Friday, May 19, 2023

That's All Well and Good


I really had good intentions of blogging more often, but that has flown out the window.*
I've complied a few photos of May, that give a picture of the busyness of the month. I left out some photos because they didn't turn out. 

This is not May, it's April 26th, but I wanted it in anyway.



Graduation Day -- RN program





Calla -- 7 months



Fishing is the order of the day for everyone except us. 








The end of the school year means field and "play" days, spring concerts, ball games, track meets, and gymnastics shows. 





And more fishing, although it looks like they spent some time turtling.



First in 50m, 100m and long jump

Barry and Christian run for their "play day", but also do things like "egg in spoon races, hula hoop races, jump rope races, and skipping races in the morning, (the eggs are ping pong balls) and things like frisbee throw, baseball throw and corn hole in the afternoon.
I didn't seem to get my camera ready in time and it's hard to take a picture on one kid in a running mob.

I got to a couple of Zane's track meets. I missed the one where he did a 5' high jump.  He's also doing 200m hurdles and the 400m run. 
 That meet he got 3rd in the high jump and hurdles and 6th in the 
400. The meet in the photos, was a 10 school invitational and Zane got 6th in the 400.
I enjoy watching the boys do things.



Running for home.


I enjoy watching the girls do things, too. 

And...
here's some more sayings.
Shoot yourself in the foot
When pigs fly
All the tea/rice in China
Not the foggiest idea
Honest to Pete
Lost your marbles
That's all well and good

Disclaimer: I don't really care if some are repeated from earlier posts.














 

Thursday, May 18, 2023

Fireplace Phase Continued

Work is slow going on this project because spring is here and there is more outside work to be done.
In the last week of April Jim started on the felt paper and expanded metal that goes underneath the first mortar coat. 
Jim is methodical and careful so he taped off all the edges.



A close up look.


The taped off board is where the mantel will go.


Jim put in these can lights sometime during this process and the mortaring in done, well you can see how far it is done.


The mortar was all smoothed on and them combed to make ridges so the next coat that is under the stones will stick.


Jim put vent holes up at the top so heat can escape and is here cutting out the hole so stone can be put around it and then a vent cover eventually.


Jim found that putting up the stone went quickly and easily. It took more time to lay out the patterns than it did to put it up. Here we have the next section laid out with discarded choices all around.






The process -- Spray, apply mortar, stick on the "wall", and apply a few seconds pressure.




All we have finished so far.


I have been missing this clock. It hasn't been on the wall for a few months and I was still looking at the place it wasn't for the time. Jim made this from an ash bole before we were married and since I don't wear a watch and spend a lot of time in the living room, a quick glance tells me the time. Jim doesn't have all the grouting done between the stones, but he set in a screw for the clock to hang on and it will be there as long as the fireplace lasts when the grout is put in. 
 

Saturday, April 29, 2023

Shoot Off Your Mouth...

 ...or shotgun as the case may be.
I've been hauling Zane to his trap shoot practice nearly every Monday, picking up the other two boys from school part of the time, and zipping over to Ravenna where practice is held. It's been an enjoyable part of my week. I always plan better when something extra is going on and it's a good chance to talk to the boys. 
"Seeings as how" they are kids, and I'm not very good at asking questions they want to answer, some days there is more chatting than others. Of course, cell phones can get in the way, but there are enough stories on that issue so I'm not going to get in it here. 
I would like to know how schools are run these days, but all school is to most kids a "necessary evil," there is not much information forthcoming from them. I do know that they think school lunch is not enough and disgusting. From pictures I've seen, it's true. 
Lynette took her lunch all through high school, because when she was a freshman, her class before lunch was so far away that by the time she got there, the good food was gone and all that was left was "lunch B" and the fast food options. All the nearly 1500 kids had lunch at the same time, there wasn't room in the cafeteria to seat them all, and juniors and seniors could leave campus for lunch without needing a parent sign off, which led to a number of other problems not the least of which was several hundred kids wandering around fairly busy streets to find a place to eat. 
There is a new school now, far away from any fast food places and with a closed campus. I hope some of the smoking, drinking, hooliganism is also curbed. I haven't been in the new school. Lynette graduated the spring before the move.

But I digress...
Thursday was the state trap competition. In Doniphan. Fifty miles away. Zane needed to be there at 7:15 because Ravenna Trap had an early slot. We left at 6. I over estimated the driving time and we were there before 7. There was a team picture and the first round of 5 shooters started about 7:30. It took them nearly an hour to shoot their 100 rounds. Zane was in the second group and with only 4, they were done about 9:30. Zane didn't need to be back to school until 11:30 so we looked at the trophies and the vendors, got some ice cream and left for home. 
With (I'm guessing) several hundred kids there, the chances of a first year bringing one home is slim to none. Zane has done very well, this first year, never having fired a shotgun before. He did the best he's ever done, with 75 hits out of a hundred. I find it hard to keep my eye on the clay pigeons (blue rocks where I grew up) even though they are orange. My long sight isn't very good anymore. 


On another note, I am still collecting idioms or sayings or "our way of saying things".
Here are today's.
Some I use, some I don't
Fat as a roll of butter
Looking down your nose (at someone)
Hanker after (something)
All gussied up
Strike while the iron is hot
Nervous as a cat on a hot tin roof
Raining cats and dogs
Brand, spanking, new
*and the starred ones in the post





Wednesday, March 29, 2023

New Project -- Fireplace Phase

March 17
 This week we had the fireplace installed. 
It was so heavy that it was a struggle to get into the house.  Jim helped the three guys that came with it. 

Here it is ready to go in.

I left during the process so I didn't see all the hoses and ducts put in.  We had a duct put in to push hot air into the basement.  Jim installed the fans for that and for the main fireplace the next day. 

This morning we started a fire.  It promptly blackened the door so we couldn't see the fire, but a little fire goes a long way since the brick lining really holds the heat.  It is going to be a learning process to manage this fireplace so different than the one we had. 
I'm relaxing in front of it, knitting. 

As of today, March 29th --
The fireplace is enclosed in particle board. That was done a couple of weeks ago and last weekend, Jim put down the hearth stones and last night, he got the lights up. He had the wires ready several weeks ago, but after some trouble with breaking sheet rock with the 4" lights he wanted to use, we ordered the 
6" ones and had to wait a long time for them to come. They slid in their holes easily where the other ones didn't. Lorene was there on that day and sawed the holes, relieving Jim's aching arms. It's hard work  working with your arms over your head. 
Now that I think about it, the sawing part was Monday and the hooking up the electricity part was yesterday, because Lorene and the boys were here for a bit. 




Now, what will be next, carpet or stone?




Friday, March 17, 2023

New Project -- Phase 2

Where we are as of February 18th.

The problem with starting any new project is the other things that come up that have to be done. The "one thing leads to another" that happens.  Jim has wanted to redo the floors in this house for a couple of years. As of now the kitchen, dining room and hall are all finished with the new flooring except that the transition strips from the vinyl flooring to the bedrooms off the hall are taking an inordinately long amount of time to come in. 

Jim decided we needed to redo the fireplace this year as well.  Our house is 55+ years old and we've lived here 33 1/2 years and used this fire place heavily for 5-6 months out of the year.  We can keep the front of the house warm while turning the furnace down because it has a fan that pushes warm air out. 
The metal in the chimney is starting to warp and Jim felt it was time for a replacement. After much thinking and talking and looking at the fireplace store, we ordered the fireplace with a 6 week wait time. Then we spent additional time talking and thinking and looking and getting advice from some friends that have interior decorating experience we decided on the stone (in stock) and as of February 18th the jury is still out on the hearth stone. 

The fire place itself is gone. Jim dismantled as much of the outside until the fireplace guys came to take out the fireplace part itself and shore up the chimney until Jim gets the framing done around where it goes and then it will be installed. And since "one thing leads to another", the painted paneling is coming off, a thin layer of sheet rock going on over the stuff under the paneling.

The inner blue tape line is where the front of the fireplace will be and the hearth will be somewhere between the other two tape lines. 

The last fire in this fireplace.

Tear down.







Trim coming off the book shelves and china closet.



Jim replaced the bottom sheetrock entirely so he could move outlets and a light switch. The original was 1/2" under the paneling.

After installing the 1/2", he put on 1/4" sheetrock to take the place of the paneling.

The frame is built for the new fireplace to be installed. 

Now it's March.

Ready for mudding.


Jim found that a sander that attaches to the shop vac is a bit awkward, 
but amazing for keeping the dust at bay.

The next stage is installing the fireplace.



 


Friday, March 3, 2023

The Quote Collection

 I collect quotes and then I don't know what to do with them.  
Today is Friday and since it is still cold weather Jim is not working in the formal way that is the usual 10 hour days on Monday through Thursday.  However, since everyone else concerned with utilities 
work 5 days a week and sometimes 6 or 7, he has a few things pertaining to work today. 
He has to meet a couple of people that mean more work in the coming days and months.

We've had more snow this winter than we had the last two years with some rain as well.  We have been on a see-saw with the weather as well, having a week of zero-hugging days, then another week above freezing.  While not all the cold weeks were that cold, the fluctuation made for some soggy days that made our subdivision roads, the end of our driveway, and the road to our home shop a mess of sloppy, rutted mess.  Then after a freeze again, we would bounce over ruts and into potholes. Jim got a couple of truck loads of concrete millings to use on our property and then a little leftover for some of the potholes. I haven't been out to see how it is working, but the end of the driveway looks like we won't be sinking when we drive out anymore.

And what does that have to do with quotations? Nothing actually.  I'm spending the morning tidying up some little tasks that are written on slips of paper piled by my daily to-do list and I found some quotes I saved and since I don't want to lose them, I'm going to add them here. 
As for the rest of all the writing. Since it is morning (or not very much past) and I still have most of my brains intact, I just like to write things. 

Do not judge someone's journey by the chapter you walked in on.

We are all part of a family, so by helping the family we are helping ourselves.

Maybe that's a gift of  a long marriage, that you give up a part of your individuality to be a part of another person and he gives his up to be a part of you.
-- Laura Kalpakian 
GH 2006 "The Key of Love"

Even the closest people to you don't need to hear your every thought on a subject.  These people are allowed to have opinions of their own. They can make decisions on their own. If they desire an outside opinion, you can give it, carefully.

Thou shouldst eat to live, not live to eat.

What can you do to make someone's life easier today?

Hope in the Thing with Feathers
That perches in the soul
And since the tune without the words
And never stops at all.
--Emily Dickenson

Monday, February 27, 2023

Too Wordy for Me

I love words. 
 I said this before in the other three posts of idioms and sayings.  I found a list on the internet and they are called idioms. Most of them I would call sayings. Sayings that make our language more colorful and more confusing to someone learning it. I love the twists and turns that words can make. I added to that list of things that I know and use.

Add insult to injury
All the tea/rice in China
At the eleventh hour
Avoid like the plague
Back to the drawing board
The ball is in your court
Barking up the wrong tree
Beat around the bush
Bell the cat
The best thing since sliced bread
Beside yourself with joy
Best of both worlds
Black sheep of the family
A blessing in disguise
Blow hot and cold
Between an rock and a hard place
Bite the bullet
Blind as a bat
Blow off steam
Your back against the wall
All in the same boat
The ball is in your court
Bit off more than you can chew
Bob's your uncle*
A bolt from the blue 
Born with a silver spoon in your mouth
Break a leg
Break new ground*
Brought everything but the kitchen sink
Burn your bridges/boats
By the skin of your teeth
Call a spade a spade
Call it a day
A cold day in July*
Come rain or shine
Couch potato*
Cross that bridge when you come to it
Cost a bomb*
Cry for the moon*
Crying wolf
Cut corners
Cut to the chase
Cut some slack
Don't cry over spilled milk
Don't give up your day job
Don't judge a book by it's cover
Don't run before you can walk
Down for the count
Draw first blood*
Eat like a horse
Egg on your face
The elephant in the room
Face the music
Fair and square
Not the only fish in the sea
For land's sake
For goodness sake
In full swing
Full as a tick
Full of beans
Get out of my hair
Get your act together
Get your wires crossed
Give it a whirl
Go cold turkey
Go down in flames
Wild goose chase
Green thumb
Your guess is as good as mine
Hold a grudge
Have a beef about
Have bigger fish to fry
Heard it on the grapevine
My heart is in my mouth
Hit the books
Hit the nail on the head
Hit the road
Hit the sack
Hold your horses
Ignorance is bliss
The last straw
Johnny on the spot
Jump on the bandwagon
Jump ship
Keep an ear to the ground
Leave no stone unturned
Left in the dark
Like a fish out of water
Looking to your laurels*
Look before you leap
Lose your marbles
Make a hash of
Miss the boat
My old stomping grounds
Not my cup of tea
Once in a blue moon
On cloud nine
A one trick pony
Over my dead body
A penny for your thoughts
Play devil's advocate
Play it by ear
Play your cards right
Pot calls the kettle black
Pull someone's leg
Raining cats and dogs
Rain on my parade
Right as rain
 That rings a bell
Run around in circles
A sandwich short of a picnic
Sat on the fence
Scrape the bottom of the barrel 
See eye to eye
Sell like hotcakes
Shed light on
Shoot from the hip
Sit tight
Sleep on it
Something the cat drug in
A stone's throw away
Smell a rat
Snowball effect
Snug as a bug in a rug
So far, so good
Spanner in the works (UK)*
Spill the beans
Speak of the devil
Steal someone's thunder
Step up your game
Straight from the horses mouth
Swan song
Taste of your own medicine
Like two peas in a pod
Take a back seat
Take it with a pinch of salt
Tickled pink
Third times a charm
Throw caution to the winds
It takes two to tango
Through thick and thin
Two shakes of a dead lambs tail (or maybe a live one)
Under the weather
Up in arms
When pigs fly
The whole nine yards
The whole shebang
Wouldn't be caught dead
You can say that again

*these are not part of me

If there are double between my posts...too bad.