"Slow
down and enjoy life. It's not only the scenery you miss by going too fast-you
also miss the sense of where you are going and why." --Eddie Cantor
The
past couple of days I have finally been able to sit and boy am I enjoying
it. My car broke down and is in the
shop which is why I am stuck home. But
Jimmy crack corn and I don’t care because the sun is shining the temperature
is perfect with a slight breeze to keep insects at bay. I am sitting in the shade of an apple tree
with my kindle (wifi reaches to the apple tree) and a sweet tea. The smell of the wild rose and peonies
wafting through the air, the birds singing ….so relaxing it sounds like a
lullabye! So much has happen since I
last updated and I truly needed some down days to regroup.
I have a new daughter in law would probably be
at the top of the list of happenings. The wedding was
awesome and she was beautiful. It rained
the day before, the morning of and the day after but cleared up so they were
able to have the outside wedding they wanted.
I cried because #1 son was trying so hard not to. They had a photo booth which took a series of
four pictures printed on one sheet. You
got to keep a copy and one was put in a scrap book along with a personal
message for the bride and groom. There
was usually a line of people waiting to enter but then after a couple of hours
they brought out props and I can’t wait to see the pictures that ensued! The newly wedded couple is leaving today for
a Caribbean cruise.
#2
daughter had a fantastic week. She
passed her driver’s test on Thursday and graduated Friday. Next year #2 son graduates and then I will be
done packing lunches and getting sick calls from school nurses.
The
garden is finally planted and tomatoes are blossoming.
My niece and her kids
came up for the wedding and spent a week.
I thought I could con them into some help but it rained almost every day
they were here! This year has been a
trial, lots of rain, late frosts, chipmunks digging up seed and I have a deer
with a fawn nearby. She is hanging
around my garden eating my apple trees, plum, forsythia, Jerusalem artichokes,
raspberries and anything else that takes her fancy. Someone left the garden gate open and she did
a little damage walking around on my new transplants but thankfully I had
extras to replace them. The apple trees
are loaded, the red and black raspberries and blackberries look like it is
going to be a good year but the grapes bit the dust in the late frost.
Most
of the garden has been papered and mulched with straw which is going to leave
me with some extra time to sit under the apple tree! We moved some black berry bushes outside the
garden to increase air circulation and we put in stock panels for the tomatoes,
cucumbers and beans. Usually we mulch
our tomatoes and let them lay on the ground.
Last year I lost a lot of tomatoes to animals (now know it was ground
hog) so I am trying the staking method and hoping for increased harvest at the
same time. My mom and I tried staking
once and even though it was a bad tomato year for everyone we weren’t willing
to take the chance again. Keep your
fingers crossed it works since we need a lot of tomatoes…think a year’s worth
of salsa, V8, spaghetti sauce, picante sauce, pizza sauce, tomato soup, stewed/whole
tomatoes along with eating tomato sandwiches and bruschetta . Garden diagram for my own reference and
missing most of the herbs and peppers.
I
have not been knitting much. I made the
bolero for my friend’s daughter and one for my niece. I had a dye day which was fun but in my exuberance
(rushing) I felted it a little. I was
able to still spin the roving but not into lace weight which was a bummer because
it was a green gradient dyed roving. I
was able to spin it into a worsted weight and make a small shawl with it but
would have liked it to be thinner.
I
also dyed this rather loud roving
and some white Finn yarn
and I even threw in
some silk hankies.
I have been spinning
a lot more than knitting.
The white Finn
pictured above I spun and plied on the electric spinner….very productive but
noisier so I spin on the Traveler and then have a ply day on the electric since
I can get bigger skeins on those bobbins.
I went to an alpaca shearing (my cousin) and I am going to get some white alpaca to spin and dye. I had some of her black alpaca but I want to see how white takes the dye.
On the farm, the milkhouse got a paint job, planted two apple trees and a tulip. Clean up of barberry continues as it quickly grows back if you turn your back for a second! And we have a baby chick.
Hopefully we get a couple of more. We have to go pick up the turkey poults otherwise we won't have anything for dinner on Thanksgiving and we have much to be thankful for this year.
But now I must head back out to the apple tree and watch #2 son mow the grass!!!