Friday, April 30, 2021

April 30th

 

Happy Arbor day!


In celebration of this remembrance,
here is one of our majestic cypress trees.


We have 3 cypress but this one has 
squirrel nests!
What a beautiful native tree.

What's the deal with Arbor Day anyway?
Well, I looked it up.

The first Arbor Day was documented in 1594
 in a small village in Spain.
It was organized by the mayor because
a lot of their trees died so they planted more.

Fast forward to 1805
 (we are in another Spanish village),
when their local priest held the 200th
anniversary of the original date,
calling it Fiesta de Arbol.
This priest was convinced that trees
were more than fruit, berry and nut bearers.
He extolled the virtues of trees as 
decoration and natural beauty.
So, after Mass, the whole village 
came out and planted several trees
along the main road to town.
🌲
The remembrance of Arbor Day
in the U.S. began in Nebraska in 1872.
It's unknown how the celebration came
to America, but it's thought that it was probably
due to Spanish immigrants.
On April 10th that year an estimated 
one million trees were planted.
The guy responsible was determined to re-plant areas
destroyed by de-forestation from the huge logging industry.

This idea caught on.
The American Forestry Association
sought to use Arbor Day to
get the public enthused 
about re-forestation,
especially since huge swaths of land
had been clear cut to harvest the lumber.
There was an enormous building boom in the U.S. back then.

Theodore Roosevelt, back in 1906,
thought Arbor Day was an awesome idea.
He, being a nature and conservation enthusiast,
got the lumber industry to embrace it too.
His speeches about tree conservation
included this quote,
"A people without children
would face a hopeless future;
a country without trees is
almost as helpless."
🌲
And this quote from John Muir.
"The clearest way into the Universe
is through a forest wilderness."
🌳

Chief Seattle



*************************************

The veggie garden is doing very well.
These are a few of our artichokes.


This is what we've harvested so far,
Celery, Cauliflower, Purple Broccoli 
and an artichoke.


A close up of the beautiful bud!


Hazel.
I think she's hoping for a treat.


Some eggplant flowers.


Nugget snooping around.
  

A friendly neighborhood cat.
This is the poor guy who gets
literally henpecked by the girls.
He's resting on hay behind our small building.


2 cherry tomatoes.

🐔
Four of the girls are following me.
Ethel is in the coop laying an egg.
She asked to not be disturbed.
 😆
There isn't a time when they don't follow us.
It's something you can count on with
a regularity that your bowels rarely achieve.
😆
Oh, yeah,
they don't follow us when it's too early to go
night-night.
They automatically go into the coop at sundown,
but they REALLY don't like to go in early,
so we have to tempt them with pieces of bread.
If we have to leave and won't be home to
close the coop door to protect them
from predators, we corral them in early.
That's when we use bread pieces as an "incentive".
They go for it like it's the last life preserver on 
the freaking Titanic!
They never get bread, so it's a treat for them.
Now I can rewrite my curriculum vitae
to include Chicken Wrangler...

Pepper,
She's probably pissed.
She wanted to go lay an egg,
but for some infernal reason,
they all have to use the same cockadoodie box!
So now she waits, clucking around, 
for Ethel to finish laying.


Sweet onions.
These are a similar to Vidalia's.


Parsley.
 This guy needs a haircut!
I'll cut some and dry it for my herbal blend.


Lucy giving me the stink eye.



These are Greek Oregano, 
French and German Thyme,
and French Tarragon. 


The baby angel is between Peppermint
and Oregano .


The herb garden.


****************************


The gardenias are blooming like crazy!
This picture was taken yesterday morning...



This picture is of the same bush this morning...
Amazing!

Just too beautiful!
And the scent is wonderful as you step onto
the porch!
I also have a few gladiolus that will bloom soon.
Can't wait to see the colors.
I think they may be yellow, but several  bulbs
died in the freeze.
So it'll be a surprize.
Kinda like a gender reveal!
😂😆

*******************

The weather is getting hotter.
I was just commenting on it with my
son and my sister,
My day consists of  bringing and picking 
up kids from school.
When I get hot, I get cranky.
I also sweat profusely.
There's nothing ladylike in sweating.
Scarlett O'Hara may have fanned herself
or sat under an oak to get cool
while drinking sweet tea,
But,
I sweat!
I was so hot yesterday that
I could have warmed the entire
Donner Party
and nobody woulda been eaten!
Just sayin'

***********

Love ya,
Sis!

Sunday, April 18, 2021

April 18th

 

This is so true,
especially in the last week.
I think it rained for 6 consecutive days.
We were without power for almost 28 hours
at one point when the weather got very bad.
Thankfully we had a generator!
 But,
for most of those days,
it was drizzles and thunderstorms,
and to quote e.e.cummings
"puddlelicious",
and thankfully
not the mini-tropical storm that
caused the power outages.


The veggies withstood the rain for the most part,
but my flowers took a beating.
I'm glad I took a few pictures before the rains began.

The Amaryllis withstood the heavy rain
pretty well.



Same with my Snapdragons.


And the Irises






This is a small container with 
Mother-in-Law Tongue
and
Marigolds.



This is the gardenia bush.
We have 2 of them flanking the front door.
They are covered with buds.
Can't wait'll they bloom!!



I got a "Just Because" bouquet
during the rainy week.
It's so beautiful!


I love roses.
🌹
💘

**********************************

Cilantro.
It's flowering with these delicate
white flowers.
All of it is edible.



Artichokes.
This plant has 5 or 6.
They are about the size of a baseball.



I don't have many pictures of the veggies
and none of the hens on this blog because
of the rain.
The ground is soggy and the girls
just love that.
More unlucky bugs to eat!
They were out before 6 this morning
hunting in the grass.
🐔


*******************************



Some small chocolate pies.

I always try to think of a way to
use up any leftovers.
😃
In this case it was 3 slices of 
Mississippi Mud Bundt cake
from Rouses, about 3 tablespoons of 
sour cherry jam,
 a small amount of Praline Liqueur and some
refrigerated pie crusts that will expire 
next week.
So, rather than pitch them out here's what I did...

I mashed up the Mississippi Mud cake slices,
added the jam and stirred it up.
I then added the Praline Liqueur
till the mixture was a pasty consistency.
Then....
I used a glass to cut out circles in the
pie crust and rolled it out again to use 
up the entire amount of pastry dough.
It made 9 circles.
I preheated the oven to 450 degrees,
and foil lined a cookie sheet.
Then I filled the bottom circle 
(with a tablespoon of the mixture)
and pinched the top one to cover,
placed it on the cookie sheet,
poked holes in the top
and baked for 15 minutes
(that's package directions for a pie).
But, I kept checking on them.
Didn't want them to burn.

As you can see, 
the CEO got to them already!
They turned out great!
Yay!

I did the same kinda thing with
refrigerated pizza dough and leftovers last night.
I had 6 chicken tenders and 2 meatballs that
I was trying to think of something to make with them.
The CEO said lets' make a pizza.
So I did.
I rolled out the refrigerated pizza dough.
into a rectangle,
then brushed garlic butter on it.
I placed it in the oven at 450 degrees
for a couple minutes to toast the bottom,
and removed it from the heat.
Then, I cut the meatballs up into small chunks
as well as the chicken.
I had some sliced red onion, spinach leaves,
cherry tomatoes, some leftover marinara sauce
 and several types of cheese.
Then we started layering....
We put the chicken on one side and the meatballs on the other.
They made just enough for two,
and it tasted great!
🍕

***************************

An almost tail-less lizard.
This guy escaped the clucking beak of Hazel
by breaking off the end of his tail.
He'll live to fight another day!


A male Blue Jay.
He visits the backyard to snack on 
the chicken feed.
No, the girls don't like the company,
and if they see him,
they'll run him off.


*******************************


This is an acquired taste.
I know it, but
I love this stuff!
Some of the grocery stores have been out of it,
so when I saw it,
I grabbed a jar!



*************************************

I saw this picture and it reminded me of my
sister and I eating these while they hung around our necks.
We loved them.
As an adult, I see them for what they really are...
the candy was like a mini jaw breaker.
or a small stone with a hole in it!
Not very tasty and hard as hell to remove from the 
elastic string.
It also made our necks sticky with the moist heat
of the summer and the spit as we tried
to crack a tooth removing one.
So, we drank water from the hose to quench
that sweetness in our mouths.
Then after we went in to watch Gilligan's Island on T.V.

"Just sit right back
and you'll hear a tale,
a tale of a fateful trip,
that started from this tropic port
aboard this tiny ship......."

Love ya, Sue!
(Bet ya sang those lyrics!)
**************************

And this just in....

Received in yesterday's mail

NOOOOOOO!!
CRAP!

Sunday, April 4, 2021

April 4th Easter Sunday

Easter Sunday comes in the most
beautiful time of the year in 
southeast Louisiana.
Not too hot, not too cold...
it's a Goldilocks,
just right,
time of year.

Ever wonder how a bunny delivers eggs,
or why eggs in the first place?
Well, I looked it up.

Easter, or more correctly Christian Easter,
is a movable feast.
That means it'll always fall on the first Sunday
after the first full moon after spring equinox.
So, this is relatively new in historical terms.
In pre-history, it was just another rite of spring.

The egg symbolized new life, rebirth and fertility.
In Persia, the egg was colored to give as a gift
during the spring rites.
In Judeo-Christian rites the egg symbolizes new life too,
but in early Christianity,
the egg was forbidden to eat during Lent,
so the faithful collected them for 40 days,
colored them and gave them as gifts to
celebrate the Resurrection.

As far as the rabbits go,
ancient Greeks thought the rabbit
reproduced spontaneously.
So the (obvious to them) connection
to the Virgin Mary was their conclusion.
This is the reason hares are commonly
seen in medieval religious art depicting Mary.
But,
the Easter Bunny is taken from the German Protestants.
He was called Osterhase.
 (translated to Easter Hare)
He brought colored eggs and sweets to good kids.
(Kinda the same as Santa, that also came from
the Germans. It was probably a way to
keep the kids in line for 6 months till
Christmas. Ha!)
Back to the Germans...
 Their traditions followed 
them to the American Colonies.
This is where a kinda new twist
started with Easter traditions.
The children of those colonists
fashioned "nests" in baskets for 
the sweets and eggs that
Mr Osterhase brought on Easter Sunday.
They decorated them to "encourage"
more goodies. 

The lamb is a symbol of Easter too.
It's roots are deep in the Jewish tradition of Passover,
where the angel of death passes over the homes whose
 doorways were smeared with sacrificial lambs blood,
 thus sparing their first born sons.
Now, it's an integral part of a Seder plate.
The lamb to the slaughter, the Pascal Lamb and
The Lamb of God are synonymous 
with Christ as well.

Oh, and why ham as dinner on Easter?
That's another tradition stolen from the Germans.
The pig was considered to bring good luck
and prosperity, so they slaughtered
a pig to eat in a communal meal
with relatives and friends on Easter.
So, here's hoping this cleared up those
burning questions that
inquiring minds want to know.
😂

*******************************

The Amaryllis are in full bloom!
What a beautiful flower!
These are a much more scarlet
color than they look in the photo.

This one fell over on a windy day,
so I cut it to bring inside.
I call them my peppermint Amaryllis.


The Louisiana Iris's are starting to 
bloom too.
This one is white with a pale yellow throat.

This is the typical purple.
You can really see the "Fleur de Lis"
in this one.

More white ones.

This will open up to be a pale yellow.


These are Stargazer Lilies.
They're beautiful but stink!



*******************************


Here's a few of the beets we harvested
(and ate) recently. 
They were huge!


A baby Artichoke.
We have 4 plants, but this is 
the only one bearing fruit so far.

Cauliflower X's 3

And 2 Mirlitons waiting for a spot in the garden



Some herbs and some veggies,
ready to plant in the raised garden.

******************

Easter Chicken Humor





Here's hoping that your Easter
was great.


*******************************


Here's a shout out to my sister
who suffered the loss of her
Easter, Halloween and Christmas candy yearly.
You see, she always took a long time to finish her candies, 
( mine were eaten faster than you could say
"Here Comes Peter Cotton Tail")
so I took on the responsibility
of assisting her in that endeavor.
I don't think she saw it as a helpful gesture.
In fact, looking back, neither did my Mom.
😔
But,
In my defense,
 I never ate her coconut candy.
(Because I hate coconut)
I even ate her Sugar "Looking Egg".
Yes, I was that kid.
Thanks baby sis, for a goofy memory,
Love you!
💚