September Week 1 2024
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Comments (63)Yay for the violets, Nancy! And...you still have summer squash? The bugs killed ours long ago. Even the C. Moschata. I am pooped. So tired. We shopped today and I don't have to tell anyone that shopping is very unpleasant right now. However, Dillards allows you to try on clothes and I found a dress. It's not exactly the bohemian/fairy princess dress that I wanted. But it fits nicely and its a forest green color...and it's Robin Hoodish (not really), so I bought it. Paid more than what I wanted to pay, but it's done. DONE! Came home around 3 and sliced, breaded and froze okra. Then figured out how to use my pressure canner as a water bath canner and pickled some okra. On my own. The lids sealed so hopefully we're good. My house is getting to the point that I am very unhappy. I know a clean house isn't the most important thing in the world....but I enjoy a clean home. It just feels nice to me. However, a clean house isn't anywhere in my near future. I am hoping the robot vacuums are cheap this Christmas. That will at least help. We are celebrating Mason's BD tomorrow and that will be fun. It's at a very good restaurant that I haven't been to in a long time. Then grocery shopping and then maybe starting more lettuce seed. In between all of those things is animal care. Lots of animal care. There's always one of them doing something they shouldn't be doing or somewhere they shouldn't be hanging out. One of the fat buff orpingtons has figured out how to get out of the chicken yard. And she isn't swift. She is dumb--beautiful but dumb and wanders over by the dogs. So, I'm constantly leaving whatever task I'm working on to catch her or entice her back to the yard. And everyone is always hungry all the time. The 3 young pullets mingled with the main flock today. It went very well. Having a good rooster helps with that. They're roosting in their own coop, though. It will be a gradual thing as always. Momma Blossom will be tired of her chicks soon and those two chicks will need to move to the pullet coop at that time. Although, at least one of those chicks is a cockerel. Tom may or may not start doing meat birds and these two could be the start of it. They won't be THE meat birds, but they might be the parents of. I've named the one I think is a girl. Her name is Gwendolyn, which is sorta funny because Gwendolyn (actually related to Jennifer/Guinevere.) means white ...and Gwendolyn is a dark cornish. I'm simply rambling now....See MoreHealthy Lifestyle Progress - Week of 1/21/2024
Comments (20)@funkyart - I'm sorry you are hurting. Maybe the walk will help? Stretch it out and warm up the muscles? If it persists maybe PT? I am such a fan. They helped me with a shoulder injury almost immediately and told me the stretches to do at home that worked. @Rnmom - thanks for the Noatmeal reminder! My health coach told me about that way back when I started this, but I had forgotten all about it. And as Sueb suggested - I did add some protein powder to my oatmeal one morning. That was perfect for my glucose monitor and my day! It just works for me if I do a high protein breakfast. Sets my day up perfectly. My blood sugar levels were better the whole day. I didn't LOVE the taste of it, but I think I can experiment with that and the Noatmeal and find a good breakfast alternative. For me, it really is key for the whole day. I haven't bought into the whole protein powder thing, but since I can't really do a lot of eggs and I don't like yogurt, it is probably a good alternative for me. I also tracked my weight this week and I'm not really status quo like I've been telling myself. When looking back over the last year, I am steadily up about 5 pounds and trending in the wrong direction. I think it's a combination, diet of course, but I am not moving. It's so nice in the warmer months when I can play pickleball for hours. Now, I'm lucky to walk 1/2 hour a day. I might need to seek outside accountability of a gym or class to really get back into it. I haven't sweat in months and that isn't good. And it doesn't feel good. I haven't read the MOVE book yet, but I can say from first hand experience how important it is to stable blood sugar. I can walk for 10-15 minutes or fast for a couple hours to get my numbers back down. And they're just not stable if I don't move. It's really quite amazing the difference it makes....See MoreHealthy Lifestyle Progress - Week of 9/1/2024
Comments (36)Funky, i had registered long ago with my name andwhatever was required. i used my name until houzz, without my knowledge changedme to this number. i had absolutely nothing to do wth this deleting my name and changing it to a number. after my name was changed to a number, on the very few posts i have made, i have often sgned my name as westy, aka westsider40. With all due respect to your longstanding participation and helpful attitude, the fact that complex carbs turn into sugar is neither snark nor misinformation. From a weight loss pov, complex carbs turn into sugar. ”If you want to swoop in and share misinformation and snark, there are plenty of other places on the internet to do so.” You said this to me specifically. doesnt make me feel very good. westsider40, aka westy aka 86…...See More2024, week 1 October
Comments (25)Glenda, I just looked that up--Walnut Woods. Pretty sure I looked at a house online that was for sale on your street. I'll have to take my little grandson there next year. He's only 4 months old now. We take our school to Orr because it's close. Larry, it's great that your family is appreciating all the homegrown food! And it's great that you grow it for them. We got up early to feed the animals at both homes and then got to work outdoors. I was able to put down cardboard in an area in the native garden that I want to be more of a perennial garden for native plants. But, left a small spot for the gaillardia and poppies (I know they're not native). I left about a 10' x 8' spot for them. Once the cardboard was down, I hauled woodchips to the put on top of the cardboard. I pushed through although I didn't feel like doing that chore at all. Tom was going to help but started working on an antique bed that has been in the shop for years. It was really dirty and needs some work. He offered to help me, but I'm thrilled he's working on that bed. I want to put it in Ethan's room. There's a dresser and a washstand that goes with it, but those items need a lot more work. He already has the bed about ready. Here's a story about that furniture (skip ahead now if that is boring to you. I should really write all of this down in a journal instead of a gardening forum.) About 27 years ago we lived in Tom's hometown. A doctor (from another country) had a practice there as well as a factory that made a certain medical thing). He asked me to clean a rent house that he had. He had brought over young men from his home country to work in the factory, but they decided to go home. I walked in and I kid you not, there were millions of roaches all over the house. There was no way to clean it. I told him that he needed to spray, and he said to clean around the bugs. I'm not sure if he had actually looked at the house, but there was not an empty, roach-free spot to even wipe a cloth or sponge, If you had knocked them off, more would be immediately there. Nope. Not doing that. Apparently, they young men who went back to their country, left food in the freezer/refrigerator/pantry. Doctor shut of the electricity because no one was living there, and he was cheap about certain things. So, he finally had it sprayed. And I cleaned. Nasty work and I wasn't paid near enough. This house had been AMAZING at one time. I couldn't get over the details and just how lovely it truly was. It was 3 stories......the staircase--wow! But, he had made it into apartments on each level with a kitchen. When he purchased the house, it came with some of the original furniture including that antique bed. I loved the bed and asked if I could buy it. He gave it to me because he saw it as junk. He understandably had no appreciation of American antique furniture. Honestly, we took the dresser and washstand without asking too. And one of those wooden sewing stands that hold thread and all. I knew he thought it was all junk and it was shameful how much he paid me. I had agreed to the price before seeing the house and the cockroaches. Anyway...that's the story of the bed. We used it two houses ago in our room. I did some research on it and it was probably made in the 1920's. This doctor was a piece of work. He asked us to take the nasty sheets home to wash. Nope. Not taking anything like that into my home or washing machine. So, we threw them in Tom's truck and planned on taking them to a laundromat. But it rained on them and they got all nasty (nastier) so we tossed them. The doctor got SO mad that we threw them away. He was probably in his 60's and said he had those sheets since he residency. Yeah, but they have roach eggs on them and they got rained on. And just gross.. He got over it and asked us to watch their little dog while they went back to their home country for a bit. Little dog ate part of our bathroom door. LOL I watered a few things and am about to shower. We're going to stay with our baby for a bit this late afternoon. I had a thought about what I would do if I could go back in time regarding the garden. But that is a discussion for another time. I wasted all my time talking about the antique bed....See MoreRelated Professionals
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