menu plan monday ~ august 14, 2017

I spent most of last week cleaning up the craft room. I finally found the counters.

Cleaning...

Among many other things I located, I also found three Putz houses and a Putz church that had been painted and then forgotten. I put panes in the windows and then found matching bases for the houses. I need to make a base for the church as I didn’t have one already made that matched the colors of the church. Two of the houses need window and door frames.

Putz houses

Middle Daughter and Youngest Daughter went shopping last Thursday. They brought back a toy for the kitties. A carrot stuffed with catnip…the cats are taking turns wrestling with the carrot…this is Amy.

Amy loves her carrot.

Saturday we traveled to Older Son’s house and enjoyed a delicious meal. To get there, we crossed the Stan Span across the Mississippi River at St. Louis, Missouri. Otherwise known as the Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge, it is beautiful.

crossing the Stan Span

We had a great visit with our son and his family. It was the first time I got to see their new home. So much more room than they had before. We are very happy for them.

Here is the menu for the week.

Monday
Italian Baked Chicken
Roasted New Potatoes
Steamed Cauliflower with Cheddar Cheese
Garden Salad

Tuesday
Cheesy Burgers
Sliced Tomatoes
Asparagus

Wednesday
Fridge Food

Thursday
Tacos

Friday
Sausage Casserole
Melon Slices

Saturday
Chicken Salad over Greens
Cheese and Crackers
Grapes

Sunday
Roast Beef in the Instant Pot with Potatoes and Carrots
Loaded Cauliflower and Broccoli
Garden Salad

We will have company over the weekend and an eclipse party on Monday. I am excited about the opportunity to see a total solar eclipse. We will have two minutes and 16 seconds of totality in our back yard! It should be fun!

~~Rhonda

menu plan monday ~ august 7, 2017

Our garden has received much needed rain and the grass is looking greener and the flowers are looking fresher. This past weekend, I used surprise lilies, crepe myrtle, and hosta flowers for the Sunday bouquet.

Sunday bouquet

I captured a little video of Clark. He likes to hang out on the banister in the upstairs hall.

Clark, the monorail cat

He even takes naps there. Such a funny cat.

Clark, the monorail cat

Here’s the menu for the week. I’m loving the Instant Pot. It’a an electric pressure cooker. It cooks quickly without heating the kitchen. Nice this time of year. The more I use it, the more I like it.

Monday
Burgers with Smoked Cheddar Cheese
Steamed Broccoli

Tuesday
Roasted Kielbasa and Cabbage

Wednesday
Pork Roast in the Instant Pot
Buttered New Potatoes with Fresh Parsley
Garden Salad
Green Beans

Thursday
Creamy Tuscan Garlic Chicken
Sautéed Sugar Snap Peas
Garden Salad

Friday
Fridge Food

Saturday
Dinner to be prepared by our son and DDIL.

Sunday
Crispy Oven Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes
Asparagus with Lemon Butter
Garden Salad

Have you planned your menu for the week? I hope you have! It’s so helpful!

~~Rhonda

the tail end of the week

This past week has been a busy one. Today is much quieter and at a slower pace, which I am enjoying.

DH is the director for our presbytery summer camp. That took place this week, so he was gone to camp. I am the editor of the camp “yearbook,” a collection of pictures of campers, camp activities, and address lists. It takes a full three days to pull that together. Middle Daughter takes tons of pictures for me to use each year. It is fun to do, but by Thursday I was way tired!

Ski kept me company most of the time I was working on the yearbook.

Ski

Sometimes he napped, though…

Ski

DH got home yesterday, with our grands in tow. It was their first time at summer camp. They had a great week! They stayed all night here and their daddy picked them up this morning. They need to do some school shopping. Their school year starts later this week.

We made a little fire last evening and cooked hot dogs and made S’Mores. The weather was beautiful and it was a pleasant evening to be outside.

backyard cookout

The S’Mores are their favorite part.

Time for S'Mores

We spent part of our outdoor time looking for butterfly eggs on Queen Anne’s Lace, but didn’t find any. The girls were disappointed, but we’ll keep looking. In previous years, we’ve found the black swallowtail butterfly eggs in late August and September. We have a fish tank that we have set aside for raising butterflies, so we’re ready if we do come across some eggs. Here’s a picture of the tank.

butterfly tank

And a picture from last year. Clark paid no attention to the tank until the butterflies emerged. Their fluttering was so exciting!

raising butterflies

Here’s a blog post about our caterpillar / butterfly setup, in case you’re interested in doing the same. It’s an activity that is just as fascinating for adults as it is for the kids.

caterpillar club

Youngest Daughter’s college roommate is visiting this weekend. We aren’t seeing much of them, as is usually the case. They’re making the rounds of places to go and people to see. Soon, they will be starting school where classes and projects will be filling their time.

I am looking forward to getting back to the craft room next week. It has been almost a week since I made any progress there. All those projects I have underway are calling my name and I’m eager to get back to them.

~~Rhonda

menu plan monday ~ july 31, 2017

Life has been very busy the past several days. Today it has slowed down a bit. I am working on this blue and white Putz church. I like the contrast between the dark blue and the white. I am adding silver embellishments. Maybe some white or clear, too. We shall see how it goes.

blue and white Putz church

Winston loves a good nap. Here he is curled up in my recliner. I always feel bad for shooing him out of such a cozy spot. Doesn’t he look comfy?

Winston loves a cozy corner.

He did let me pet him to make up for waking him up. He’s such a sweet tempered cat.

Winston and  his curly whiskers

We play host to a bee hive that belongs to friends. The bees get lots of lovely flowers and we get a lovely gift of honey! Thank you, Diane! I poured off a bit to give to our pastor’s wife when she came by to say hi. She asked if it was local. I said it was about as local as you can get. Part of it may have come from our yard!

very local honey

I’m keeping the menu easy this week, so I can concentrate on a big project the next few days. I usually have a cobb-style salad for lunch and then a meat and veggie combo for supper, with a side salad for good measure. Wiki says to remember what’s in a Cobb salad this way…
“One way to remember the components is to use the mnemonic EAT COBB: Egg, Avocado, Tomato, Chicken, Onion, Bacon, Blue cheese…then add lettuce.” I usually have feta instead of blue cheese, but the rest sounds right. 🙂

Monday
Cobb Salad

Tuesday
Stir Fried Kielbasa and Sugar Snap Peas
Garden Salad

Wednesday
Cheddar Burgers
Dill Pickle Spears
Steamed Broccoli

Thursday
Meatloaf
Summer Squash Stir Fry
Garden Salad

Friday
Baby Back Ribs
Asparagus with Lemon Butter
Garden Salad
Corn on the Cob

Saturday
Fridge Food

Sunday
Pork Roast in the Instant Pot
Roasted Brussels Sprouts with Toasted Pecans and Avocado
Boiled New Potatoes with fresh parsley and butter
Garden Salad

Have a great week! ~~Rhonda

the same turtle…four times

We are blessed with a large yard. It’s about 3.5 acres. Most of the front yard has flower beds while the backyard has a few old oaks and some open grass. In the backyard, there’s an ancient mulberry tree with an old well under its branches. Near the well, a tiny spring bubbles up and keeps the ground damp and the grass green, even when we’re in a drought. The temperature is noticeably cooler under the tree, even on the hottest days. Past the mulberry, we have a little one acre “woods” at the south end of the property. It was all grass when we moved in, except for two large pin oaks. After a while, I began to mow around little oaks that sprouted where the squirrels had hidden acorns. After a while, I was just mowing paths through the trees. Now we have a little woods. The whole yard is a wildlife magnet, which we enjoy a great deal.

One species we keep track of are the box turtles. It amazing how many different ones we’ve seen in the 20+ years we have lived here. At some point, we began taking pictures to keep track of them. This morning, after a good rain during the night, DH found an old friend. This particular turtle has been spotted at least four times in our yard.

This morning he was found under the redbud tree near the old foundation in the backyard.

Found July 27, 2017.

April 28, 2012
He was found on the east side of the fenced garden, with his girlfriend. But she got away before I could take her picture.

carapace of the box turtle

May 1, 2010…caught in the act of mating.
Found in the flowerbed under the Southern Red Oak in the backyard.

Eastern Box Turtles

September 8, 2009
Found near the old foundation by the veggie garden, which is where he was found this morning.

Eastern box turtle

Our friend has a bright red eye which indicates a male turtle.

Eastern box turtle

Turtle populations are declining in a many parts of the United States. It’s important to take care of the wild population to give them the best possible chance for survival. If you see a turtle crossing a road, do stop if you can safely do so, and move it to the side of the road it is heading for. Don’t move turtles to other areas where you think they may be safer. Turtles attempt to return to their original habitat. Most box turtles have a limited home range of half an acre to up to two acres. Some will range over as much as ten acres. Their home range can overlap with other turtles. They don’t mind sharing.

We’ll keep an eye out for more turtle sightings and we’ll keep you posted!

~~Rhonda

grandma’s kitchen and other memories

I was thinking about Grandma Ruth’s kitchen this morning. Not sure how I wound up down that road, but it brought back a lot of memories. I think it started when I remembered Grandma giving me a bath in her kitchen sink. I must have been four or five? Or less? But I remember it vividly. She bathed me and then lifted me out of the sink and put me on the floor. She handed me a towel and told me to dry off. I had trouble doing my back. She said, “Didn’t anyone every show you how to dry your back?” And then proceeded to teach me how to hold the towel kitty-cornered across my back, first one way, then the other, as I moved the towel back and forth. Such a vivid memory.

Grandma in her kitchen.

Grandma Ruth

Grandpa and Grandma’s house was L-shaped and had a porch that ran along the inside of the “L” and then along the end of the “L.” Got that?? We’d start at one end (the top of the L) and run! Turn left and run, turn right and keep running so we could fly off the side of the porch. A short drop to the ground and then we’d run around the house and do it again! And again! The porch boards made a thwacking sound as we ran along. Loud!

Here’s a picture of the house that my Aunt Carol painted when she was twelve years old.

family farm house

In this picture, you can see the porch in the background. When I was a child, Grandma had planted shrubs (Bridal Wreath spirea, I think) all along the porch with lily of the valley growing below the shrubs.

Back: Donald, Grandpa, Dad, Grandma
Front: Joyce, Gary, Carol and Linda (Phyllis, the oldest, isn’t in the picture.)

Clarence and Ruth, all kids but Phyllis

The door everyone used entered from the porch into the kitchen. The kitchen table was on the left side of the room and a path of newspapers on the floor led past the table and then left into the living room. The kitchen counters and appliances were on the right and far sides of the kitchen. If I remember correctly, there were three windows in the kitchen. One looked over the back yard into the barnyard. One looked toward the pole barn (in above picture behind the car) and one faced south looking over the front yard and the long driveway down to the country road. There used to be two poplar trees at the road, marking Grandpa’s driveway. They must have been Lombardy Poplars because they grew tall and straight and narrow.

In the kitchen. The window on the left looks east. The one on the right looks south.

Ruth and Clarence in the kitchen

There was a cupboard built into the wall near the table and I found it fascinating that you could open the doors in the wall and find shelves, with dishes and, more importantly, saltine crackers! We’d beg a few to feed the fish, which was always an adventure. Grandpa had a metal watering trough that was kept full by a nearby pump. Grandpa had a little motor there. When he flipped the switch, the cold water would come out of the pump, go down a little piece of pipe and flow into the trough. In the trough were huge goldfish that lived there year round. Moss grew in the water and we’d have to watch closely, leaning over the fencing, to get the first glimpse of the flash of gold as the fish came up for cracker crumbs.

I think this picture of my father was taken when he was in the fourth grade, about the age I was when these memories were made. He said he was embarrassed that day because he had new overalls and they were too long for him.

Alan Ashby

Grandpa and Grandma had a large vegetable garden. It was fun to pick tomatoes with Grandma. She was a hard worker, though, and we usually petered out before she did. My grandparents also raised their own popping corn. One of the few times I was allowed in Grandma’s bedroom was when she told me to look under the bed and pull some popcorn ears from the large burlap sack where they were stored. We shelled the little ears of corn and she made a skillet full of popcorn for us on the kitchen stove. Another treat Grandma gave us were snowballs she saved and gave us to eat in the summer. She gave us a salt shaker for sprinkling salt on our snowballs. Cousins, do you remember eating snowballs? Or was that a one time thing?

Grandpa and his three sons, Donald, Gary and my Dad.

Clarence and three sons

Once, I was fascinated to see a cow giving birth in the barnyard. But Grandma hustled me away from the kitchen window. She didn’t think I should be watching that! There was an indoor bathroom, but we weren’t allowed to use it. We had to use the outhouse at Grandma’s. But the trek to the outhouse was fun. The path led past the rabbit hutch and we’d stop to feed the bunnies some fresh grass or clover. It never occurred to us that Grandpa butchered the rabbits for meat! From there, we had to watch our step, because we had to cut across the chicken yard to reach our destination. One time, when my eldest daughter was three or four, I took her to the outhouse and she peeked in, then said, “Yeah, but where’s the bathroom?” That was an adventure!

Grandma let me help her make soap. She showed me how to churn butter. We picked raspberries together. Her root cellar was a mysterious place to me. Dark and quiet and cool. It was always fun to go to Grandpa and Grandma’s house. My grandma was steady, sweet-tempered, gentle and quiet. I miss her a lot.

Ruth and spring flowers

~~Rhonda

menu plan monday ~ july 24, 2017

Last Saturday, DH and I went to my Dad’s house for a family reunion. I shared a picture of Dad and his siblings in my last post. Another highlight of the afternoon was a drawing for two quilts that had been made by my paternal grandmother and her mother.

The first quilt was won by my niece’s husband. The quilt is embroidered and has blocks for the (at the time) 48 states.

Quilt

The second quilt, a lovely scrap quilt, was won by my Uncle Donald.

Quilt

I captured a picture of Clark napping on the upstairs banister yesterday. He does this a lot! My DDIL dubbed him the “monorail cat.”

Clark the monorail cat

DH caught this picture of him from the other side. The ceiling of the downstairs is 12′ high. That’s a long way down!

Clark the monorail cat

I am happily ensconced in my craft room, working on the embellishments for about twenty Putz houses I’ve made over the past several months. I had been working at the craft desk downstairs and all my extra “stuff,” like embellishments, are upstairs in the official craft room. Here are two Putz houses made from a pattern I drafted.

Putz house

Putz house

Putz house

Putz house

I took this picture one evening as I left the kitchen and headed to my craft desk. The big windows in this old house make for some pretty lighting, especially in the early mornings and early evenings.

evening light

Here’s the menu for the coming week. I’m enjoying using my Instant Pot for meal making. An easy way to prepare a meal. And it doesn’t heat the kitchen during these hot days of summer.

Monday
Cheddar Burgers
Loaded Broccoli and Cauliflower Casserole

Tuesday
Fridge Food

Wednesday
Bacon Wrapped Stuffed Chicken Breast
Asparagus with Lemon Butter
Garden Salad

Thursday
Instant Pot Mongolian Beef
Cauliflower and Broccoli

Friday
Instant Pot Kielbasa and Cabbage
Sliced Cucumbers and Tomatoes

Saturday
Fridge Food

Sunday
Garlic Herb Pot Roast in the Instant Pot
Garden Salad
Green Beans
New Potatoes in Butter

Do you have a meal plan for the week? It makes meal prep easier in so many ways! You’ll save time, money and fretting about what to make for supper!

~~Rhonda

family runion

Yesterday, DH and I went to my Dad’s house for a family reunion. This is my Aunt Linda, Dad, Great-uncle Dean, Uncle Donald, Aunt Carol and Aunt Joyce.

My Dad and four of his siblings plus their maternal uncle.

I have a cousin who teaches history in a college in Liberia, Africa. We were glad to see him at the reunion and it was fun to catch up with him and what is going on his life.

We had a great time. Lots of stories shared, lots of laughter, and lots of love! One uncle was not able to come, as he lives in Florida. One aunt has passed away.

I have two brothers and four sisters. One sister wasn’t able to come due to work and another sister wasn’t there due to health issues. We missed everyone who wasn’t there. But those of us who were able to come were very glad to be there. It’s always wonderful to get together with family!

~~Rhonda

a peek at my week

Today has been a quiet day. The girls are gone for the afternoon…one to work and one to an appointment. DH is at work, of course. So it’s just me and the cats. Here are a few pictures of Winston from the past week.

In the kitchen sunshine. He is quite fluffy and has very long whiskers.

Winston

In a box…

cat-in-a-box

Did you notice above that I got a new Ninja blender? Love it. My old blender was awful to use. This is SO much better! And it makes great smoothies!

We also got a counter-top ice maker. Winston cannot stand an unexplored box.

They can't resist, can they?

Buttercup enjoys the Sunday morning catnip treat. When DH picks the flowers for the Sunday bouquet, he always brings in some catnip for the kitties.

Sunday morning treat of catnip

This past Sunday, I went out with DH to choose flowers. The dew was heavy, but the early temperature was wonderful. Later in the day, it was in the high 90s.

gathering flowers

daisies and hydrangeas

Buttercup enjoys the back of the craft desk. Especially in the afternoon when the sun shines in.

Buttercup likes the back of the craft desk.

I did some quilt piecing this past week. I am part of a group of women from our church who piece quilt tops for missionaries and others. We’ve been using jelly rolls which makes for easy piecing and beautiful quilt tops.

jelly roll quilt piecing

And last of all, a food picture. I tried “fathead pizza” which uses grated cheese in the crust. It was very good!

fathead pizza

Just a peek at my week. ~~Rhonda

Putz barn

Christmas Putz Barn

I’ve been wanting to make a Putz barn for some time. The other day I took some time and googled Christmas barns. I saw a lot I liked, but finally found one that really caught my eye on Instagram. So pretty in its rich red and white. I snapped a screen capture to save the picture and began the process of turning it into a Putz.

Putz inspiration

I made a rough sketch with a few notes to determine the size and the placement of openings…

Christmas Putz Barn

Then drew the pattern and made a paper mock-up. As usual, I found a few things that needed tweaking, and made the necessary changes to the pattern.

Christmas Putz Barn

Then it was time to make the poster board version.

Christmas Putz Barn

The barn door seemed too large to leave empty. I mulled that over for a while, then decided to find a vintage Christmas card picture online that could be used. I saved the image, then inserted it in Word and downsized it by a lot. It took a few fiddles to get it to the right size, but in the end…perfect!

Christmas Putz Barn

Next came the paint.

Christmas Putz Barn

And the door and window frames.

Christmas Putz Barn

Then the corrugated “tin” roof. I had thought about painting it silver or grey, but decided that white would be more effective for achieving the crisp red and white that I liked so much in the original picture.

Christmas Putz Barn

I am very happy with the finished barn. There are a few things I want to tweak the next time I make one. Not real changes, but just some finesse in the finished piece.

Christmas Putz Barn

But I think Santa and the reindeer are happy with their new barn.

Christmas Putz Barn

The next step is to make the base, then I’ll embellish the barn with some snow covered trees and Christmas greens.

~~Rhonda