Living the Farm Life

February16

True to my roots, I am very interested in farming.

Unfortunately, we don’t live on a farm. We live on a little postage stamp size lot with a TINY front yard (if you can even call it that) and a small backyard. Obviously, we aren’t going to be doing any large scale animal farming. Rather than whine until we get a place that I can have goats and a milk cow, I have decided to make the most of what I have.

We live in a very rural area, so I have found someone who has some land who would be willing to keep a goat with their herd. Having a goat like this will allow me to milk a doe and have a fresh supply of raw milk and a way to make cheese for our family. If I get a cream separator, I can run the cream out of the milk and make butter and anything else that would require cream. This is very exciting for me.

In our backyard, I am going to set up a place for some chickens. I will get a few for eggs, and I am going to look into getting some just for our own purposes to eat. I will probably have to have them processed at a farm down the road because I do not know how to process them myself, nor do I have any equipment to do so. I still have to see if someone would be willing to help me process some chickens. Either way, I am going to keep 3-4 laying hens to get eggs. I need to start raising the chicks soon because it takes a while for them to grow up and start laying.

I am also going to start a vegetable garden. I am going to make 4-5 raised beds that are 6′ by 6′ by 1′. I am then going to head to the local dump where they compost people’s yard debris, and I am going to by a unit 7.5 cubic yards of 50/50 compost and sandy loam. I don’t have a better place to get this right now. I am going to get it to my house and fill my raised beds. Then I am going to plant some vegetables. I am excited. I just need to decide what I want to plant, and where. I think I will line the beds up in my back yard. I am making them each 6′ by 6′ so that I can reach the interior without really having to stand in them. Our yard is fenced, with a 6′ fence, so it should not be too hard to keep animals out, which is really nice.

In this way, I will do some farming and produce some food for our family. I am going to help Daphne learn to be more self sufficient, and I will get to spend some time outside. I am excited.

We have VERY few tools to do this, and I don’t plan to buy any more really except maybe a hand saw, so I will be doing a lot of the work by hand. :)

Reading

February15

I spent a good deal of time reading with Eli while in Burns. It was actually really enjoyable.

I am impressed with how smart he is. He can spot letter and numbers with incredible ease. My sister is doing a wonderful job raising him!

I can’t wait until Daphne is older and can read. I have a lot of fun ahead of me.

Farbric Store

February14

I have been looking for a LONG time for fabric that I can use to create some napkins for our house.

I have been wanting to make napkins. I have enough to make around 15 or 16 napkins. They will be used for many things around the kitchen, so I am happy for them. I even like them even though I paid more for them here than I otherwise would in Portland.

I am going to post photos when I get them done.

Kitchen Shop

February14

Burns has a really wonderful kitchen shop that my sister and I often get gift certificates to. It has a better selection that even kitchen stores over where I live near Portland.

I went in with my sister today and checked out the things that they had available. There were a lot of things that I saw that looked like my kitchen would benefit from.

I would like to get some egg rings that are silicone so that I can get rid of my non stick pan that keeps burning me.

I also would like to get a cavatelli roller, but I think I want to try it by hand first before investing in any equipment.

I DID buy some very nice silicone Popsicle molds so that I can make some Popsicles for Jared and Daphne and I, especially for the summer. I am excited because we have been looking for something like this for a long time.

I always look forward to going in to the shop when I come to visit again.

Mimicry

February14

I am continually amazed with the ability that Daphne has to mimic the motions of other people.

She has learned to wave 2-3 different ways by just looking at us wave at her and trying to make the same motion.

I learned the other day that she knew how to clap after I got excited at something that she had done and started clapping. She mimicked the motion that I made.

She learned how to “jump” on the trampoline after watching Jared exercise on it. She got from watching that the legs needed to bend and try to come off the ground. She now “jumps” when she is on the trampoline.

Today, Eli was sitting on the couch eating an Italian cream soda. He was dipping his finger into the whip cream on the top and putting it into his mouth. After a few tastes of the cream, Daphne decided she was going to do the same. She started touching her finger to the glass and then putting it in her mouth, just like her cousin. She spent about 5 minutes repeating the motion. It was very cute.

It is the simple little things. These things are wonderful. She is becoming an independent personality. I love being her mom.

The Perfect Fabric

February13

I was fabric shopping with my sister today, and I found the PERFECT fabric. I have been waiting for a long time to make napkins for my kitchen because I was unsure of what fabric to use. I have been looking and looking. I actually found the perfect fabric here in Burns. It is a little spendy, but I am going to get a few yards of it so that I can make some killer napkins.

I am excited.

Driving Across the Desert

February12

We made it! I am in Burns with my sister and my family. It is so nice to be back home for a little while.

The drive was long and boring, but at least the snow did not stop me like I thought it would. There was 136 inches across the pass. Now that is a lot of snow!

Driving, Driving

February11

Today, I have to drive across the mountains to Burns to see my family. I don’t particularly like the drive, and I really don’t like it when it is snowing over the pass.

It looks like the pass will be clear until I get over it, I just hope it will be safe to return next Saturday.

I am taking Daphne with me, and I am taking a lot of things for my sister for her new baby. The car is STUFFED.

See you in Burns.

Nothing is Better than

February10

Spending time with friends who truly understand you and appreciate you.

Thanks for taking me out today and keeping me busy, Robin.

Rodelinda

February9

I entered one of my photos into a photo contest at PSU, and wouldn’t you know that I actually won!

My prize was two tickets to the opening night of Rodelinda, which is an opera.

We got grandpa James to babysit, and Jared and I trudged off to the opera in Portland last night. We actually had a great time. He gave me a lot of guff about not wanting to go. Apparently he did not know that 1) operas are typically more than 3 hours long 2.) they are never written in English and 3.) they are 100% singing. He seemed really reluctant to go.

We actually had a REALLY great time. The opera was really nice, and the story was pretty fun. Neither of us really liked the LONG airas that lasted forever where the person said the same thing over and over, but other than that, it lovely. I felt very redeemed at the end.

As a side note, the woman who plays the title role Rodelinda was sick yesterday. Apparently the Portland Opera has people that they have stay with them for 2 years who work to learn roles and fill in when people are ill. The woman who stepped in did a fabulous job for her first performance, and she actually received a standing ovation.

This is the synopis of the opera from the Met opera site.

Rodelinda

Composer: George Frideric Handel

Bertarido, King of Lombardy and Milan, has been attacked and deposed by Grimoaldo, an ally of his estranged brother, Gundeberto. Gundeberto was killed in the battle and Bertarido vanished, leaving his queen, Rodelinda, and a young son, Flavio, in the power of the victorious ally, Grimoaldo. As a reward for defeating Bertarido, Grimoaldo was promised the hand of Bertarido’s sister, Eduige-therefore gaining a legitimate claim to the throne at Milan. Eduige and Grimoaldo fell in love, but she would not marry him while mourning two brothers-one dead, one presumed so.

From abroad Bertarido has sent word of his own death, intending to return to Milan in disguise, rescue his wife and son, and escape to an anonymous life far from the vagaries of politics and the burden of government. The news of his death has devastated both Rodelinda and Eduige. Grimoaldo, intent on gaining the throne, weighs his options, counseled by two advisers-Garibaldo, his closest aide, and Unulfo, a member of Bertarido’s cabinet who maintains intimate ties with the royal family and is the only person who knows that Bertarido still lives.

ACT I. Rodelinda and her son are being held in a sparsely furnished room in the palace in Milan. Grimoaldo enters with Eduige and his advisers and announces his wish to marry Rodelinda, thereby gaining the throne. The outraged Rodelinda refuses him and storms away. Eduige is appalled at Grimoaldo’s overture to Rodelinda but despite the rules of mourning offers him her hand, heart and throne. Grimoaldo, however, is still stung by her previous postponements, and though still in love with her, fiercely declines Eduige’s offer. Now Garibaldo makes overtures to Eduige, hoping to gain the throne for himself. Eduige, furious with Grimoaldo, does not discourage him. When he is left alone Garibaldo reveals his passionate ambition for the throne.

Bertarido arrives at the stables, where Unulfo has left a soldier’s uniform for his disguise. He finds in the cemetery a memorial built in his memory by Grimoaldo to appease those loyal to him. Bertarido yearns to see Rodelinda but knows he cannot yet reveal himself. His reunion with Unulfo is interrupted when Rodelinda brings her son to plant flowers at the memorial. Unulfo succeeds in restraining Bertarido, who wants desperately to reach out to his family. Garibaldo appears with an ultimatum from Grimoaldo, to which Bertarido must also be silent witness: either Rodelinda agrees to wed Grimoaldo, or Garibaldo kills the boy. Rodelinda is forced to agree. She takes back her child, lashes out at Garibaldo, and rushes away. Bertarido cannot see past Rodelinda’s surrender to Grimoaldo’s demand. Unulfo promises to find some resolution to the dilemma. Alone and disconsolate, Bertarido grieves over Rodelinda’s seeming loss of faith.

ACT II. In the palace library Garibaldo again offers his services to Eduige in exchange for her hand-he will kill Grimoaldo if necessary. But he sees from her response that Eduige loves Grimoaldo still. Rodelinda appears with her child and reassures Eduige that her son’s future is her greatest concern. Eduige shares with Rodelinda her confused anger over Grimoaldo’s rejection of her. Grimoaldo enters with Garibaldo and Unulfo, and Rodelinda presents him with an ultimatum of her own: she will marry him on one condition, that he personally kill her son before her eyes. Her gambit works-Grimoaldo backs down; but he is very taken with Rodelinda’s courage and constancy and feels that he might actually come to love her, though he cannot forget his feelings for Eduige. Garibaldo and Unulfo are left alone to debate Grimoaldo’s options. Garibaldo believes power should be seized and ensured at any cost. Unulfo, musing alone, decides to take Rodelinda to Bertarido and finds a breath of hope.

Walking near the stables, Eduige happens upon and recognizes Bertarido. She is overjoyed to find him alive. She assuages his fears about Rodelinda’s constancy, and they move away deep in conversation as Unulfo brings Rodelinda to the stables. Unulfo goes off to look for Bertarido, who soon returns with Eduige to be reunited at last with his wife. When they are discovered together by Grimoaldo, he orders Bertarido taken into custody and, enraged, bids them take their final farewells. Bertarido will soon die.

ACT II. Eduige sends a servant to the dungeon with a concealed weapon that is to be given to Bertarido. She and Unulfo plan for Bertarido’s escape: Unulfo, who has access to the prison, will lead Bertarido through a hidden tunnel from the cell to the palace garden, where Eduige will wait with Rodelinda and the child. From there they will escape. Grimoaldo enters with Garibaldo, who advises him to kill the prisoner or lose the kingdom, but Grimoaldo’s conscience prevents him from taking this action: he is caught in a web of conflicting feelings-fear, suspicion, love, and remorse.

Bertarido is reassured when a weapon is dropped through the bars of his prison cell. In the darkness he strikes out at what he believes to be an assassin-but it is Unulfo, come to help him. Even though he is wounded, Unulfo manages to get Bertarido to change out of the clothes he has been seen in. As the two men escape into the tunnel, Rodelinda and Eduige arrive-Rodelinda has insisted on rescuing Bertarido herself but finds only his clothes covered with Unulfo’s blood. She imagines the worst.

At the foot of Bertarido’s memorial Grimoaldo’s internal struggle continues. He ultimately acknowledges his cruelty and guilt. Exhausted, he falls asleep. Garibaldo attempts to assassinate Grimoaldo, but is stopped, and killed by Bertarido, who gives himself up to Grimoaldo. Following Grimoaldo into the library, Bertarido dares him to condemn his own savior. Grimoaldo is himself ready to surrender and restores wife, child and throne to the rightful king. His apology to Eduige goes unheeded at first, but eventually she forgives him. With reason restored, the survivors can envision and celebrate a happier future.

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