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Winter Espalier

We missed some apples on the apple trees. They’re frozen now.

I was rather surprised that we missed so many apples on this one branch. They must have really blended in with the green leaves of the apple tree (which are now all brown and on the ground).

While I was snapping these photos of the forgotten apples, I realized that without the leafy green of the trees and all the other plants in the garden, you can actually make out the form of the espalier. We only have the two, but we hope to have many espalier fruit trees around the yard as time goes by.

They save on room, for one thing.

They form a nice fence around the garden.

Espalier is a horticultural form that my husband is very interested in. These two are his second and third such trees (we left his first behind when we moved from our former home to this one). I am not so much into it (looks like way too much work), but I enjoy the fruits of Don’s labors (pun intended).

Once, I attended a class on espalier with Don. The speaker did not like espalier where several varieties of apples are grafted onto one root stock and even discouraged it. But all of ours have been just that sort of graft. We have a total of  six varieties of apples on these two trees.

I am not going to attempt to explain espalier or get into some deep gardening discussion on it. I haven’t the first-hand knowledge, for one thing. They are Don’s trees and he tends them. I know enough that I could prune them and keep the wires taut.

There are several designs of espalier and a lot of resources, both on the Internet and in gardening books. It’s just another one of those things that I should pursue more in-depth but I haven’t taken the time to do (yet).

They do look pretty, however.

Murphy!

We had our real first frost yesterday and today. This morning, I thought I would run out and get photos of Don’s Bonsai in frost and call that the photo of the day.

Murphy went with me.

Murphy was invigorated by the cold and wanted to play “stick.”

I put my camera on “rapid shoot”.

Murphy sort of went crazy on me.

It was so funny. I took one photo, then set my camera on “rapid fire” and proceeded to follow him around the yard. he was sure I was playing with him, and he grabbed that darn stick.

It was hard to keep him in focus.

Later, as we were leaving a party, the hostess said, “I am so glad Murphy is doing better!”

Don turned to me and said, “Blogging?”

“Oh, yes, but good things about Murphy.” I didn’t tell him I was posting this tonight.

A Photo Poem

A simple walk.

A pair of geese on a pond. The sky reflected on the water.

Riffles on the surface of the water, softly distort the reflection.

Two Canada geese on a pond in the afternoon, swimming lazily, disturbing the reflection.

Go Green!

Grass is fascinating from an artist’s point of view. Try replicating this with paint or colored pencil or crayon. There are so many different colors and shades in there! I once had an “artist” friend who argued that “even the color purple is in grass.”

She may have been right, from an artistic point. Purple would certainly add depth!

I chose this photo for a couple reasons: 1) it is late and I have to get myself to bed and 2) green is the color of the University of Oregon Ducks.

I’m not even a football fan, but I want to shout out “Go Ducks!”

I’m married to a Beaver’s fan and my kids are Beaver’s fans and I rooted for the Beavers in tonight’s Civil War game (OSU vs. U of O). OSU lost by a close margin, and it was a beautiful game with a lot of good sporstmanship displayed. I wasn’t happy that the Ducks allowed Blount to play, but…

They won and they are headed to the Rose Bowl!

Congratulations University of Oregon Ducks! We’ll be rooting for you at the Rose Bowl!

Contortionist Baby

Where there are teeth, there are little hands. Yummmm… Love the taste of fingers!

And socks. Socks are especially tasty.

Oh dear… there’s that Cabbage Patch™ face again. That face and that hair just kill me.

This is the reason I think I can survive the next five months of the kids living with us. Yeppers.

Favorite Christmas Songs

Laurelle’s comment on my tree prompted me to post my favorite Christmas song.

This is my all-time Christmas favorite. It may seem really corny, but listen to the words. Forget that it is about a cartoon dog and his imaginary world – listen to the words.

The words are great, but they are only half the reason this is my all-time, hands-down favorite Christmas song. In 1966, I was just 10 years old and in the 5th grade. Life was terrible. I was miserably “unpopular” (whatever the heck that is): a skinny little girl who looked more like a boy with her “pixie” haircut. I didn’t “get” school and barely eked out average grades. I had no idea that I was simply a late bloomer: I was certain I was doomed to failure. I cried a lot.

I had a few friends and one of those was a girl named Trudi Elmore. Trudi had a vivid imagination like I did, so we hit it off with any game that involved playing “pretend.” We had some favorites: “pretend we’re Pepé le Pew and Chilly Willy” or “pretend we’re wild horses” (a perennial favorite) and “Snoopy Vs. the Red Baron”.

The latter involved getting to the swingset in the playground before anyone else. There was a crack in the pavement under the swingset. We’d swing as high as we could (she was always braver than I was an would get so high the swing would “buck”, which would get us in trouble with the playground monitor). On the back-swing, we were over Allied soil, getting refueled or drinking root beers. Then we’d swing forward and over the crack in the pavement: GERMANY!

Ratttattat-tat-tat! Boom! Boom! We were Snoopy and the Red Baron was getting a full dose of Allied righteous wrath.

Over and over and over again.

I thought I died and went to Heaven when I found this CD in a discount bin.

Some classics, Eh?

Anyway, the point of this is the song: Snoopy’s Christmas.

Trudi (who could sing – the eternal curse of my life is that no matter how hard I try, I cannot sing. I’m not tone-deaf, but I am flat) would sing that song as we “flew” in the swings over the Allied Nations and Germany, destroying Hitler and all his minions and (especially) the notorious Red Baron (“curse you, Red Baron!”).

For twenty minutes, two times a day, plus recess, I was a world-conqueror with my friend, Trudi.

That is why I love that song so much.

Epilogue: when we were 20, Trudi was diagnosed with a brain tumor. She was a semester from achieving her Bachelor’s in Theology and well on her way to becoming an ordained Methodist minister. The tumor on her brain was deemed inoperable in the USA, so her parents (who had already lost one child) took her to Paris and paid the top surgeons in the world to operate. They got the tumor, but Trudi’s brilliant brain was exposed to oxygen for far too long and she was left a mental vegetable who lived out the rest of her life in a group home in Reno. The long letters we wrote to each other were replaced by long Christmas notes between her mom and I until the event of her mother’s death a couple years ago. Trudi died about five years earlier.

Now – instead of crying, go back up to that link and play that song again.

“Christmas Bells, those Christmas Bells

Ringing through the land

Ringing peace for all the world

And good will to Man.”

“Merry Christmas, My Friend!”

Christmas Decorating

Everyone left me today: Don went into the mountains and the kids went off to church. I got up late, made coffee and decorated the Christmas tree.

It gives me a sense of peace to decorate the tree (once I have the lights on, that is: putting the lights on the tree never goes peacefully). I used about two-thirds of my ornaments as I didn’t want to crawl back into the attic and look for the other boxes.

It is just as well: I tend to over-do Christmas. I have had to pare it down the past three Christmases. All the Santas and Nativities remain boxed in the attic this year, along with another third of the ornaments, the tins, the garland, the cooky platter and all of the outdoor stuff. I decided to not do anything outdoor this year, except the traditional wreath on the door.

Well, it’s a swag and it isn’t hanging on the door. Left over Noble fir branches, some holly from our holly tree and garland, jingle bells and red accents.

When I was done, I put the boxes back in the attic, turned the lights on the tree and sat back.

The North wind blows.

I love it when this turns into…

This.

I like ornaments that have a story to tell. Some of them have history as well, but the ornaments themselves must tell a story.

Many are gifts from friends (like Laurelle). We buy ornaments for each other every year. And some are ones that I saw during the year that I just had to have for my tree.

There  is    no theme. 

I love Christmas as much for the Reason as I do for the decorations, the lights, the getting together with friends, and the food.

I’m not big on the shopping. That is probably the one thing I do not like about Christmas. But I do love the giving.

And the tree. I really, really like the tree part of Christmas.

Time Out

Darn. Time out, again. Life is so hard when you are two years old. It’s time out for this and time out for that.

Don’t I look sorry? I promise I will kiss and make it up to you.

 

Roy’s U-Cut

The day after Thanksgiving is traditionally our “get-the-heck-outta-Dodge” day. We’ve tried shopping on Black Friday, but neither Don nor I like crowds and the more commercial it becomes, the further from the madness we want to be.

We cut our Christmas tree on Black Friday. Traditionally, we go up into the National Forest to pick out a wild noble fir, but there are those odd winters when the snow level drops to 2500′ and getting up to 5,000′ is not going to happen. Roads are closed.

That leaves tree lots and U-Cut places. And we like wild Noble fir trees. Charlie Brown trees. The majority of U-Cut places grow clone trees that look like little pine incense cones. We’ve stumbled onto a few U-Cut places where we’ve lucked out, and the best one was a place we found the year Sam & Arwen got married.

If only we could remember the name of the U-Cut and what road it was on. Don and I searched the Internet for local U-Cut places (this is Christmas Tree country and there are plenty to choose from), but nothing sounded quite right. There was one hopeful in Colton, but when we tried the call ahead number, no one answered. Undeterred, we decided to drive out and look for it.

The name of the place was some guy’s first name and he was a really nice laid-back guy who grew laid-back trees. And it was located out by Colton.

The amazing part to this tale is that we drove right to it.

Roy’s U-Cut.

Roy has been doing this for 18 years but the sign says “Since July 21, 1966”. You drive down in to the place and Roy might be at the house or down at the portable sawmill. He points you in the right direction, and when you’ve picked out a tree, he will come out and cut it down for you.

We’ve never paid more than $20 for a Noble at Roy’s.

We stood around and visited before leaving, mentioning to Roy that we couldn’t find him on the Internet. Turns out, he’s looked into web-hosting, was over-whelmed at the cost, and left it there. But he told us to tell our friends about his business. So I am telling my friends.

We loaded the tree onto the Explorer and brought it home, where Don used the air compressor to blow out the dead needles and what not from the center of the tree.

A Just Perfect Noble fir awaiting decorations. $20. Fresh cut, in a stand full of sugar water. It will still be fresh when we take it down in January.

I’m not decorating it until Sunday because I have to buy new lights. I have lights, but getting to them in the attic is convoluted and while I got the ornaments out, I decided my back hurts too much to try to figure out which box the lights are in. Don took one look into the attic and said, “Just buy lights.”

Want a tree like this? Or another sort: Doug fir? Grand fir? Do you live locally around the Portland Metro area? Try Roy’s U-Cut. 503-824-2445. 28643 Baurer Road. Take S. Beavercreek Road out of Oregon City to the Clarkes Intersection and turn east onto Unger. Four miles and south onto Baurer Road one mile. There are hand-painted signs along the way.

Roy is a very nice man. You’ll be glad you went.

Give Thanks, Pigeons

Our Thanksgiving Day was pretty quiet. The babies were up too early and the men slept in. Arwen fed children and prepared yams. I got up and poured myself a cup of coffee. Walking across the kitchen, WHAM! – my back went out. Just like that. Major spasms in the upper left quadrant that abated slightly when Arwen massaged it, but which have not yet left.

The kids were not planning on eating here today. They have friends (imagine that!) who do not have family nearby and they wanted to hang out with young people who share similar goals and who have small children as well. So by 11:00AM, we were left alone with the dog. Or the dog was left alone with us.

I muddled through getting the bread dough ready, the turkey stuffed and into the oven (missed my brother’s call but he talked to Don) and then I came down with an ocular migraine. I rarely have the headache (although sometimes I get a rebound one within 48 hours of the ocular migraine), but the little halo lights are disconcerting and blinding. This one was a particularly bad one (brought on, I think, by the spasms in my back).

I’ve talked to a lot of people who experience ocular migraines and everyone describes the halo differently, so I wonder if it isn’t different for everyone? For me, they lights start as a pinprick, then slowly become a semi-circle of lights that blink like the neon lights on a ferris wheel at night, seeming to move. I lose about a third of my vision and have to stop whatever I am doing if it requires reading, typing, or driving. A dark room helps, but it doesn’t make the lights go away. In fact, they can be more intense when I close my eyes and am forced to focus on them. Such was the case today.

I was beginning to think the day was a bust all around! But the migraine finally abated and I was able to relax a little and dinner came together as planned, on time.

When the meat thermometer reached 160-degrees (F), I set the table. Out with the fine china and crystal dishes. I opted out of digging out the fine silver flat ware because of my shoulder/back issue, so we used the Oneida flatware. That also meant I did not dig out the Thanksgiving cloth napkins, and paper was the order of the day.

There’s something very relaxing about tradition and even if it was going to be just the two of us, we both wanted some trappings of traditional Thanksgiving Dinner with fine china, crystal and my mother’s antique turkey platter.

When the thermometer beeped at 180-degrees (F), the turkey came out of the oven, the sourdough bread and home-made candied yams went in. I’m really not much into cooking at any time of the year, so I confess that Thanksgiving staples around here have to be simple to make.

The stuffing comes out of a box (I sauteé onions and add them, but the giblets go to the dog. Can’t stand the giblets). The yams are amazingly simple to make: boil whole for 15-20 minutes and they just pop out of their skins. A little brown sugar and butter and bake at 375 for 30 minutes (or so). The marshmallows go on top  for the last 5-10 minutes. The jellied cranberry sauce comes out of a can as do the olives.

The sourdough probably takes the most preparation. I have to feed the started the night before and mix the dough in the morning so it will rise at least once before I form the rounds.

This year I bought a handful of brussels sprouts and nuked them in a covered container with just a little bit of water, then drizzled a mixture of butter, basil leaves, salt & pepper over them. Yummy.

We added a bottle of 2007 Bogle petite sirah to the table and dinner was ready. The turkey was yummy.

We even had company.

The band-tailed pigeons showed up right as we sat down to dine. There are about six of them in the feeder (you can see five) and one sentry in the limb above, and five or more that are not in the photo because they were on other limbs, waiting their turn at the feeder. We’ve seen as many as nine on the feeder at once, with another ten or so hovering n the branches of the lodgepole pine and the trees across the street, or sitting on our eaves. I had to shoot the photo through the window because they fly off the moment the front door is opened a crack. They are very shy dinner guests.

When I started ProjectFeeder Watch, I wondered if I would get feedback when I entered the number of pigeons at our feeder at one time. I did: “That’s an unusually high number of band-tailed pigeons at once. Are you certain?” Oh, yes, I am certain. These beautiful game birds have been coming to our feeder for about three years now. Sometimes cars stop on the street out front and people stare in amazement. I’ve seen pedestrians pause.

We are the only people in the area that I know feed birds and I think our feeder is easy to get to. The band-tailed pigeons love the forest-like feel of the neighborhood where we live and nest here during the summer. In the winter, they flock up and we see them once a day or so. They come in, take over the feeder, fill their craws and fly away to roost and “chew” the bird seed (pigeons peck small bits of gravel which passes through their system, chewing up the seeds in the craw since birds do not have teeth). (Jaci’s Simplified Explanation.)

So we dined with the flock of pigeons outside the window, Murphy curled up on my feet (why my feet?) and no children to share our day with.

Clean-up was simple and the dishes are now done, the turkey carves and refrigerated, and everything put away.

All we need is for the kids to bring us home one of the pies they baked and took over to their friends’ house. In my pie pans.

I’ve called my son and wished him Happy Thanksgiving; Don has called his parents and his brother; my brother called and talked to Don. I need to call my dad in a few. I talked to Chrystal yesterday (she had other plans today as well). So we’re good in the family department.

Thankful for a quiet day since my shoulder still hurts like a son-of-a-gun and I’m a little more than crabby. Hopefully whatever I did to put it out will resolve itself over night. Because tomorrow is Christmas Tree Day.