Big Snow!
We some snow before Christmas and got even more a few days later. The temperature dropped and snow started, we woke up with about three/four new inches. Since the temperature stayed cold none of it melted. We got hit hard Tuesday/Wednesday about 4" more, more Thursday, then stopped Friday. We had a nice Italian lunch out for New Year's Eve and then stayed home. We had a nice evening watching Christmas movies. We packed up the Christmas tree (artificial due to allergies) New Year's day. I made a big pot of minestrone soup, with salad and bread for dinner. I used this recipe
Olive Garden Minestrone Soup . Nice and hot when it's 13 degrees out, under the deep cold front!
Here's some shots of the snow and the holiday decor we still have up, will pack up next weekend-
we feed the critters
Cozy coop with sunroom
Sun room doing it's job!
daughter's yard art
winter wonderland
Herb boxes
It did!
Fresh greens in a vase from Target
Dave gave me the barn for my birthday!
Our tree
backyard view
Flowers in time for New Year's!
Little Homestead 2021 Year In Review!
Here's our year in review, not in any particular order!
Our biggest indoor home project was having our shower tile redone in our large bathroom
Tile Upgrade We had done a total remodel quite a few years ago, but we had installed plastic panels for the shower due to time/ money constraints. We had always wanted to do some kind of nice ceramic tile. When we got our "stimulus" checks we decided to invest that money into the house. We did some pricing and I did a lot of research. I saw a couple homes that had really large tiles with light gray grout. We hired a local tile company and they did a great job! We wanted niches but the studs were in the wrong spot. We have absolutely loved it and is very, very low maintenance with the epoxy grout. We clean it once a week with vinegar/water spray and then we do the normal tub cleaning, etc. I feel like I'm in a spa when I get in!
Floating stainless steel shelves
Some of our other stimulus money we used to invest in some other smaller things like insulated curtains, an oil-filled radiant space heater for my office, upgraded some other home items to keep it more energy efficient.
Our garden did really well this year, but it took a while to get established due to the extreme high heat we had. We had quite a few weeks of a 100 degree weather and that stunted a lot of the growth. Once the weather moderated a bit we had a bumper crop of apples, pears, peaches, peppers, tomatoes-
We had such a bumper crop we decided to invest in a second, smaller freezer that we have in my home office. That's worked out really well especially with doing more food storage for preparedness-
I also used my dehydrator and vacuum bag sealer a lot this year, preserved a lot of different fruits and vegetables. Did lots of fermenting, more food production/preservation/storage in general. In the Spring I felt a real need to be more prepared and work on the pantry. Sadly what I feared came true with higher food prices, availability, supply chain issues, etc. No down side to being prepared!
After years of being really frustrated with a job that I could not transfer out of I decided to quit my job. Bye Bye SLHS. My current job almost tripled my vacation, has amazing benefits and it's basically a nice group of people to work with. While it can be pretty boring I am looking at retirement at sometime hopefully in the not-too-distant future. I'm still doing research on that and time will tell. I plan on working part time, hopefully back in education, we'll see.
We were gifted with our third grandchild, a girl, in August. I know a lot of people post a lot of photos, but I think that it's good to have some kind of privacy from social media. Her name is Ripley, named after Ripley from the Aliens movie franchise. She's very happy baby, a real sweetheart and was born with lots of red hair! It's kind of fun having a granddaughter after having two grandsons. The grandsons are doing well and five years old. We're really lucky that we can see our grandchildren living in the area.
Chickens are doing really well, had a real bumper crop of eggs and so I froze a lot of them. We had a bee swarm, nicely relocated! We did a partial re-do on the coop Coop Update and Garden Fencing We had wanted to build a new one and relocate it, but lumber prices were just way way too high. Since we had some free scrap lumber Dave I suggested that he rebuild part of the floor, which he did. He also used some leftover bricks that we had to brick the floor where the dirt floor had been. There are two levels in the coop. The chickens were almost digging under the edge of the walls on the bottom level making it unstable. I suggested a new design on the sunroom for the winter. We were able to ditch the really heavy glass shower doors and use some flexible plastic tubing. It's a lot easier to set up and less weight and does a good job! We also added a used metal storm door, the old one was really warped-
Major landscaping re-do was in the backyard and we had some duck visitors! Garden Rehab I was really tired of having a ugly view from the kitchen/ dining room of the rotting cold frames. We had opened up another part of the garden for those veggies and I had seen a design that I really liked Garden Re-hab Begins. We were able to use the dirt, mound it, curve it, and plant mixed sun/ shade plants and shrubs. Wood was rotted so we composted it. We also dug out the two ugly shrubs that were along the fence line and replaced them with Arborvitaes. We will have privacy from the backyard rental house and it really softens the fence. We did it on a budget and everything has grown in really, really well. We moved the huge bamboo on the left from another area. Only thing I forgot about was to plant spring bulbs, but will plant some other little flowers in the spring. It's grown in really well and we absolutely love it! We will have a tree pruner come in at some point and trim back our huge maple tree for more sun on the veggie garden.
Our veggie garden fence was falling apart, so we bought new metal fence panels, quick install and should last a long time! Garden Rehab Phase 4
We love the curves!
We bought some extra panels this fall and will make the shade are for the hens longer and start keeping them out of the veggie garden. With preparedness, we need to grow more food.
The city/county is going to be putting sidewalks through our street since we don't have them all the way. Basically they purchased three to four feet of our frontage on our lot. Construction will start this month. Will basically rip up our street/re-pave, widen the street and create curbs all the way. Good news- they will also fix part of our broken concrete driveway. Glad they are doing this, will be safer for the neighborhood. We decided to use this as an opportunity to re-do part of the front yard. Dave dug up the perennials we felt that we could salvage and planted them in another area of the yard. He also removed part of the picket fence, since they will tear it out. There's only a few plants left and they will go (sick or stunted). Then once it's completed in the spring we'll put the fence back, some of the perennials and add some new things. We're trying to really naturalize the front yard more. May add some edibles too.
Went to Hood River, Oregon in the spring for Dave's brother's belated funeral. We stayed at the Columbia Gorge Hotel, great off season rates and gorgeous gardens in the spring-
Got to see Mount Hood up close from Parkdale! Gorgeous!!! Wish we could live there.
And lastly-
From Target!
Struggle Meals Show-
I ran across this show over the holidays, on our free
Tastemade Channel's called
Struggle Meals . The premise is low-cost, no-waste meals. Frankie Celenza is the host, a chef and he's a hoot! You can watch online for free. He was inspired to create healthy meals for people with not much $ with simple ingredients. I watched a show with a weekly budget with three meals a day, he was very creative, has some great ideas! He posts on
Instragram and has some
Youtube videos too, check him out!