flower pitcher

Monday, April 11, 2011

Spring Makes Me Feel Like A Chick


These eggs are so gloriously perfect that I gasped when I open the carton. Many of my neighbors have taken to the quaint hobby of chicken raising in this urban jungle of asphalt in which we reside and lucky us, this is one of the perks, farm fresh eggs from exotic heirloom chickens. The colors of these beauties are the colors Martha Stewart dreams in. They make me want to run around a farm with little chicks at my heels, chirping whilst wearing red or blue gingham of course - me not the chicks. "Spring is here!!!" they cackle. This time of year in my city is the prettiest and most temperate. The azaleas are blooming like the world is ending and the irises are wafting a fragrance that smells just like those dime-size jelly beans you get at the drug store to scatter in your Easter basket. Some of my favorite things about spring : the sound of lawn mowers, seeing what plants are popping up in my yard- asparagus, Brussel sprouts, morning glory and moon vine, buying radishes the size of apples in the market, putting spring onion in everything, my son and daughter playing in the hose, hiding fairy dolls in the garden for the kids to find, Dallas Blooms at the Arboretum, cherry blossoms.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Seasons are Good


This year we actually got a nice winter in Texas. Many people are complaining about it because they can't be outside as much or they can't drive their cars. I for one am very grateful to have the snow and frigid temperatures. The other night we had 6 inches of powder snow - perfect ski snow if there was a place to ski around here. The kids would hardly play in it because it was so cold but I bounded around and made snow angels like a preschooler. As an almost life long Texan and a life long Southerner I know that a goodly amount of snow in this area is a miracle so I take full advantage. Dallas has lovely springs and falls (minus the foliage I love, but none the less, lovely) and scorching summers so a snowy winter rounds it all out - having 4 SEASONS IS WONDERFUL. I know scientists have concluded that climate change is the reason for all this wintery weather but if Dallas gets more interesting weather because of climate change then I hate to say it but bring it on!

Goethe said "Nothing is harder to bear than a succession of fair days."

Indeed the mind goes numb after months of sunny, 70 degree days. We needed some change and indeed we got it!

This picture is of the kids and I making our own fun one day when it was too cold to play outside. Coziness abounds!

Thursday, December 16, 2010

I feel like burning a yule log...or maybe just eating one



The holly and the ivy
Now both are full well grown,
Of all the trees that are in the wood,
The holly bears the crown.
O the rising of the sun
And the running of the deer
The playing of the merry organ
Sweet singing of the choir



With Winter Solstice within arms reach I find myself dreaming of snow and dark nights lit by candle light. There are many cultures around the world that celebrate the Winter Solstice even those who follow Christian traditions throughout the year join in on the merriment. I think it is a wonderful way to add to the season of Christmas another way to celebrate without the commercialism and materialism that our other Christmas traditions bring with them. I am going to burn a Yule log this year complete with mistletoe and rosemary and of course holly and ivy and drink glogg and possibly even attempt to make a chocolate Yule log. Yikes - jellyroll pans scare me! Looks like it will be warmish so we will maybe even enjoy a day at the Arboretum.

Yule Log Recipe : http://www.joyofbaking.com/YuleLog.html

Glogg recipe: http://goscandinavia.about.com/od/restaurantsdining/r/gloggrecipe.htm

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Two Fat Ladies make Christmas Pudding Ice Cream

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5iuJzFmWAM

December is upon us now. In my town it is nearly 75 degrees today so it hardly seems bleak or midwintery. This poem put me in a chilly state of mind which always helps to move my Christmas spirit along. Yesterday we visited our family in Granbury. Mom, Skylar and Aunt Billie decorated Grandpa's house in Billie's over the top Victorian Christmas style while Dad and I cut cedar branches and picked bright green gourds from the woods at Blue Branch Ranch. Last night Skylar and Wolf and my parents and I played tag in the park among the twinkling lights of the Granbury square. We ate dinner at an old renovated gas station that smelled of hickory and pinon smoke from the fire pits out front. We drank hot chocolate and roasted marshmallow cappuccinos (even though the air conditioner was on in the coffee house). Then we walked back to Aunt Billie's house to have a "camp out" in her living room. A fine start to December even if it was warm enough for sandals.

December in Warm Climates


The Snow Man
by Wallace Stevens

One must have a mind of winter
To regard the frost and the boughs
Of the pine-trees crusted with snow;

And have been cold a long time
To behold the junipers shagged with ice,
The spruces rough in the distant glitter

Of the January sun; and not to think
Of any misery in the sound of the wind,
In the sound of a few leaves,

Which is the sound of the land
Full of the same wind
That is blowing in the same bare place

For the listener, who listens in the snow,
And, nothing himself, beholds
Nothing that is not there and the nothing that is.