harvest time

Ocr 2012 harvest web

It was a misty three day weekend around the farm.  The neighbors are still harvesting. The pumpkin's are coming in now as well.  We had one near perfect weekend of football and cornfields and a quick trip to Cambridge.
Tomorrow the telephone company is sending an engineer out to explore our phone line.  Here is hoping. 

London day trip

 

A few snaps of London daytrip from the phone files. This was during the paralympics. You'll see the symbol hanging from the bridge. 

We have only made the London (downtown) trip in various small combinations of family members and I haven't been one of those members yet. It's nerve wracking to me to think of taking the littles on the underground so we are practicing in smaller groups and getting our bearings.  Dh went first with the bigger kids. <g>


 london tower bridge web-3

london tower bridge web-6

 london tower bridge web

 london tower bridge web-5

london tower bridge web-4

 london buses web

7 Quick Takes

 

This is for Asher, my boy around the world.  Ok actually, I have three boys around the world from me at this moment.  (pause to weep)  This is for my boy in Korea who tends to skim through my blog saying to himself "blah blah homeschool, blah blah food, blah blah…. Hey! 7 Quick Takes!"  

(more links at Conversiondiary.com!)

I have to add an 8th take here.  I cannot connect to the net reliably to save my life here so I uploaded the pics for this post to Instagram if you'd like to see them. (I can compose these posts on the phone but not add pics)  I am starryskykim over there. Come join us! I hope we can fix the net at home, but it may not be meant to be. Solves the whole excess surfing danger! 

1.

We got a second car – this one British specs.  Which means I am on the other side now.

Can I say to all the people who said this would be easier – you were right. WAY right.  We only lost one seatbelt in capacity but it is much smaller making maveuvering the back roads much easier.  Visibility is much better over near the center of the road.  And yes, after a certain number of weeks habit does kick in.  I still hit the windshield (wind screen) wipers occasionally instead of the turn signal.  I missed a fairly high percentage of exits on roundabouts today while driving friends to a larger city.  But all in all – it's going better.  

2.

We visited the ENT/Audiologist to discuss options for Brendan's ear.  He was born with a mild microtia and we have been weighing the pro's and con's of surgery.  (Still weighing.) But while he was in the audiology clinic I was  fascinated by the decibel chart. Did you know that ranked right below the level at which you should not be exposed for more than 15 minutes you have "baby crying"?  Ranked right by motorcycle and just below jack hammer and rock concert.  

I knew it. 

3.

Random British grocery factoid: 

Eggs are not refrigerated in this country.  They weren't in Germany either.  This may totally wig out American friends.  No one seems worse for wear however. 

4.

Random British grocery bit #2:   PG Tips come in cereal box sized packages here.  They are not playin'.

5.

While shopping today I saw this awsome art work.  It was a series of framed prints, the design created from reducing pages of classic lit and fitting every page of the book into the frame.  Colin would love this. (do check this on Instagram because I have no other link.  If you know where to find this to buy online please share!)

 

6.

I mentioned we have made a lot of pie this week.  We have eaten a fair amount of pie this week but we also gave some away.  Friends were moving into their new home this week as well and I wanted to bring them a meal.  Great intention, but often requires more than one take around here. The afternoon of the planned dinner I realized the chicken had been frozen rather than in the fridge. After calculating the window of time I had to make the delivery I knew we weren't going to finish in time.  We rainchecked til the next day which always makes me feel bad.  

Next day we had the appt for B above.  I traded kids back at the house and took others to the Shakespeare class, while moving food into and out of the oven.  Then traded them back again for the football practice kids and grabbed the dinner Alannah had helped finish.  We pulled it off.  By late that evening I was a little tapped but happy.  I woke up in the morning to find a neighbor at the door bringing cinnamon rolls.  The circle of hospitality continues.  It is so good to be part of it both in the blessing and being blessed. 

And a PS to my neighbor: when I see you next I hope to have run a comb through my hair, be wearing an outfit with more redeeming attributes besides "4 Way stretch," and maybe even have waved a wand of mascara. No promises though. ; ) 

7. 

On that note, a loaves and fishes story. 

The other appts we had this week involved the Red Cross.  Alannah has been doing her own discerning and determined that her biggest priority right now was not income but service and experience.  All she ever wanted to do was help people.  She is getting her chance.  She is training with the Red Cross.

This whole thing got me thinking.  For so many years I have had my hands more than full at home and physically just wasn't able to push any harder than I was. But God knew my heart. The children did too.

My scope has been necessarily home-based.  It was not to remain there however because home is a training ground for future citizens of a bigger world who have now gone out to give back in the unique ways they are gifted. One has worked in a soup kitchen, one is coaching inner city kids, one is serving in the military, one in the Red Cross.  Many small hands here with us are shaping pie crusts, making cards, saying prayers, and preparing for bigger things.

Moral of the story. You can multiply your efforts many times over.  This is how. You give them your all, they pay it forward.  You don't "spend" time with your kids.  You invest it. It reaps major dividends.

So a big thank you to my big kids for taking your candle out into the world.

Light it up.    Love you.   : ) 

 

Beet, beet, sugar beet, beet…

Sept 2012 beet field oil web

The farm is coming to the end of harvest season and its been a flurry of activity around here with tractors moving about and co-op trucks picking up grain and onions. Last week they began "lifting" the sugar beets. 

 

Sept 2012 sugar beets web-4

This has been fascinating to me, having never actually seen a sugar beet up close. They are enormous for what it's worth.  

 

Sept 2012 sugar beets web-2

If you are a person of a certain age you might remember the song that has been on continuous play in my brain since the harvest began and it first came to mind. Sesame Street anyone?  I apologize in advance – it sticks!  The video is a good overview of the whole process though.  

Sept 2012 sugar beets web-5

My children couldn't quite picture how those huge roots could make sugar.  When they saw some of them split open they had to ditch their initial theory that the were rather sugar filled.  

Sept 2012 sugar beets web-6

Sept 2012 sugar beets web

an apple pie a day

apples door

That is pretty much our solution of choice to the question of how to handle the bulging baskets of apples multiplying daily.  There is a small orchard enclosed by a venerable hedge on the farm which is now in need of immediate attention.  
Combine that with a fault on the phone line between our place and the road, lots of Shakespeare immersion preparing for an upcoming tour of the Globe Theater, and all the football September and October entail, you get one very short update tonight.  : )

It’s good to be queen

2012 ants web

"Young ants, like young people, wish to set up for themselves in a new home. They spread their fine wings.  Off they fly!
They swarm as the bees do. As they rise high from the earth, they drift off on the wind. Very many of them tire out and die or are blown into the water and are drowned.
A few live and settle on places fit for a new ant-hill.  It is the mother or queen ant who chooses the new home. 
When she has found the right place, what do you think she does? She takes off her wings, as she does not care to fly any more. The ant does not tear off her wings.  She unhooks them, and lets them fall away, and does not seem to miss them. " 
Seaside and Wayside No. 2, Julia McNair Wright, 1888
 Brendan read me these words this week and I have chewed them over and over in my head.  It is humbling, really, how she commits to her mission so fully, without reserve. Like Cortez burning the ships. 
 She doesn't thrash against her sandy walls, bemoaning the smallness, the hidden nature of her empire.  She doesn't gaze out of the hill wondering what might be happening inside other colonies. Have they constructed differently? Better? Are they larger? More productive?  She doesn't wonder if she should have been a worker or a drone or… who knows what. She isn't blown about on the winds of curiosity and discontent. 
No.
She settles in and shapes one small but complex and remarkably rich world, where she is completely indispensable, where what she does matters today and tomorrow.