Thursday, February 08, 2007
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
Foodwatch, Day 5
Lunch: cup of lentil soup, romaine salad with tomatoes, broccoli, onions, and tofu-miso dressing, one slice whole grain bread with one slice of cheddar and mustard, water.
Dinner: Cup of pasta with white clam sauce, 1/2 cup of green peas.
Snack: Green tea, whole grapefruit
Exercise: 30 minutes running around pulling a sled. Does that count? Weights.
feeding kermit at the library
He is full of little kindnesses.
John and I have been to story hour at the library lately. When Ella was this age she would cruise the room at the Portland Library and never listened to the story. John sits on my legs and watches the book. He especially loves any time that there is singing, and Miss Alison brought her guitar yesterday.
Speaking of libraries, our favorite librarian retired last wednesday. She was seventy.
mama pulls
Tuesday, February 06, 2007
fat and carbs, day 4
lunch torilla, refried beans, sprinkle of cheese
dinner, pita pizza
later: 1 glass of shiraz
What have we learned here. I don't eat well when daddy-o is out of town. Also, I don't have a problem with sugar.
Monday, February 05, 2007
Wednesday Night
Members of Mountain Women Rising are Gaye Johnson, a performer for over 30 years and a native of North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains; Meredith Dean, a social activist from Southwest Virginia; Edna Gulley, a “welfare mother” from Clincho who developed and coordinated a community-based preschool program serving low-income children in her community for over 16 years; and Rema Keen, a writer, actor, activist and musician from Southwest Virginia.
The Appalachian Women’s Alliance is a movement of women and girls dedicated to taking action on social issues. Performance groups such as Mountain Women Rising educate, challenge and inspire women and men inside and outside of Appalachia to become allies against racism, violence against women and war.
Sweet Juniper's Alphabet Book
yogaman
Ella got into my bed at 4:41. She said, "I'm here because I'm so snugalious". Great, snuggle up and go to sleep for one hour and sixteen minutes. Two minutes later she says I have bad breath. Two minutes more and she wants me to turn over so that she can breath. I say go back to bed. She is talking about nonsense and wakes up her brother in the next room. Not even five and we are up for the day. Between five and eight there are several episodes in which she tries to beat me down with her screams about what she is going to wear, what she is going to eat after lunch, and how many televison programs she is going to watch today. Also, she can brush her hair using only her mind.
foodwatch, day 3, oh hell, butter
playdate: 1/2 cup pineapple with yogurt (Annie Kay's--tastes homemade), cup of coffee, 2 bites banana bread
lunch: 2 pancakes, 2 chicken sausages, butter
dinner: small bean burrito, water
What an aweful food day when you see it on paper. Where are the vegatables? I'm am living on carbs and dairy products...and butter, milkfat, and chicken fat.
Sunday, February 04, 2007
foodwatch, day 2
Lunch: Veggie burger on whole grain toast with one slice of cheddar, mustard, and organic ketchup, 2 servings of homemade coleslaw(made with yogurt and reduced fat mayo), water.
Exercise: 30 minute walk, ten minutes weightlifting, short yoga ball workout
Snack: 2 pieces dried papaya, cup of hungarian cabbage soup, black tea
Atrocity du jour: I ate a handfull of cheese crackers while getting a snack for John
Dinner: takeout pad thai with shrimp, spring roll, half an apple, water
Saturday, February 03, 2007
pancakes
Lunch: 2 corn tortillas with organic pinto beans and a sprinkle of cheddar, homemade salsa,
large salad with tofu miso dressing
Birthday party: water and half an apple
Dinner: Brown rice with tofu, peas, kale, garlic and ginger, completely unsatisfying.
Snack: whole grapefruit, herb tea
Exercise: mama related hauling of thirty pound baby
Wednesday, January 31, 2007
Sunday, January 28, 2007
The Quiltmaker's Journey
This book, as well as The Quiltmaker's Gift, is certainly my favorite book from the past month. I'd recommend it for boys as well as girls. The details of the illustrations were mesmerizing for Ella. We are going to make a Waldorf doll of the main character and a quilt for her.
e paints a quilt
After two weeks of quilts, Ella is starting a new unit at school. I asked her if she knew what that would be she said, "Obviously, blankets!"
annie's quilt
I wanted to make a doll quilt for Ella while the kids were studying quilts at school. My original intention was to let her actually stitch parts of it, but she choose to go her own was with my scraps. Grandmarie sent her a little woven sewing box with a silver thimble, and I gave her a pincushion with some pearl topped pins. She has wanted dreadfully sharp objects of her own for years. I got some muslin and was going to make a cathedral window quilt for another doll, one yet to be made, but Ella suddenly wanted "colorful patchwork, nine patch". She picked some fabrics from my stash and put the pieces in a "pat-ter-en" on the dining room table. As she learned more about how quilts were made, I put this one together at night, adding some appliques on the back. The colors are nice for Annie.
Saturday, January 27, 2007
summer::school
Fossil hunting expeditions, New River and Appomattox
Build a wood burning earth oven to bake bread
Many camp outs
Paper Mache, Life size kid forms to paint
Making paper
Book making with sewn bindings
Take big easels on a painting expedition
New Jamestown 400th anniversary exhibits
to be continued
Friday, January 26, 2007
decadent grits
Grits, Fancy
3 cups whole milk
2/3 cups water
2 sprigs fresh rosemary
2/3 cups old – fashioned grits ( not quick-cooking)
Salt and freshly ground pepper
Put the milk, water, rosemary, salt and pepper in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil. Slip in the grits. Adjust the heat so that the grits barely simmer, just a bubble at a time is perfect. Stir frequently until all the liquid is absorbed.
I use 3 cups whole milk and 1 cup water to 1 cup of grits with those Byrd Mill Grits.
Excellent with Sauteed Shrimp as Charleston Shrimp and Grits These can now be transformed into GARLIC CHEESE GRITS. To the cooked grits add:
2 cups grated Sharp Cheddar Cheese, ½ teaspoon finely chopped garlic
½ cup chopped scallions or chives, if desired
A dash of hot pepper sauce
4 eggs
Blend well.
Pour the mixture into a flat 2 quart casserole and bake at 350* for 25 minutes. More cheese can be added atop the casserole during the last 10 minutes of baking.
get your grit on
walking in someone else's shoes
We are still here. It has just been a long week, a long month. We have been weaning, teething, bad dreaming, you name it. I've been reading a few blogs but just haven't had a lot to say. How many times can I say that I feel like Miss Clavel in the middle of the night? Something is not right.
It is me though. The children are fine. I'd be fine too if someone strapped me into a car seat and let me sleep for an hour.
Saturday, January 20, 2007
september 2001
My friend Marge took this picture of me at the Chinese Garden in Portland, Oregon while I was uber pregnant with Ella. The Garden of Awakening Orchids was certainly one of Portland's many jewels. Marge brought over an orchid when we came home from the hospital. It bloomed for six weeks but it hasn't bloomed since. It is still in our dining room, the only plant to travel east with us.
90 percent chance of snow
Ella and her daddy have been spending some good times together today. They went shopping at an old book store and got nine vintage children's books. They heard some bluegrass over at the coffee shop and brought home some good things from the whole food store.
Now they are in the tub with some toy animals. I got in the hot tub last night in a high wind, turned up the jets and felt like I was in a hurricane in a tropical sea.
Friday, January 19, 2007
lions, and tigers, and bears, oh my
She came home a few days ago announcing that Jenny had eaten a rabbit, and we repeated our mantra of tolerance for the carnivores. Every person and animal gets to choose their own food.
Yesterday she was quite concerned about Sharry's soup. "It was a lovely soup", she said, "It had white beans, carrots, and broccoli, and then she added a pig and boiled it until the meat fell off the bone."...as if Sharry were Frankenstein if Ella knew who Frankenstein was. She was particularly fascinated with the phrase, "until the meat fell off the bone".
"I am meat," she says.
Thursday, January 18, 2007
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
hedgehogs and periwinkles
This is all said in a slightly hushed fairy tale voice with hand motions.
Monday, January 15, 2007
bands
Sunday, January 14, 2007
Saturday, January 13, 2007
boogie wonderland
I have hot eyeballs and keep expecting to have this cold at any minute. Mostly I am tired. John has been exclusively in his crib for three nights. The first one was rough. Last night there were two or three peeps and then he slept until almost seven. The morning before was five forty five. This morning he said, "Oatmeal!"
Friday, January 12, 2007
Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Tuesday, January 09, 2007
tea for three
Sunday, January 07, 2007
Saturday, January 06, 2007
elves
I'm starting my Christmas crafting early this year.
Friday, January 05, 2007
Thursday, January 04, 2007
Wednesday, January 03, 2007
January at Ella's School
Discovery Time- investigating skulls and bones, dinosaur number/numeral word game, dinosaur sticker pictures, stegasaurus hats, Ticeratops puppets
Circle Time- What we know and want to know about dinosaurs, classifying dinosaurs by eating habits, habitats, and hip bones, graphing toy dinosaurs brought from home
Small Group Time- phonics workbooks (phonmeic awareness and letter formation of Qq and Rr) and journals
Story- Dinosaurs, Dinosaur Bones, Dinosaur Babies, How Big is a Brachiosaurus?, Let's Go Dinosaur Tracking
Week 2 More About Dinosaurs
Discovery Time-making Boxosaurs, dinosaur paper skeleton, play dough dinosaurs, dinosaur dig in rice, dinosaur floor puzzles, easel painted dinosaurs for large bulletin board.
Circle Time-What happened to the dinosaurs?, Sizing up dinosaurs, "Annie Apatosaurus", "Our Dinosaur Friends" video and songs.
Small Group Time- adding using a number line, math workbookds. phonics workbooks-Uu and Vv, journals
Story- What Happend to the Dinosaurs, Sea Monsters of Long Ago, The Horned Dinosaur, Flying Dinosaur, Magic School Bus in the Time of Dinosaurs
Week 3 Quilting
Art and Discovery-color by number quilt blocks, exploring and arranging quilt squares with paper cut-outs, pattern blocks and geoboard quilts, paper quilts, quilting "sandwiches" with yarn (paper quilt front and back with batting in the middle)
Circle Time-The history of quilts, how quilts are made, counting and nameing the colors and shapes in quilts
Smalll Group Time-addition review, math workbooks, phonics workbooks Ww and Xx, journals.
Story- The Quilting Bee, The Seasons Sewn; A Year in Patchwork, Eight Hands Round, A Patchwork Alphabet, The Keeping Quilt, The Patchwork Quilt
Week 4 More Quilts
Art and Discovery- Story quilts with borders, wallpaper crazy quilts, lacing cards, triangle symetry
Circle-differnent quilt tyes and patterns, matching quilt block patterns to their names, explring various ways to make shapes (how many ways can you cover this shape?)
Small Group-subtracting using the number line, subtracting by counting backwards, math workbooks, phonics workbooks (YyZz), Journals
Story- My Grandmother's Patchwork Quilt, The Pumpkin Blanket, The Patchwork Lady, The Quilt Story, The Boy and the Quilt
Almost 17 months
se water avenue composite photgraph by Patricia Bognar Portland ,Oregon
se water avenue composite photgraph by Patricia Bognar Portland ,Oregon, originally uploaded by ellajohn.
Our friend Pat sent us a polaroid transfer of this composite photograph. For me it is a quilt, a tie die, and a kaleidescope of the Oregon summer.
If you are absolutely smitten with it, as I am, email me and I will introduce you a woman with a good story to tell, an amazing collection of photgraphs, a champion yardsaler, and the partner of a man who knows just when to throw his shoe.
Tuesday, January 02, 2007
retrospective
We went over two mountains and through the foggy woods and spent New Years Eve with Isaac , his family, and some of their friends. There was good food , and I drank lots of champagne. The kids piled onto the bed to watch Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, and at nine thirty they had a toast. Real glasses on a flowered tray. That was lovely. At midnight we were driving down Main street. Shortly after we were in the house and the local revelers started "shooting in the New Year". It is the habit of the indiginous folks to go out in the yard and shoot guns at midnight. I don't want to use the term redneck or white trash in a negative way, but for those of us who have lived in big cities with crime, it can be fairly disconcerting. I recently read that this is a purely American custom, most likely a way for rural people to greet their neighbors in celebration. Apparently, this custom is alive and well here in Appalachian smalltown.
Here in the New Year we are counting our blessings and cleaning out our cupboards. I've been saying that I'm going Swedish in the New Year. Spare. Boxed. Clean. Ella and I got to work on the pantry yesterday. Today we took all our old pictures off the refridgerator and put up all the new photos of our friend's children that came on Christmas cards. Our Christmas tree is growing in the yard, and the the decorations are boxed and packed. My mother asked me if I was celebrating the sixth of January. No, I'm just being Swedish. I am making lists for next year. I want to celebrate Saint Lucy's day with candle crowns and wizard hats and cardomom breads. I want to make lots of elfin dolls for the tree. I want to make a family star for the top of the tree out of some leftover material from my wedding dress, or maybe even a fairy doll with white mohair hair and the dupioni dress. Next year I want to have a Buddha day party to celebrate the day of the Buddha's enlightenment, and a bigger bolder toddler be darned Christmas tree.
We have resolutions and budget plans and yoga videos and massage gift cards. We have happy children. We have dreams of a house with a fireplace, a coop for chickens, and peace on earth.
Monday, January 01, 2007
Friday, December 29, 2006
Sunday, December 24, 2006
Friday, December 22, 2006
Thursday, December 21, 2006
a tangled web
Tuesday, December 19, 2006
poised, is that the word?
I thought it was time to insert a little reality into this little blog. It has been looking a little syrupy around here lately, so I thought you should see the food stuck to the face of a man poised to wipe.....who has not even pulled down his pants because he really has no idea what he is doing.
He is nothing if not enthusiastic. He wants to keep the alphabets from the fridge in the potty, and he must fill a teapot with water whenever there is water in the bathtub and fill this potty because that is the way he thinks it should be.
Further proving that he is his father's son, yesterday I found him in this very spot flipping through The Economist. Pants up, of course.
Monday, December 18, 2006
stay out of the closet. no peeking under the bed.
The children are nestled all snug in their beds and our house smells like chocolate and incense.
Saturday, December 16, 2006
One week
I need to make a list of all the things that need to be done this week, but I must say that I have enjoyed the Christmas "process". I'm ready to clear away all the supplies and bask in the glow of the lights, but I still have thirty five cards to make, parmesan black pepper biscotti to bake, a package to mail to Massachusetts on monday, cookies to bake, another little tree to decorate with all white ornaments, twelve squares of the checkers set to sew down, and packages to wrap.
Friday, December 15, 2006
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Sunday, December 10, 2006
nutcracker
We took Miss Ella to the Nutcracker at the local university this weekend. Her ballet teacher was dancing, and now she has a whole new vision of that woman; Sarah is a real ballerina. I was quite impressed by the performance. Ella and Emily were both completely caught up in the magical story, and both loved walking down to watch the musicians in the orchestra before the performance and during the intermission. Ella took Sarah a bouquet at the stage door but was fairly awestruck by seeing her in the full makeup.
Granny and Grampy were here for the weekend, and this morning Ella staged Dolly's fifth birthday party during breakfast. (Dolly is, ahem, a doll) She had five candles in a pumpkin pancake, and she sat at the table wearing a paper hat.
Last night was the third annual building of the gingerbread house. I'm so happy she is finally making shingles.
Friday, December 08, 2006
peanut snowman
This little guy is so easy that a four year old can make them! Paint a peanut white with a few drops of glue in a tablespoon of white paint. Roll in salt or sugar. Tie on some yarn. The hat is felt or construction paper. I made the carrot out of a rubber band, but paper would be fine. A safety pin on the back of the scarf makes it into a pin, or it would be a sweet tree ornament.
Wednesday, December 06, 2006
some fruit for the woodpeckers
The woodpeckers were at it again today. Life in a wooden house isn't always quiet. Ella was a bear today. She wanted to make 22 clothespin dolls for her class tomorrow..or a trillion million. I'm feeling a little beaten down by it all lately, the toys on the floor, the request to be a vegetarian who eats fried chicken, and the best quote of all from yesterday, "Do you know how much my mom hates plastic?" I know, she is five. No filters.
Tuesday, December 05, 2006
handmade thrifty irish sheep
When I have two or three nerves left I like to make a little something. This is the sleeve of a felted fisherman sweater and a black sock.
I've been trying to wean John, and he is fighting the good fight. He stomps his little feet in a rage. He also trys throwing food, or, if we are in the grocery store, groceries. Giving up nursing means giving up the five minutes of peace in the afternoon. During the day he will take snacks and whole milk, but at night I have much less willpower. I'd sell my soul for the little bit of sleep I do get, so when he wakes up in the middle of the night I tuck him into my bed and get back to the business of sleeping. The hours between midnight and six am are not functional ones for me.