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Sunday, August 30, 2009

Treasure Hunt

Today's spider haiku-

Baby spider webs
Growing in the compost pile
Many bugs to eat

(Going back and forth about whether "pile" is one syllable or two for the purposes of this haiku. I went with one in this version but it could easily be two syllables and just take out the "the".)



Eva and I spent some time digging up garlic today. I am amazed at how much we found- and such large cloves! We dug up about 2/3 of what is back there so far.

Saturday, August 29, 2009



my friend dawn took this photo of samuel and i at the captain bogg and salty concert we went to last week at sellwood park. samuel actually got up on stage and sang one of the na-na-na parts in the song. truly amazing. a few years ago we may not even have gone to this concert- too loud, too crowded, too much...

i love being able to allow space for my kids to grow in ways that feel comfortable and enjoyable to them without the pressure of a time line, ill-conceived notions of a *right* way to live- each of us reaching for what feels best for us where we find ourselves rather than struggling with outside directives that attempt to fit us all into the same mold, as though there can only be one mold. here's to a life of our own making, our life, for us.
just back from the park. so lovely with the crickets and bats and sunset and gorgeous moon moving toward full. eva swinging told me she was afraid of swinging for a while because the swing went so high up and now she is enjoying her time swinging again. i know how she feels. sometimes when i swing i can't imagine how i ever swing higher than the ground and other times it is just the thing, swinging higher and higher with the wind blowing through my body clearing everything out, making way for deep breaths and expansion.

samuel's new sword has him temporarily a part of the cavalry on our walks, even going so far as to request a walk today and then another, all of us seeming to need movement, finding peace and clarity in the movement, in stillness around us. where is everyone? suburban life gives the illusion of no one but i know they are in there somewhere. i smell their barbecues, see their garage sale signs, catch a view of a car coming and going now and then. we see their dogs, their cats. imagine living so close to one another and knowing nothing. happy to smile hello to those who pass by on their way to other parts of their lives.

Saturday, August 22, 2009



Eva with her pine cone rabbit she made earlier today and asleep in her chair cave with Albert this evening before go fish. Albert started fussing and woke her up.

summer abundance

Whew- this afternoon (late) and apparently this evening as well- who knew it was so late- I processed the produce from both of my CSA baskets. One came yesterday afternoon and I picked the other larger one up today at the farmers market. This is what happened with all of that produce-
- so much corn cut off the cob and frozen (I am officially tired of corn on the cob. It doesn't take long because it is just too sweet for me to eat often. I love it more in tamales and in the middle of the winter for the kids.)
- corn and peppers prepped for tamales later this week
- chicken cooked, also prepped for tamales
- minestrone soup made! (I used the chicken broth, zucchini, eggplant, peppers, onion, garlic, basil...)
- half of the eggplant not used in the minestrone roasted for dip tomorrow
- peppers chopped and frozen
- tomato, basil, pepper chopped for sauce later this week (I may end up just freezing this because I am not in the mood for pasta right now, particularly with the minestrone.)
- salsa made!
- so many cucumbers chopped and ready for salad or dipping
- lettuce chopped, washed, spun and ready for salad
- gravenstein apple and blackberry crisp made! (We picked a few blackberries yesterday and the apples came in the second CSA basket today!)

What's left? There are a couple of tomatoes on the counter for cheese sandwiches and morning toast with butter. There are still potatoes and cabbage from prior weeks in the refrigerator and um several {ahem} zucchini. What's a cook to do with so much zucchini? It has to be one of the more optimistic vegetables. I also have a counter full of watermelon (yellow and red), cantaloupe (two varieties), peaches and apples (the first of the season!), if you can believe it. The fruit is from the farmers market and the upick. Oh yes, there are also fall raspberries that I think will end up in a smoothie tomorrow morning. Did I mention peaches? The abundance of this time of year is near gushing at this point. Enjoy the season. The flavors are endless.

And now to play some go fish with Eva. She has been waiting for me to finish up with the food for quite some time now and has been dividing her time between Albert and the new disc swing I put up for her in the back yard a few days ago. I meant to get a picture of her on the swing but my camera has been lost for several days and only just recovered. Photos will have to wait until after go fish!

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

tid bits

I walk with trepidation through the clover-filled lawn, wary of the honey makers buzzing around my feet, unable to talk myself into putting shoes on every time I go outside- it is summer after all!- and also understanding so well why the bee sting works, how it protects the hive and keeps its members safe. Yes, whereas before my bee sting (pre-bee-sting) a few weeks ago, I would have been respectful of the bees, I am now hyper-vigilant, uber-respectful, ever protective of my feet and their tiny stinger-filled bodies, hoping to create a yard where bare feet and bees can coexist peacefully. Perhaps if I told them how many flowers I plant in their honor? I am also much more aware- thanks to the bee sting and to Albert who loves to eat clover- of just how much clover is growing in my yard!

Mmmmm- there was finally some kale in one of my CSA baskets. I cooked it tonight in olive oil with squash, tomato, garlic and red pepper flakes. (Another word for this would be saute but I usually avoid this word, particularly in the past tense, because I can never remember how to make the little mark over the "e"...) I served it over sprouted grain pasta which was good but sort of a stretch to actually call pasta. This got me thinking and I looked up pasta, which, as it turns out, is "dough with flour, water and/ or eggs," so maybe sprouted grain pasta is not such a stretch after all. It would have been lovely with some Parmesan as well.

We have discovered that our guinea pig Albert loves strange singing and high pitched whistles and squeals and will make his happy purring noises over and over again when he hears these noises. Yesterday Eva was making high pitched squeak noises while blowing on a leaf and Albert sat on my lap purring again and again. It is great fun for all of us. He will also march right up to a plate filled with watermelon and begin eating a slice all on his own. Why wait? He is currently in his cage with a slice of watermelon Eva must have put in there with him, dubbing it "Albert's slice" and he is beside himself with guinea pig enthusiasm, jumping about, bubbling over with chirps and chortles, eyeing the watermelon from over here, from over there. Guinea pigs appreciate abundance as much as the next species.

Yesterday evening I was in our back yard checking on the garden after another hot day and I decided to check out Momma Yellow Jacket in the shed. I was surprised to see that after all that tug-of-war with her a few months ago, she was nowhere to be found. Her nest was gone and there was not a yellow jacket in sight. This was particularly perplexing to me because there have been a number of yellow jackets flying around the apple tree lately, presumably eating the tent worms living there? I had just assumed they were from Momma Yellow Jacket's brood and that the arrangement between us had worked out quite nicely after all. She had a safe, sheltered spot in which to raise her um baby yellow jackets and I had yellow jackets eating the tent worms. (Not a great proposition for the tent worms, I realize, but they seem to be maintaining their numbers regardless of the yellow jackets. At that level I chalk it all up to Mother Nature. What, really, can I do about yellow jackets eating tent worms, after all? Wait- if you use insecticides and other forms of whatnot, don't answer that question!)

Of course I also noticed the four large spider webs spanning the shed door in various permutations. There were two across each azalea bush, one higher up and one across the um lawn mower itself. The number and size of the spider webs and the fact that one was actually using the lawn mower as a web anchor really illustrates just how long it has been since I mowed the lawn. I had been thinking about mowing at least the part near the garden that keeps growing due to watering (It doesn't rain here during the summer, at least not enough to support a lawn, and I don't water the lawn. Whatever part of the lawn that survives the summer has to make do with what little rain we do get. This makes for very little mowing during the summer months, something I enjoy after the twice-a-week mowing in the spring.)

Like I said, I had been thinking about mowing the lawn but what with the spiders and their webs using the doorway and the actual lawn mower, I guess it can wait a few more days or weeks or gosh, how long is spider season again? And what about the clover? If I mow the lawn, there goes the clover and what would the bees think of our treaty if I mowed down their clover? Yes, I think the lawn can wait. I can use my energy to pick more blackberries, which I am hoping to do tomorrow!

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

un-school-y

watering plants- horticulture, biology, ecosystem studies
cooking- chemistry, home ec, basic skill development
roller skating- gym, sensory integration studies
playing with the fan- physics, auditory experiments
photographing spiders- art, biology
building water contraption- shop, physics, problem solving, geometry, recycling
checking out ants under bricks- biology
watching Planet Earth- biology, ecosystem studies
talking about fairy clothes- dye techniques, sewing, home ec, death and dying (for the rabbit)
playing with new hamster puppet- story telling, speech, fine motor development
Albert- biology, developing responsibility, developing empathy
playing DS- developing responsibility, memorizing skills, strategy skills, math skills
lego building- money management, fine motor skills, story telling, geometry
talking on the phone- social skills, basic skill development
reading Moomin books- reading, story telling, listening
sticker book- art, fine motor skills, design, organization, writing

Hmmm...what else?



Eva and her water contraption- see, all the water goes in through the straw...