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Tag Archives: Family
The Season Begins …
When I think of getting ready for Christmas there are a few favorite and special things that come to mind.
First thing out is our ‘family’ Santa. CLICK HERE to find out why he reminds me so much of my dad !!
Christmas music is always a good way to get into the spirit and one of my favorite CD’s was put together just for me two years ago by my daughter Deb. CLICK HEREto find out more about this special collection.
Memories of my one and only childhood Christmas spent on the Vineyard with my godparents can be found by CLICKING HERE.
Now it’s off to deck the halls and tra-la-la-la-la.
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Tagged christmas, Family, holidays, Martha's Vineyard, Memories, New Jersey, Photographs
Happy Thanksgiving!
Comments Off on Happy Thanksgiving!
Tagged Cooking, Family, holiday, Thanksgiving
You have to hold your mouth right
Today we did the bulk of the shopping for our Thanksgiving meal. We’ll get a couple of the really perishable things on Wednesday at the last minute. As you can see, the turkey with her brine takes up an entire shelf in the fridge. It’s nice and chilly this week so most likely it’ll be refrigerator temps outside and the turkey can loll about in her bath out there. When her fridge was this full and I was standing trying to find a spot to put something away, Grandma always advised, “you have to hold your mouth right”. I’m making my turkey stock today and spreading out much of the other prep over the next few days in hopes of having a more relaxed Thanksgiving day with time for parades and dog shows and family time.
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Tagged Cooking, Family, holiday, Thanksgiving
Giving Thanks …
With Thanksgiving coming up I want to thank my mother (she’s on the right) for bringing Martha’s Vineyard into my life and the lives of my family. Little did she know when she set me down on this beach in Oak Bluffs for the first time what an important and life defining occasion it was. CLICK HERE for more about my mom.
Same beach Oct 2010.

My entire family has been to MV with me at one time or another but never all of us at the same time. That’s okay though as the Vineyard is a different experience depending on who I’m there with. Or if I’m with no one at all… and that’s nice too.
Passing the Vineyard to new generations is a tradition for lots of families and mine is no different. Here at State Beach in Oak Bluffs in the early evening one May is my daughter Deb and her dog Chappy.
My daughter Patty and son-in-law Mike at Aquinnah… actually on a beach in the summer.
In 1996 the next generation appears. My grandchildren Tiffany and Tyler at Edgartown lighthouse during their first trip to the Vineyard. It was the month of May, not swimming weather but good for collecting shells and rocks and seeing the ocean for the first time.
Thank you Mom.
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Tagged Family, holidays, Martha's Vineyard, Memories, Photographs
wee bit of knitting, pen1s shaped mushrooms, calendars are out!,
Aka stinkhorn,

Phallus ravenelii, looking rather disgusting after getting rained on.
These red mitts are for Mom. She says they make her arthritic hands feel better. I had wanted to finish them a month or so ago, but at least they’re done. Made of cotton with elastic in it (Fixation). The gray wool ones are for a friend’s mom in VT. I forget what kind of wool they’re made of, something I had lying around.

Remember the Calendar Girls post? Well, the calendars are out! I’m April…
Get yours at Rocky Knoll Photography.
Election night… the dogs I was visiting were not especially interested in the results. Sid (the girls’ bro) and another friend’s pal Chester.
In other dog news… the girls got pruned today. Pics soon.
And in other family news, this boy turns 17 tomorrow.

Cripes, my photos are all a bit blurry. I think my lens needs cleaning. It’s a tiny point and shoot, Sony T77… do they have a lifespan? Or am I just getting old and shaky?
Comments Off on wee bit of knitting, pen1s shaped mushrooms, calendars are out!,
Tagged dogs, Family, life in maine, projects
October fun

We are having the most amazing weather this fall.

A mix of crisp and cool, and mild, very late-summery stuff. Really great all around.



On Saturday, my parents came to visit and we all went to a farm with pumpkins, hay fun, and corn mazes.









Yesterday, I painted the shutters and the front door. Goodbye, faded Hunter green...

Hello lovely shade of blue!

Anything to be outside really. Soon it will be winter, and I never know how much we'll be able to do outside in the very cold months with a small baby, but for now we are soaking up every last bit of sunshine anytime we can.
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Tagged Family, house projects
I just don’t know…

I feel like I'm always playing catch-up over here, because, well, I'm always playing catch-up over here.

So in no particular order, here's some stuff we've been up to.
We had our first frost of the season on the 13th,




I cobbled together something special for convenient backpack storage out of an old green board I found in our basement when we moved in, and some new lumber and hooks:






Still doing some detail work on the letters, but it is already a much loved addition to the dining room!
In family news, I did my first ever 5K walk (with a special walking partner!) while John did the 10K run,

Ethan turned six,

and everybody keeps getting bigger!




I'm also in the process of "sprucing up" my loom and hoping to do some more weaving soon. For now though, just testing, testing...

There really are some soapy things in the works, including a whipped soap tutorial, and testing a soap kit from my favorite supplier, but the detailed stuff is proving to be painfully difficult with a small one in the house again, so you'll just have to be a teensy bit patient with me.
And for now, that's all she wrote.
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Tagged drivel, Family, gardening, house projects, manic rambling, weaving
another step closer
…to finishing the back living room (aka the living room living room as named by boyo when he was 3, to distinguish it from the family room living room that we actually do the “living” in). The living room is probably the prettiest room in the house, and the least used of the downstairs rooms. We close it off in the winter with a blanket in the doorway, and it gets really cold in there.
All summer I’d been noticing a faintly mildewy smell (or more accurately for me, taste) in that room, and when I’d walk by the doorway to go upstairs. It was finally time to take some action. I learned this summer that I have a slight mold allergy, and even with the dysosmia issues, I can still taste mold/mildew perhaps more than smell it. Not especially pleasant.
The beginning
It’s not too cluttered in these photos, but it is… Stuff just lands there. Camping gear, stuff that should go into the attic, stuff that should go in the barn, stuff that should just go away… Often there is a weight set in there over the winter and/or a bicycle in a stand. The room serves as library, laboratory, and herbarium. There’s a fireplace behind that chest, but we closed it up because of the drafts.
When the house was built, this was originally two smaller rooms. Not sure when they opened it up, but I’m glad somebody did. Now the room measures about 25 feet by 10. This is half of the downstairs of the main part of the house. The other half is the kitchen, which is open into the dining room. Open from the dining room is the ell where we mostly “live”, and where there’s a woodstove.
in progress
Two coats of paint on the ceilings took longer than I thought it would! And then…

There was loose wallpaper around the fireplace. Yes, somebody had painted over the wallpaper. I wasn’t going to take it all down, but I had to get up that hanging, loose bit. And then it was hard to stop. And then I had a good time skim coating it (really, I did).

Two coats behind the bookshelves, ceilings done, trim has a coat, and a coat or two on the walls…

There are six windows in this room! When I did the back (red) wall, I just painted the window, but as I did the rest of the room, I realized that three windows needed attention, and I may as well take out and put back in the one with the sash weights so that the cords are new.
things i discovered
The window that had cords hanging from the lower sash, and pulleys at the top of the window case, doesn’t actually have pocket doors to access the sash weights. I have no idea if there are sash weights in there or not! Also, this window glass was cracked, so out it came. It’s still in the barn, waiting for a piece of glass.

Where is the weight pocket???

Painting the lower sashes and trim pieces that hold the windows in. The heat gun is a new toy; it allowed me to get the old glazing out of the window with the broken glass without killing myself or the window sash…
Two windows had the sash weight/pulley system replaced with something called a Caldwell Sash Balance. They still make these things, but they are totally different. Generically, these things are called coil spring balances.


They sit where the pulley goes, and there is a metal strip that comes down where the cord goes, and that open triangular hookey thing goes where the knot goes. All of mine are broken and/or rusted. And the windows need sticks to prop them open.
Do you think anybody makes these anymore? I’ve found a company in the midwest who sells them, but their sizes are a tad different than what I have. I have to call them soon. I have two other windows in the house with these things in them. Pain in the ass. Why did anybody replace the so easy to maintain sash and pulley system???
Be still my beating heart! I think I just found them!!
I also discovered that at some point the mantel was gold. Bright, shiny, and gold.

:::::shudder:::::
The stuffed chair that was in the room is especially mildewy. It came to us with some issues, and they’ve gotten worse. It’s a good chair, but it’ll be ~$700 to reupholster. I may try to do this myself… I mean, what is there to lose?
And now

(things still aren’t quite picked up… we need to organize some of the plant specimens… and I never pulled the stuff off of this wall to paint it, but it’s totally covered by cabinets and shelves. Maybe in the spring.)
The oldest books (over 100 years old some of them, but none valuable… they’re all in middling condition or so) are going through an airing regimen to get rid of some of the mustiness… and they got sprayed with Lysol. We just need another sunny day or two to put them out again.

What’s interesting is that the wall changes color in the different lights,

and the best part?
We’re getting a gas fireplace insert and planning to use the room this winter!
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Tagged Family, life in maine, projects
























































