Wednesday, April 25, 2018

WEEK FOUR OF THE NAME THE LAMB CONTEST


Week Four, Name the Lamb Contest

When Sammy’s baby chickens arrived, in what way was he not prepared for them?

He didn’t have—

a.  A place to keep them.

b.  Food and water dishes.

c.  A heat lamp.

d.  None of the above.

e.  All of the above.

I have moved the contest from under the Bookshelf area of this blog to the main section because for the next few weeks.  As much as I enjoy sharing this time with you, for the next few weeks will need to be spend it preparing for our move from Pennsylvania to Alabama.

This involves sorting through boxes that were never unpacked from when we moved to PA, preparing for a Garage Sale, repacking what I did unpack, and the actual move itself.  Anyone who has experienced any of these chores, understands the time and physical energy it will take to accomplish these tasks.  Of course, squeezing into this hectic pace will be ordinary living—you know the mundane of getting meals, doctor’s visits, and just plain living, and maybe a rest or two.

Thank you for your understanding.

There were no winners for week three, so the question will remain open for another week if you want to try your luck in answering it.  It is repeated below.

Again, I apologize for the briefness of this blog.

Week Three, Name the Lamb Contest

What did Sammy do to change Dad’s mind and allow him to raise chickens?

a.  He said CAYC was a dumb club and he was going to quit

b.  He threw a tantrum of crying and screaming

c.  He presented plans, a budget, and pictures

d.  He threatened to go live at Gran’s

e.  He promised to clean Dad’s office for the entire summer

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

WEEK THREE OF THE “NAME THE LAMB” CONTEST (Check in the Book Shelf column)


TIME TO THINK ABOUT GARDENING!

The other day I received a seed catalog in the mail and it made me realize that it is time to think about planting a garden.  Although I really enjoy gardening,  as well as the canning that follows, I am afraid that this year I again will not be planting.  Our house sold and come near the end of May, we will be heading south again.  That means there is no reason—or time!—to plant up here, and since most of the garden items will be getting harvested when we arrive there, it won’t make sense to plant down there, either.  Hopefully next year we can have a garden.

It is still snowing here—mid April and we have snow!  It has snowed all day today, from lazy, little flakes, to almost what could be termed a blizzard, on to large flakes.  It snows heavily, then stops for a while.  Then it starts up, again.  By that time all the snow that was laying on the ground has melted and the cycle starts over again.

A couple of weeks ago I was in the Dollar General.  It was another day that there had been snow after a week or so of warm weather.  The clerk commented on the fact that he hoped it was the potato snow.  I had never heard of a potato snow, so I asked him what he meant.  He said that the last snow of the season was referred to as the potato snow because it meant that it was time to plant your potatoes.

My friend came to visit me last week and I was telling her about it.  A soon as I mentioned “the last snow,” she interrupted me and said, “Oh, you mean the “onion snow.”  Now, I had never heard of that one, either!

A lot has changed since we moved to Florida thirty-nine years ago!  I did know that one is supposed to plant English peas (green peas) on Good Friday, and garlic is to be planted in September, but I had no idea that there were special days to plant either potatoes or onions.

I also knew that one did not plant tomato or pepper plants until after the thirtieth of May so that, hopefully, there would be no more killing frosts to do them harm.  However, that is no guarantee, because the year we moved to Florida, the farmers and gardeners here in Pennsylvania were hit by a killing frost around the seventeenth of June!  And yes, my gardening friends had covered the plants, but the frost was so severe, it even chilled them through the paper tents and boxes they used.

Now I do know the saying “a frost in the dark of the moon will not kill the plants, but a frost in the light of the moon will.”  And I know that saying is true, for I have experienced it.

Another thing that I experienced was companion planting.  Companion planting is when you plant two different kinds of plants near each other.  I used to have a list I made from the gardening magazines I used to get.  But time has wiped away most of the combinations from my memory.  I do, however, recall that good companions to most everything were marigolds and nasturtiums.  Because the tomato and pepper plants are planted so late, I, like a lot of gardeners, had already planted the crops I would start with seeds.  Therefore, I had saved room in my plot for the plants and just plant them together.  I learned in the companion planting that for the best crops, tomatoes and peppers should not be planted side by side, but the best idea is to plant them either end of the garden, separating them as much as possible.  After I started separating them, I did get better harvests.

So I wish all my gardening friends success in their efforts this coming season.  May you not have cutworms or harmful grubs of any kind, and may the bees and ladybugs be kind to you.  Best of all, may you get a rich and satisfying harvest.  Enjoy the eats!

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

MY, THE CHANGES IN HAIR GROOMING


I just got my hair cut again, after a year and a half, and was surprised at the change in procedure.  Since my hair has wave to it, I was used to the hairdresser wetting my hair before putting me in the chair and applying the scissors.

However, this time she just draped me with the protective cloth and started to work.  The method of controlling the wave now, to make trimming easier, is to use one of those hot irons used by many women to straighten their unwanted waves and curls.  My sister-in-law assured me that was now the standard procedure, at least in this area, as this is what her hairdresser does, too.

I started to think back to when I was a kid and the way we women used to manage our hair.

Saturday was hair washing day.  Back then, it was believed that it was not good for your hair to be washed more than once a week, so there was no hair-washing as part of the daily bath/shower routine.  I remember most vividly the way my mother used to curl my hair when I was about the age of five.  She used to put it up in rags.  Oh, not the same way it is done these days.  Her method was to take long strips of old sheets and begin by layering them back and forth over her index finger.  Then she would portion out a section of my hair and comb it down around her rag-draped finger.  After the curl of hair was made, then she would wrap the remaining cloth neatly up over the curl she had just made, slip it off her finger, and tie it up.  She continued doing this until I had about a dozen or more rag curls dangling from my head.  At least they didn’t slip when she sent me outside in front of all my friends to play hop scotch, or whatever the game for the day was.

Hours later, when the curl inside all that cloth had dried, she would unwind all those rags and carefully slip them from inside the curl, and roll each up for the next week.  The curls were set so well, I could pull them down and watch them spring right back up again! 

Part of this great curl success was due to the fact I had naturally curly hair.  And as such, the teenage years were a grooming breeze for me since I did not have to tend to my hair with any grooming.

Another fond memory I had was the night we were visiting my aunt and uncle in Brockway, PA, and my teenaged cousin took me to her bedroom and introduced me to putting one’s hair up in pincurls.  Do any of you remember those days?  That was when girls would take strands of hair, wet them, usually with a comb or just their fingers dipped in a glass of water, then wrap them tightly around a finger pressed against their skull, slide the circle of hair off onto their head, and anchor it with crossed bobby pins.  Usually the whole head was covered with these metal prongs.  I remember my older sister sitting on her bed, with the glass of water between her crossed legs and her body, listening to her favorite radio program or broadcasted music, going through this ritual almost every night.  Very time consuming, but it did work!  The results were nice waves, or curls depending on your hair’s natural ability.

Then there were those little pink, plastic curlers with the long, thin hinged strap that came over the division of hair rolled onto it and locked into the opposite end of the curler itself.  They were part of that new invention—the home permanent.  Remember?  In our vanity, we would take strands of hair, slip tissue-like papers over the ends to keep all the strands together, roll them over those spikey things along the inside of the curler, set the anchoring part of the curler, then dab the permanent solution all over those curlers making sure they were well saturated.  Next came the plastic bonnet and then the waiting until everything dried.  Oh, I can still remember the smell!

But they, too, worked and waves or curls resulted…at least for a while, but lots longer than the nightly bobby pins!

Another method was curlers.  And they have had their own revolving, too.  I have one of the first curlers I ever used.  It was a three piece metal contraption.  There was a long tube of maybe five to six inches, with a hinged half tube connected to it with a rivet near the top.  We would squeeze a portion of the curler pieces that protruded beyond the rivet and the pieces would separate.  We would slip a section of hair between these two pieces, pull it as near the end as we could without the hair slipping out, roll the curler up, and then slip over a thin piece of metal wire attached to the same rivet to “close” the curler.  They were hard to sleep on at night, but they also did the job.  These evolved to plastic curlers.  They started with the same idea as the permanent curlers, but instead of the prickly inside, there was sponge covering the curler part.  Then it progressed to just a single piece of rolled plastic, usually with holes in it to aid drying, and the hair was once again anchored with oversized bobby pins.  These curlers came in diameter sizes from small to jumbo, depending on how curly you wanted your hair to be—or uncurly, as the case may be.  That’s where the jumbo size came in. The last curlers I got (yes, the older I got, the less curl I had) were heated curlers!  They came upright in a box you plugged into the wall.  Their charm?  The heat curled your hair in MUCH less time than the other processes I have mentioned. 

Which reminds me, I almost forgot to mention the old-fashioned “quick-set” using the heating iron.  It was a long rod of ten to twelve(?) inches that also had a hinged flap, a wooden handle, and an electric cord.  It was plugged into the wall with the metal tip usually resting on the provided metal stand.  The portion of hair one desired to have curl was sectioned off and slipped in between the two pieces of metal, wound up, and held that way for a short time.  The trick was to get the desired curl without burning the hair!

Oh, what we ladies go through just to look pleasing for our men!

As for me, so far the straightening that was done at the beauty shop has not returned to either curl or wave.  However, I do see signs of some curl returning, I hope it won’t be too long before it is all back.  I’m too old to learn new tricks, and I did enjoy the looks of the wave I had.  But after all these years, it’s kinda nice to have it smooth, too.  Oh, well, as long as I have what I refer to as my “wash and dry” look, I am satisfied.  What is wash and dry?  I wash it in the shower, dry it with a towel, and comb it into place.  What I see is what I get…and I am satisfied.  But what is more important, so is my husband.

How about you?  Do you remember those days?  How do you groom your hair?

Wednesday, April 4, 2018

TODAY IT BEGINS!


Returning to the family homestead intensifies twelve-year-old Sammy’s longing for the family heritage—farming.  But Dad’s ultimatum, “…no crops, no animals, no barn…” shows Dad wants nothing to do with farming, for himself or Sammy.  Then why did Dad insist Sammy join a farming club?

Permission slips for Ag club summer projects are due.  Sammy defends his project choice with, “Technically, Dad, chickens are birds not animals.”  Miraculously, he wins Dad’s approval.

Sammy’s problems begin with the early arrival of his peeps and the loss of his best pals.  His ingenuity to care for his chicks, make a new friend, and design a compost bin win him a new name.  His biggest challenge—can he butcher his roosters?

Summer’s many adventures include solving a mystery, fighting a hawk, and being disqualified at the County Fair.

At the end of the project, has he won…or lost…the thing he wanted most—Dad’s change of heart about farming?

So reads the back cover blurb of my first book, All Because of Chickens of the series, Adventures of the Half Dozen.

Today is the start of something big…the start of the contest to name nineteen lambs to be born in my new book of the series.

By the time the contest is over, I expect to have this new “work in progress” ready for the publisher.  The names of the contest winners will be listed on the acknowledgements page of the new publication about Sam, Mai Li, and the rest of the gang, Lori, Kate, Joseph and Will.

In the second book of the series, Lessons from the Sheepfold, Sam followed in the footsteps of his mentor, Si.  Sam and the gang named his first eight lambs all beginning with the letter A; Abby, Adena, Alice, Anna, Arianne, Alex, Amos, and Andy.  Now, these new lambs will have names each beginning with the letter B.

Mai Li has already named the lamb known to be runt of the litter Bitsy, short for Itsy Bitsy.  Can you come up with another name that starts with the letter B?

Here is a recap of the rules.

After today, I will have the weekly question in my blog under the Bookshelf section. 

Each question will be a multiple answer question from something in my first Sam book, All Because of Chickens. 

To be sure your answer gets to me safely, send it to me directly at glmiller456@gmail.com.

As Subject, put Week Number (each week’s question will be numbered) Contest Answer.  The earliest correct answer, determined by the email date, will be the winner for that week.  Winners will be notified both by return email and listed on my blog.

Oh, I almost forgot.  In case you do not yet have a copy of All Because of Chickens, you can purchase either an e-book or a printed copy on-line from: MuseItUp Bookstore, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, or several other on-line book stores.  You can also get printed copies locally from Red House Books in Dothan, AL, Rosie’s Book Shoppe in DuBois, PA, or Brockway Drugs in Brockway, PA.  You can also order a printed copy from me at the above email address.

Let’s have some fun and get those lambs names!



Week One, Name the Lamb Contest

Which breed of chicken did Sammy choose for his CAYC summer project?

a.  White Leghorn

b.  Rhode Island Red

c.  Barbed Plymouth Rock

d.  Golden Comet

e.  Black Minorka