Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Celebrating Christmas in July

"Christmas in July" is a concept I heard about a few years ago, when the Miller's Oven (a cafe run by Manotick seniors) started to serve turkey dinner - with all the trimmings - in July.

This year, we went with our neighbors Earl and Mary... and sat next to the Christmas tree!

But once the turkey arrived, I forgot to take pictures! But it was delicious - nice to have turkey again.

I rarely cook turkey anymore, winter or summer.

The chosen dessert was "sky-high" lemon pie... which Terry is all for making part of our Christmas tradition!






Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Container Plant Experiment

In mid-June, I was given a tuber for an elephant ear plant, which I planted in a large pot.

I haven't done much container gardening in recent years - because I don't want to have to think about watering them...

But this plant, with elephant-ear sized leaves intrigued me.






I spread small stones around in the pot to prevent squirrels from digging up the pink tuber - which may be toxic to them.

You'll be surprised at how quickly - and how large it grows, our friend Joe said when he gave it to us.

An avid gardener, Joe has two next to his backyard pond.

Will ours grow as well as his? I wondered... as I watched and waited...

A few weeks later, one leaf emerged...

But some animal nibbled on it!

(Was it the large rat that Terry found dead on the sidewalk?!)

Online, plant toxicity website warns that elephant ear plants give indigestion to small animals, like cats and dogs. But they don't kill them...



A few new leaf shoots sprouted up, but they were quickly gnawed off by some animal.

One leaf is lying, still curled up, next to its stem, beside the brick. A second is lying on the ground next to the pot.








Time to move the plant to another location. It's not doing well on the grass...












A week after moving the plant onto higher ground - on our deck - it has several more leaves which are considerably taller than the old ones.











A week later... more large leaves!

I've never seen rabbits on the deck - so I assume they were the culprits who had been chewing on the plant. The deck would not be a deterrent to the agile little squirrels!

Monday, July 29, 2019

Sharing Jokes...

My father had the knack of remembering jokes - and telling them at the right time.

My mother loved laughter... But she (like me) could never remember jokes! So she would write them down. Sometimes she carried them around in her purse to share with friends.

Recently, going through her papers, I came across one that she had written down. This is how it goes:

Senior Citizens are the biggest carriers of AIDS - Hearing AIDS, band AIDS, roll AIDS, walking AIDS, medical AIDS, government AID.

(In my mind, I just see my mother smiling as she shares this joke!)

Sunday, July 28, 2019

"Hidden... Under Wings..."

My daughter recently sent me this photo on Pinterest.

I stared at it for a while, thinking I was looking at a sorry face... Did a duck's markings look like that from behind?!

Then I realized that I was actually looking at a photo of two ducklings hiding under a mother duck's wings!

The dots under the duck's wings are actually the eyes and beaks of two baby ducks!

A while later, I encountered two Biblical references that reminded me of this photo: "I will take cover under the refuge of your wings," a quote from Psalm 61... And the prayer: "Hide me under the shadow of your wings," from Psalm 91.

The ancients definitely knew ducks better than I do! I didn't realize that baby ducks literally did that!!

Saturday, July 27, 2019

An Almonte Bike Path

Terry and I often go to Almonte, a town about an hour southwest of Ottawa...

(Baker Bob's carrot cake and croissants draw us back, again and again.)











We often walk along the river...









The raging water is so beautiful!













This time, we tried a new path... a bike path that was formerly a railway track...












(It can be seen from below in the first photo...)













The same view as the river path (which the foot bridge in this photo is part of)...

Just a slightly different angle - and a little higher up!








It's always fun to discover new places... I wonder what path we'll discover next!!

Friday, July 26, 2019

Computer Woes

I really like my current computer - but it is getting old...

One corner of the top is separating from the rest... I wonder if it's dangerous!?

Once this computer dies, we'll need to buy a new printer... This is the only computer in the house that still can get the old printer to work...

I also have a lot of photos stored on this old machine... photos I have plans for. I want to create several photo books...

And now Microsoft is sending me warnings that after January 1, 2020, they will no longer be updating Windows 7!

"The end is nigh!" I'd better get ready!

Thursday, July 25, 2019

Favorite Time of Year

Now that July is here, I enjoy the outdoors... any time of the day...

I love driving up the street and seeing all the flowers in bloom!












Lush and gorgeous!

The trees are in full leaf as well...










With our longer hours of daylight, I sometimes step outside to taste the dawn...

How hot will the weather be today?!

Then I notice the beauty of the trees silhouetted against the early morning sky!

Beauty everywhere!

Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Mochi Ice Cream

Our hot weather this past week has encouraged me to try Mochi, a Japanese-style ice cream that is a favorite with my daughter...

I got several packages...












The ice cream is encased with a thin layer of rice. This makes it easy to pick up and eat.

I started out with one small ball - and quickly added a second.

My favorite flavors are chocolate (of course!) and mango.



Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Cat on a Leash!

Recently in Kingston, we saw a cat on a leash...

He wasn't too happy to be told where to walk...

He wanted to choose his own path.











With a little practice, he might enjoy it...








Monday, July 22, 2019

I Could Grow a Forest... in My Yard!

Every year, I dig small trees out of my flower beds...

Some grow from seeds blown by the wind. Birds drop seeds as well. Some take root. But the biggest culprits are the squirrels, who spend their lives burying seeds in the ground.

I recently counted six small trees springing up in my front flower bed. They're hard to distinguish from other plants until they grow taller than the other plants. By then their roots are firmly entrenched in the soil.


The weeping cherry that I purchased when I first started this front yard flower bed isn't doing all that well.

Two years ago, I sprayed the gout weed growing under the tree with a "natural" weed killer. (I think it was vinegar). The gout weed survived, but the tree is dying!





Should I leave one squirrel-planted tree in the flower bed, in case the weeping cherry dies?

Several of the seedlings are Manitoba maples, according to my neighbor Rob. They're not a good tree to have.

These ripply leaves belong to a tiny black chestnut tree. We already have one of those near the fence. I don't want more chestnuts in the yard either, as they encourage squirrels to dig and plant...

I like trees that flower in spring. But I don't think any of my naturally-planted seedlings is one of those. I guess I'll just cut them all down! I don't want a forest growing in our front yard...

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Cousins

Today marks my mother's birthday. She was born in 1919, a hundred years ago today. Perusing one of her old albums, I come across an interesting photo.

I recognize my mother's older sister Lydia, on the left, my mother, in the middle - but who is the girl on the right?

A caption under the photo says: Olga Gruenke, our cousin.

Strange! I've never heard of her!

The album has several more photos - of Olga as an adult on her wedding day, another an older-looking Olga with her husband and five children.

How did my mother manage to keep in touch with her over the years?! Did they write letters? As children, they must have been close...

I ask my cousin Rose-Marie, the chief genealogist of the family... It appears that Olga is a cousin on my mother's father's side. My mother's father died when she was two years old... They must have kept over the years.

My mother was 9 when her family immigrated to Canada. Her sister Lydia was 11. This photo must have been taken in the Ukraine before my mother's family left. Is that why the girls look so sad?

Olga's family didn't manage to escape the Ukraine before Stalin's land grab. They were among the unfortunate ones sent to Siberia, where Olga lived until her death on July 1, 1986, according to another note in the photo album.

Saturday, July 20, 2019

Happy Birthday!!

Today is my youngest son's birthday!

How to convey the fun we've had over the years?!












Here is a picture taken on his first birthday!

















More action on his fifth ...!












Old family albums reveal important milestones...












Loss of the two front teeth!












Soccer games...

















An old-fashioned train ride...

A memorable vacation whale watching in Cape Cod...











We actually did see some whales!













Happy birthday!!

May the year ahead be full of MORE adventure and joy!

Friday, July 19, 2019

Memories of a New Brunswick Vacation

I rarely eat potato chips...

But I recently saw these chips in a local grocery store and couldn't resist buying them...

(There are enough chip lovers in my family to eat them, even if I don't!)

Why did I just have to pick them up and put them in my grocery basket?

They reminded me of a trip Terry and I made two years ago - when we visited "The World's Longest Covered Bridge" in Hartland, New Brunswick.


Several kilometers away we came across the chip factory where these were made.

The chips bring me back to the memory of that day!

Thursday, July 18, 2019

Bongo Drums...

Am I nuts?! I ask Terry as I carry a set of  bongo drums from the public library to the car. (They are surprisingly heavy...)

Ever since discovering that our public library lends musical instruments, I've thought about borrowing them... 

When I was young, I wanted to learn to play the bongos, but I never did... Now at my age?!

You're not nuts - just curious, Terry replies. Being curious keeps you young!




Now I can finally try them for three weeks. I'd better find out how they work... You Tube to the rescue!

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Enneagram Personality Tests

A friend recently told me about an enneagram personality test she had taken with her work colleagues. I looked it up online and did a free version (which you can access by going to the website link above.

How was the enneagram different from any other personality test I've ever taken?

I'm still trying to figure that out...

The book, the Four Tendencies, which I read a while back, divided people into four main personality types. The enneagram system divides people into 9 different types - and the test found on the link above, determines a person's strongest three of the nine.




Terry agreed to do the test, too - and (of course!) we're completely different. Don't they say opposites attract?!

Why am I doing this? Terry asked... and, of course, I couldn't give a reasonable explanation...


Don't you find it interesting to see that your "faults" are sometimes part of your personality package? That's what I find so interesting... Knowing that, I blame myself less for the characteristics that I have that I don't like...

Once, years ago, at work our coordinator had us all do personality tests. That test grouped people in "colors," not descriptive works.

Later we sat together and talked to the people who had the same personality type as we did. I found the people in my group to be the most interesting people on staff!

If I learned anything from that workplace exercise it was not to expect everyone to act or think the same as I do. Every organization needs people with different skills, with different strengths and weaknesses. That said, we may not enjoy spending time with all our colleagues equally either.

(It's also interesting that different personality types appear in families, too!)

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Bob Ross Style Painting

I recently stopped at a red light behind a car with a lot of advertising plastered all over it...

The person driving the car must be a certified Bob Ross style painting instructor...!

Really?! That's a thing?!

Our family has fond memories of watching Bob Ross's painting lessons on TV when our children were young... It was one of their favorite programs.

His style must be living on on.

After googling Bob Ross painting style, I discovered that there are special courses that people can take to become certified Bob Ross style painting instructors!

Imagine that!!


Not long afterwards, I came across this display for Bob Ross paintings...

 According to this bio, he died more than 20 years ago... Yet a lot of people still have fond memories of his TV program and his painting style!

Then my daughter sent me this delightful You Tube video that tells a little more about where his paintings can be found today!


Monday, July 15, 2019

Learning about Longevity...

I have been reading books on living a healthy life ever since I developed type 2 diabetes. Since that time, my personal library of health-related books has grown...

One author whose advice I value is Dr. Jason Fung, a Canadian doctor who is a strong proponent of intermittent fasting for those of us struggling with high blood sugar issues. I already own three of his books.

Intermittent fasting involves eating all meals and snacks within a 6-8 hour period, with no food intake after that time. (Fortunately, drinking - coffee, tea and water - don't count as "eating.")

Recently a book co-authored by Dr. Fung caught my eye. Fortunately I found it in the public library. The Longevity Solution, (published in 2019) is an interesting read.

So far I've only skimmed its contents, jumping here and there to read about the importance of salt in diets, the value of eating nuts, and how fasting releases "growth hormone."

(It's hard to do much reading in gardening season!)

I don't know if I'll finish the book before it comes due - and I have no chance of renewing it as several dozen people have placed a hold on it...

(Maybe I simply need to buy my own copy...!!)

Sunday, July 14, 2019

Silent Meals ... in the Convent

The convent I stayed in while taking the icon-making course (that I mentioned in  yesterday's blog post) observes a tradition of eating in silence - meals with no conversation.

At first it seems strange, but there is actually something peaceful about it.












Why do they do it? one of my sons asked me...

I don't know, I told him. In early Benedictine monasteries, someone would read aloud during mealtime. Many people were illiterate, so this was a quiet time for them to listen and learn.












What do you think about while you're eating?

Sometimes I look out the window at the garden outdoors.








Mostly I think about the food - I pay attention to the flavors and textures... more than if I'm busy talking!