I did manage to bring in some tulips and grape hyacinth before the storm hit. They certainly brightened the kitchen!
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Ice Storm
Crazy Kansas weather! In one week's time we have gone from tornados and hail to ice and blizzards to 65 degrees and sunny and back to thunderstorms again last night!! We fared the ice storm pretty well - we had power the whole time, which is more than we can say for most folks in the area. Bernice - our 93-year-old neighbor - is staying with us intil her power comes back on. (Yes, she is 93 and lives by herself in the country ... she's pretty amazing!) Even though the ice shut things down for a few days, it was quite beautiful ...
This is Gage's favorite view of the house ... he loves the exposed roots on this old oak tree.
Koda didn't mind the ice and snow a bit!
Poor daffodils!
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Bye-Bye Camper
You may recall, in one of my very first posts I shared with you about purchasing a camper to be our "headquarters" during our build. In truth, we actually lived in the camper more than we lived at Roger's last spring, summer and fall. I loved that camper. I hated that camper. And now it is gone ...
On St. Patrick's Day, we sold our camper to some friends of ours. It all happened suddenly, which was great, but crazy. Gage and I had just started talking about what we needed to do to get the camper ready to sell. I went out Saturday afternoon and deep cleaned the sucker. Saturday evening, Jeff and Dovie showed up and said they wanted to buy our camper. Just like that. Like it was meant to be.
Strange how your feelings about something can change so quickly. Looking at it through new eyes after I cleaned it I thought, "What a great little camper. We should definitly camp out here sometime this spring. Maybe we shouldn't sell it." When just back in October, sitting in the cramped, dirty, musty, leaking camper, I didn't think I could hate anything more than I hated that camper. C'est la vie, right?
Above is the happy little camper last mother's day. Imagine how blown away Gage's family will be when we can host get togethers in an actual house ... not just on our camper's "porch". :)
Here is the empty spot where our camper used to sit! So great! So strange! We actually now have a view from our front porch, and we can watch Emily playing in her tree house.
Emily was with us on Monday for spring break. Good day to catch lady bugs. :)
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Fire, 'Facts and Garden Fun
I realize it has been a bit since my last update. Here is what we have been up to over the last few weeks...
Some beautiful, warm days last week provided the perfect opportunity to burn our fields/pastures/weed patch. Having grown up in Western Kansas, the spring burn is still a somewhat foreign concept to me. In Lane county, any spring fire is almost certainly an accident. Not so on the edge of the Flint Hills. I've learned that spring burns are essential to promote healthy bluestem growth and to keep trees from taking over your pasture land (not such a concern in Western Kansas ...) It has taken me a few years, but I'm finally past my fear of field fires and trust that folks around here are skilled and knowledgable in controlled burns.
Since our land was cropland just a few years ago, we currently have more weeds than grass. Hopefully with consistant spring burns and a little cultivating, we will have pastures before long.
Looks scary, doesn't it?! Looks like our house is just a few feet away from the fire! In fact, a very green lawn separated the fire from the house, all but eliminating any danger. Plus, the wind was pushing the fire away from the house.
A view from the porch of the burn out front.
Is it just me, or does the dog look concerned?
Eek! I hate this view of the house right now ... DESPERATLY needs landscaping! I'm working on it ...
The weather stayed delightful through the weekend, giving me the chance to plant some early crops - yea!! Peas, lettuce, carrots, onions and potatoes are all in the ground ... I am simply craving fresh vegetables! I can't WAIT!
Dusty was a lot of help, of course ...
.... but he tired quickly and opted for a nap on my sweatshirt.
After our beautiful days, we got a much needed rain early in the week. Rain on freshly-tilled gardens and just-burned fields provides the perfect opportunity for artifact hunting! (and yes I realize that calling artifacts "facts" in the title was ridiculous ... I just couldn't resist the alliteration.)
Here is what I found in the one of the gardens ... it's lovely don't you think? That's a thumb tack next to it for scale.
I was very proud of my little point ... until I saw what my husband found ...
same thumb tack, muuuuuch bigger arrowhead. (humph)
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