Did
you miss me last week?
I
missed you and I thought about you every day right up until Thursday, at which
point I decided a letter blog just wasn't going to happen, then I set my sights
on the weekend to come, which is here. Now. This weekend.
As
you know, or maybe you don't, I usually take Saturday and Sunday to visit with
you, which is a change from what it used to be. Used to be I only wrote on
Sunday's, but with the evolution of my letter blogs, I needed more time and now
it's a two-day event.
We
had a dinner date last Saturday with our neighbors the Robinson's, Jon and
Steph. They invited us up for dinner and a game night, something we haven't
done in a long time.
"What
about your letter?" Mike asked me.
Steph
made the best chili for our dinner and game night. I made Kat's No-Kneed Bread.
I love the bread recipe that Kat gave me, it's so easy! I love the flavor and
texture and leftovers make the best toast! I love homemade bread toast with all
its nooks and crannies to hold the butter! And something else I love is game
nights. We always have so much fun.
And
then Saturday was gone.
This
is My Week In Pictures, last week's
letter blog.
I
still take pictures of graffiti on the train cars and I still don't have any
idea what they say, but this one sparkles!
I
saw this guy too.
"What
is that!" you say.
Check
this out.
How
about a couple of bird pictures?
How
about this one that ran across the road in front of us the other day?
A
young or female pheasant?
This
one I know! A male Cardinal. The female was around too but I didn't get a photo
of her.
Bush Asters.
These
little one are Calico Asters.
Burdock.
Milkweed.
Look
what I found on a blanket I had hanging on the clothesline.
"Elytra?"
you ask.
Elytra.
That is what the hard outer set of wings are called.
"I
thought it was just a shell," you say.
It
looks like a shell but they are wings and they protect the thin wings
underneath that are used for flying.
"What's a sundog?" Rosie asked
when I pointed it out to her.
"It's
like a little piece of rainbow in the sky," I told her but here is more
info I got from the internet.
I
was working on these two photos. Which
one of these should I pick? I hadn't decided when I ran out of Sunday. It
just zipped right past me. Somehow, someway, Sunday got away from me too and
I'd only gotten five pages done. I'll
finish it up Monday evening.... Tuesday at the latest, I told myself.
And
here we are. Saturday.
"What
guy?"
"Right
back there. He's crossing the road now."
Do
y'all know what mudding is?
"Yeah!
It's when you take your truck out with a couple of buddies and a six pack and
you race around a wet field or creek or some other muddy spot, spinning your
tires and throwing mud all over the place!" my handsome youngest son
replies.
"Yeah,
I know what that is too," Kevin says.
"I
don't," Momma says.
...then you take a piece of drywall tape and place it across the joint.
Press
it in with your drywall knife.
Add
another layer of mud on the top and taper it out.
And
that's how you drywall.
"I'm
not a drywaller," Mike complains when it doesn't come out perfect.
"It's
fine!" I tell him. "It's character!" And that's what Mike has
been working on.
Then
this past week has been consumed with a couple of projects. Let me tell you
about what I've been up to.
My
ladies exercise class has fallen into a bit of a rut. We really like the Slim
in Six series by Debbie Siebers and we do one of her routines at least once a
week and sometimes twice. We like some of the Richard Simmons workouts too.
We've tried a few other things but nothing else has stuck like those two
have.
On
our days off I do aerobic stepping at home. I really like stepping but only one
of my seven faithful participants has a stepper and I hated to ask everyone
else to go out and buy a $30 piece of equipment.
"Mike
would you make me a few steppers?" I asked.
Mike
let it rattle around in his head for a few days and came up with a design using
scrap lumber we have around here.
"We
can use 2x12's for the top," he says to me.
I
didn't have to think about it. "No!"
"Why
not? It's good and strong."
"It
makes them too heavy! Besides we don't need them that heavy duty. We've got
some boards around here, why can't we use those?"
"I
can sand them."
"We'll
just buy a 1x12x12 and a couple of 2x4's."
And
that's what we did.
It
didn't take Mike long to cut the lumber to the length we needed or to screw
them together for me. But sanding, even with an electric sander, took me about
half an hour to forty-five minutes and several pieces of sandpaper each. Then I
painted them.
I
only used a wash to color the steppers because I don't want them to be slippery
with a coat of paint. I used stencils and transfer paper where I could and the
rest of it is all me.
So
I did a beach scene for Joanie, my little ray of sunshine. She brightens any
room she walks into.
I
never intended this to cost us much more than our time. But I should have known
better. I should have known it wouldn't be good enough for Mike. If his name is
attached to it, he wants it to be as good as it can be. We made the short trip
to Laceyville to buy the 1x12x12 and it cost just under $20. All things
considered we've probably got about $10 in each stepper. Not counting my artistic
talents that is. But I'm not complaining. And Mike didn't complain either when
I asked him if we could make four more steppers.
"I
need at least six," I told him. We got four steppers out of a 1x12x12 and
since we were planning a shopping trip to Lowe's, we would buy another one from
them. After all, "Lowe's has got to be cheaper than Laceyville Lumber,
don't you think?"
"I'd
think so," I agreed.
Imagine
our shock and surprise when we get to Lowe's and find their 1x12x12's are over
$27!
"It's
prime lumber," I was told when I complained. "We don't carry it in a
grade two but if we did, it would have a lot more knots in it."
Well,
I'm here to tell you, and I told her, that Laceyville Lumber's grade two lumber
is way better than Lowe's prime grade lumber!
"I'm
only supposed to match prices on grade for grade but since I don't carry it in
a number two grade, I'll match their price — this one time only!"
One
of the ladies requested I leave one 'all natural' for her, which made it easy
for me. I don't have to paint it. And that just leaves me with two more
steppers to sand and paint. Tomorrow. Tomorrow night will be our first aerobic
stepping class.
And
I want you to know that the ladies do appreciate what Mike and I are doing for
them. They think the steppers are beautiful, awesome, cute, and a testimony to
my devotion to helping all of us lose weight and get in shape. We'll see what
they say when I work their butts off tomorrow night.
A
teeny tiny little spider.
A
skipper butterfly.
A
Cloudless Sulphur Butterfly.
Another job we did this past week was
to put an awning over our generator.
"They're
made to be outside!" I protested.
"I
paid a lot of money for that generator and I want to take as good a care of it
as I can," Mike justified.
S'okay.
Up early, before the fog has burned off, one cup of coffee under my belt, and
out to work we went. It didn't really take us very long. We only had the
material to frame it up then we'd have to make a run to get the lumber for the
purlins.
There's
kind of a big paper wasp nest back where we were working.
"No
you don't," I stick up for the wasps. "They're way back here not
hurting anything," and did I mention they eat spiders?
"It'll
just keep getting bigger and bigger," Mike says.
I
did a little research online and did you know, Mike didn't, that the bees die
off in the winter. All except for the queen. She'll overwinter in this nest and
in the spring she'll take off and start a new nest somewhere else. Not only
that, but another colony of bees won't make
a nest
anywhere near this one. I read that people even buy these old nests to put up
to discourage other bees from making their home in the same area.
Another
early morning walk and I spy a garden spider repairing his web. See the silk
coming from his spinneret?
I
don't mind though. I love taking photos for you guys.
We finished our job using reclaimed steel
roofing. It has holes in it but it will keep most of the weather off.
I'm
trying to trap my whistle pigs again. All I got was this guy — twice.
This one is the Viceroy butterfly.
It
wasn't long after that that the Kipps stopped by on their morning walk. We
visited for a little while and I notice no one was interested in the chipmunk
anymore.
"I
think I'll take it around to Callie and Sugar," I told Lamar and got up,
picked the poor little guy up by his tail, and carried him around the house to
where our wild girls live. No one was home so I threw it up in the weeds.
The
Kipps were leaving, walking down the driveway, Mike walking along chatting, when
Lamar yells back at me. "Hey Peg! Feisty has something."
"No,
this one's alive."
"Grab
your camera," Mike yelled.
I
walked out there and Feisty had a young chipmunk she was keeping corralled.
I
was taking pictures and this little guy came running over to me and climbed
right up my leg! I shook my leg and he fell to the ground where Feisty got him
again.
Spitfire
was drawn by all the commotion and he got in on the game with Feisty.
"She
caught it, I guess I'll let her have it," I told the Kipps as they took
their leave.
"That
a girl," Lamar said. He knows how hard it is for me.
I
walked away, leaving the cats to their game.
A
while later, I don't know how long it was, but a while later Mike and I were
heading out to do a job and I see they are still tormenting that poor little
guy. If the first chipmunk was any indication, they wouldn't eat this one
either.
I'll fix you, I thought. Let's make this game more fun and give him a
head start. "Here kitty-kitty," I said and picked up Spitfire.
The chipmunk took off for the weeds and I nabbed Feisty as she took off, hot on
his tail. But two squirming, meowing, clawing, cats couldn't be held on to for
very long so I'm afraid I only gave him about a five second head start. Was it enough? I wondered as Spitfire
and Feisty took off, wheels spinning, clumps of grass and dirt flying, and they
were gone. A few minutes later Feisty came out of the weeds, nose to the ground,
trying to pick up his trail, I assume.
I don't
know if they ever caught him again or not because I had other things to do. Speaking
of which, I'm sure I've kept you long enough.
So let's
call this one done and end it with a sunset photo I took last week.
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