Thursday, August 27, 2015

Summer has slipped away







Joshua and I made a trip to Ellijay, GA the last week of May to pick up granddaughter Ariel.  She spent the summer with us.

We didn't plan any exciting adventures for this year's visit.  Instead, I focused on teaching her some of the artistic skills I've learned over the years.

I bought several paper crafting and mixed media books at Barnes & Nobel's and Hobby Lobby.  These included:
Coloring Flower Mandalas: 30 Hand-drawn Designs for Mindful Relaxation
Coloring Flower Mandalas

Coloring Your Prayers


Coloring Mandalas 2: For Balance, Harmony, and Spiritual Well-BeingColoring Your Prayers: An Inspirational Coloring Book for Making Dreams Come True



Coloring Mandalas 2
 
She also got watercolor pencils, felt tip markers, origami paper, and some pastels.

We did our daily walks in the woods with the dogs.

This big oak came down over our lane after one thunderstorm.

We picked mushrooms...

 Chantarelle mushrooms in the woods.


After cleaning.













We did some sun dyeing on silk with our friends Gena Stout and Erika Schindler and Karna McFadden.

Sun dyeing is always so much fun!

I hatched out some chicks (in the incubator) just before we left for Georgia.  And while we were gone, our banty hens hatched out 10 chicks!

 Rhode Island Red chicks and 1 tiny batam chick behind.  We also hatched out 2 Black Copper Maran chicks.
 Bantam chicks are always so cute!
And a mama bird made her nest in the glove compartment of our golf cart.

Ariel and I went to The Pig n' Whistle in Hardy, along with Gena Stout and Erika Schindler, for a tea party.  That was fun.  Julie and Perry Morgan came in while we were there.  It was great to see them.

Sweets to go with our tea.


Erika and Gena

Tadpoles (pollywogs) in our "pond".

The addition that was built last fall is complete now, the cedar siding was put on by our friend Chris Graves in July.
Custom cedar siding on the bedroom/mudroom addition.

Our house, with the addition now complete.  I think it looks great!

Ariel sewed some aprons, and she did a great job on them.


Tammy and Rickie came to pick Ariel up the last Monday in July.  They stayed until Friday morning.  That was a teary day, here at the Teem household.  I really enjoy the summer visits.

I did manage to finish a few projects.  The tunic and sandals were for Tammy.  The alpaca shawl is for sale ($50).
Tammy's cotton tunic.

Cotton crocheted onto flip flops.  Tammy loved them!

Baby alpaca shawl in a nice, summery green.



Sunday, July 19, 2015

An interesting visitor

Sometimes you just see something in Nature that makes you laugh.  Look who's been visiting our humming bird feeders...

A large woodpecker/sap sucker!  What a treat.


Sunday, July 12, 2015

Mushroom gathering

My granddaughter, Ariel, and I have been learning to identify and harvest mushrooms.  I invested in 3 books:

National Audubon Society American Mushrooms
Good Mushroom Bad Mushroom
Mushrooming without Fear

We also got a great Pocket Naturalist guide, Familiar American Mushrooms folding guide

After taking the field guide into the woods with us, we've discovered we have at least 6 different types of edible mushrooms on our property.  They are:

King Bolete (also spelled Blewit)
Chanterelle
Smooth Chanterelle
Cauliflower (also called Coral)
Giant Puffball
Old Man of the Woods

Wow!  I guess I'll be doing some mushroom eating!  We've  been dining on Chanterelles all week.  We picked another 1 1/4 pounds yesterday!  Happy, Happy!

Here's an update to my posting, one day's mushroom gathering on July 25th.
Chanterelle and smooth coral mushrooms.
We tried the coral mushrooms for the first time.  The Audubon guide stated they were very delicate tasting, and were good with fruit.  We tried them sauteed in butter, and they were bitter.  I don't know if they were past prime... or were cooked too long.

I finished knitting a tunic for my stepdaughter, Tammy.  I think it came out pretty well.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Is it really the third week in June already???!!

I can't believe how fast time is flying by!  Ariel has been here for almost a month.... and will be gone in 5 weeks.  Summer is going too fast!

We haven't been able to float or swim in the Spring River this year.  There is an e. coli notice, and all the public swimming places are closed.  We've had so much heavy rain. I guess the runoff from the farms and such (or some dasterdly town's sewage treatment facility leaked).  Anyway, we've been hoping to go floating with our friend Gena Stout.  We're scheduled to go float on Saturday, June 27th.  I hope we can.  Here's a picture from last year's floating adventure.

That was a fun day!  April, Karna, me, Gena and Beth.  Ariel is in front.

Summer projects around the homestead are finally getting started.  With all the rain, we haven't been able to work on the workshop roof.  Or the slab for the carport we ordered.  Or the siding on the addition we finished last fall.

The carport slab is supposed to start today.  This will mean big trucks, gravel, a cement truck.  I think I'll keep the dogs inside today...  The don't need to be in the way out there.  That's just a recipe for trouble.

Chickens.  I lost another bantam hen last week.  I think a snake killed her.  She didn't have a mark on her, she was just lying dead in the nest area.  That makes me sad.  She was a nice hen.

We moved the Rhode Island Red hens into the smaller section of the chicken enclosure.  I suspect they are eating the other hen's eggs.  Or maybe the rooster Hexter is the culprit.  We've gotten 1 egg each day from them... and the Brahma Cochin hen's egg was broken, and she's still in the larger portion of the enclosure.

Either way... I need the rooster.  I want to hatch out chicks.  I would prefer that he NOT eat eggs though.

I'm going to have to decide how to divide and contain our 10 bantam chicks.  And  the 3 RIR cross chicks.  Those 3 chicks will be getting to big for their cage soon.  I'm thinking I will put them in where the bantam rooster, Ashe, is.  He's alone in that cage since the hen died.  He will go in the enclosure with the 2 RIR hens.  Once those chicks are large enough I can put them in the main enclosure. 

Exactly how I accommodate the bantam chicks is still up in the air.  They're alright for now.  They're 3 weeks younger than the RIR cross chicks, so I still have some time to work that out.

I finished knitting an alpaca shawl, I'm very pleased with the way it came out.


Friday, June 5, 2015

Summer fun in the making

My son Joshua and I traveled to Ellijay, GA to pick up my granddaughter Ariel.  The trip there and back were uneventful (which is how I like my driving adventures).  We had a good time visiting with my daughter Tammy (Ariel's mom) and her partner Ricky, and Pete the wonder dog.  Tammy and Josh's mom Margaret spent some time with us.  That was good, because Josh hasn't seen her in a year.  We had a nice seafood meal.  Crab and shrimp.  Yummy.

We're back home in Williford now.  We had some more bantam chicks hatch out while we were gone.  I was talking to my hubby John one night on the phone and he told me "your banty hens sprouted extra legs today.  One has 8 legs and the other 10"..  And I was totally baffled by this!  "WHAT"???  "More chicks hatched out Penny."  Duh. 

So now we have 10 bantam chicks, 2 maran/RIR, and 1 cochin/RIR.  I hope they aren't all roosters!

Here's some baby chick pictures to make you smile.

A little bird has built a nest in the dashboard of our golf cart.  Tiny little speckled eggs, 3 I believe.
Ariel, Cricket and I walked down to the spring yesterday.  It rained quite heavily a few days ago.  Now we have a large oak tree down over our lane.
Our good friend, Joe Barnett and his son Matt, also cut down a dead and leaning hickory tree for us.  It was beginning to threaten our workshop.  They also brought us 2 nice cedar logs.  I see lumber and firewood in our future.




Friday, May 22, 2015

Gardening and hatching eggs.... Two of my spring time favorites.

It's been rather rainy these past few days.

Our garden is growing!  I spent most of the day on Tuesday weeding the rows and pulling up Jerusalem artichokes.  Those guys really take over if you don't keep them under control!  We started out with 1 row about 15 feet long.  We ended up with the "row" growing about 10 feet wide.  The poor potatoes were in the shade!  Not any more.

This year we have cucumbers, zuchinni, crook neck squash, bell peppers, cayanne peppers, 5 variety of heirloom tomatoes, mixed greens, 1 candy roaster squash (this plant grows VERY large), 4 varieties of melon, rhubarb, asparagus, and garlic.



I put 37 eggs in the incubator back on May 1st.  They started hatching yesterday.  So far, we have 4 little cheepers in there.  I have the brooder set up, and will get them in it this morning.


It was really chilly when I got up this morning, 45F.  Yesterday, we broke the record lowest high daily temperature.  Our high was 60.  Geeze.  It will warm up a bit this weekend, and more rain is in the forecast.

I finished knitting a merino wool/silk lace shawl for my neice-in-law to wear when she marries my nephew next week.  I think it came out very well.


John did some brush hogging and mowing.  Josh mowed the yard.  I got the flower beds under control.  Our place is looking pretty good!



Saturday, May 16, 2015

Getting back into blogging.

I haven't been inspired to write lately....  I felt like I was boring people.  Is anyone interested in what I'm cooking today?  Did they care about my flower and veggie garden?  My pets?  My knitting? 

I enjoy my lifestyle very much.  I'm blessed to be in a position to spend my days with my husband and son.  We enjoy each other's company.  We get along well.  We each work on our projects.  If we're working on something together, we communicate well.  No raised voices (except to yell NO!!!! at the dogs when the UPS truck comes). 

So anyway, here's what's been going on here.

My elbow and hand are slowly recuperating after surgery earlier this year for carpal tunnel and ulnar nerve compression.  My right arm and hand are still numb.  This makes me even more awkward than I was because of my Parkinson's.  This is frustrating!  I have cuts and scrapes on my hand & I have no idea I've hurt myself.  It takes me longer to do my crafts.  Hand sewing and beading are very slow... Fingerweaving is also very slow.  Kumihumo isn't really effected, as I can use my left hand to move the threads.  Spinning is a bit slower, but not too bad.  Knitting and crochet are slower, but I am completing projects.

The flower beds are all weeded, the veggie garden is planted.  We've been harvesting asparagus and mixed salad greens.  Tomatoes, squash, melons, cucumbers, bell peppers, potatoes, rhubarb and Jerusalem artichokes are up and growing.  The fruit trees have fruits growing, as do the berry bushes.  That makes me happy.




Both dogs are healthy.    Our cat, Rusty, died in January.  This made me very sad.  I miss him.





We lost a hen and a rooster this past winter.  I also gave a trio away.  So, we're down to a Rhode Island Red trio, a Black Copper Maran hen and a Brahma Cochin hen, a trio and another pair of duckwing bantam, and a pair and a trio of guinea fowl.  A grand total of 5 large chickens, 5 bantam chickens and 5 guinea.  I do have eggs in the incubator.  They should hatch on the 21st. 


Our granddaughter, Ariel, will be spending the summer with us again this year.  I really enjoy our time together.  She's growing up so fast.  She's 12 this year.  Not a little girl anymore.  The past 10 years have really flown by. 


Friday, February 6, 2015

Dealing with carpal tunnel surgery

I went to the family doctor back in December and told him my right arm & elbow were really bothering me.  Pain in my elbow, traveling up to my elbow.  He referred me to the same orthopedic surgeon I had seen 2 years ago, Dr. Varela, in Mountain View.

Two years ago my right hand and elbow were hurting.  Tennis elbow was the diagnosis.  After several cortisone shots, I had outpatient surgery to relieve the pressure on my nerve.  That surgery wasn't too bad.  A week in a surgical wrapping, a few months wearing a splint... and all was well.

But now my elbow has been hurting on the other side.  We arrived at the office on 28th.  Dr. Varela listened to my complaint... Poked my elbow and had me squeeze his fingers.  He had one of his staff come in and do a nerve conductivity test.  Just what I love... having someone shock my arm over and over until I almost jump out of my chair.... He came back in and told me I have both carpal tunnel syndrome and nerve compression of my ulnar nerve.  What did I want to do?  "I want to be able to garden and knit without pain".  And when did I want to do this?  "As soon as possible".  Can we come tomorrow?  "You bet"!

So now I have a surgical wrapping on my right arm.  And some pain pills.  I spent the first 3 days stationed in my chair, arm elevated, watch the boob tube all day.  Oh, fun, fun... I could at least move my arm around the next few days.  Not using my hand, but I could atleast move around.  We went out to lunch.  Eating in public with my "off" hand and Parkinson's disease was an adventure.  But I managed. 

Joshua has been caring for my birds.  John or Josh have been cooking.  I need help with buttons, barettes, tights, bra... I feel like a 4 year old!

I took care of the birds today.  And my fingers are now swollen and burning.  Cripes!  Back into the house and take half a pain pill... and type this rant one handed.

I go back to see Dr. Varela on Monday to get the surgical dressing off and the stapes out.  I understand I will be wearing a splint for several weeks/months to come. 

OK.  Enough gripping.

The hellebores are blooming.  Don't they look nice?