Welcome to my blog! If you enjoy my stories, please leave a comment. I love hearing from you!

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Happy Thanksgiving!


May your stuffing  be tasty 

 
May your turkey be  plump, 

 
May your potatoes  and gravy
Have never a lump.  
May your yams be  delicious
And your pies take  the prize,
And may your  Thanksgiving dinner
Stay off your  thighs!

  76y/
 

 

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Yummy for Your Tummy!



 I know you've all got your favorite holiday recipes, some handed down through generations.  Well, I guess you could say this is a three-generation hand-me-recipe.  My granddaughters love making these.  This is my favorite homemade cookie.  It's sweet, chewy, crispy, and super easy to make...  all the things that make a cookie good!

When my daughter was very young, I sent off a dollar plus some box tops (I think) to redeem for a Jello recipe book.  All the recipes call for a Jello gelatin or pudding product.  This recipe contains instant pudding and a cake mix, so all you calorie-conscious readers beware!



These cookies are great to include with edible gifts for Christmas, as they are green!  They look lovely paired with candy-cane cookies on a platter.  I'm sorry I don't have a photo of them, but I did upload the recipe as a jpg file!  So save it, try them, and let me know what you think.








Sunday, November 22, 2009

Hello, Bydgoszcz!



I have an obsession...  Well, I have more than one, but I'm only going to talk about one for now...  My tracking widgets have turned me into an OC monster! 





Well, maybe not THAT kind of monster.  More like this...


I have the same tracking widgets on all three blogs.  My visitor counter from pax.com keeps a running total of visits to my blog.  I don't know why I have it there.  I'm convinced it's not accurate, and I rarely look at it. I use the ClustrMaps widget to keep a record of all the countries that have visited my blogs.  I seldom check it either, but I like it anyway.  But honestly, the widget that I blame for my obsessive/compulsive behavior is the MapLoco widget at the bottom of the page...

This widget tracks the cities that have visited my blogs.  It's not accurate either.  I live in Xenia.  I have had visitors from Xenia show up on it.  But I show up as Dayton.  I don't know exactly how it decides what city to register.  I've also had visitors (I can tell by the comments they leave) that don't show up at all!  Not that it's really critical anyway; I just like to see all the cities around the world that pass by my blog.  It truly amazes me that someone in Bahrain read my blog!  I'm not sure I could find Bahrain on a map if it wasn't for Google!



The thing about this widget that really makes me OC...  It doesn't keep the data!  That's right...  read 'em while they're there!  It updates every twenty-four hours.  That means, if I should happen to get a visitor from the space station or Mars, and I don't check it that day, I'll never know.  NEVER!

I wish I would have placed these widgets on my blog when I first started them.  Or, at least, would have started keeping track of the cities when I first got the widgets, but I didn't. until around mid-July.  I'm not sure really when I started, but it probably closely correlates with when the dust started accumulating on the furniture.    OK, maybe my priorities are a little out-of-whack.  (What exactly is whack?)

Soon, my curiosity took over...  How long would it take for all fifty states to visit my blogs?  The OCD kicked in...  I set up a spread sheet. (Not this one.)
 
Everyday I checked the widget and recorded any cities not already on my chart.  I'm very organized, so this was a quick task.  It was going to be a temporary thing.  It didn't take long to collect a list of cities from forty states.  I found it's kinda like dieting...  the closer you get to the goal, the harder it becomes.

Since I've been logging the data, I'm still waiting for visitors from Delaware, Wyoming,  Rhode Island, and both Dakotas.   Yet, I've had visitors from Argentina to Yugoslavia.  I've actually been visited by seventy-three different countries!  Isn't that amazing?  And I'm not even one of the 'popular' bloggers!   I thought about giving up on the tracking.  Maybe I'll never have a visitor from South Dakota.

I thought about stopping when I reached a thousand cities...  Now, that time is upon me. Yes, this afternoon I crossed that threshold.  Yesterday I had reached nine hundred ninety-six world cities.  Today I had these new cities visit me:  Bhopal, India; Selfoss, Iceland; Espoo, Finland; Trabuco Canyon, CA, USA; Bydgoszcz, Poland. 


Should I hang in there?  Will Delawareans get bored enough to travel to my blog?  It has been fun to share with my two oldest grandchildren (also part-time bloggers) the new countries that show up on my widget.  Although, honestly, I think they lost interest long ago.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Recycled Dust & Old Neighborhoods


We had some business in Dayton this week, so while we were in town, we decided to stop at the shop and load up on sawdust. 

We know some guys that have a pattern shop.  Their trash collectors do not allow them to put their sawdust in the trash, so we told them we could help them get rid of it...  We use it in our stalls.  You know how I love to recycle!

We have to make sure we know what kind of wood it came from.  Some wood shavings aren't safe to use with horses.  And sometimes it's too dusty, so I just spread it around outside.

Looks like the dust collectors blew up before we got there!  Normally, most of the sawdust goes into this collector system:

Those black trash bags on the left are filled with sawdust, as is the door under the big funnel-shaped thing.  We ended up with seven large garbage bags full of pine dust and shavings.  That will top off our bin and get us through the winter. 

We don't keep our horses inside much.  Maggie stays in at night unless it's really warm out., and we keep her in during heavy rains.  The other two only stay in if it's icy out.  They have a run-in shelter in the paddock.  They don't let Maggie in it.

After we left the shop, we decided to drop in on a friend I used to work with.  He lives one block over from my old house in the city.  No, I wasn't a country girl until six years ago!  I loved the city then.  Now, I can't imagine going back!



 I always loved the big trees that lined the street.



 Fourth house on the left. 

It wasn't much, but it was mine!  Built in 1907, it was a DIY dream.  I left it for the burbs in 1999.  Then, after tying the knot with Mr J, we bought some old farm land outside of Xenia.  The rest, as they say, is history...



Ghost Blogger

I came in the bedroom the other day and caught Mickey on my laptop...
  




 
 Seems she was working on a Thanksgiving Day post...

Happy International Overalls Day!









Lille Diane at Woodstock Lily gave me the heads-up on this one...  What item of clothing deserves its own special day, if not overalls?  They are a part of our history in many ways; from farming to hippiedom, overalls have been there!
 ~
Ah, remember the seventies? 
Big, puffed sleeves?  Huge, pointy collars? 
Yeah, I was 19, and I was cool...

 ~
Oh, but NOT as cool as Mr J...


~
He still wears his overalls or, as we lovingly refer to them, 'bibs'.

I love the 'No Crack' feature!
~
Bibs span the generations. 
From old dudes like Mr J to babies, bibs are universal.


~
Bibs are appropriate for any occasion...
even greeting a new baby sister!

~
There's something about wearing bibs that just makes you happy!

~
They're great for playtime, too!

~
And team them with a peasant top...

What a fashion statement!
~
Nobody wears bibs like Lexi...

~
But don't compare yourself to her...
Just don those overalls and have a happy day!