Sunday, December 4, 2011

Who's "Who" Is Your Who?



  • Who can find a virtuous woman? her price is far above rubies


  • She openeth her mouth with wisdom, and in her tongue is the law of kindness


It's that time of year again. The silly season when we easily get so caught up in the prep work--cleaning, cooking, decorating, buying gifts, wrapping gifts, going to work parties and club parties and church parties and church services and family gatherings and on and on and on..that we forget the "Who".



No, not the "Who" down in "Whoville".



The real "Who".



As in, "Who are we doing this for in the first place?".





"Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of His hand, and mete out heaven with the span, and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure, and weighed the mountains in scales, and the hills in a balance?



"Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord, or being his counsellor hath taught him?" Isaiah 40:12-13




You know. THAT "Who"




For unto us a child is given. Right?






"Who hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?



"For he shall grow up before him as a tender plant, and as a root out of a dry ground: he hath no beauty of comeliness: and when we shall see hime, there is no beauty that we should desire him.



"He is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief; and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was despised, and we esteemed him not.



"Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows; yet we did esteem him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted.



"But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed.


"All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way;
and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all." Isaiah
56:1-6



I love this time of year--cooking, the decorating, the presents, the lights, the busy-ness. But as I catch myself being overwhelmed by my inablity to do more and to be more, I'm trying to remember to take some time out to remember who my "Who" is. Not just during advent, but whenever I found myself distracted and caught up in the whirlwind that is life.



He's my "Who". Who's Your Who?

Until next time...

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Life on the Farm is Kinda Laid Back...

Well, technically, it isn't a farm. It's my parent's camp, but it's on family land that used to be a farm.


It's where my parents go to relax...


...and watch the wildlife...

...like this wild turkey...



They usually travel in packs, but that day we spotted only one.





We did find this teeny, tiny little lizard, basking in the sun...


on an overturned porch swing.


I think he tried to ignore us...


but we we were sitting about 10 feet away, so I don't think he could.



He finally tired of the spotlight and hid out on the light string under the porch rail.










Until next time...

Thursday, August 11, 2011

I Got My Big Fat Check, How About You?


  • Who can find a virtuous woman? her price is far above rubies

  • She looketh well to the ways of her household

Anyone remember the post I did a few months back about shopping online through Ebates?







Well, guess what? I got my big fat check for this quarter! $19.38! Yippee! It's not a lot, but sure does come in handy to get a rebate from something you'd be buying anyway.



Click on the link on the top line to read all about how you can sign up through one my referral links, and save money for both of us!



Until next time...

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Crepe Myrtles in Bloom


  • Who can find a virtuous woman? her price is far above rubies

  • with the fruit of her hands she planteth a vineyard

It's that time of the year, here in the South, that the crepe myrtles are blooming.


Right in the middle of the summer, when the heat is at it's worst, and the drought still has no end in sight; when the gardens have started dying and other flowers are drooping from heat exhaustion--suddenly, the crepe myrtles burst out in all of their array of colors.

The one in my mom's front yard always blooms at least a couple of weeks ahead of mine. (Hers gets full sun, and mine are really not planted at the optimum place in my yard, they get too much shade from the oak trees.) But just when I think mine are going to give me just a couple of measly little flowers, they show up--just a bit late, but beautiful, nevertheless.


Mine are the traditional "hot pink" fuchsia color...




but variety is the spice of life, and crepe myrtles come in a variety of colors, from lavender...



to white...


to light pink.


They come in different shapes, too, according to how they're pruned, from a loose, airy look...




to one that's more tightly shaped.



Which are your favorites? I think I like them all!


This post is linked to:


Tuesday Garden Party at An Oregon Cottage

Outdoor Wednesday at A Southern Daydreamer


Until next time...

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Garden Update, July 10th



  • Who can find a virtuous woman? her price is far above rubies


  • ...with the fruit of her hands, she planteth a vineyard
I have not been very virtuous lately, even in the garden. Especially in the garden. Partly because of this...

I took this about 10:00 one morning, maybe even earlier. Already 90. Degrees. Fahrenheit.

Some days my air conditioner can't keep it cool even inside the house. On those days I'm miserable inside and out. And it shows, too.



Fortunately, most of my container plants are very forgiving. They droop, and shrivel, and close up leaves to preserve moisture, but all it takes a good drink from the water hose and they perk right back up.

I wish I were that resilient, don't you?


Some things, like this morning glory, have foliage but no blooms, but it hangs in there. (That's a periwinkle at the base, giving it at least a touch of color.)


Other things, like these lilies, come back up year after year. The top fell out of this tree six years ago with Hurricane Rita blew threw, but it continues to leaf and put out new branches, and the lilies--my husband even burns them over every couple of years, and they come right back and eventually give us the most brilliant, if short-lived, blooms.








And of course the garden....by far the star of this spring/summer garden are the cherry tomatoes.


The heat has made every one's tomatoes smaller than usual, and these are no exception, but they are by far the best tasting tomatoes I've ever had--I'll definitely plant these Sweet Cherry 100's again.



Can you see how many still-green ones I have? I've had a few that split, but most are perfect and sweet.



Watermelon vines are taking over the end of their bed...




and I actually have a couple of melons--one the size of a softball...





...and one more suitable for golf!




And while my water bill has more than doubled...



at least I can turn it on and let it go!



Meanwhile, how is your garden growing?

Until next time...


This post is linked to:


Tuesday Garden Party at An Oregon Cottage

Outdoor Wednesday at A Southern Daydreamer



Wednesday, June 22, 2011

It's Raining!!


  • Who can find a virtuous woman? her price is far above rubies

  • ...with the fruit of her hands, she planteth a vineyard...

Yesterday in the wee hours of the morning I woke up to one of the most beautiful sounds in the world---that of rain hitting the roof and pouring off onto the ground! It's been literally weeks! We were about 20 inches down in total rainfall for last year and this one--gardens and pasture and crops have dried up and shriveled on the vine, and we've had at least a month of temperatures in the high 90's and low triple digits.


But not today. Praise the Lord! The high so far today has been in the 70's. Yesterday we got almost 2 1/2 inches at our place, that good slow, stop-and-start kind that lets it a lot of it soak in instead of running off. And it's raining again, today, too! Yippee!

Yesterday morning, off my carport...


...and out back toward the garden and one of the cow pastures...



I couldn't resist trying to snap a picture of the rain dripping and running off the roof of the back porch...


...and of water still standing on the brick walkway.


...even puddles in the driveway, and a birdbath, filled with fresh water that didn't come out of a hose!


I'm getting cherry tomatoes by the handfuls, but the cucumbers are still dying off, one by one. I'm tempted to just pull them up and wait until the fall, but I think I'll wait to see what the rain and a couple of days of cooler temperatures does (if anything) to revive them.


Meanwhile, I'm listening to the hay meadow across the road--I think I can hear it growing as we speak!


Until next time...

This post is linked to:


Tuesday Garden Party at An Oregon Cottage

Outdoor Wednesday at A Southern Daydreamer










Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Garden Update--June 14


  • Who can find a virtuous woman? her price is far above rubies

  • ...with the fruit of her hands, she planteth a vineyard

Not too much to report on the garden front this week. The weather moderated--for a couple of day, the highs were only in the mid-90's (!) but as of yesterday, we were back to triple digits again.

I thinned all of the dead cucumber vines out, and we found two more cucumbers, but they are a weird yellowish color and don't seem to be turning the right shade of green. The one we picked last week was bitter, but that seems to be a problem with of the folk's this year--I really think it's the hot dry weather, nothing seems to be growing right. My husband decided that maybe they were getting too much sun during the heat of the day, so he dug out this old umbrella from the shed and rigged up a shade from the noon sun. Snappy, huh?


Cherry tomatoes still turning slowly--we've 4 or 5 so far, and none of the yellow ones have turned at all.






And while farmers all around are harvesting melons, I finally have one lone baby watermelon on the vines!



Containers are about the same, tired looking in the middle of the day from the heat, but they are (so far) still perking up once evening falls.


How is your garden growing this year?


This post is linked to:


Outdoor Wednesday at A Southern Daydreamer

Tuesday Garden Party at An Oregon Cottage

Frugal Gardening 101 At Cents to Get Debt Free, Amy's Finer Things, and Smockity Frocks


Until next time...

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Garden Update--June 6



  • Who can find a virtuous woman? her price is far above rubies


  • ...with the fruit of her hands she planteth a vineyard
Here in southwest Louisiana, we are experiencing record-breaking drought and unseasonable (even for us!) heat, including several days of triple digit temperatures already. Even when the actual temperature is in the 90's, the heat index hits the 100's, so we're cooking, not growing!

Thankfully, the heat doesn't make this New Zealand spinach bolt, and since it's in a container, I can position it to get some shade for at least part of the day. I need to find or make a trellis, these are just about ready to start running.

I thought I'd lost my basil last week--on my day for container watering, I came home to NO water--our rural water system had a leaky pipe, so they cut us off (with no warning, might I add) for about 18 hours. Thankfully it perked right back up when I was finally able to water the next day. The rosemary right above it just sort of sits there, and the smaller New Zealand spinach is recovering nicely from the day I stepped on it while I was dead-heading my petunias.


These are some marigolds I started from seed--I was late with these, but they usually do pretty well in the heat, so I'm hoping these will give me some color when everything else is drooping. They are surrounded by a monkey vine...


...that wants to wrap around everything except the post that I want it to wrap.



Another hot-weather favorite of mine, periwinkles. They should fill this bowl nicely, and can recover from the worst heat--just a little drink seems to perk them right up, even in the oven-like temperatures we usually don't experience until later in the summer.




Can you tell the temperature? It was already 80 degrees, and this was about 8:00 a.m. Right now (4:00p.m.) it's around 98.




Hostas and paint plants are doing well, I have them on the eastern side of the house where they get morning light, but afternoon and evening shade...




...right down from the morning glory/periwinkle combo pot. The periwinkles should spread out a little more and shade the tender bare lower vines of the morning glories. So far no blooms on the morning glory--I'm thinking they need a feeding. One year I had a planter full of these with glorious foliage but no blooms, but as soon as I dosed it good with plant food, they bloomed practically over night.




As far as the actual garden--the cucumbers have about had it. One day they were full and covered with blooms, the next they started drooping. Every day in the heat they wilt down, and they do still perk back up (mostly) in the evenings, but several of the vines have wilted down and died...




...and this is as close to a cucumber as I've seen so far. (edited to add: we found an actual, full-sized cucumber this morning (6/7) while out watering--it was hiding on the far side of the fence, hanging from a vine that was wrapped around the side--so with our lunch we will have a cucumber, along with our lone ripe cherry tomato)




Watermelon vines have finally started growing, and I have a couple of blooms, plus one that looks as though it is trying to make a melon. I hope they will keep going long enough to actually bear fruit.




Some of the blueberries look like they're dying, too...




...and although the blackberries are growing, I've yet to see a single bloom on this bunch. The wilder ones that are in the side yard have bloomed and even made a few berries, but they dried up before they ripened.




I have one hope for a decent harvest--the cherry tomatoes look great so far...




they are loaded with blooms and fruit...




...including this one lone tomato that's actually started to turn!




Petunia are alive--leggy but hanging in there--this is what they usually look like in the middle of the summer--I usually have pretty petunias only in the spring and fall, they fade quickly in the real heat of the summer.




This is my (so far) vain attempt to catch the creature of the night that keeps rooting up the yard. He's move to the "fairy ring" of green I have in the middle of the back yard that catches the sprinkler.




I think the rest of yard is unappetizing, even to the bugs that the armadillo roots around to find.





We've been praying for rain, not just for us, but for the farmers and ranchers who are really beginning to hurt. The news reports widespread crop and pasture failures--while those parishes on the eastern side of the state are still facing floods! As much as I wish my little patch was doing better, I'm thankful that I'm not really dependent on it my for food, or to make a living. It could be a wonderful supplement, but I will still be able to feed my family without it. Others are not so blessed.




I never did try the powdered milk for fertilizer, thing, but my mother did, and her plants have done about as well on reconstituted powdered milk as they have with a light fertilizer. I did read again that it works well for tomatoes, so maybe I'll give my tomato plants a drink of milk this week. It's the calcium that does it, I know, but it does seem to me that if you have a plant or some dirt that you know needs calcium, this would be a safe and "green" way to take care of it.


This post is linked to:


Tuesday Garden Party at An Oregon Cottage


Outdoor Wednesday at A Southern Daydreamer

Frugal Gardening 101 at Cents to Get Debt Free, Amy's Finer Things, and Smockity Frocks

Until next time...

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