Friday, February 29, 2008

HALLELUJAH!!!!!!


Grey's Anatomy is coming back! Hooray! There are at least five new episodes and they will start airing on 4/24. My Thursday nights have meaning again.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Things, Part 5

Things I love: Chocolate cakes that I can make in the microwave (YUM!) and a Honeysuckle candle from the Yankee Candle Company (my house smells like summers of my childhood!)

Things I do NOT love: allergies (ah-CHOO!) and litter boxes (P-U!)

BUT - clean litter box + Honeysuckle candle = happy me :-)

Would you go to a party

if the menu was:

Raspberry Fizz punch (raspberry vodka optional)
Toasted Peppery Pecan Brie
Summer Berry Shortcakes
and
Truffle Brownie cups?

I'm having my "open house" next weekend for my Pampered Chef business. It will be people I know and love and am comfortable with, but I'm still a little nervous. It will be good practice for my first "show" at someone else's house, though. And, the food will be yummy so what could really go wrong?

How CUTE is this?

This child was at my wedding shower (hosted by her grandma . . . the Elvis lady) when she was TWO! I still remember cracking up at her singing "If I Only Had a Brain" when she was about three. She likes to perform, for sure! She's a sweet girl from a great family and I just had to share this. :-)
http://www.valdostadailytimes.com/homepage/local_story_059010122.html

Although . . .

A dog's life really wouldn't be too bad, either.
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In my next life . . .

I
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want
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to
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be
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a
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CAT!
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Wednesday, February 27, 2008

A Massacre on Park Avenue

Remember all those beautiful fall pictures (and here are some more) I posted of the trees in the park by my house? Well, they're taking a hard hit. Do you also remember the windstorm I posted about when a few of those old poplars blew down? It seems they all have some kind of poplar disease and they are rotting from the inside out. All it could take is one more strong wind gust and any one of them could have come toppling down. The city decided they didn't want to take the chance that the next one falls on a person or any of the homes and cars that line the street, so THIS started this week:
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Did you spot the little man with the chainsaw? Here's a better look:
PhotobucketI'll bet you know what's coming next . . .
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That is not an enormous limb jutting out of the tree in the forefront, it's the one he was sawing on its way down. Take note of the big, knotty tree in the left of the picture, we'll revisit it in a moment.
And in this corner . . . three heavyweights. Here's the first one to bite the dust:
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They took the big one on the right, too, and we were left with this:
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The saw whirred to life again, and this happened:
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Until finally we were left with wide-open sky.
PhotobucketNow, remember the one I told you to pay attention to? That's the one my daughter said is her favorite. She's been so thankful each time she comes home and it's still standing, especially since they had already taken down all the ones around it. I have no idea what her reaction will be when she gets home and sees this:
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It has been a painful process watching all these giants come tumbling down . . . and they're still going. Although I am thankful that I do not have to worry about them falling on my home (we would have been pretty much a direct hit), I sure wish there was some other way. I know they will replant (this IS Washington, after all, the most tree-hugging state in the union!) but trees are such slow-growing things. I guess I'll look for the positive and enjoy my slightly better water view.

Monday, February 25, 2008

Humphead Parrot Fish


Ha. Hee Hee. Hooooo. Whoooo tee-hee ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. I just saw THESE guys for the first time on the science channel. Tell me God doesn't have a sense of humor.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Oscar Night!


I love Oscar night. I must admit, I get mesmerized watching all the beautiful dresses arrive. I have a few favorites: Cate Blanchett, Nicole Kidman, Julia Roberts, Jennifer Garner and Salma Hayek to name a few. The picture is one of my most favorite Oscar dresses of all time - the color was decadent, and it oozes glamour. Since Angelina's "baby bump" was revealed yesterday, it will be interesting to see what she chooses, and I always like seeing the "crazies", too.

This could turn out to be a really interesting year for the red carpet arrivals, since the writer's strike ruined the earlier awards shows. The stars have their only real chance to get all "glammed up." You know where to find me tonight!

Who knew?

Delilah is my neighbor. You know, that Delilah . . . from the radio? Queen of late-night love songs? http://kitsapsun.com/news/2008/feb/24/yes-that-delilah-lives-in-south-kitsap/

Saturday, February 23, 2008

for Grandma


Tonight, I have a wee little bit of insomnia again. I decided to pass the time that I would go back and read lots of my mother-in-law's old posts on her blog, because she's pretty cool and I always enjoy what she has to say. :-) I was having quite a fun little memory trip over the past year when I came across this post.

It appears that she has a fond memory of putting on her tap shoes and dancing all over her tile floor. Well, guess what Grandma? Haleigh doesn't go out to play without putting on a pair of black patent leather 'high heels'. As soon as she hits the sidewalk she proceeds to dance like a maniac . . . "just like Shirley Temple." Wonder where she got an idea like that?

Hooray!


Or should I say "bravo"? I found out today that I got the lead role in the musical I auditioned for several weeks ago. I'm so excited I might just explode.


The musical is "The Pajama Game", and Doris Day made the lead role famous in the movie version. I tend to identify with Doris Day characters . . . sweet, wholesome good girl with some spunk. This play was "revived" on Broadway a few years ago and Harry Connick, Jr. played the main guy. Be still, my heart. Sadly, he has some scheduling conflicts and won't be able to reprise his role in our community theatre version. Oh, but wouldn't THAT be fun? :-)
I literally had no idea that I would be given this role. I went to rehearsal today thinking that all the girls would be singing again for the director and she would be making final casting decisions after that. However, when I walked in the door she handed me a script and said "Amy, I want you to read Babe. I want you to BE Babe." And while I was still floating in that moment, ANOTHER wonderful thing happened. It went something like this:

ME: (looking at the music we were working on) "Whoah, I haven't sang that high
since I was 21."


ADORABLE LITTLE HIGH SCHOOL GIRL NEXT TO ME: (with shocked expression) "Wait ...
you're over 21?"


ME: "Oh, honey, I love you. I'm 29, and you're my new BFF."

I might have offered to name future children after her, as well .. .

Raising Children

No one told me it was going to be so hard. Ok, actually quite a few people told me it would be the hardest job of my entire life. But you just don't GET it until you are actually responsible for another human being every single day for the rest of their lives. I think, honestly, if people really KNEW how hard it was going to be, there would be a lot less baby-birthing going on.
No, that's not true. See, all the really good things in life are usually the same things that require the most time and effort. Sometimes I just want to bury my head in a hole, but right before I get the edge, Haleigh walks up and hands me an original custom-designed "I Love Mommy" masterpiece. Then I breathe deeply, refuel, and power on.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Pleasant and Eventful Weekend

My family decided to go camping over this last long weekend. Since I had already promised a friend that I would babysit very late into the evening, Matt and Haleigh headed out on Saturday afternoon and I planned to join them on Sunday morning. We were meeting friends that we have not seen in quite a while, the weather was supposed to be perfect, and we were all quite excited. Our friends called at the last minute and said they were unable to make it to our original destination because there was entirely too much snow, so they ended up heading to another beautiful area slightly closer to our home. This turned out to be a fortuitous turn of events.
You see, Saturday evening I needed to leave my house to attend a get-together. I woke the little girl I was babysitting up from her nap and proceeded to get ready to leave. Then, I proceeded to look for my keys for a full 20 minutes. I started to panic, and looked some more. I called the person I was supposed to be visiting and explained my dilemma, then I looked some more. Finally, I accepted the fact that my husband had left my house and headed to the woods with BOTH SETS OF KEYS! Fortunately the change of camping locations had put him in a spot that actually had cell phone reception! I wasn't able to make my party, but I did manage to go camping. My poor husband had to come and get me at 7:00 in the morning, but I made it. And it was worth it. We camped on Lake Cushman, which has entirely too many people for my liking in the summer but is serene and practically isolated in the winter. It was cold, but it was gorgeous. We built a lovely bonfire, and Haleigh helped, too!
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She thoroughly enjoyed it when the sun went down and it got verrrrry chilly. I had so much fun watching her poke sticks in the fire until the ends burned orange, then wave them around in the dark and watch the patterns it made. This was one of my most favorite things to do when I was younger! These pics are blurry, but I think they are cool anyway!
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On our last day, we went to explore a trail that looked interesting. It was lovely, but do you remember all the terrible wind storms and flooding we had back in December? Well, this is what that kind of weather does to heavily forested areas. We couldn't even tell where the trail was most of the time because you couldn't see it under the carpet of limbs and fallen trees.
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This particular tree just blew my mind. What kind of force does it take to shred hardwood?
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I forgot to mention that it was very cold on this trip. You might have guessed that, considering it is February, and we were at relatively high elevations. The weather was so sunny and wonderful, though, that I never really got too chilly. In fact, I would have slept like a baby lulled to sleep by peace and quiet if it were not for the fact that the air mattress slowly deflated as we slept on it. :-) Imagine my surprise at being awakened in the middle of the night by the feel of hard ground and a few uncomfortably positioned rocks. I survived, though, and it was so nice to get away for a few days and enjoy nature.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

I couldn't help it

My mother-in-law posted her results in this fun little quiz on her blog. Naturally, I had to do it. And I HAD to post my results, if only to freak her out a little bit. I was two years off, but had the same description.
You Belong in 1953
You're fun loving, romantic, and more than a little innocent. See you at the drive in!
http://www.blogthings.com/whatyeardoyoubelonginquiz/">What Year Do You Belong In?

I've heard that a man looks for someone who reminds him of his mother, even if he doesn't realize he's doing it at the time. I suppose we should have taken notice when people regularly confused the two of us on the phone. We even recorded ourselves on the answering machine message alternating lines . . . and it sounded pretty much like the same person. In our ten years as family, and especially as I've grown and learned more about myself, we've discovered many more similarities. Of course I count my blessings for having this kind of relationship with my mother-in-law, of all people!

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr


Remember that insomnia I mentioned? Tonight is particularly bad. I was exhausted at 10:00 but I couldn't go to sleep because I still had things to do. Apparently I missed my moment. Grrrrrrrrrrrr. Need sleep.

I also

got a new bike after all that driving. It's a real mountain bike with great tires and multiple gears that actually work. It also has a disc brake, which I really had no idea about (or how much I would appreciate it) before I tried biking around here on a $70 k-mart bike. I've only had a chance to try the new one out once, and I crashed . . . well . . . more than once. More on my biking adventures and accompanying psychological struggles later . . .

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Driving

Ever since I was a little girl, I have loved to hop in a car and ride around with someone to see what we can see. It started with my Dad. We would drive out all over the place and he would show me land his family used to farm, where the old shack his great-grandparents lived in used to stand, old ancient churches brimming over with history where my ancestors were buried. We would enjoy the scenery and see what we could find while he told me history lessons and stories of his childhood. It absolutely made our day when we discovered some new "out of the way" spot, maybe an old-fashioned general store selling homemade jellies or a man selling Tupelo honey and fresh peaches out of his pickup truck. Magical things happened on these trips, like finding giant turtles crossing the road, or spotting a bobcat crossing a field. I learned to enjoy the moment and stay alert for the magic happening around me.

I married a man who likes to "take a drive and see what we see", too. We have found ourselves smack in the middle of the most beautiful scenery this country has to offer, from one coast to the other. Once, we drove right over the tip of a peak in the Olympic Mountains and back down the other side when we set out exploring old logging roads. Now that was a white-knuckle experience, but I will never forget it! On that same trip we also explored tide pools full of sea urchins and other tiny creatures, observed the biggest slugs I've ever seen in a rainbow of colors in a northwest rain forest, and found ourselves at the western-most point of the United States staring out into a vast ocean that made us feel itty-bitty and down at neon orange starfish plastered to the walls of sea caves.

A few days ago, we had an opportunity to drive around a beautiful area in our state, the Hood Canal. The Hood Canal is a breathtaking place, where water and mountains combine with woods and wildlife and you literally never know what you will see. Things like this happen in the north end:
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We camped on the shores once a few years ago and I found myself waist-deep gathering oysters by flashlight and watching giant Dungeness crabs scurry across the rocks.
On this trip, I glanced down once at the water and I saw this:
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I did not take this picture, but this is precisely what I saw, and this bald eagle is actually sitting on the shores of Hood Canal, so this could very well be my eagle.

I was just settling down from the surprise and joy of seeing that beautiful bird down on the sand when my husband said "look, here's another one with his landing gear out." I looked up in the trees and this bird looked enormous! The sun was shining from above him so he was sillhouetted and he had his talons out in preparation for latching onto a pine branch. Have you ever seen any bird of prey with his talons out?
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This is a beautiful picture, but it doesn't quite do justice to the power I felt emanating from the bald eagle I watched land in that tree!

As if all the bird watching wasn't enough for one day, we also passed a giant group of deer grazing along the side of the road on our way home. It was a special, magical day.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

a little bit of political stuff


Republicrata citizen of the United States of America who rationally and without regard to partisan political boundaries concerns herself/himself with the well-being of the nation’s political past, present, and future.

This definition is courtesy of my husband, who has found a creative way to describe a phenomenon that might not be as rare as we first imagined.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

A fun night


Last night we took our daughter to see Jeff Corwin. He came to do a fundraiser show for a local kids museum, and the frogs, turtles, lizards and snakes he brought with him stole the show! Oh, there was even an alligator!

Haleigh is a science fanatic, and she especially loves animals so she really enjoyed the experience. He called volunteers up to the stage and he would have them face the audience and hold their hands out. Then, he would hand them an animal from behind so they wouldn't see what they were getting until it was in their hands. At one point he had three kids up there, and he and his assistance passed a 6 foot long alligator over their heads and into their hands. The looks on their faces were priceless!

We determined after the show that Haleigh's favorite animal was the alligator:

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Although she also really liked her dad's favorite, the monitor:
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And I really liked the alligator snapping turtle:

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Lots of fun!

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Happy New Year (and today's history lesson)!




In the north end of my county is a town called Bainbridge Island. It is a real island, connected to the mainland by a beautiful old bridge, and a ferry leaves the other side for a 30 minute ride to Seattle. It is the wealthiest part of our county, being a bedroom community for Seattle, and the people value the glamour, natural beauty, and seclusion. Many famous people have homes there, but you'll never find them because they're just one of the crowd. Brad and Jennifer (when it was still Brad and Jennifer) once house-shopped there.
But the COOLEST part of this place is not what is there currently, but the history. During the World Wars it was a strategic area for American forces protecting Seattle, a major port city, and the Navy bases in the area. There are still old WWII bunkers built into the hillsides. Some folks say they are haunted, but I couldn't resist exploring anyway (in broad daylight with a flashlight!). There is Fort Worden, a former military training post, where "code breakers" were trained - and some of the earlier Japanese messages before Pearl Harbor passed through.
There is a rich Native American history in this area as well, with the grave of Chief Seattle being just outside the city limits, as well as a gathering place where the leaders of the local tribes used to come together and discuss the future and well-being of their people.

Bainbridge Island is also home to a significant Asian Population. There was a large influx of Japanese and Chinese immigrants prior to the World Wars. Did you see "Snow Falling on Cedars?" That was based and partially filmed there, documenting a dark period in the island's history, when Japanese-Americans were shipped away to be interned in protection camps during WWII.
All this history leads me to what is happening this weekend . . . a Chinese New Year celebration! You can read about it here. It's one of the biggest around. I'm not able to attend this year, but I'm already planning for next year! I'm thinking that I may possibly be accompanied by a particular family member who is intrigued by Chinese culture even more than me, so we will make an event of it, for sure!

Note to self

If you live smack in the middle of the downtown area of the city in which your husband is employed as a police officer, you should always think twice before walking out to the car in a ratty bathrobe and serious bedhead. Why? Because you never know when one of his coworkers will be riding by and waving good morning. Sometimes, they even like to stop and chat. The risk of that increases exponentially when you are walking one of the dogs.

Yes, I had a hiney-cringing moment yesterday. I just needed to grab something quickly out of the car, and it was still pretty early. I had my yucky old bathrobe on because the beautiful luxuriously soft baby blue one that my mother-in-law sent me was in the wash. My hair was a disaster. Then I spotted it ... the sleek silver patrol car headed toward me. There was nothing I could do. I couldn't turn around and walk back inside, so I grinned (or grimaced?), managed a tiny wave and ducked into my car. I can only thank my lucky stars that I wasn't taking one of the dogs out, because they always like to stop and admire the doggies.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Updates

My mother-in-law inspired me to change things up around here. While admiring her lovely new gray and red theme I realized that I have not updated my page in a while. So, voila! :-)

It is snowing here again tonight. The weather channel apparently doesn't have a clue . . . there's no snow anywhere in the forecast! We have a powdered sugar dusting outside our house, but there are cars sliding off the road all over the place in the rest of the county.

I am thankful tonight that snow is my biggest worry right now when it comes to weather. I watched the news last night of the terrible storms in Arkansas, Tennessee and Alabama. I have always been terrified of tornadoes, and that made for some sleepless nights when I still lived in the south. If the wind picked up during a thunderstorm, it was not uncommon to find me sitting on the floor in our bathroom (the center of the house!) reading Psalms to calm my nerves. I cannot even begin to imagine the terror those folks were experiencing last night. I am thinking about them tonight, hoping everyone gets the help they need, and hoping those that lost friends and family members are able to find some kind of peace.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Just for fun

You Are a Dreaming Soul
Your vivid emotions and imagination takes you away from this worldSo much so that you tend to live in your head most of the timeYou have great dreams and ambitions that could be the envy of all...But for you, following through with your dreams is a bit difficult
You are charming, endearing, and people tend to love you.Forgiving and tolerant, you see the world through rose colored glasses.Underneath it all, you have a ton of passion that you hide from others.Always hopeful, you tend to expect positive outcomes in your life.
Souls you are most compatible with: Newborn Soul, Prophet Soul, and Traveler Soul
http://www.blogthings.com/whatkindofsoulareyouquiz/">What Kind of Soul Are You?

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Things, Part 4

Things I love: watching Shirley Temple movies with my daughter (thanks, Grandma!); getting to the "free coffee" on my frequent-flyer punch card; wearing a cute apron that my husband bought me for Christmas (it reminds me every time that he remembered a passing comment that I made about wanting an apron, then took the time to pick two he thought would suit me, and that just makes me feel special)
Things I do NOT love: realizing just how much money we spend on coffee; the idea of Hillary Clinton possibly leading this country; my mother-in-law taking a blogging break (because it sends me into a panic and makes me think she was attacked by rabid raccoons or choked on whole grain pasta or *gasp* just might not want to blog any more and THAT would be something I would really not love)