn’t have been as sore as I am tonight. 

     I’ll get over.  I’ll be out working in the yard until the predicted cold front moves through by the end of the week.  Of course, with cooler weather and rain I’ll be inside chomping at the bit to get out again.

     I can’t help myself.  I am dying to be able to sit outside at night and enjoy all the hard work.

Blame Delaney

 

  A couple of years ago, my hard drive crashed.  (I’m so glad I back up my books daily.)  I had a program on the old hard drive that did some of the things that Fotosketcher does.  I lost it.  It was no where to be found.  I’d used it to do the portrait of Gavin that I use as my avatar.  I’d done a gorgeous portrait of my neighbor’s daughter in a water color effect. 

    I tried many photo programs but hadn’t found one that did the things I wanted.  Then Delaney did a post on Fotosketcher.

     I have a new addiction.  I blame Delaney.  Yes, it’s all her fault.  She tempted me to try it and now I am completely addicted.

     I love Fotosketcher!  I’ve played with it so often that I think most of my best photos have copies in water color, oil, pencil, and whatever else I can tweak it into doing.  I’m driving DH crazy.  Yep, I tell him it’s all Delaney’s fault.

     Today I was guilty of addicting someone else to the program. 

     I wonder if I can find a chapter of Fotosketcher addicts anonymous.

Gone fishing

 

DH fishing

     The second week of fishing season there will be a sign on our front door, ‘Gone Fishing’ and at least once a week thereafter through to late fall.  We never go the first week of the season because all the danged amateurs who think they know how to fish are out there crowding the river banks.  It takes most of them about a week to decide that they’d rather do something else.  We didn’t get out at all last year and we both missed it.

     Fishing amateurs are easy to recognize.  They arrive with brand new tackle more suited to lake or deep sea fishing than trout streams.  They spend more time untangling their line than they do wetting it in the river.  An amateur will place him/herself directly across the river from anyone else that is fishing and throw his or her line atop the other person’s line—definitely bad form.

     The amateur will trash the river bank.  We clean up after ourselves and pick up any other trash we find.  Our parks department supplies plenty of trash barrels but the amateur, the slob fisherman, and lazybones visitors to our lovely parks don’t bother to use them.  Most of the fish we catch, we release.

     DH and I always have at least two cheap rods and reel set ups in our vehicles that we will often gift to some child who is interested in fishing but doesn’t have the proper tackle.  

     Two years ago, a couple had their nine year old grandson out near our favorite fishing hole.  Someone at a store (that will remain nameless) sold them a lake pole, a horrible reel, plastic worms, and fish hooks only suitable for deep sea fishing.  None of them knew what they were doing and they were all getting frustrated, so while DH kept them busy, I slipped off to my car and pulled out one of our give-away set ups.  DH and I patiently showed the boy how to tie on a leader, put a proper hook on, and bait it.  We took turns teaching him how to cast his line.  Fifteen minutes later the delighted boy pulled a decent sized trout out of the stream with his new fishing pole.  Hours and many fish later, the grandparents and the boy were ready to leave.  The boy brought the ‘borrowed’ fishing pole over to us—my favorite part is when we tell kids they can keep the rod and reel.  Their faces are priceless.

Something I miss having around

 

     I grew up with a piano in the house.  We took lessons but none of us was what you’d call a musical prodigy.  I remember all the piano teachers both the good ones and the bad.  Scales?  Yes, I can still play them.  One of the teachers had insisted on hours of practicing scales.

     However, there was one person in our house who could play beautifully, if you could catch her at it.  That person was my grandmother.  You truly had to sneak up on her to hear her play the piano because she’d never play when she thought anyone was home.  That woman could play like a dream.  I remember many a time hiding on the stairs, practically holding my breath to make sure she didn’t know I was there, and listening to her play.

     I miss having a piano and maybe one day I’ll buy one.  There’s always some old piano for sale in the newspaper at a cheap price.  I already know where I’d put a small one.  All my old sheet music and lesson books are stashed in a bookcase.

It must be January because I’m getting the gardening bug

 

     It never fails once we get that tiny warm spell, that miniscule thaw out in January; I begin to think of gardening.  I scan online seed catalogues.  I dig through catalogues I get in the mail.  I plan and dream of where things will go in the spring.

     I’m on a constant search for perennials.  I hunt for anything in a black flower because I love the way the black accents make all the other colors pop. 

     I blame my father and my Aunt J. for this.  They got me started.  They caused my addiction to gardening. 

     My father always planted tomatoes and a few other vegetables each year.  I often helped him dig around in the garden.  When I visited my Aunt J on a more regular basis, she moved my interest to perennials because she and my Uncle H had a garden shop.  Aunt J caused my full blown addiction when they went out of business and she insisted I load my van with plants on several trips.

     I still have most of those perennials in my garden.  Some of which I’ve split over the years and given to G for her gardens.  Now G and I spend the spring haunting garden shops and loading our gardens with new discoveries.

I wish I’d thought of that!

    
     I know these pictues have made the rounds already this year.  I can’t help it, I laughed like a fool and passed them on. 
Maybe I’ll put up some lights this year after all–these gave me a few ideas.  Hehehe!
Holiday Bad Attitude

Once again, I was disqualified from my neighborhoods"Best Decorated House" contest due to my bad attitude!

Be vewwy vewwy qwiet...

This may offend some people but it cracked me up!

 

Green tomatoes are good in everything…right?

 

My potted vegetable garden

My potted vegetable garden

     I love green tomatoes.  I’ve picked them early to fry them when I couldn’t wait for the first frost warning.  I’ve mooched them from neighbors on years I didn’t grow any.  Last year I planted two tomato plants in a pot, this year I tripled that because last year I had no green tomatoes at the end of the season.

     I harvested all the green tomatoes left on my vines before we had frost this past week.  Now I have a basket full of them.  We’ve had them fried, made into chutney, green tomato salsa, and diced and sautéed with the onions in a chicken liver curry.  Remember, DH is on a soft diet.  (Nevertheless, the curry was very good!)  Now I am dredging up all the green tomato recipes in my files. 

     I think tomorrow, I’ll make green tomato pie but that only takes three and half cups.  Maybe more chutney is in order to use up what I’ll have left.  I could dice some into the chili I plan to make on Friday.  I bet that would be good.  Hmm, there’s that recipe I saw for green tomato bread—that’s it, next year I’m planting more tomatoes.

Gnasty gnats

 

     The last couple of weeks we have a plague of gnats.  They swarm and bite not just the dogs but us too.  When I ran the trimmer around the pond, the gardens, and along the fence those nasty bugs were biting the heck out of my ears.  They drew blood and were worse than the mosquitoes.  It’s a darned shame the bull frogs consider them too small to be an appetizer.

     No, our frogs want to eat birds and nightcrawlers.  One of the frogs, probably Goliath, has the mourning doves on heightened patrol at the waterfall.  The birds have begun to use a lookout when they come in to drink.  I haven’t seen any starlings stop by for quite a while.  

     When I sit on the little bench by the back door, I can see a dozen or so gold finches feasting on my coneflowers’ seeds.  They arrive every afternoon around five and aren’t as skittish now as they were this summer.  The cat bird joins them.  From the far side of the cemetery I can hear the red tailed hawk yelling at the mowers.  I can’t stay outside and enjoy the birds for long because the gnats discover me again.