Saturday, December 20, 2014

Happy 3rd Birthday, Marinn Lee!

Where did my baby go?? Somehow, is a series of seemingly never ending days, three years whizzed by. Where once there was a tiny baby resting on my chest there is now a silly, sweet and sometimes sassy toddler running by on the way to her next adventure. It is so bittersweet as each milestone approaches. Part of me aches for the babies they once were and another part is beaming with pride as I watch them grow into wonderful people. Will birthdays always be this hard for me??

When I sit with my husband at the end of the day I get lost in the memories and we recount times past, but in the moment with Marinn on her birthday there was much celebration for what the next year will hold for her. (Gum chewing and driving are on her list!) We had our traditional birthday pancakes, there was an impromptu photo session courtesy of the front facing camera on my phone and we ended the night with her requested purple cake. I couldn't be any prouder of the confident and fun-loving girl I get to watch grow! Happy birthday, Marinn Lee! We love you so very much!






We celebrated with friends and family with a joint party with her sister earlier this year. You can see pictures from her birthday party HERE.

Thursday, December 18, 2014

First Snow of the Season!

We had the first snow of the season which elated the little people in my life. To them snow is such a magical occurrence and I love hearing their excitement in their squeals of joy as each flake falls or the announcement "it's my lucky day, it's snowing!" This year my excitement has grown because both of them are enjoying playing in it! (In previous years I had one crying to go in and the other crying because they had to go in and it was miserable, cold and wet.) In honor of the first snow we ventured out to make the long awaited first snowman. For Marinn this was the first year she actually participated and she was giddy as she rolled the ball across the yard and watched it grow. We threw snowballs, built a snowman (and a snow chicken) and giggled and laughed as we rolled in the snow. It was wet, it was cold and it was glorious. I love spending days like these with my girls!











Saturday, December 6, 2014

Family Traditions: Christmas Cookies

Few things say Christmas like cookies. Whether your style is gooey cookies, filled with chocolate morsels or a crisp,  frosted sugar cookie there is sure to be a cookie to please your palate. Almost more importantly, you need one to please the Big Guy's palate,  it would be drearisome to have your house passed over on Christmas due to lack of cookies!

Cookies are an easy option for a potluck, a friendly gift for a neighbor or a great treat to enjoy around the table with your family. The best part is you can enjoy them fresh from the oven or tuck them into the freezer and pull them out as needed and they will taste as fresh as the day you baked them. (Off the record: they thaw very quickly and leave little trace evidence when you sneak one out for a late night snack!)

The only thing that could make a cookie better is to spend an entire day baking them with some of your favorite people! That is exactly what we did at Kathy's Christmas Cookies 2014. That's a fancy title for baking cookies with my lovely aunt and sisters for our third year. It is quickly becoming a tradition I cherish. It is hard to find an opportunity for all of my sisters and myself to get together as we get older and have our own families and careers to juggle. I'm very grateful for my aunt, who has quite the knack in the kitchen, for facilitating and sharing her recipes and knowledge with us. We may have only participated in this tradition for a few years, however cookie baking with her goes back to when we were much younger. She was actually the one who baked the reindeer cookies with us which have become the Christmas eve tradition I have carried on with my children. I feel lucky to have such a great family and I am excited to see my children making memories much like my own!


Thursday, December 4, 2014

That's Not Funny

As we sat at the table after dinner I announced that I was going to venture out to the store for a few necessities. This isn't a habit I have, usually shopping is done during the day and with my helpers. My statement was met with tears and protests from both girls.  Luckily Daddy came to the rescue... kind of.
He announced with great excitement, "Alright! Mama's leaving, we get to do whatever we want!" Amelia, used to his shenanigans played right into it and clapped and cheered with delight. Marinn hasn't quite learned that sometimes Daddy is being more sarcastic than literal. "We can do anything you want!" he continued. Marinn settled a bit and looked at him questioningly then looked at me.
"Poop!" she said.
"You need to poop?" he asked.
"No." She turned a sideways glance to me and said, "Poop! Toot!"
Amelia started laughing and Andy looked puzzled ask asked again, "You want to go poop?"
"No!" she couldn't hold back the giggles at this point.
I stood up and excused myself from the table, letting Daddy know as I parted that she was saying 'poop' and 'toot' because I don't find it appropriate to say such things. The entire room erupted in laughter as I walked out the door.
I will never understand the humor some find from bodily functions. I think my children may have inherited this 'humor' from their grandma. Maybe that is why I don't find it funny, maybe I was traumatized in my childhood. Regardless of the why's, these will continue to be inappropriate words in our house... as long as I'm home anyway!
I must admit, it is a little reassuring that when given the opportunity to do "anything you want" my kid chose to say (only slightly) inappropriate words!

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Once There Was A Opossum

Every night as the sun drops in the sky our flock makes there way to the coop where they take claim to their spot on the roost to rest for the night. Early in the year I would spend a great deal of time chasing them in out of fear something would get them before I had a chance to close them in for the night. At after a few nights of being too busy to chase them down I realized how much easier it was just to let them put themselves to bed when they were ready, you know, instead of running around with your arms flailing like a crazy person. Our routine has remained that simple since then with little exception. Every once in a while the gate to the run blows shut in the wind and I have to go open it for the few ladies who can manage to jump out but not jump back in. (Really?! It's like they try to be difficult.)

Last night that very thing happened and my dear husband thought he would stay toasty inside by the fire and wait for me to come home from the grocery run to handle it. The problem with his plan was that it was dark by time I returned which meant that the hens probably my had found places to roost and I would have to find them all and carry them to bed. I grabbed a flashlight, slipped on my boots and set out to find my chickens. I stopped in the coop to see just how many I had to track down. As the gate creaked open the chickens started stirring and I was shot a look  or two as I shined the light into sleeping faces. Sleeping chickens are funny, they wake and look at you but don't move, even if you're lifting them. A head count of five told me six birds were (hopefully) roosting elsewhere. It also brought back a little rage at the loss of my other chickens, no longer am I counting to 15.

I stepped out of the coop and circled around the fence and into the open part of the building where I thought I would find them. A quick shine of the flashlight revealed a cluster of hens roosting on a support beam along the far wall. As I turned a half circle to see if I could spot anymore of the ladies I caught glimpse of one by herself and continued around to spot another. I started to bring the light back around to determine who I could carry back first when the flashlight illuminated something I hadn't notice on the first pass, a opossum. At the foot of my chicken! As she sat perched atop a saw horse he was on his hind legs peering up at her. When my light hit him he froze. I thought he was surely going to bolt and I was already playing out in my head the conversation I was going to have with my husband: now we have to worry about another predator when keep our chickens safe.

You know what opossum don't do? Run away. I remember encountering one when I was in high school and she would run you off, she never backed down. She would stand on her hind legs and hiss until you would give in and run, giving her domain. There was even a brief episode where a few guys we hung out with decided to take her on, wielding their fancy new knives. She still didn't cave and those guys ran from her like little pansies after she charged them.

I was equipped with a flashlight and a cell phone so I did what anyone in my situation would do, I called my husband. Wouldn't you know I had to call him twice to get him to answer? After very matter of factly telling him he needed to get his gun and come get rid of this opossum he responded,"Nuh uh, are you being serious? There is a opossum? Where is it?" There was no concern in his voice, no urgency in his pace. I actually had to confirm he was in fact going to come out.

While waiting for him to make the journey out to the building I took a step toward the nasty terrorist and he backed down away from the chicken and slinked behind a board propped against the back wall. I stood holding him at bay with the light. No way was I letting him get away after finding a potential new food source for his family.

My fearless husband arrived to take out this opossum and save our chickens....with a baseball bat. Not what I expected. I handed off the flashlight and scooped up my nearly eaten chicken and carried her to the coop. I returned to scoop up another to clear the path to our pest. I pulled the board back away from the wall and the husband attempted to chase the opossum out. He wouldn't come, he knew he has the upper hand where he was. After using a little force he scurried out to the yard where he stayed, hissing at us. He was injured and pissed.

This was the part where I questioned the choice of tool to take care of our problem. While my husband defended his choice (due to the noise that would have been created by shooting they would undoubtedly attract the attention of our neighbors and perhaps the police) we both agreed that we would need a small gun to be able to handle these problems in the future because disposing of animals in this fashion is unappealing.

Once the threat to the chickens was gone we put the rest of the birds to roost.They were shook and did not go without a fight, which helped put into perspective the fact that we were doing what was best to protect our chickens. Even so, taking the life of an animal isn't something we take lightly. There was a mix of emotions as we walked back to the house. I was relieved the chickens were all accounted for and that my husband was able to handle a task I wasn't sure I could handle, but it was still sad we had to kill something.

As we approached the house the neighbor's yard was lit up with a show of christmas lights and there was adistant hum of festive music that played in time with the lights. As we started up the stairs and all was right in the world as we knew our flock would be safe for another night and we were another step deeper into farm life.