Baby Shower # 1

We have three babies joining the Hight clan over the next three months.  My Leslie is the party planner extraordinaire, so she’s planned themed showers for each of the babies.  We had the first one at our house today.  The theme was a “moustache  Shower”.  She had napkins with moustaches, I made moustache cookies.  She had balloons with moustaches, and a game identifying the owners of some famous moustaches.  It was really cute.

 

The gift  table         DSC_1469

The drink table     DSC_1470

 

The Food

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The Honoree and the two other expectant moms        DSC_1472

 

 

The guests

 

 

 

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Opening the gifts

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The moustache identifying game

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Guys just don’t seem to get all that excited about going to a baby shower.

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The next shower has a Georgia Bulldogs theme.  That Leslie, always being creative!

 

Waiting……

Sometimes, I feel almost like a character in Hitchcock’s movie “The Birds”.  I go outside to fill the feeders and see dozens of birds sitting on the limbs, watching and waiting.  Sometimes I even have to shoo them away from the feeders to take them down and refill them.  And yes, some of the birds are crows, or ravens, like in the movie.  But they don’t wait long to swoop in and have a seat at the restaurant table.  I’m filling three feeders every day (one twice a day on these cold days) and a couple need refilling every other day.  So if you see some day that the Hight household has gone bankrupt, blame it on the birds!

The birds are out en mass, looking for food anywhere they can find it.  I have five feeders, each with a different kind of food.  Sunflower seeds in an area of the yard where I don’t mind if nothing ever grows there.  Sunflower seeds give of fa chemical that will often make the ground unusable for growing stuff.  That’s the price I pay for the cardinals, towhees, chickadees, nuthatches, and blue jays that visit the feeder.

Then there’s the mixed seed feeder (always get seed without Milo, as most of our native birds won’t eat this.   It is a cheap filler seed companies use so they can charge less per bag.  Better to pay a little more per bag than to see all those fat, brown Milo seeds scratched off the feeder and lying on the ground)  I have dozens of little brown birds, mourning doves, bluebirds, nuthatches, and woodpeckers who visit the mixed seeds.

I put safflower seeds in the feeder that I know the squirrels can manage to get into.  The squirrels just don’t like safflower seeds.  The Cardinals and finches, titmouse and sparrows like the safflower seeds.  They can be a little messy, when the birds sit at the feeder and shell the seeds.  But I’m willing to sweep away the husks to keep the feeder right outside the kitchen window.

My fourth feeder is the suet basket.  The woodpeckers and nuthatches, bluebirds and sapsuckers love suet.  It is a great source of fat and protein, which the birds need in cold weather.  Unfortunately, the squirrels also seem to like suet, so I’ve devised a baffle to keep them off the feeder.  That is, until they outsmart me.  Then it’s back to the drawing board for a new scheme to thwart them.

My favorite feeder is one I built of wood and glass.  It has wooden ends with entrance holes on each end, cut the size of the opening in the bluebird house.  The sides are two panes of glass.  I pour in some dried meal worms and the bluebirds flock around.  I had three males out there this morning waiting in line to be the next to have a snack.   I can sit and watch them inside the feeder through the glass sides, without disturbing them while they eat.  Two of them are so fat, they can barely squeeze through the opening.  I guess I’ll have to put an open tray of meal worms on the picnic table for them.  Bluebirds are my favorites.  They stay in the yard year round, and reuse the same birdhouse every year.  I often have three to four broods of baby bluebirds in  a year, if I mind them well and clean out the houses as soon as the babies fledge.

On snowy days, I try to toss a handful of seeds on the ground for those ground feeding birds who can’t find food under the snow.

One of the nice things about bird feeding is that there is always something to sit and admire while they feed.  There are birds that will eat only certain seeds, birds that prefer one kind of feeder over another, and ground feeding birds to clean up the mess under the hanging feeders.

This afternoon, I’ll take a piece of deadwood and drill 1 inch holes, stuff the holes with peanut butter and hang it from a tree limb.  The woodpeckers and nuthatches will probably be knocking on the door to thank me!

If you are weary of being inside, put up a bird feeder.  You’ll enjoy hours of pleasure watching them.  And don’t forget to have a bird ID book handy.  It makes it all the more fun when you actually know what kind of bird you are seeing.  The girls gave me a gadget a couple of years ago that is a small scanner that will scan bar codes in my ID book.  It will play the sound of the birds’ calls, so I can start to recognize the calls and know what kind of birds are in the yard at any given time, even when I don’t see them.  There are several great books that can help you get started with bird feeding, naming the kinds of birds each kind of food will attract. You’re never too old or too young to become a birdwatcher.  In fact, Brandi’s first word was bird, uttered while we sat at the window watching the birds at the feeder.  Not exactly what a mama wants to hear first, but at least I knew she was listening and learning.

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Let it snow, let it snow….if it must

The beehive is snugly enshrouded with an insulated blanket and a reducer on the opening to reduce the cold air getting inside.  I’m sure the bees will appreciate that if it gets as cold as predicted.  The dogs are snuggled on their blankets in Scott’s office, and I’m about to put some supper in the oven.

While I built a beehive insulation box, Scott covered all the outside faucets with insulation and plastic.  We went to all the hardware places today and the insulated faucet were all sold out.  Home Depot had people coming from D’ville and surrounding areas, and the last ones were sold by 10:00 this morning.  So we improvised and made our own.  Lowe’s said they were getting in a truck tonight, but we weren’t sure they were getting any faucet covers.  Better safe than sorry.  I sure didn’t want to be out there after dark trying to cover the faucets.  Note to self:  go get some faucet covers as soon as possible for the next cold snap!

I have three delicious books checked out from the library, as well as my Sunday School lesson to study, so the brain won’t shut down if the snow comes.

And I still have a bazillion things to sew if I get tired of reading.

There’s a big pot of homemade chicken  noodle soup, a large bowl of homemade chicken salad, and plenty of bread and milk, fixings for more soup-vegetable and clam chowder, if needed. .  So we can weather any storm that comes our way.  We even have some firewood stocked up.

For the sake of those who are homeless, or who have homes that don’t hold heat well, I would wish away this cold coming our way.  With each snowflake that falls, I’ll be praying for everyone to stay safe and warm inside their homes.  I am so thankful for all my blessings.

Christmas revisited

It’s always a guessing game as to what Brandi is gonna want for Christmas.  One year, she had fabric delivered and I covered all her outdoor furniture cushions.

This year, she came with her suitcase stuffed full of her bedroom curtains.  She wanted the shirred curtains made into Roman shades, as the curtains seemed to dwarf her small bedroom.  She checked with a local seamstress out there, and the lady wanted $2000 to make the 4 shades from the curtains.  So her Christmas present from me was once again a sewing project.  We spent a bit of time together in the basement, which was a treat.

She sent me a photo of the first shade when she got it hung, and I must say it looks good.  I was a little intimidated working just from her measurements-not that I don’t trust her to do it right, but my daddy always said measure twice, cut once.

So Brandi has decided that this was the most expensive gift I’ve ever given her.  We’ll see what next year brings!

I returned a couple of things I had bought Leslie.  I think that I’ll use the money to buy plants to landscape the slope in the backyard of the house they are hoping to buy.  It’s a beautiful , with a slope that runs down to a small creek at the foot of the hill.  I’m thinking some silverbells, leucothe, sparkleberry, and native azaleas on the slope for spring blooms, some sourwood along the woods line for the gorgeous blooms in  and late summer and some witch hazel for those beautiful spidery blooms in November.  Along the stream bank, I’ll plant lots of rescued ferns.  All this after we remove the privet hedge and the English Ivy.  Yuck!  It will be a showplace if/when we ever get it done.  It’s going to be a long term project, but one I’m just itching to get started on.

The basement saga continues

I promised myself a while ago that I would do a compete overhaul in the basement, throwing out the unneeded/unwanted and organizing the rest of the ‘stuff’.  Well, stowing away the Christmas stuff has got me on a roll.  Yesterday, I emptied one of several storage totes containing Christmas linens- napkins, table runner, tablecloths, etc.  Whittled that down to two totes-one full of stuff I use every year, the other full of stuff that I bought intending to get them embroidered for gifts.  That’s a project for a later date.

Then I tackled a box labeled “Christmas fabric”.  Found several pieces of fabric with Christmas vests printed on them.  I cut our all the vest last night and got three of them quilted (I’m adding a thin layer of batting to make them warmer) and stitched together.  Then I started cutting the other Christmas fabrics into pillow sized pieces.  Couldn’t get started on the sewing because I didn’t have enough cording, and I do love pillows with cording!  After a trip this afternoon to the fabric store, I’ll start on the pillows tonight.  I plan to make them removable so I can change out the covers for pillows on the front porch rockers.  May also have some to sell at the Christmas bazaar next year.

We’ve had my brother and nephews over all day trying to find a water leak.  They had to dig up a bunch of the front yard-that red clay is sticky with all this rain.  Finally found the leak at the faucet in the garden.  At least they didn’t have to replace the whole water line as we had feared.  Steve is such a good old soul.  Never complains about working in the cold or heat.  I got lucky when I was born into the family with a brother like him.

We bought a new dining room set before Christmas, and the rug looked terrible with the red seated chairs.  So the new rug came today and the old rug looks great in my bedroom.  Couldn’t have worked out better.  Hopefully that’s all the stuff we’ll have to deal with for a while, until I start my next remodel project.  Oh, yes, there’s always something that change be changed, rearranged, torn down or built on.  I have three specific projects in mind, but I’ll only spring one at a time on Mr. Hight.  I have to give him time to recover from one before I begin on another!

A Successful Christmas

The tree is down, decorations are packed away, and I’m through for the day.  Don’t want to think about what needs to be done in the basement to get everything back in some semblance of order.

On the other hand, I have installed 48 card holders on the drawers of the cabinet I am restoring.  It’s an old lateral filing cabinet with 24 drawers.  I found it half rotted away in the basement of a house my cousin bought.  It had been in the Bank of Covington for years, then put in storage when they modernized.  When I started the refinishing, the card holders had the alphabet written on the backs of cut up food ration coupons from the 40’s.

With a new base, new top and some sanding and staining, it will make a great storage cabinet for my table linens.  I’m also devoting a couple of the drawers to cards and stationary to make a correspondence center.

Brandi and Leslie gave me new brass card holders for the drawers and they look great.  Now I just have to find some appropriate-sized handles for the very shallow  drawers and I’ll be all set.  They gave me handles, but they are a bit too substantial for the small drawers.  But they look great on the kitchen cabinets where I am installing them to replace the 30+ year old handles that have definitely seen better days.  They did a great job of selecting just the perfect gift.

 

Whirlwind

Life at Christmas time is certainly like a whirlwind, spinning from one family get together to another, opening gifts, cooking, eating, and visiting.  We had a wonderful Christmas meal with Mama-our annual breakfast for supper, with homemade biscuits, sausage, tenderloin, fried and scrambled eggs, melon, and tons of desserts.  Mama’s been cooking cakes and pies for a week.  The kids (and yes the 40 somethings are still part of the kids) enjoyed opening their stockings.  Dianne and I start the week after Christmas finding quirky, useful, or silly things to fill the stockings.  We had some real winners this year.

Gram’s parties started last Saturday with all the grandkids, except Casey.  She came in on Christmas day.  For years, we have gathered all the grandchildren in the living room for a group photo in front of the Christmas tree.  Each year, they all take the same place with the same poses.  It’s really fun to look back and see them grow up.  We started this about 11 years ago.  Wish we had thought of it when they were small children, but then Sam probably wouldn’t have had his famous pose!  It’s a zoo when Gram, all her children, their spouses, and all the grands and the great grands start opening presents.  Every year, it’s what did you get.  Oh, neat!  I want one of those.   Where die you get that?  What a great family to be a part of.

On Christmas Day, we spent time at Gram’s house with the extended family-her siblings and their children who were able to come, plus all her children and grands who were able to come.  We had a houseful of people, and spent the day talking about all the family get togethers we have had over the years.

 

Yesterday, I finished the curtains I was making as part of Brandi’s Christmas present.  They looked good, just hope they fit like she wants them to.  I hate making Roman shades!  Now Leslie has started selecting fabrics for curtains in the house they just bought.  Looks like another sewing marathon.  I’d rather spend the time playing in the dirt on that hill in the back yard.  I can just see it in my mind’s eye- covered with native azaleas, native flowering trees and shrubs, and the stream bank covered with native ferns.  Looks like I’ll be spending a lot of time on plant rescues if we’re going to turn that hill into a showplace.

But today was devoted to my own yard.  Mulching leaves is probably my least favorite task in the yard, but with all the trees, it’s a have-to-do job.  We finished about half of the front yard. putting the shredded leaves right back around all the plants.  But it does look so much better than piles of leaves tossing around in the wind.  I’m spending a lot of time removing piles of grass clippings that a local yard man dumps in the yard.  I filled his usual spot with tree shreds from Carroll EMC, so he dumped them in the woods, not realizing that he was covering some of my precious native plants.  I’ve uncovered most of them, but still have a few more to go.  However, on the up side, the shreds he left make fabulous mulch after I also run them through my leaf shredder.   It’s like brown gold!  I know my plants will appreciate this during the summer.

Tonight, I’m having a lazy night-not cleaning up anything Christmasy, just gonna read a fun book and go to bed with my ice pack, my heating pad, and my Aleve,.  Getting old and decrepit is not so great, but I do appreciate that I’m still able to be as active as I am.

Life is grand when you have a plan!

Before and after…

So, I got this wild hair to start on an upholstery project (actually two projects, but one must wait for a new supply of staples for my staple gun)  I’ve stripped the cover from a chair I found at Goodwill.  It was covered with some really ugly plastic green vine fabric.  Then I realized that I was out of staples, so I moved onto my footstool.  Scott bought this for me at a shop in Kennesaw, and it had a really ratty cover.  I had hoped to do some needlepoint like the old cover, but have had no luck in finding a pattern.  So Hobby Lobby happened to have some nice fabric that will do well.

I stripped the old fabric off today, and will start the recovering tonight.  So here are the before pictures, and the ‘in between the old and new’ pictures.

 

BEFORE

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Phase 1:  Remove all upholstery fabric, in this case two layers.  These are the In between the old and the new cover.

 

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Phase 2:  Disassemble the wood, glue, clamp, and wait.  Hopefully the stool will be much sturdier now!

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Hopefully, the new and improved stool will be ready in a few days.

I’ll keep you posted.

Let the festivities begin….

Sunday night my mother’s family kicked off their holiday traditions with a dinner out.  There were about forty of us.  The number dwindles every year, so it’s so important to not miss this!  Mama still has three of her sisters and one brother, and thankfully they were all able to come.

Tonight is the Native Plant Society’s Christmas meeting, with a short meeting, then tons of great food.  This is one of the most wonderful groups I’ve ever been involved with-no pretentious bones in any of their bodies, thoughtful, committed to our work of rescuing native plants, and just good all-round people.  I look forward to every meeting, rescue, board meeting, presentation we do.

Brandi will be home on Thursday, with our family stuff getting into full swing over the weekend at Gram’s house.  Scott’s family is such a joy to be with.

Still haven’t done all the decorating I usually do, but this year, I’m thankful for the small graces God has bestowed on me-a healthy mama, my sister, my children of whom I am so proud, Scott-who puts up with me.  My list goes on and on-no need to have a Santa list.  I’ve got everything I need to make me happy.

Hope everyone else out there can say the same.

What a great way to start off the Christmas season-a trip to Nashville to see a Christmas program by one of our favorites-Suzy Boguss at the Opryland Hotel.   The hotel was festooned with thousands of cascading twinkling lights, lighted trees outside and garland everywhere.  It was worth the trip just to see the hotel all dressed up for Christmas.

And, as always, Suzy Boguss did a wonderful job.

Our tour guides, Lynn and Hugh, did a wondeful job!  Planning a return trip in the spring to get the full Nashville tour from Hugh.

  

DSC_1315A tree inside the Opry Hotel

DSC_1346Cascading lights inside the hotel

DSC_1320Outside the hotel, all the trees and shrubs were lighted.

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DSC_1324Scott with our friend Lynn

A tour of downtown, including a guided tour through the Ryman Auditorium, home of The Grand Old Opry.

DSC_1384DSC_1376 DSC_1352 DSC_1348And the opening night of Suzy Boguss performing at her Christmas songs.

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