Saturday, July 31, 2010

Sunflowers

My homeroom mom put together a beautiful package to give me for Teacher Appreciation Week. It included several packs of sunflower seeds. I didn't hold onto the packets, so I can't list the varieties, but I did snap some great photos. These guys are super photogenic. I love how the above shot shows the pollen that the bee has been busy collecting, how bee-utiful!
The purple morning glories are a lovely contrast to the bright yellows and they volunteered to come up.


Monday, July 26, 2010

Kitchen Remodeling, Land of Waterfalls, and a visit to Katies

While I was away visiting my sister, Clay began putting our new kitchen vision into place. Although we are a little shaky on what that vision exactly is. We did decide eliminating part of the wall between the kitchen and dining room would make the space feel less cramped. I hate that Clay is working around so much stuff randomly floating between the two rooms. I plan to box up as much as possible, but our storage space in any other room is limited. Clay has to be able to access the upstairs and unfinished basement in order to redo some wiring, so piling up boxes in those spaces wouldn't be helpful. Our plan for the area in the above picture is to put in a pantry, then slide the refrigerator over next to it. So we will not be leaving the brick exposed, storage space trumps the more aesthetic idea!
The view from the kitchen into the dinning room. We hope to do a drop-leaf table in front of the window and an island/table with stools near the new big opening.
The view from the dinning room into the kitchen. We plan to keep the cabinets, but sand and paint them.
Our first baby bump picture taken at DuPont State Forest in Transylvania County, NC. This area is known as the Land of Waterfalls. Above and below is Triple Falls. We also hiked to Hooker Falls, which had an incredible swimming hole that we spent some time cooling off in.

This was a spur of the moment overnight trip. We were suppose to visit my friend Erin in Sewickley, PA. over the weekend, but had to cancel the trip. Clay had worked so hard all week and I didn't think either one of us needed to stay in the house and be overwhelmed with all the remodeling. Our favorite quick get away has been Asheville, NC. We stopped at the visitor center on the NC border to look for hotel discounts and discovered that there would be zero openings due to Bele Chere. I'm sure it is a fabulous festival but I didn't feel the need to walk the streets in mid 90 degree weather with 300,000 tourists. So we decided to go further south to Brevard, NC. We ran into the same problem there because of their summer music festivals. We finally found a reasonably priced hotel in Hendersonville, east of Brevard. We weren't disappointed, the town was full of great eateries, live music in the street, and great window shopping. We loved the surrounding mountains and landscape. It all added up to the perfect getaway.
Below are just a few pictures from my trip to Indiana to visit my sister Katie and her family. I traveled with my mom and my other sister Jennifer, plus her two children. Daniel loved the backyard pool. I can't get over how tall this rising second grader is!
Hannah and Rick Booth, with Rachel Brotherton. Hannah is very active in her local theatrical happenings. We all went to see her in the play, The King and I. I didn't get any pictures of her in her fancy, shiny costume. She was one of the many wives of the king of Siam. It is hard to see in this picture, but she dyed her normally very blond hair for the show.
Below is Molly, the Booth's family pet. She is super friendly and just loved having company to chase around the pool and take her on nightly walks in the neighborhood.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Mid July 2010


It has been almost a year since my last garden post. A lot has changed, which kept me from keeping the blog updated. I switched to a new school, going from Christiansburg Elementary to Price's Fork Elementary. This also included a grade change from 5th to 1st, which was no easy feat for me. Early June, Clay and I found out that we were going to have an addition to our family!! My due day is Jan. 18th and that puts me in the middle of my 14th week. We knew this would speed up our need to make some changes to the house. We started with wanting to add a dishwasher, which meant we had to change the cabinets, which meant we might as well redo everything in the kitchen, hence the pictures of the gutted walls. The brick below was put in when Clay's grandparents used a wood stove. We are debating on cleaning it up and leaving some of it exposed??
Last year too much rain saturated our garden and caused our tomatoes to succumb to the blight and literally rot from the inside, stems, fruit, and all. This year Virginia is officially having a drought. Below you can see where the lack of rain has caused our septic pipe line to show, and has kept our corn and sunflowers from getting any height, but the tomatoes have grown nicely and are beginning to ripen.
Knee high corn that is beginning to put out tassels. We've had terrible luck with cucumbers in the past and this year two of our three vines are doing fairly well. The spotted and striped cucumber beetles are my nemesis. They are too little and quick to hand pick off, and love to hide down in the base of a new bloom. (In the background of this picture you can see the bottom of the fence that Clay had his friend Ryan Vaden put in. It has kept our neighbors ducks and dogs from coming over daily to do their business. The ducks liked our place so much they decided to nest and lay 13 eggs under our canoe!)
This is our sacrificial lamb, the eggplant. These little nasty black bugs just sucked the life right out of it. Maybe next year we will come up with a netting system to protect it.
One of my students gave me a thoughtful gift certificate to Crow's Nest so I went shopping in late June and most of the plants were pretty root bound and not looking their best, but I found a happy home for this sunny one.
I few items from the garden. We love how versatile red cabbage can be and planted about 6 this year. But what can you do with 6 cabbages at once? Luckily they don't rot quickly after ripening up so we just pick one about once a week. What I did discover was that they are a favorite home to earwigs. I pulled one out of the garden yesterday and turned it upside down to carry it it and probably a hundred earwigs came raining out, they were so quick to scatter somewhere for shelter, I had them crawling up my legs. Just like cabbage worms they do damage, but I have found that they rarely make it into the heart of the cabbage and after removing a couple of layers you are good to go. I probably should look into how to avoid providing an earwig hotel.

The potatoes have started to die back, so I figured it was time to go digging. The plants started out thriving. They were bombarded with the same little black bug that killed the eggplant. I think we sprayed once or twice and did a lot of handpicking for potato beetles. I noticed a few more predator insects this year, probably coming to feed on all the squished potato beetles I left behind. One was a shield bug and some different wasp like guys. When the days of 90 degrees heat and no rain hit, the potatoes were often left out of my efforts to water the garden. So I wasn't too surprised to find that they didn't produce very big tubers.

We still have lots of zucchini that need to be shredded for bread and enough cucumbers that I need to experiment with cucumber dip.
Clay's first summer project was outfitting a canoe that his buddy Todd is letting us use. It had one rotten seat and was otherwise nothing but a shell when we got it. So Clay replaced both seats and put in two support bars. He also spent a lot of hot hours trying to seal up a tiny crack int he bottom. Luckily it doesn't go all the way through, because the sealer popped lose on our first trip out, but it is not taking in water and seems to be working really well!!
Dyed Queen Anne's Lace made for a nice 4th of July bouquet.

New Garden Pest Discoveries
Striped Blister Beetle - I have seen this beetle mostly on our Roma tomatoes.