A few weeks ago I went outside to give the grass its last cut (hooray!) before "winter" and the belt broke. We had it repaired and serviced for the winter. The guys brought it back last week, but my schedule was maxed out. Today was the last warm day for a while, so I was determined I was going to squeeze in the front yard today, if nothing else. Cranked the machine up, and the belt was smoking a little bit. Sometimes new belts do that for the first few minutes. Sure enough, after the first pass, it quit. At the end of pass three, the deck started shaking. I stopped the blades, backed up, looked underneath, and the belt is off. I've already called and schedule a pickup for tomorrow. To be honest, I don't know whether to be frustrated or relieved. Yes, the front yard is only halfway cut. But I'm also tired. After two presentations this morning and more things to do tonight, it's a little nice to have something off my schedule, even if it is off because of problems.
On to the next thing!!
Monday, November 11, 2019
Thursday, November 7, 2019
on the mend
The middle of September I began experiencing my normal fall congestion/sneezing, etc. Except this time my ears begin to fill up with fluid. It finally reached a point where one ear was totally stopped up and I couldn't hear out of it.
I've been through a round of steroids, a round of antibiotic ear drops, and this past week I finally saw an ENT. He vacuumed out my ear, and I could hear!!! But then he put powder and a syringe full of medicine in it, so it is stopped up again. I go back in two weeks where he'll clean it out and possibly repeat the process. (The ear canal was still halfway swollen shut so he couldn't take care of everything...as opposed to totally swollen shut a few weeks ago!) It's still ringing some, but the pressure is gone, and for that I'm extremely grateful. Had a brief scare today when my left ear started filling up. I think if I had muffled/no hearing in both ears I would go crazy. I have several friends who have gone deaf in one ear, and it makes me wonder how they adjusted. It's been hard. I can't tell how loud or soft I'm talking. Sometimes I can hear a person's voice but their words are a few degrees toward the adults in a Peanuts movie. Sometimes my voice echoes in my head, and it sounds really strange when I eat.
It seems like it's been one thing after the other this year. Poison ivy reaction which took several months to totally clear, a bad fall that I'm still not totally recovered from, and now this. I'm hoping 2020 will be less injury/sickness heavy!
I've been through a round of steroids, a round of antibiotic ear drops, and this past week I finally saw an ENT. He vacuumed out my ear, and I could hear!!! But then he put powder and a syringe full of medicine in it, so it is stopped up again. I go back in two weeks where he'll clean it out and possibly repeat the process. (The ear canal was still halfway swollen shut so he couldn't take care of everything...as opposed to totally swollen shut a few weeks ago!) It's still ringing some, but the pressure is gone, and for that I'm extremely grateful. Had a brief scare today when my left ear started filling up. I think if I had muffled/no hearing in both ears I would go crazy. I have several friends who have gone deaf in one ear, and it makes me wonder how they adjusted. It's been hard. I can't tell how loud or soft I'm talking. Sometimes I can hear a person's voice but their words are a few degrees toward the adults in a Peanuts movie. Sometimes my voice echoes in my head, and it sounds really strange when I eat.
It seems like it's been one thing after the other this year. Poison ivy reaction which took several months to totally clear, a bad fall that I'm still not totally recovered from, and now this. I'm hoping 2020 will be less injury/sickness heavy!
Friday, November 1, 2019
Cherokee salad
We stopped at a restaurant in Cherokee one day for lunch called The Princess. It had a buffet and was incredibly good. I don't know how authentic the food is, but there was one cold salad on the salad bar I had never had before, but really enjoyed.
Raw collards, chopped small
Thin sliced tomatoes
Round balls of cheese...not sure if it was mozzarella or what.
And these three ingredients were marinated in a dressing that was similar to Italian, though not quite that. It was really good, and turned out to be one of my favorite foods there that day.
We had to ask what the cheese was. I thought it might be an egg of some kind, but when I bit into it the taste and texture was more like bland chicken. The lady thought I was crazy when I asked, but said it was cheese. I wish I had followed up with what kind of cheese, but I didn't.
Thursday, October 31, 2019
Elk
Last week we escaped to Cherokee and Bryson City for a few days. We had one day set aside for shopping and driving through the Blue Ridge Parkway. As we exited the parkway, the traffic was backed up like Highway 50 in Garner in the evenings. As we turn to head away from the traffic to head back toward our cabin, I see a flashing road sign in the opposite direction. "Elk Viewing...please get in right lane. Lane closed ahead." We were puzzled, but have also never seen elk, so we turned around and got back in line.
We were about 35 miles from Gatlinburg.
Sure enough, the right lane was closed off with cones where vehicles could pull of and view the elk in the field.
We pulled over and got out to head toward the area of the "viewing lane" where the herd was located.When we got about half the distance toward the end, a park ranger came up and advised us not to get any closer unless we got on the road side of the cars. The bull above was staying closer to the road (there was a younger bull near the edge of the woods in the opposite direction) and the ranger said they are easily agitated and have been known to charge. He said it would be best for Bobby to stay behind or on the far side of the parked cars so he could dodge behind them for cover if the bull began to move. We decided to stay put.
The viewpoint from where we were standing.
And with my zoom lens. The building in the background was actually a historical farm museum where you could walk around and see the types of buildings and such. The apple orchard was actually fenced in to keep the elk out.
And on the way back, we ran into a smaller herd of 4-5, but the bull in this group was amazing. He was awfully close to the cars, close enough I was hoping no one was stupid enough to blow their horn.
Wednesday, October 30, 2019
Old dog; new trick
Sunday morning I was talking to a friend, and we wound up on the subject of eggs. She shuddered and said she was short on time so didn't do the float test, and sure enough, had a bad egg. It made me stop short. Float test? I had never heard of such a thing. You take a "fresh" egg and put it in a bowl of water. If it stays flat on the bottom, it is fresh. If it doesn't, it's not good. So I tested 24+ that I've collected in the last week but not refrigerated yet, and it works!!!
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Totally submerged egg. |
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Egg slightly rising on one end... |
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Egg halfway floating (one end kept peeping out of the water). |
The eggs that were lifted slightly on one end but not out of the water are above. I'll use these eggs (though I did toss a few of them). You'll notice in the top left, the egg has a spot. If left under heat for another day, it would become more pronounced. It's simply where the yolk was fertilized before it entered the shell.
The egg that was peeping out of the water actually had blood specks in it, so I tossed it. Technically those are safe to eat; the hen stressed out a vein during the egg formation. Many cooks simply remove the blood spots, but sometimes you'll see multiple ones and it's too much to stomach.
I am super excited to have a way to check my eggs before I use them or give them away!
So if you ever have fresh eggs that you want to test their freshness, now you know how.
Monday, October 7, 2019
Finished project
Since we had to move almost everything out of the 3 bedrooms while we replaced the flooring in the room and the hallway, my sewing room, (which was a nightmare) had to be emptied. I determined that I was going to sort and clean as I put things in and was NOT going to have such a cluttered mess. As part of my cleaning and re-organizing, I moved the old tv/bookcase (the one my parents got when I was in elementary school and I gutted a few years ago when it started showing signs of dying) into the room and decided to put an ironing pad on time. After researching a few possibilities, I came across a Leah Day (a well known quilter) you tube video on how to make a pressing board.
The next day I had to go to Raleigh for a few things, and JoAnns was having a sale, so of course I had to stop and get the batting and canvas fabric to try it. On the way home I stopped at Home Depot to get the plywood (my leftovers from the chicken house wasn't thick enough) and though I had to wait a while, they did cut it to the exact size I needed. So that night/next morning when Bobby's trying to sleep, between the hours of 1am and 2am, I put everything on the kitchen table and went to work. I'm sure he appreciated the hammering of the staples that the nail gun didn't get all the way into the board. My corners aren't as neat as the video, but overall I was pleased with how it turned out and look forward to using it. And since the bookcase underneath the cabinet was the not the ideal size for many books, it works way better at storing my project containers.
Hopefully next week everything will be back in its place and I can take pictures of the sewing room. I don't think I took a before picture, but I'm quite pleased with how things are turning out now. I'm still appalled at how much stuff I have in there, and my goal for the next two years is to downsize things in there considerably.
I'm still just amazed that I actually have a project that was conceived, started, AND completed in 24 hrs!
Sunday, October 6, 2019
Gross alert
It's been a week and a half. While I am healing, there's still some discomfort and general ugliness.
Day one: hurts like crazy but doesn't look too bad
Week One: The bruising has come out halfway down my leg,
but I can now bend my knee without pain.
11 Days Out: Bruising is slowly fading, but after standing on concrete 3 hrs yesterday and then walking 1.5 miles at the corn maze last night, I'm feeling the pain today. At least the toe bruise on this leg is gone. Right foot is going to take much longer. My wrist healed and cleared within 3 days.
I was really hoping this would be cleared up before the elections on Tuesday. But if I survived moving furniture the few days after this happened for the new floors (still working on putting things back!), I should be able to survive getting in and out of my car over and over followed by 30 minutes to an hour of standing and walking between each trip for 16 hrs straight.
I'm still thankful this fall was nowhere near as bad as the one 9 years, and there were no broken bones. Just a broken cell phone case.
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