Wednesday, August 31, 2011

It's Five O'Clock Somewhere or maybe Noon Perpetually....

A blog I read has a Ipad contest. HERE You had to make her laugh.

I'm sorry BUT I find it hard to find humor in a device that leaves me weak in the knees and with a throbbing headache at even the 'thought' of owning something with an android OS or smart phone, whatever either of those ARE ?? .........

Because I have a DVD player........
It' s a NEW DVD player/recorder because the old one quit after a jazillion years which brings me to the problem.....

It needs to be SET UP.  I read the instruction manual which makes NO sense other than to press MENU and then Quick Set Up which did..........nothing.  Absolutely NOTHING............



What in the SAM HILL would I do with an IPAD when I cannot even set up my DVD Player????  Who writes these instruction manuals anyway???? Do they even HAVE the DVD Player in the Room with them?  Or do they just write goobley-gook and take that fat paycheck home.  I vote for Option No. 2 myself.


There's a Whole Bloomin' Boomer Generation of us out here whose DVD Player, Microwave, Coffee Pot, and probably the Cell Phone, Answering Machine and Goodness knows what ELSE is permanently FLASHING
12:00

Do me a favor will ya?  Don't let me win that IPAD.  It will finally and irretrieveably drive me to the Nut House.


Monday, August 22, 2011

Fall's Around the Corner!! Bring out the Canner & the Jars!!

Well there is a nip in the morning air now which means Fall isn't far behind even though our days are in the 90's here North of Nowhere.  I discovered a Food Coop was coming to my area (yes even to almost 60 miles of North of Nowhere!) and I joined.  It's called Bountiful Baskets and I picked up my first order this past Saturday.  All sorts of Yummy!! Goodies and I will definitely be putting in a order every time.  They have a website so you can see if they are in your area.  Click HERE


My Bountiful Basket from August 20th
For 15 Dollar-reenies I got everything in these two baskets!! Amazing -- here's the list:
  1. 2 cantaloupes (the best I've had in a LONG time - very ripe & sweet).
  2. 1 lb of strawberries
  3. 2 bunches of bananas
  4. 2 lb of black seedless grapes
  5. some plums - about 8 of them
  6. some peaches - about five of them
  7. 1 head of bib lettuce
  8. 5 large tomatoes
  9. 2 large heads of broccoli
  10. 3 ears of very good corn
You get one fruit basket and one vegetable basket.  I also got 30 pounds of Hatch Chiles -- and my #1 DIL helped me roast and freeze them.  24 pounds of plums (10 varieties they said) was also in order.  I saved some for fresh eating and canned the rest.

My Plums
There is NOTHING like home-canned plums.  We ate one jar tonight that had not sealed properly and the Hubby raved about them!  They were definitely worth the effort.

I come by my home-canning genes through my paternal grandmother.  By the time I was born my paternal grandfather had passed away so I never knew him.  My grandmother had a huge garden out back of her small two bedroom home.  Her basement opened up into the garden and her clothesline.  She was an Iowa farm girl through and through.  Her washing machine was an old old Magtag wringer washer and she had the old galvanized double tub to rinse in.  She made her own lye soap until she died at the age of 83.  And the basement of her small home had shelves all around which was LINED every year with every imaginable thing you could think of to eat, most of it from her own garden.  Spiced Crabapples, Peaches, Plums, Bing Cherries, Apples, Jams, Jellies, Rhubarb, Corn, Green Beans, Peas, even some canned meats.  My grandma did not buy much from a grocery store, just the basics.

In her spare time, she quilted.  All of her grandkids and family received several of her quilts.  One of mine had patches from the same fabric my mother had used to make my clothes.  Very precious today!  She watched Ed Sullivan on the television, the local news and weather and that was it.

I used to have a huge garden when we lived in the Big Horn Basin and could get canning fruit easily.  Now stores don't carry it, I cannot raise a garden at North of Nowhere due to high sulfate well water that will kill the plants.  I've felt GUILTY for several years because I haven't canned!!  Once, when a cousin was visiting Wyoming from Minnesota, I mentioned to her that I felt guilty because I had only put up jam that year.  She giggled and said she canned too and felt guilty if the walls weren't lined.  We had a great time reminiscing about Grandma's basement and naming everything we would see on her shelves.  Apparently, my cousin got those canning genes too.  As far as I know we were the only 2 granddaughters who did.

I was delighted to find out I could get bulk boxes of some things when they were in season from Bountiful Baskets.

But my grandmother didn't teach me how to can.  That I learned from the Best Mother-in-Law on earth. She was a big home canner and she showed me how to can one summer.  I took off and canned for YEARS after that.  Home canning is a dying art.  But there is NOTHING you can buy as flavorful as food you put up yourself. YOU control the quality of your food when you home can. #1 DIL has expressed an interest in home canning so I hope I can pass on the gift my grandmother and mother-in-law gave me.

One year when I visited my grandmother with #1 Son and Hubby, I asked her for her Catsup recipe.  She told me it was in the recipe book in the left hand drawer.  When I went to get it, I noticed the copyright on the recipe book was 1918, the year my grandmother and grandfather were married!  Now I wonder if it was a wedding gift but I did not think to ask her then.

This is my grandmother's recipe for Catsup:
  • 1 gallon of ripe tomatoes
  • 1 pint of vinegar
  • 1 /2 T of red pepper
  • 2 T of salt
  • 1/2 T of cloves
  • 1 cup of sugar
  • 1 t. mustard
  • 1 onion
Take the tomatoes and onion and chop very fine. Cook enough to press through a strainer. Remove seeds and skins left behind.  Add to the tomato/onions after straining the vinegar and sugar.  Place spices in a muslin bag (I usually just add them and don't use the muslin) then boil the pulp down to a good thickness.  At this point I put the catsup in pint jars and water bath can them for 20-25 minutes.  This has a flavor unlike any catsup you've ever eaten.  It's full of flavor from the spices and I really cannot describe it.  Hubby loves it but it's rare I have enough tomatoes to spare to make it.  You could just make a single batch and freeze it also.

My grandmother on her Wedding Day in 1918
She lived her whole life by the creed of Recycle, Reuse, Reduce, and Redo
long before anyone knew we needed to do this to help lower our impact on our earth.

If you think you want to home-can, try the Jarden website HERE, it is loaded with great canning information and receipes that will tell you everything you need to know. I'm lucky enough to have both a copy of the old Kerr canning recipe book and the old Ball Canning recipe book. Jarden is the only current manufacturer of home canning jars.  Home Extension offices usually have a wealth of canning information also.   Or drop by 60 Miles North of Nowhere and I'll give you a Lesson! Canning jars can often be found at yard sales along with water bath canners (for acid foods and fruit and jams, jellies, pickled foods), jar lifts, etc.  Sometimes you can get lucky and score a pressure canner (meats and vegetables), which are very expensive to buy new.

Happy Home Canning Everyone!

PS - don't you think it's totally Wasteful we don't recycle our tin cans??  I know they used to during World War II.  Tin is from the earth so there has to be a limited amount available.  Why don't we recycle all those gazillion tin cans????????????


Friday, August 19, 2011

Be Careful of What you Wish for - Part 2

Last post I told you about the cool spring and all the rain.....and how the La Nina scooped the moisture out of Texas and brought it up to us 60 Miles North of Nowhere.

So the positives were 1) cool spring and 2) lots of rain!  The negatives were less hay crop and here is #2 and it's a biggie!

Texas is buying all our hay and taking it south.  Normally our hay prices run around $120 a ton.  Texans are buying it for $200 a ton and over.  Add in their shipping costs and it's prohibitive but they get government money to buy hay.  Wyoming ranchers got the Short End of the Stick.  There is NO hay to be had for a reasonable price; it's like WE are in the drought right along with Texas.  Some ranchers on the Eastern side of Wyoming have found some South Dakota hay but most are scratching their heads to figure out what to do.

Better Half and I have decided what we will do -- sell our cows (they aren't our living just a hobby herd) and keep only the best five cows along with the best replacement heifers who will calve in 2012 for the first time.  Buy some cake for the cows and what hay we did get from our hay supplier will go to the horses.

We have sold some horse and are cutting back.  It's much easier to sell cows; you don't have to find them a new HOME. It helps that we have a lot of grass this year and won't have to feed as long.

Sometimes this climate stuff just sucks.  Like a vacumn cleaner.  Strongly! Lesson Learned - Be CAREFUL of what you wish for!

Yesterday was fun.  #2 Son and Darling Wife and grandkids came out.  And We did what our family does.  #1 Granddaughter is pretty enamored with the horses.  They forgot her riding helmet but fortunately had her bike helmet in the car.  She rode 'all by herself'.

But not really - it took an entourage....
Bob the Dog got banished right after this photo when I realized he was in the shot.  He is a known heel-nipper.  No heel nipping on Fizz when Granddaughter is on him!!!  No Bob No!

Even #1 Grandson got introduced.  Nice Saddle Dad!  He didn't seem to notice there was a horse under it, but I guess at nine months you only concentrate on the things you can get your hands on.





Friday, August 12, 2011

Be Careful of what You Wish For!

I haven't had much time to post recently.  I came back from vacation in May to a job where my boss had left the company and much more responsibility -- ie MORE work.  So I've been busy.

The weather in Wyoming (and most of the northern Rocky Mountain Region) has been so cold and wet.  They say it's due to a La Nina which takes moisture from the southwest and sweeps it up to the north; leaving the southwest in a terrible drought!!  La Nina is when the equatorial Pacific is cooler and El Nino is when it's warmer (we usually have a drought in a El Nino year). They say in Texas right now, it is the worst in 100 years.  I can sympathize with them.

Photo taken in June in midst of the drought years in 2004.  Notice the lack of green grass and how short it is.  We were definitely very short of feed that year!  Often we had to begin feeding hay in late September to the middle of May.
October, 2007


After going through a decade of drought (late 1999 to 2008/2009) I know how that wears you out.  You are always struggling to get feed/water or whatever to your livestock and paying for it.  Or you really bite the bullet and sell them not knowing how you are going to replace or WHEN.

This year places in Wyoming have had almost 200% of the normal precipitation.  We are at about 150% over normal here Sixty Miles north of Nowhere.  Welcome indeed .......


Tall Grass is Welcome

But it did not come from all this white stuff; we did not get our normal amount of snow.

In stead we got rain; almost every day from early April until late July!!!  And that for Wyoming IS definitely not normal.

So with all this rain, you would think there would be a BUMPER CROP of hay, right?
Nope, it was so cool the hay did not grow a lot.    Our hay grower told us he is short of hay this year and we won't get our normal 30 tons.  The GOOD news is we won't need it.  We probably won't have to start feeding until after January first, 2012.

Certainly makes me wonder what Wyoming will look like after the climate changes in about 2050 or 2100.  Makes me frightened for my grandchildren and I think I will be glad I won't be here to see our place which is near and dear to my heart.  Nope I'll be pushin' up daisies by then, hopefully over on what we call sheep hill where you can see our entire 160 acres and beyond.