Last Monday, I carried an armload of winter
sweaters upstairs to one of the dressers in the little office. Tuesday, I
brought some summer clothes downstairs.
It rained, sleeted, iced, and snowed two nights
later.
I knew it would; it always does,
immediately after I exchange winter clothes for summer attire.
In the fall, if I remove the cotton quilt and
thin fleece blanket from the bed and replace them with the flannel quilt and
fleece blanket with Sherpa on one side, the temperature will rocket up past 90°
within hours.
It’s one of Murphy’s Laws. It has to happen.
The kalanchoe in my laundry room is
blooming. Each of these little buds is
about the size of my little fingernail.
I peered out the front door one afternoon and
discovered... a potted cat.
A friend and I were discussing how people
treat each other, especially in difficult times such as we are having now, with
the COVID-19 pandemic making its way around the world.
Some people immediately go out of their way
to do whatever they can to help. Others push
their way to the front and take advantage in every way they can.
I recall my father preaching from the Epistle
to the Philippians, using the verses that say, “Look not every man on his own
things, but on the things of others.”
Imagine what a different world this would be,
if everyone was that concerned and caring about everybody else!
I’m sorry for those who have it rough,
without the bare essentials... and for those whose loved ones have fallen
victim to this disease.
In answer to a few questions from those
wondering why some took issue with my machine-stitched bindings, I think some
quilting ladies believe that bindings must always be hand-stitched,
never mind if the machine stitching looks nice or not. In the not so
distant past (and sometimes, even now), people believed one wasn’t
really quilting unless it was all done by hand. Finally, most
accepted that quilts are quilts, even when put together by machine... but it
was a long time before some got over their outrage at the actual quilting
process being done by big quilting machines! Preposterous, they
thought. 🙄
People who think like that should be forced
to give up their cars and ride in horse-drawn carriages. And they should
have their stoves and ovens removed from their homes, to be replaced with open
fires that vent up through holes in the tops of their pointed roofs. Oh,
and take out running water and plunk down outhouses instead.
Some of those same people use computers,
tablets, and smartphones. I say, rip those electronics right out of their
hypocritical little fingers and give them a swatch of buffalo hide, the better
to create smoke signals over their campfires!
((evil sniggle))
It was a beautiful day here Tuesday, with
temperatures around 70°. I had all the windows and the patio door open,
and could hear the birds singing like anything in the surrounding trees. I even heard a woodpecker over in the little
woods on the hill to the northeast. I like springtime!
Somebody wanted to know, upon seeing my
pictures of a blue jay last week, if we grow them smaller here in Nebraska.
It’s a regular-sized blue jay, and they’re
the same size here as they are anywhere – but the jay was concerned about the
business end of the camera that was sticking through the curtains at him, so he
pulled his crest down hard against his head, and scrunched himself down low,
the better to be invisible to that giant eye of whatever animal he thought it
might belong to.
They really do that, when they’re
uneasy. Funny to watch.
Also, it’s hard to tell how much bigger the
jay is than other songbirds, because all those other songbirds go
flittering away when the jays show up.
Too bad one of the prettiest birds is also
the nastiest! They eat other birds’ eggs... and we have even seen them
raid nests of recently-hatched wrens. My mother used to have a can with a
chain in it which she would shake while out on her deck if she saw a blue jay
getting near her wren houses. One bold blue jay ignored her, bent on
getting to the babies he could hear in that house.
At that point, Mama didn’t just shake
the can, she threw the can. If the jay had not seen it coming and
flown from his perch, he’d’ve gotten ka-walloped good, because Mama’s aim was
true.
Mama was about 83 or so at the time.
For a while after that when Loren and Janice came visiting, Loren would hide
around the corner and peak into rooms before entering, to make sure Mama didn’t
have a can or other weapon in her hand. 😂
Socks once, one early morning, went galloping
down the piano keys in hot pursuit of a blue jay he’d brought into the house
through the pet door and then released.
You can be sure that brought me wide awake and straight out of
bed!
(I opened the front door, closed all the other
doors and pulled curtains over windows, and eventually the blue jay got his
wits together enough to fly out the door and into the Great Blue.)
Tuesday, I went on sewing pearls and square
glass beads to the Atlantic Beach Path quilt.
The upstairs window was open, and the breeze was rustling in the maples
and pines. I like that noise. The little brown bats are back; we
have seen them swooping about in the dusky evenings. I don’t mind bats at all – if they stay
outside where they belong. But they
have a penchant for getting into my house. Last year, they outdid themselves at this
venture. We cut short the ‘catch and
release’ program and went straight into ‘Kill!
Kill! Kill!’ mode. Don’t waste your time lecturing me about it,
all you bleeding-heart types. I’m not
listening. “La-la-la-la-LA-LA-LA-LA!!!” (fingers in ears)
Here’s a meal schedule that should appeal to
some of you. (A friend posted part of it; I did not think it was
complete, and added to it.)
Quarantine Meal Schedule
7:00 a.m.: Breakfast, with chocolate
7:15 a.m.: Dessert Breakfast
8:30 a.m.: Panic Snack w/news
9:45 a.m.: Chocolate
11:30 a.m.: Snack while standing up staring
12:30 p.m.: Lunch w/small dessert
2:00 p.m.: Post nap luncheon
3:00 p.m.: Chocolate
4:30 p.m.: Trail Mix
6:00 p.m.: Dinner while reading weird emails
about virus
8:30 p.m.: Chocolate
10:00 p.m.: Ice cream
11:00 p.m.: Bedtime snack
11:30 p.m.: Chocolate
Wednesday, I swept
and vacuumed floors, cleaned the kitchen, rearranged the vitamin cupboard
whilst hunting for new bottles of Vitamin C and calcium (yep, I found them), filled
the bird feeders, and then headed back upstairs to sew beads onto the Atlantic
Beach Path quilt. Again, all the windows
and doors were open, and it was 72°; but I had to prop all the doors so they
wouldn’t blow shut, because the wind was whipping through at 32 mph.
I carried more summer
clothes downstairs, further ensuring a winter weather advisory.
Thursday, WeatherBug sent me
a notice – there was yet another flood warning for Paducah! (You’ll recall, that’s where my New York
Beauty quilt is having a holiday, reclining indolently in a large temperature-
and humidity-controlled warehouse somewhere.)
By late afternoon, we were issued the
expected winter weather advisory. Soon the rain started, and it wasn’t
long before it changed to sleet and ice, and later, snow. We got a coating of approximately 1/5” of ice. And Larry was driving on that stuff with the
boom truck and pup!
Fortunately, both truck and trailer were
fully loaded with forms, giving him fairly good traction. However, the cattle hauler he was following
was empty, and could only go 30-35 mph before his trailer would start sliding
all over the road, threatening to jackknife.
Another cattle hauler, fully loaded and not
having too much trouble on the icy road, passed both Larry and the empty truck,
traveling at a speed that was really too fast for conditions. The vortex he caused nearly sent the hapless empty
hauler into a tailspin. 😬 Larry stayed well back, so perchance he would
have time to stop if the truck went totally out of control.
Eventually, he made it back into town safely.
Friday, the Schwan man
brought me a big order of frozen foods; my freezer is full now.
We had Schwan’s loaded baked potato soup for
supper, along with a little bit of leftover macaroni and cheese with hamburger
from the night before, peaches and cottage cheese, with monster cookies and
Strawberry Cheesecake ice cream for dessert.
That night, I spread the quilt out on my bed,
decided where to attach the 40 hexagon-shaped Swarovski crystals, and marked
the spots with curved quilting safety pins.
Before hauling it back upstairs, I weighed it: 15 pounds.
Then I took it back up to my quilting studio
and sewed the crystals in place. It
was done!!! All but the label, that
is. And the hanging sleeve, if I ever
happen to find a quilt show that will accept this large of a quilt.
Saturday afternoon, a
friend from Texas wrote, “Winter is back! Here in Central Texas, the high for today is
52 degrees! Had to turn the A/C off and
heat back on. Tomorrow, however, we
begin the climb into the 80s only to drop back to 60s next Saturday. And rain, rain, rain all week. Good ol’ Texas weather. Like a roller coaster!”
I promptly retorted,
“‘Winter is back!’ she says. ha! Yesterday,
it was 22° here, with a wind chill of 9°! Brrrrrr.
The low temps for the last couple of
nights were in the teens, and it was windy, so the ‘real feel’ temp was around
0. Right now it’s 38°, but it’s bright
and sunny, and there’s only a 13 mph breeze. Practically summertime!”
Many
of my quilting friends have been making face masks. There’s a lot of information about them, and
quite a variety of opinions. Some say that non-woven material is better
than woven; however, I saw a video where tests were conducted with various
fabrics and filters by spraying a heavy mist of some sort of chemical through
them. It showed that the best homemade
masks were made of two layers of heavy-weight quilters’ cotton, such as batik: Best
Masks
But, as I said, there are lots of differing studies, opinions,
and dogma. Facebook quilting groups have
had some rousing debates and arguments over the matter. I declare, had they not been practicing ‘social
distancing’, they would’ve all come to blows!
There are so many sad stories, including some where
doctors and nurses were terminated for insubordination when they bought and
wore their own PPE, and superiors ordered them to remove their gear – and if
they refused, they were suspended. That’s
horrible. The ones who treat others like
that ought to be the ones who are suspended. Compassion and kindness would keep people from
trampling all over others, but those commodities are so often in short supply.
One supervisor said that the reason a doctor was
suspended for wearing his own mask was that ‘he was unduly alarming the
patients’! She also said that ‘it wasn’t
fair to the other employees who didn’t have their own masks’. That socialistic supervisor ought to be out
on her tin ear. (And not be allowed to
purchase toilet paper, kleenexes, or paper towels.) Nasty ol’ bully.
That day, I steamed the
Atlantic Beach Path. The quilt, that
is. When that was done, I took photos of it outside on the back deck.
My first One-Block Wonder
quilt is done! Soon I will attach the
embroidery module to my new-to-me Bernina Artista 730, and embroider for the
first time with this machine.
Quilt Details:
Ø Quilt
size: 123” x 124”, and it weighs 15
pounds.
Ø Technique:
One-Block Wonder, with the hexagons
appliquéd to the center panel and to the borders.
Ø Batting:
a base of 80/20 cotton/poly, with
Quilters’ Dream wool on top.
Ø Fabric: Center panel:
Call of the Wild series by Hoffman Fabrics, Atlantic Beach Path (hence
the quilt’s name). I used 7 panels; 6
were for hexagons. The majority of the
hexagons were from the Countryside Floral line by Maywood Studio, with many cut
from the outer border fabric.
Ø It
took 186 hours to piece the quilt, and 34.5 hours to sew the twisted tucks in
the light blue border. There is a narrow
navy flange on one side of the tucked border, and a wider flange between the
gold and royal blue borders. The wider
flange is ruched every 2”, with a square glass bead sewn on, creating the
scalloped effect.
Ø Thread:
Bottom Line #60, So Fine #50, Omni #40,
King Tut #40, Signature #40, Mettler #50 – all these, because I used a variety
of colors, and these were what I had on hand.
Ø There
are 439 hexagons in the quilt. No hexie
quilting designs were repeated.
Ø There
are about 1,000 pearls, about 250 square Czech glass beads, and 40
hexagon-shaped Swarovski crystals in a ‘spray’ configuration at the top above
the panel. It took 52 hours to do all
the beading.
Ø Hours
in the quilt, not counting the label: 510.5,
with 242 in the quilting alone.
Ø The
quilt will be for our youngest son and daughter-in-law, Caleb and Maria; but
first I plan to enter it in our County and State Fairs. I hope to enter it in other shows, but I must
find some that do not restrict the width of a quilt to 112”.
Ø As
for my next project, since many have asked, I will be making quilts for a
nephew who is suffering from colon cancer, and for a niece who is suffering
from breast cancer. They are brother and
sister – my brother-in-law and sister’s oldest and youngest. Their second son was killed when a drunk
driver rammed into his beautiful house in the middle of the night. So to have two children struck with cancer is
hard for them. (And no, I will not be
spending 500 hours on these quilts; I hope to get them done quickly.)
Are
you as aggravated as I am by people saying that they’re ‘bored’? People complaining about being bored make me
want to tie their ears behind their heads.
I was never allowed to say such a thing, as a child. Not that I ever wanted to; I always had
way more things I wanted to do than there was time to do them all. But I was taught that such an attitude reeked
of unthankfulness, and an unwillingness to help others, too. After all, if you run out of things to do for yourself,
there is an unending number of things you can do for others.
Yesirree, there are always things to do.
I used to know a person who was always
griping about ‘having nothing to do’ – while her carpets looked like they had
not been vacuumed since the day they were installed, and her counters looked
like she was doing experimentation with prehistoric food on them. It wasn’t that she ‘had nothing to do’; it
was merely that she was too lazy to do what needed to be done. Furthermore, being unhappy with one’s
circumstances is no excuse for not doing – or finding – things that can and should
be done.
The Apostle Paul said, “I have learned, whatsoever state
I am in, therewith to be content.”
I would not have let my children say they were
bored, either – but I don’t recall ever having to tell them not to
say it, because they were always extremely busy all the time, either with their
own homework and chores, or with playing and doing crafts.
There are so very many hobbies and crafts one
could do, things that would even benefit others. Learn to play an instrument! Print some staff paper and compose songs!
Another good thing to do is to turn on a
cleaning video – here’s one I like: Clean with Amy Darley – and then clean the
house while the video is playing.
Would you believe, I found her channel when I
was looking at hoarding videos one night (there are some real horrors out
there) ... (those hoarding videos make me get up and clean my house!) ...
anyway, in the youtube list under the video I was looking at, I spotted one of
her housecleaning videos and thought, Okay, this will be much better
for a before-bedtime video; I won’t have nightmares, like I might from these
hoarding videos!
More things to do: get seeds and little containers and start an
herb garden. The sprouts can be transferred to bigger pots later.
Herb plants can sit right on your windowsill and be used in things you are
cooking. If you plant flowers, you can transfer them to pots and set them
outside later. Read up on plants and
flowers and composting and landscaping.
Interesting reading!
You can paint... color... read a book... or
take the time to listen or read your Bible all the way through. Here’s a
link to get you started at Genesis 1: Audio King James Version Bible
Another thing to do in these times:
write about your life, starting at childhood. Or your parents’ childhoods,
if you know about them. Exercising is
good, too, especially if you can’t work outside.
A steady diet of electronic games or TV shows
is not at all the answer; both are so detrimental. TV is a timewaster and a scourge. It’s
well known that it can cause emotional and mental problems even in those who
don’t have problems in the first place. I can’t watch two minutes of TV
without seriously objecting to the content, either on grounds of morals or
beliefs or sensibilities. My opinion of TV: UGH, UGH, UGH! And
card games such as Solitaire are total wastes of times, too. Why would anyone want to do things with
absolutely no benefit, or things that are actually harmful?
As Paul wrote to the Ephesians, “See then that ye walk
circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days
are evil. ... Speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs,
singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord.”
I’ve heard a handful of people say this
pandemic with the ‘stay-at-home’ order is ‘the worst thing they’ve ever been
through’. Be thankful, if this is the
hardest thing you’ve ever gone through. There are many things in this old
world that are infinitely worse.
God has everything in hand, no matter what
happens. I trust Him through it all.
Remember what Paul and Silas did, when they
were thrown into prison, and their feet were even in stocks? They
sang!
The old gospel hymns have the best words;
they help a lot in times like these.
Some are not getting along with other members
in the family, namely, their spouses.
Even this can be improved on by just
getting busy and doing things. Contrary to what some say, there
are always plenty of things to do. One just has to be willing to do
them.
If finally by reason of health and age one is unable
to do much, one can read, offer cheering words to others (as opposed to
criticism), or listen to an audio book (did you know listening to a book
stimulates the same part of the brain reading a book does?). And don’t forget to pray! The Apostle James wrote, “The effectual
fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.”
We can say this about any trouble: it
brings the godly closer to God, and sometimes even turns the hearts of the
unbeliever. Most of those who turn to God in times of trouble are
temporary help-seekers – ‘foxhole religion’, as it were. But every now
and then, someone truly has a change of heart.
The striped squill is about to bloom. I used to get mixed up and call it ‘striped
squid’, which caused my disrespectful brats to call it ‘striped sea
urchin’. (But I did remember the
correct name after that.)
Sunday morning, we listened to the morning
service, streamed live. I really miss
the evening services, because Brother Robert was giving a series on the book of
Mark, and I was looking forward to arriving at the portion of scripture
speaking of the resurrection, right in time for Easter.
I wonder how people are going to make it
through this COVID-19 trouble, when they lose their jobs, and have no more money
coming in?
If I have to wear a mask... ... I plan to be
stylish whilst I’m at it:
Hannah, upon seeing these, remarked, “It’s
like a hat for the face! 😅😅”
“It’s a... face-inator! 😃” I replied.
Tiger just discovered that I put a clean
blanket on the loveseat for him. He walked back and forth on it a few
times, smelling it, then came over to the arm of the chair nearest my recliner,
and peered into my face all squinty, purring. After a few seconds of
that, he turned around, waddled back to a good spot, and ker-plopped himself
down.
He really is the sweetest ol’ thing. He
waddle-scurries around with Larry every morning while Larry is getting ready
for work, creating quite a bottleneck in tight spots like the hallway where the
hope chest juts out into it. And when Larry puts on his socks and boots,
Tiger is right there to run under each foot as Larry lifts it up, completely
muddying the process.
When Larry gets home, if we stand somewhere
talking, Tiger comes scurrying to do figure eights around our ankles, rubbing
and purring... and if Larry doesn’t hurry up and pet him, he ka-thumps his head
hard on Larry’s kneecaps and leeeeans against his legs.
Animals and little kids always love Larry.
That’s one of the reasons I decided I liked him, back when we were 13 years
old.
Ah, here we go. How about one of these face masks for Larry?
It’s different from the pleated ones so many
other people are making. It should fit a little better. I’m going to use this inside the masks: Filters
Yes, ah haff destruckshuns! – you take it
apart, flatten it, and cut it to fit. It’s
a better-fitting mask, and those filters should be every bit as good as the
very best PPE masks.
Larry is still traveling about hither and
yon, and then he sometimes goes to Loren and Norma’s... and he doesn’t want to
make either of them sick (or get sick himself). He has a couple of the good
masks he uses when he’s painting or sanding or suchlike. He informed me
yesterday that the dirtier they get, the better they’ll protect him. haha
The birds are singing like anything
today. There’s one out there (starling? grackle?) that sounds like a frog
croaking away. Here are some unique
birdsongs: Bird Calls
I
spent nearly three hours this afternoon trying to find all the groceries and
household necessities (and several birthday gifts) I needed online. Wal-Mart, Target, Amazon – they’re out of one
thing after another. There’s page after
page of ‘out of stock’ items such as sugar, canned tuna, peanut butter, picanté
sauce, salsa, ...
I
decided to look for canned tomatoes. I
can make picanté sauce, after all.
The
canned tomatoes of all ilk are out of stock, too. 😯
Amazon actually has
some of this stuff – but a 28 oz. jar of peanut butter, for example, costs
$15! 😲
Is
this all because people aren’t eating at restaurants, but are making their own
food at home?? Did they make practically
nothing at home, before??? Or is it because there aren’t enough workers
in the warehouses, and online ordering has increased so greatly?
I
switched to Hy-Vee, filled the online cart with all those items I had not been
able to order elsewhere for delivery. Larry
could just get them at the pick-up station.
Happy
I’d managed to find everything, I clicked ‘Pick-up’ – and got the following
notice: “We are sorry, but there are no
more available pick-up time slots. Please
try again tomorrow.”
Well, but, but, but, I needed my caviar TODAY!!!
(Not that I like caviar.) (Not that I’ve
ever tried it.)
He said he would wear his painting respirator:
I told him to be sure to sneak up behind
someone who was not practicing proper ‘social distancing’, or who was being
greedy with the merchandise, and yell “BOOOO!!!”
Larry
brought home all the items on my list (I know, I’m astonished, too), and a few
other things besides. We are fortunate
to have everything we really need and quite a few things we merely want, even though the money tree loses its blooms fairly often
and produces no fruit. heh
Larry informed me that Walkers had some industrial face masks, and he brought me one, in case I need it.
Walkers is considered an ‘essential business’, so
they continue to work.
When
he handed me the mask, I saw that it was labeled ‘N95’, started to exclaim in
delight over it – then took a closer look.
“It’s
dirty!” I exclaimed.
There
were traces of black around the outside. I looked on the inside.
It
was dirty inside, too! There were
faint black smudges in it.
Larry
looked sheepish. “Well, it’s just
welding dust,” he said reassuringly. “I
put it on under my shield and goggles when I went and asked Charles if he
needed anything at the store.”
’Just
welding dust,’ he says. Of course I wouldn’t mind black welding dust all over my face and up
my nose. (Would I?)
That man.
Here
he is in his get-up. He posted a video on Instagram in this gear, asking all
his friends, relatives, and followers if they needed anything at the store. He always gets a lot of funny replies,
particularly from our daughters.
Larry got milk, almond milk,
butter, orange juice, yogurt, cottage cheese – the usual stuff one cannot order
for delivery. And he found the stuff I could
not find elsewhere, too: peanut butter,
sugar, salsa, syrup, tomato sauce. He
even discovered one package of toilet paper – the very last one.
I was hunting for an old story yesterday, and
came upon this in a journal dated December 09, 2001:
Saturday afternoon, Larry put up the Christmas
lights. Yes! He really did! Victoria offered
to help.
“Will you catch me if I fall?” asked Larry.
She tipped her head dubiously. ”Well,” she explained
apologetically, ”You might be too heavy for me, you know, so maybe...” she
paused thoughtfully. Brightening, she resolved, “I’ll catch your
feet!”
“That’s good,” nodded Larry gravely, “Because they might come crashing
down behind me, wham into me, and really hurt me.” He frowned
contemplatively. ”But what if I come down feet first?”
“Oh,” responded Victoria quickly, having no trouble with that scenario, “Then
I’ll catch your head.”
She trotted off to get her shoes and coat. Back she came with
a pair of shoes that were a couple of sizes too big. “I couldn’t
find my tennis shoes with the flowers,” she explained, “So aren’t you glad
(that’s her favorite line: ‘aren’t you glad’) I have these grow-up shoes?”
‘Grow-up’ shoes. That’s what she calls shoes that are still
too big for her.
Another memory, this one from October of
1964:
I well remember my first day of Sunday
School, at age 4, when just as I slid off the pew to head for my class, my
mother said very, very quietly in my ear, “Whatever you do, do not act like
your coloring is better than anyone else’s; that would make somebody feel bad.”
(I loved to color, and knew that at
the end of the teacher’s story, the children were usually given the opportunity
to color their Sunday School papers. I could hardly wait.)
I was indignant. My mother should have known
that a great big 4-year-old girl like me would never, ever act like
that!
But I never forgot what she said, and I’ve
gauged many things I did from that day until this on whether or not it might ‘make
somebody feel bad’.
Hester said Keira misses her Grandpa and Grandma,
too. I told Hester to show her our
picture and tell her, “Grandpa and Grandma say, ‘We love you!’”
Hester then proceeded to send us a video of
Keira holding our picture and saying ‘Hello’ --- cutest thing imaginable. “She says ‘Dampa and Damma’ now,” wrote
Hester. “She’s looking at your picture
saying ‘hug’.”
As I type, I’m drinking pomegranate
tea with a couple of cranberry gel tabs thrown in for good measure. I can’t swallow them; they get caught quite
badly in my throat. But they dissolve in
the hot liquid, and give the tea a slight cranberry flavor. Quite good, actually.
Time to see what I can
do with the embroidery module and my ‘new’ machine!
(Oh, and the welding
dust did brush off of the face mask.)
,,,>^..^<,,, Sarah Lynn ,,,>^..^<,,,
Sarah Lynn you are my second acquaintance from Nebraska. I love you dearly, my unmet in person friend. Your wonderful sense of humor and thought process (so very similar to my other one met in person friend from Nebraska) is simply divine. Keep on quilting, crafting, thinking, and writing. You bring much joy into this world.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! That's a lovely compliment. 😊
DeleteYou are an entertaining writer! We do need to be thankful for what we have...I know I have plenty of things to stay busy doing, if I'd get to it. I loved your Meal Schedule. I feel like I am eating tooo much. I do love my chocolate....Last evening my husband wanted pie, so off he went 30 miles one way to get frozen pie and cobbler. He came home with Blueberry Pie and Peach Cobbler, baby bananas, and vanilla ice cream for the deserts. Your quilt has turned out so beautiful! keep on keeping on... until we meet someday. love in Christ your sister.
ReplyDeleteMmmmmm, blueberry pie and peach cobbler! A couple of my favorites. 😋
Delete