Tag Archives: manic rambling

Everything again?

 rudbeckia explosion

Can't seem to get enough of one sort of thing done around here to have a post that makes sense, so here's everything I guess.

 first harvest

That was my first "pesto garden" harvest a while back. My Memmy gave me a still-in-the-box food processor that she never used (her old one is still kickin' and then somebody gave her this one for whatever reason and it just sat around). Anyway, what? Oh yeah. I chopped up those piles of goodness and smooshed them into a little bitty container and stuck them in the freezer.

And now I'm ready to do it all over again.

herbs

I just wish my 'maters were as fruitful (literally).

tomatoes

They got nice and big, but are just now really blossoming and I've had very little fruit so far.

Ah well. At least we've been finally getting a little rain here and there.

rainbow

Our area was/is not in drought, but it still had been so dry for so long.

A nice thing:

real eggs

Even though we are not allowed to keep chickens in our borough (and honestly? I don't have the energy or money for them at this point in my life anyway), we have plenty of local sources for fresh eggs, and my neighbor Linda surprised me with a dozen the other week. Of course, we had already devoured half of them before I managed to get a picture.

Now. Remember this?

the $20 former kitchen hutch is slowly getting a makeover

I finally picked a paint color and put a better back on it:

$20 hutch - finally repainted

$20 hutch - finally repainted

Hooray! Now I love it again!

And speaking of loving things again... The mystery shawl from my last post? It got weird.

mystery shawl progress

It's hard to explain -- no wait, let me rephrase this. It's actually very easy to explain, and at some length too, but I will not bore you. Basically, the design of the shawl in the second clue proved to be something that I feel does not benefit from a self striping yarn and is much better served by a solid, tweed, or very slightly variegated yarn instead.

Luckily, I had these already on hand.

new yarns for mystery shawl

The brown and tan is undyed alpaca from Ideuma Creek (the ball's worth was purchased at Rhinebeck and the two cakes were purchased online much later), and the white is Juniper Moon Farm cormo that I grabbed on sale a few months back. They are both so soft! And knitting up beautifully together.

"Wool-paca-feller"

Because the pattern name is "Rockefeller" and my yarns are now alpaca and wool, I have dubbed mine, "Wool-paca-feller." ... Isn't it sad that I amuse myself so.

Now some cute things:

the whole family: dashboard version

A few years ago, my friend gave me the Little Miss figurine on the far left for no particular reason except that she was cute. After a while, I got the bright idea to affix her to my dashboard with a little adhesive square; sort of a fun little mascot for our trips. Fast forward a bit and the same friend sent me the pipe smoking bobble headed Pappy in the center, so I stuck him up there too, joking that the little figures were Mr. Ambry and me. This fabulous idea then sent me on a quest to find figures to represent the kids too.

A little while after that, my friend Michele sent us some wonderful baby gifts and just happened to stick that little Kewpie doll on the outside of the package, and I practically bolted out to the car to stick it in its place. All I needed were the boys and after several failed attempts to find the Blockheads from Gumby in an appropriate size, I settled on Mario and Luigi. Even though I am not a gamer, the boys love them, so that's that.

And now, every time we get in the car we have to smile at our little dashboard family up there. :)

Also cute was this terrified leaf friend that John found outside the other day:

Oh noes! :0

Still with me?

I am going to attempt to pickle some things this week. I have dabbled in canning in the past, but not much, and I have never pickled, so this might prove to be horrible. Or not. We'll see.

pickling spices

I mixed coriander, allspice, cloves, turmeric, celery seed, yellow mustard seeds, bay leaves, cinnamon sticks, and mixed peppercorns in there and it smells quite delightful. I have a bunch of dill in the freezer and must grab some garlic, and then I can do half batches of each item in spice blend thinger and also in garlicky dill.

Believe it or not, I could keep talking indefinitely, but I have decided to cut myself off here. Cross your fingers for cooler weather so I can get up in the attic really soon and have a real project to share again!

I hate to say, "I have nothing to say," but…

I always think I don't when I start a post like this.

But then, as usual, I am lying. I have a thousand million and one things to say. Like, Opinions! with capital Os and possibly numerous exclamation points.

Opinions! on handmade, and how much is enough/too much, and at what point one should cool the heck down and give themselves permission to not do everything. Along with that, there are the Opinions!! on DIY, and how, frankly, some of it gets a bit ridiculous and ends up wasting so much time and energy it is not actually worth your while, you know?

There are BIG Opinions!!! on starting to raise a daughter, and the new fears and ideas and methods swirling around in my head, and how all of this brings up so many fears and questions about how I've raised my boys thus far, and how I will continue in the future.

Here's the thing. As much as I really enjoy hearing myself spew out revelations like that navel-gazing, early 20s depressive who just finished an elective psych course (what? we all have our awkward stages...), I think I'll pass this time.

The most important things: I want to live my life as freely as I can. I want to be happy. I want to raise my kids as competently as possible, and I would like to have a sturdy roof over our heads, and plenty of food in our bellies. Whatever choices I make to get us there are mine to make, and mine alone. None of us should have to justify decisions we make for the good of our families, but we all feel that we must more often than not, especially in this age of social media. We have a LOT to measure up to nowadays. We hear and see what our peers are doing at all times. We have constant access to the creations and even homes of those we admire. And you know what? It gets to be too much. I stepped away from Pinterest these past few weeks because it made me hate almost every photograph I have ever taken. It made me feel like the laziest slacker of a gardener/homemaker/wife/mother -- you name it, I probably am pretty lousy at it when measured up to all those lovely pins.

When measured. I needed to step back and stop comparing for a little so I could learn to love and admire me again.

And that's that.

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But you know? I'd be remiss in my obsessed mom duties if I were to leave without some current pictures of the littlest one...

A few nights ago:

mommy made a headband

mommy made a headband

And today:

2 months!!!

Next up is probably a boring knitting post, so get yourselves all geared up for no excitement there!

Almost there!

I cannot believe how fast time is flying now, or busy I have been.

But in the past two(?) weeks, I have pretty much redone and switched around the three bedrooms in our house to make room for our (VERY) soon-to-be baby!

The room Ethan used to use is now the "grownup" bedroom. It is the room with the attic access, so I wanted to make sure we ended up in there:

mom & dad - new room

I had painted it a shocking blue for him when we moved in, but I thought John and I might benefit from something a little more soothing, so I mixed up a ton of paints I found in the basement and ended up with a lovely green.

mom & dad closet

All I did was toss our stuff in there for now -- some of it quite literally -- and I'll deal with putting it all away as soon as the kids' rooms are totally in order.

The boys moved into the former adult bedroom. The room was very bright and cheery for us, but just a cream color, and I wanted to do something extra special for the boys (especially since we were making them share a room after always having slept in their own spaces).

So I had them pick out some paint colors,

we picked out the colors for the boys' stripey walls today

And with a little masking tape and some careful rolling, the boring side walls of the room were transformed into personalized Happy Walls. :)

Noah's side:

noah's side

and Ethan's side:

ethan's side

I am so pleased with how it turned out (not too shabby for only a few hours of work in one evening!) and the boys LOVE their new space. Sleeping has been blissfully uninterrupted and they are already totally adjusted to the new arrangements.

Once their room was in at least partial working order, I started in on Lydia's room (formerly Noah's room).

I knew I wanted yellow, but I had been agonizing over shades for about a million years. After I found two I liked the best (both very different, but with qualities I admired for various reasons), I bought two of those little sample jars of paint and put two swatches on the wall, which stayed on there for another million years while I scrutinized both of them in every kind of natural and artificial light possible.

Why all the fuss over a silly shade of yellow? Well, painting with yellow can be positively disastrous.

See, I put a gorgeous yellow in the kitchen in the apartment John and I lived in around the time we got married (incidentally, that is my wedding bouquet in front of the wall in this picture):

wedding bouquet

Bold and rich, not too shocking, just warm and lovely. So when we moved to the house in Scranton a few years later, I couldn't wait to have a perfect yellow kitchen again!

I failed.

ethan takes pictures

It doesn't show in this picture, but the shade I picked was practically NEON in any kind of bright light, especially artificial -- you know, nighttime lighting when you need a day-glo nightmare to help you unwind for bedtime...

So I had indeed achieved my yellow kitchen again, but with none of the pesky tastefulness of the former kitchen. I eventually grew to like it, but would never ever ever ever have picked that shade again for any wall, no matter what, ever.

You can understand my fear of commitment here, yeah?

To wrap up a ridiculously long story, I stared at those swatches for weeks, memorized what I liked best about both of them and finally took the plunge Sunday.

By Monday, I was two coats of primer and one coat of paint in on Lydia's walls:

lydia's room in progress

Late Monday night, starting in on the second coat (just a gratuitous belly shot, really):

side view, painting Lydia's room

And as of yesterday afternoon:

crib!

glider!

tiny dresser makes a perfect changing table

What a PERFECT yellow!!! It is exactly what I was hoping for and I am beyond thrilled with the way the whole room is coming out. The color is soothing and buttery in all light, and is like heaven when the sun sets and shines through the slats of the blinds in the evening.

I have a lot of things I love in there, including my childhood dressers which I refinished when we were expecting Ethan, and the brand new crib and glider from my parents, but one of my favorite special touches is this switchplate that my parents saved from when I was little:

was mine when I was little :)

I like that it is the last thing I see as I leave the room.

I still have a lot of closet rearranging to do and laundry out the wazoo, but I have three weeks left to get that done and I think I can do it, unless someone decides on an early arrival. :)

Spring Fever Twenty-Twelve

In addition to our already unusually mild winter, the past few days have been gloriously sunny and spring-like, so I took full advantage and finally got started on some yard projects that have been eating at me for many months.

Okay so last year I built this, right?

firewood shelf almost done

It was supposed to be a neat and organized wood pile for our little fire pit's wood supply. I had plans to tack a tarp up around the back, top and sides to keep the rain out. Ahhh, plans. We all know how those go.

What happened to it instead, was that it became a grand play area for the groundhog/cats/squirrels/whatever and I was constantly picking up wood and putting it back on the shelf. I never bothered with the tarp because I figured enclosing would only make it like an all-weather animal fun factory and I did not want to encourage them.

Keep in mind that this structure is in the infuriating corner beside/behind the shed with the doomed compost house and the groundhog depot. The whole reason I was building things back there was because previous plants had failed there, and the space is too small to be useful in many other ways -- and would be a royal pain to seed and mow.

So over the course of the last three days, the wood shelf was disassembled and refashioned into a raised bed,

newly built scrap wood bed

filled with the cat-destroyed composted material (and you can see more of that in the alley behind it filling in the giant ruts the utility trucks left in the soft mud). The planter will hold a shrub. Haven't decided what yet, but I want something that will fill in that area and give some privacy from the alley.

full of composted stuff and ready for a new shrub

Compost house, pre-emptying:

this took longer than I thought to empty

See all those Sun Chips bags? None of them broke down in there. None of them. But there was some nice, dark soil all around them under that new layer of dry stuff on top!

Anyway, all the wood?

waiting for their new home

Now it lives in the emptied compost house turned woodshed. Lean-to. Whatever.

erstwhile compost house

I used the back wall of the compost house as a floor. Just a few quick trims on the sides and it fit right in there.

And THEN all of this?

sitting around for like a year now?

(Which has been waiting to be cut up into firewood for at least a year now? Yeah. Embarrassing.)

Check. It. Out.

WOOD!

That sucker is FULL! Needs to be rearranged at some point, so I can get to the small stuff in the back, but it looked like it was going to start raining as I was finishing up yesterday and I wanted to get it under the roof fast.

Hooray for no more giant random wood pile!

no more giant pile of wood!


Also in the last few days, blocks were purchased and laid beside the shed where I *may* attempt a skinny greenhouse out of old windows.

"floor" down

Still deciding that one. I have the windows, but it will be a buttload of work getting them all puttied up and secured so the old glass doesn't all come shattering out of them...

In the meantime, new composter has a good home back there on burrow-proof ground (ie: cinderblocks):

new composter lives back here

and EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!

just started

Under the straw are myriad scrap delights! And coffee grounds! And eggshells! Huzzah!

All in all, it has been an extremely successful few days and SO GOOD to get outside and moving again. The immediate forecast doesn't look as promising, but I have tons of inside projects to do and errands to catch up on and all that good stuff.

But today is gorgeous, sunny and warm, and for now I can still say: Happy almost spring!

I am feeling productive I guess?

cord and tassel detail

No big shocker I suppose, that as I am trying to take it a little bit easy, AND it is still technically winter here, I have been spending most of my time knitting.

There is now a hat for Miss Lydia's first winter next year,

Lydia's winter hat (for next year)

and a coming home hat,

Lydia's coming home hat?

I made this braid out of a bunch of different yarns to thread through the ingenious eyelets the hat's pattern included.

I love braids :)

Hat is finished and waiting to be washed. Super cute and easy pattern. I highly recommend it!

Another fun pattern is this sweater/tunic type thing I am working on.

baby sweater

Not sure what size I'll end up with, but it doesn't matter. She'll grow into it eventually!

Now something for mama, in the form of MY FIRST FAIR ISLE EVER!

Fair Isle Boot Toppers!

These are the Fair Isle Boot Toppers from the Juniper Moon Farm Chadwick Booklet and they knit up so fast! I did the actual Fair Isle part in only a few hours, but the ribbing at the top is taking me a lot longer.

ANYWAY... I was super excited to have a reason to make them because for my birthday over the weekend (32nd, if you're counting), I ordered myself something I have been longing for for a very, very, long time.

that's right -- it's birthday boots time

My very own wellies!!!

Now I am all set to hit the garden in any weather!

all set to to do some gardening

See? I have a new compost pail and everything now.

lettuce friend!!!

New compost pail's name is "Lettuce Friend" in case you were wondering, and he will become fast friends with this little beauty:

new composter!

A real composter! For as proud as I was (and still am) of my compost house, the increasing neighborhood feral cat population has destroyed any desire I had to use the beautiful soil in my little heap. Between the terrible odor and the threat of, well, piles of cat crap in my compost, I am shutting down the house and moving on to something a bit more enclosed. Let's hope this guy does the trick!

On a brighter note, I made a dress today, based on a beauty I saw on, where else? Pinterest!

new dress

It has now joined the ranks of only a handful of articles of clothing in this house that can accommodate my rapid expansion.

new dress front

(Needs a wash and press obviously, but I was too impatient to wait for all that.)

new dress back

As far as the expansion goes -- I'm 27 weeks today and now have exactly three months to go!

new dress side

VERY hard for me to believe that spring and baby are both just around the corner!

I have comments to catch up on (bad blogger), and a skillet handle cover tutorial to do, and probably a million other things I wish I could get organized enough to share, but all we should realistically expect in the immediate future is a thousand pictures of knitting, my new red boots, bizarre combinations thereof, and blathering on about any of the above...

Catching Up!

frosty carrots

Between the holidays and everything else, I seem to have disappeared for twenty days!

I have so much to catch up on, and so many pictures to share, so how about a little bit of everything, okay?

Let's see. I made some modern day pomanders,

pomanders!

which turned into a garland with bay leaves and cinnamon sticks.

good-smelling garland

garland - different view

Started knitting up some of that yarn I dyed at some point over the summer I guess? It is looking lovely, but the indigo powder is coming off on my hands like crazy.

yarn colors

The weather has occasionally turned a little colder, but for the most part, it has been unseasonably mild so far!

There were enough frosty nights to get some requisite lawn and garden pictures.

frosty lawn

a little closer

frosty nepeta - a little closer

strawberries with a little frost

leaves

I couldn't stop, sorry.

There was so much more. Mr. Ambry ran his first race since he started running this year.

CROSSING THE FINISH LINE!!!

I think he got a good reception at the end.

congratulatory hugs

Of course, then there was Christmas.

Christmas Eve 2011

Christmas Day 2011

Christmas Day 2011

I won't try to cram in the yarn photos here -- between a HUGE surprise package from my amazing friend Susan and a swap with another wonderful Ravelry friend, I have enough of a yarn stash built up to make anything I want for a while. That deserves its own post, believe me.

Two other things coming up first though. TOMORROW MORNING, at 10:00 my time (EST), I go in for the 20 week ultrasound where we will obviously make sure everything is still moving along properly in there, but with the added bonus of attempting to figure out exactly who we are looking forward to! I'll be updating tomorrow by early afternoon, after the family calls have been made. I cannot believe I am at the halfway mark already!

Another thing (but slightly less exciting at the moment to me) is that I am coming up on my four year blogging anniversary in a few days!

But I'll be back tomorrow with baby news first. :)

Gardening, projects, and a dash of rambling

in a clover patch

Well, let me start by saying how truly amazed I am at all the wonderful comments on my last post. Thank you. I still need to answer everybody individually, but for now: thank you all.

I have a few new things to share, plants and projects, including this neat plant my neighbor put in her yard along our fence.

thunbergia - faded to yellow

It is Thunbergia, commonly, "Black-Eyed Susan vine" or "Clock vine."

thunbergia - orangey

I am in love with it, and had thoughts of collecting some seeds to plant in other places next year. I came across this fascinating post and am now having second thoughts about trying to collect too many, but wow! Interesting!

My garden is still going, despite the tropical storm that whipped up through here last week. The greens bolted like crazy, so I'm looking forward to some lettuce seeds soon!

waiting for lettuce seeds

Now for a project.

A little while back, Sherrie and I arranged a swap. Among other things, one of the items she requested was a full apron, something I am always VERY happy to make!

drying :)

apron on the line

apron for Sherrie

back

I loved it so much, I made a "pattern" out of it and plan to make a similar one for myself soon. Probably more greens in mine, but who knows? I have a few more apron skirts to finish first though, and two other apron commissions, so it might be a while...

Now, some quick plant before-and-afters?

Remember the little coleus I found growing between the patio bricks last year?

rescued surprise coleus

I put it in an outside planter this year and look at it now!

coleus!

And the herb bed?

Here it is in early July:

new herbs planted

And now -- DESPERATELY in need of some cutting back!

H E R B S ! ! !

This summer turned out to be great here. It started raining again, and cooled down enough for everything to really get some more good growing in. So thankful!

Okay. Continuing to jump around now. I just had to share this trash-picked storage seat I grabbed on our last trash day. It needs some repairing, but overall is pretty sturdy. Score! More on that soon I hope.

trash-picked bench!!!

But now for a finished project that I am so happy with.

A few days ago, Linda gave me this clipping from one of our local papers about a gardener in our area. One of her little accent pieces was this hanging window frame "planter."

window project - inspiration

Linda knew it would be right up my alley and it was! I thought about it that night, and the next day, digging out some supplies I knew I already had -- an empty window frame from when my parents replaced their windows, some chain from a light fixture I hung in our living room but didn't need the chain for, and some wrapped picture hanging wire.

What I didn't have was any small pots.

As I was getting a jar out of the cupboard around dinner time the next day, I came across the small jars that came with the yogurt maker I was given to review. I didn't end up using the small ones again as it was just easier to make the yogurt in large jars, so an idea was born.

window project - day

Add some tiny (battery operated) votive candles,

window project - candle in jar

And voila! Safe and pretty at night, and something we can enjoy all year long.

window project - night

It hangs between our back stoops so we can both enjoy it. :)

And after all that rambling, I leave you with some morning glories that Teresa gave me the seeds for last year.

morning glories -mixed

morning glory - pale pink

morning glory - pale blue

morning glory - white

morning glory - deep pink

morning glory - bright blue