Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2009

playing hooky


every now and again, chuck decides to take a day off for no other reason than to just spend time with us.  last friday, we surprised the kids when they woke up and we told them they didn't have to go to school.  we went fishing instead...

chuck spent the night before getting the fishing poles ready and determining what was missing from his tackle box.  after a leisurely morning at home, we were off to havre de grace for a day on the water.











they definitely did some fishing.  and even caught a few small ones...

















tucker enjoyed his version of fishing:

mom casts
i immediately reel it in and check for fish
mom casts again
i reel it in and check for fish...again
mom casts...



chuck's "fishing" looked like this:

bait their hooks
cast their rods
begin to bait my own hook but put it down so i can reel in a 3 inch fish
remove lousy blue gill
return to my own line, only to repeat the process all over again








still, they all seemed to have a good time... even if much of that time was spent sitting



and looking


 

and waiting








but at least there was stuff to look at.


 
















and, ultimately, it was just nice to watch them be who they are...





and who they're trying to become.


Wednesday, May 13, 2009

they'll grow...



i was back in the garden again today.  teacher appreciation week and mother's day left us with an onslaught of potted plants just waiting to be de-potted.  
i obliged.

i had also picked up a few vegetable plants to begin the veggie garden.  i feel very uncertain about this new undertaking.  although my usual approach to anything is, "how hard could it be?" i don't want to let over-confidence rob us of a successful gardening experience.  usually, grandma fields all my questions but shrugs her answers.  (she's even less sure than i am... and can only relay, with confidence, what she has successfully killed).

today, while we were both out working, grandma suggested i ask our neighbors, mr. and mrs. durham, any questions i might have.  they are both avid gardeners and have lived there as long as grandma has.  i showed mr. durham a few plants and asked which would like the sun,... which would prefer some shade.  his wife joined us - mrs. durham, whose precious mind is slowly giving way to dementia.  she complimented me for taking on a garden... and for taking over grandma's as each year she decides she's less capable of all the up-keep.  she calls me Sissy.  i'm not sure if that's her generic name for me since she can't remember who i really am or if it's a prophetic label due to my obvious lack of gardening confidence.

mrs. durham gestured towards lucy and tucker, commenting on how big they are getting.  amidst references to vegetables and flowers and soil, she expressed her amazement at how much they've grown.  i couldn't help but agree.  four years ago when we moved in, i was only pregnant with tucker, and now, here he was, running through the yard, threatening to throw a golf ball at his sister.   after some instruction on using miracle grow, i thanked her, saying i hoped it would all work and returned to my yard work.
she called out, "leave them in God's hands, Sissy.  They'll grow..."

i pondered this as i returned to my small plot of earth and couldn't help but wonder if she was referring to my plants or the kids...

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

apparently, i'm a gardener

well, pioneer katie has made a rare spring-time appearance.  usually, she emerges only during wood-burning season, but it looks like her existence is going to be year-round.  

chuck and i decided that this would be the summer for a vegetable garden.  good idea, right?  finally, our kids are all old enough that i can work in the yard without having to watch them every moment.  we've been in our house for four years now... so the essential "work" is done, and we're moving on to the "fun" stuff.  

no, i'm not naive.  i know a garden is work.  but, for someone who is finally enjoying being outside rather than dreading it, the thought of cultivating and maintaining a garden sounded appealing.  about a month ago, chuck and i talked about how much we wanted to take on and he decided that 50 sq. ft. would be adequate.  i thought that seemed kind of small...at the time.  shortly after that, he cleared the plot of grass and covered it with a tarp until i was ready to plant.  although it is a bit too early to plant, i figured i'd better get the ground ready, so i trekked out to lowes and picked up a 40 lb bag of pulverized lime (don't ask) and fertilizer.  

my plan was to break up the ground, spread the lime and fertilizer, and then add some topsoil - all in anticipation of the vegetable plants i'd be adding in a few weeks.  i figured that would take a half hour or so...

lucy took pictures while i worked.  i hit a bit of a snag, though, when my garden tool kept getting caught on roots.   


turns out, my very hard-working and rarely short-cut-taking husband (and i'm not being sarcastic) decided to prepare the garden by flipping over shovel-fuls of grass.  so, what looked like a plot of dirt, was really just an upside down lawn.  i dropped my garden rake, and - down on my hands and knees - proceeded to remove each sod clod... one by one.  that small 50 sq. ft. garden never seemed so big.  and as i dug with my hands, trying to rip out the sod, i couldn't help but think that chuck must have had a really good reason for doing it this way.  for the life of me, i still can't figure that out.

an hour and a half later, i was done - and covered in almost as much dirt as my garden.  my back and arms were sore.  my ankle was throbbing.  my knees were raw.  and i was a bit crispy (did i mention i decided to do this during the hottest part of the day?).  and, yet, i felt incredibly accomplished.  
you can see how much sod is there on the tarp.  i wasn't really sure what to do with it.  but, that's ok - i'm not planning on doing a thing with it.  any guesses whose job that will be?  haha...

Friday, April 17, 2009

signs of spring


after a cold, rainy week, we were all excited to get outside for a beautiful, sunny day yesterday.  it was hard to deny spring's arrival... especially with all these sights just waiting to greet us.

the japanese maple,... working hard
i'm always amazed by how quickly the hostas shoot through the ground.

these may be considered weeds... but they're just so darn cute

nothing says "sunshine" like a forsythia
i planted these primroses last year and watched them suffer and toil to no avail.  
what a shock to see them be the first thing to bloom this year!
and, my favorite, the pansy.  
incidentally, this particular pansy sat out in a planter all winter long.
all the other pansies were taken to the basement to "rest."  they died.