Showing posts with label cupcakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cupcakes. Show all posts

Monday, February 26, 2024

fully bullies

Yikes, did I miss last week?  It's been so busy here that it's hard to stay on schedule!  We had an amazing Valentine's Day hike at Eagle Creek.



When the trees are bare, you can really see the bird nests!


We had a small celebration at home, with fudgy brownies...


...and lots of board games.  I decorated the whole downstairs in streamers...Frances was a huge help in taking them down!


We continue to have a bounty of birds in these late winter weeks. I've been at the window so much that I've tried to justify it as a "bonding experience" with the cats...


You can usually find them on their window perch.


We see bluebirds daily...hopefully they'll inhabit the new nest boxes soon.


The big pileated woodpecker comes every day too.


We've had some trouble with the European starlings that live around here.  They're invasive and definitely "bully birds." A flock will descend on our suet feeders and they'll be empty within 2 days. They fight with each other...


...and with our other birds.


When the suet feeders are empty, they stare accusingly through the window.


There are ways to starling-proof your suet feeders, but that would make it difficult for the woodpeckers to feed.  We've just resigned ourselves to refilling the feeders...a lot.

Yesterday it got down to 27 degrees, and tomorrow it will be 70.  As I wait for temperatures to moderate, I'm inside baking...

chocolate cupcakes with sweetened peanut butter filling and vanilla frosting

...and finishing up some last-minute knitting.  I haven't been knitting too much lately...just a pair of socks for a Christmas gift...


...and this cowl for myself.  I love a very tight two-loop cowl and found a great pattern right before Christmas.  I knitted over the holidays and finished in January, but as usual, I drag my feet on finishing.  The cowl was a tube that had to be grafted together like the toe of a sock.  The graft was a bit clumsy, but I'm really pleased with the final product.


I love chevron stripes!


Todd modeled it for me.


It probably won't be cold enough to wear it this winter, but I packed it carefully away for the end of the year.  I love finishing projects, especially ones where I dread the finishing.  Hooray!  

Have a great week!  





Tuesday, November 7, 2023

frost bossed

 The veggie harvest is in!

Chilis...check.  Tomatoes...CHECK.  We picked twelve pounds of cherry tomatoes the day before our first frost!!  What do you do with twelve pounds of tomatoes?  A whole lot of sauce.  


I was hoping for a bigger sweet potato harvest, but...


Next year I'll plant my potato slips early and use more compost!  

The day before the frost, Todd winterized our irrigation system by blowing it out with the air compressor.


We picked the veggies, but left most of the flowers to go to seed.  Crazy how many of them were still blooming...probably thanks to Claudia's expert protection!


The next morning...magic.







It's so pretty, and we still have so many beautiful leaves!

our back pond

living room window view

daily hiking path


reflectors for hunting season protection



We watched 31 scary movies, ate our Halloween cupcakes...


...and closed the door on my favorite month.  Now we're looking ahead to cold weather, snow, Thanksgiving, cozy, warm, fire, quilts.  Speaking of quilts...


I finished a standard postage stamp quilt throw for my brother.  It's so cheerful!



I haven't worked on a quilt for a while, so this was really fun.  I've got a few small projects scheduled for the months ahead!  For now, I'm just going to enjoy the transition to winter.  


Have a great week!









Monday, February 20, 2023

be-twix-t a winter and a spring place

 Moderate weather means more outside time!  At first glance, there's not a lot of life out there yet...

...but I'm seeing more signs.



Bean Blossom Bottoms, a 700 acre nature preserve with nearly 3 miles of suspended trails, is only 15 minutes from our house.



Because it's bottom land, and naturally boggy, it's unbearable in the summer:  heat, humidity, and mosquitoes.  Spring, though, is another story.  It's alive with so many frogs, birds, and animals.  The Sycamore Trust, which protects and maintains this and many other properties, set up trail cams and has caught some remarkable things.  I love this short video of a bobcat family!

On our other walks, we're seeing a bit of color...the beautiful purple of bare blackberry bushes...


...and even the greening of moss is a nice harbinger of spring!


A bit of red, too, in the infrequent berries spotted on bare branches of various bushes.


Speaking of red, we recently celebrated Valentine's Day.  I was still feeling unwell, so we had a low-key day at home.  A red velvet recipe that made just four cupcakes was the perfect amount...


...and, for my "gift," I made a punchboard out of plastic cups.  Insert a treat and a terrible pun, cover the opening with crepe paper, and you're magically transported back to your second-grade classroom.



Feeling better means that, besides finally able to get back to work in a meaningful way, I've also been able to work on hobbies.  I hadn't worked on a puzzle in many weeks, but as I slowly improved at the end of January and beginning of February, I got to work on a 2,000 piece puzzle that I absolutely loved.


I also got back into knitting.  I've been working on my Deco cardigan off and on for the past few months, and had nearly finished the body and both sleeves.  I've been woefully unobservant this year, and realized belatedly that I had stitched a child-size sleeve on to the adult-size body...sigh.


Grimly, I ripped the arm back to the shoulder and began again.  I'm nearly halfway through - relief!  I've already picked out my next sweater, and it's one that I've knitted before.  

Shadow sweater, photo courtesy of Brooklyn Tweed:  Wool People

Here it is as a nearly-completed project in 2015:


The problem?  First, I used a silk-blend yarn, and silk has absolutely no stretch.  Neither do cables.  And because I'm a fairly impatient knitter, I didn't bother to knit a gauge swatch.  Most of the time, these swatches are knit in stockinette, or "plain" knitting.  This pattern, however, wanted me to knit a swatch in the cable pattern and then measure it.  I didn't do it and just guessed, and this sweater was WAY too small.  I frogged it last year.

Last week, I broke down and knitted the swatch:


Bingo!  Perfect gauge on size 7 needles, and I also found the perfect yarn.  This is Brooklyn Tweed's Shelter in the Fossil colorway.  Normally it retails for $16/skein, making this a fairly pricey sweater at $128!  I found someone selling it for much cheaper on Ravelry, although it will still be (gulp) $80.  A bitter pill to swallow for someone who still prefers to get clothing from thrift stores...but it's good-quality yarn and I know I'll love wearing this sweater when it's finished.

Skies are increasingly blue here...


...and temperatures are slowly warming.  I'm still feeling well and am cautiously optimistic about continuing this trend.  Looking forward to many adventures as the season progresses!  Even in the garden, which I'm determined to control this year.  I'm talking to YOU, weeds, ticks, and chiggers!

side garden in spring from a year or so ago, pre-weed invasion

Have a great week!