Blog

  • It’s February?

    It’s February?

    How in the world did that happen? Good grief!

    I have been busy, that’s all I know. Sure, I suppose I could have squeezed in a blog post here and there, but about what? Well, now I have plenty to blog about. Let’s hope I can find the balance between work, being mom, moving forward with our homestead plans, crafting, AND the blog.

    Well, since it’s February let me share some Valentine’s crafts I’ve made recently. Some cute wreaths. They are small and utilize recycled/reused items. For Christmas 2015 I had used some boughs from an artificial Christmas tree to make a lovely hanging decoration. It looks much nicer in person than the photos show. As a result of that craft, I imagined many other lovely crafts could be made from the lovely branches. Then, as luck would have it, I discovered someone selling their 7′ tree on one of those Facebook tag sale pages. I met her and only then realized, “What am I doing?? Now I need to store this entire tree somewhere,ugh.” Well, it is done. Better get started. Initially I had planned to make more of those lovely large decorations, but then I would have to store those as well. This is not getting better. Necessity is the mother of invention… so, first things first, eliminate as much of the tree that I don’t need. The center rod, nope don’t need it, the base, uh-uh, the metal rods to which each small branch is attached – gone…but wait. Dang, now I know what I can do with them.

    Eventually, when I begin selling my goods I need a display. What better to display Christmas wares than on a Christmas tree? You will see that project later, I haven’t taken pictures yet. The branches that were not selected for that need to be dismantled, see it in this post.

    With those little twigs, a wire hanger (everyone has those, right?), a few embellishments of your choice, and some simple tools: pliers, glue gun. DONE! See that project here.

  • A new day!

    Today was the day. I have basically been secretly writing this blog. Secretly, because no one else knew anything about it…until today. Today I invited everyone on my Facebook friend list to see my blog. There’s no turning back now.  The master procrastinator bit the bullet.

    Oh wait, no, there was one person, Kim. Kim from Made in a Day. She doesn’t know me at all. I did however comment on her blog that I really liked one of her projects and that I will be re-creating it myself on my new blog.  She cautioned me to give credit where it is due when posting information found on another persons blog.  ABSOLUTELY! I would never take credit for someone else’s ideas.  She did mention that she read what I had so far and thought it was well written.  Now, since that just happened two days ago, it must be the final push I needed to make the announcement.  Prior to that I wasn’t sure I had enough content and that I wouldn’t have enough going forward.

    I will fear no more! I have been doing really well lately getting some of my fun things done. Making crafts, I love it. Sadly, the one that I found on Kim’s blog I am unable to work on today because I must buy some supplies. Until then I have been busy with a few other items.  Pictures of those items will be posted shortly AND available for purchase.  😀 At this time I will not be shipping items, they are for pick-up only. But let’s not get ahead of things…

    Something else I will be doing is including pictures of non-crafted items for sale… Hey, this blog isn’t paying for itself yet.  😉 Your support is *immensely* appreciated.

    Thank you! Warmly, -Valerie

    cropped-DSCF5039.jpg

  • Now what?

    So, lately I have been doing a lot of thinking about our homestead. The desire to make serious progress is there, what I have is a lack of direction. When I do not have a direction for anything I want to accomplish I get totally stuck. *SO* frustrating. Another thing that complicates this is that I find myself not only being relentlessly distracted, other folks in my home seem to think they need to provide me with things to do.

    As I write this I realize that the first thing that *must* happen is decluttering!

    By decluttering my life I will eliminate the need to clean, pick up, organize, put away, trash, wash, etc all these things around me. I have seen various social media outlets talking about simplifying, downsizing, and all, and I have cleared out quite a bit of stuff since we are still planning to move, but now I am thinking bigger scale.

    What does this mean? I am a sentimental fool. I keep everything, not like a hoarder, but I do keep lots of little momentos. For instance, growing up I would wonder about what I learned in first grade or what my penmanship was like. How I did on some random spelling test. Mom didn’t keep those things. Now as a mom, I have kept nearly every paper my kids brought home from school: artwork, projects, dang near everything. Each year they get a new backpack and the previous years backpack is filled with all their papers. We have a *LOT* of backpacks… When Honey and I were dating I was travelling cross country for my job and he was able to come with me. We’d see baseball games, have dinner, go to museums…every ticket stub, program, receipt – Yep, I’ve got ’em! The intent was to scrapbook them. 🙂 Unfortunately, that is still my intent, as in, it hasn’t happened yet. There always seems to be something else to do. sigh…

    TIME TO DECLUTTER!

    We have no plans this weekend, but to prepare the house for winter (put patio stuff away into the shed, rake, bring brush to the recycling center…). Honey just got the motorhome winterized today. I’m going to hide inside and organize! Make a giant donation pile and get it to our local homeless/near homeless faith-based non-for-profit pantry. What’s going? Anything that does not fit our current decorating style, we love rustic! If it can be used for our homestead, it can stay, but it must be useful. Another credential, it must be used!!! Beyond those requirements: if it’s for my craft room, it can stay. 😉 I have already begun regretting some craft things I have parted with…like my large bin of yarn. Of course I find several really cute ideas using yarn AFTER it’s gone. drat.

    I hesitate to take before pictures…at least of my basement…out of pure embarrassment. However, I will take them. Whether I actually share them likely depends on how drastic an improvement there is. Why? Because most of the stuff there is quasi-packed and ready to move. Months ago. Now there is random clutter on top of the boxes, some of the boxes are topless (no flaps or separate top to close them – totally messy looking), bunches of empty boxes, toys galore. It’s hideous!

    I imagine while cleaning I will be considering my next post, in fact, it’s certain. It will be about our next steps toward self-sufficient homesteading. Making a list to determine what we need, how to make it, what would be most beneficial to do first.

    If you don’t hear from me in the next week, tell my family to look for me in the playroom!

  • My beautiful dancer!

    Our wonderful dancer teacher, Miss Patti, had a spot available for my Brooke to get 4 hours of instruction from 4 different instructors in 4 different dance styles: jazz, tap, contemporary and hip-hop.

    Brooke is a ballerina, she appreciates tap, but is *not* a tap dancer. Jazz is fine, but she loves being en pointe. Hip-hop? No, not her… Contemporary, I think we’ve heard of it. Well, what the heck, it’s dancing, it’s got to be good.

    AND IT WAS!

    She had a terrific time. Miss Patti was able to stay and watch the whole thing, parents weren’t allowed. There were awards at the end and we didn’t get any, but we were able to take some balloons home. 😉 FUN!

    She was *so* sore. She still raved about how much she got out of it. She still loves pointe, but also now has a fondness for contemporary and hip-hop. Miss Patti took a video, can hardly wait to see it. I will be sure to post it, if I can.

  • Recycling plastic containers

    storage-8-pin

    Some containers I like, they must be kept, no idea why. This is true for the containers that I will tell you about today.

    My favorite color is purple, my least liked colors are yellow and orange. I like and appreciate all colors, they all have a place in the world, they just don’t all draw me in, in fact, some repel me…

    WHAT?

    Where are you going with this?

    Oh, right…recycling. The containers I have gathered the most of are bright yellow, not a nice pale yellow like my kitchen walls (which I love), but bright, stinkin’ yellow. UGH! Something about the shape of them, the size I suppose, and the fact that I was going through them like wild fire. Finally after having so many, while packing I realized, “GOOD GRIEF! There are a tons of these!” Knowing full well that if my Honey found this moving box full of empty Nesquik containers he would chuck them (not even into recycling) and they’d be *gone*. Something had to be done.

    storage-3Simultaneously, while packing up some boxes to move I realized there were some random things floating around in my craft room. Like pins. The kind you keep and collect or swap. The ones that used to emblazon my denim jacket back in the day. There was a pin here, a pin there, a small pile of them in some dark crevice. They should all be together in one space. And key chains, some are relics from my teen years, some are just plain rings for some project I must have needed them for. Another pile starting, this one has paper shapes…you know, when you are making a scrapbook page or a greeting card and you punch a few extra pieces, just in case. Or the kids just find your punches and think it’s fun to make confetti with them. I can’t bear to chuck them, so pile them up.

     

    storage-4storage-5

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Enter Nesquik. Good sturdy containers, but ugly as they are, that label doesn’t come off – must. cover. it.  OOOH, that cute shelf liner is saying, “pick me!” A couple quick measurements and cut with the rotary cutter. Yeah baby! That one roll of liner covered nine containers. I’d call that a complete set and a spare, but I do have more. tee-hee, gotta grab another roll or two.

    storage-6

    storage-2storage-7

     The new homes for my keychain pieces, pins, paper punch pieces and more!

     

    storage-8

    All that is left to do is label them. I think they’re great! They disguise the contents so my room looks nice. Maybe I will spray paint the lids with something translucent…is that a thing? Oh crud, something else to add to my list. :/

  • Wedding gift dilemma solved!

    Last year we were invited to a wedding.

    The problem? We didn’t know the bride *or* the groom. My husband is a co-worker of the bride’s father. We respect him and were honored to be invited to their special day. We had no idea what they have, want, need, like.  How do you buy a gift with so little information?  Cash? I’m sure it would be put to good use, but how boring. Gift cards? Eh, slightly better, but still boring. It’s so much nicer to receive a thoughtful gift that you actually like and to actually have something to open besides an envelope.  😉

    Their invitation was different, not your standard white embossed covered in flowers, hearts, and butterflies. Clearly it’s a style they like in colors that interest them, relaxed and neutral. I really liked it. I headed to the store to find a frame that would coordinate with the invitation, what a find, it was *perfect*!! Leaves engraved into it, the color matched nicely and it was a great price. I had a nice sheet of paper, centered the invitation towards the top, placed a piece of burlap ribbon across the bottom after placing three heart brads on it. Before placing it in the frame I wrote a little note inside, should they ever open it. Sadly, I don’t recall my exact words, just reminding them to always show their love for each other, not to take each other for granted. Then I wrapped it in a box with kraft paper and tied it up with a burlap bow. Of course, that wasn’t enough of a gift so we also put cash in a card, but at least they had something to open.

    wedding-gift

     

  • Recycling mind blown

    Eventually I would like to grow my own food and can it myself. Until then we have a healthy supply of store-bought canned goods.

    Recycling is very important to me. I’m not neurotic or anything, but every little bit helps. Conserving water, reusing gift bags, even the wrinkly old tissue paper. One of the easiest is cans from the canned goods. Cut off the top, use the stuff inside, rinse and add to the recycling box.

    …but what about the top?

    You can’t just leave that floating around, it’s crazy sharp and would definitely inflict a nasty wound. The solution is so simple, it will blow your mind!

    Don’t cut it all the way off! I merely cut most of the top leaving about 1/4″, after dumping out the contents, quick rinse and push the top inside. DONE! Safely recycling even more! YAY!

    can-1

    can-3

    can-4

    can-5

    can-6

     

  • Solar-powered solar-heater

    solar-heater-8-pin

     

    That sounds redundant doesn’t it? I don’t know, maybe, but I don’t think so. See it’s solar-powered heat, the sun heats up the heater and the fan blasts (well…I’ll get specific on that later) the heat into the room.  The fan is solar-powered as well. So using the same sun, but for two different parts.

    OK, so here is how it works: The sun heats up the large black “box” while simultaneously charging the mini-solar panel. The mini-solar panel makes the fan turn which blows the hot air from the box into your room. Makes sense, right? I made this for about $35.  Perfect for me – nice and cheap!

    I will share what I would do differently first so you can decide how you want to proceed with your own.  Be sure to share your stories, I am eager to hear all about them! First thing is to be sure your fan is powerful enough to blow the hot air where you need it.  I salvaged my fan from a treadmill that no longer worked. It just isn’t strong enough to blow the hot air far enough.  I’ve seen some fans on end-of-season clearance, I expect to replace mine with one of those, fingers crossed, for about $5-10. Totally worth it. Design wise, I would plan a better top plate for connecting/covering the fan to the box. It works, so it’s functionally fine, just a little lot ugly.

    Now to get started here is what you need I used:

    • Random piece of plywood, any thickness, mine is 1/2″ thick (free, recycled from a different project we had in our home)
    • several tin cans I have almost 50 (25 larger cans, 20ish smaller cans that easily fit inside) (free, lots of soup! Progresso and Campbell’s)
    • scrap 2″x4″ ‘s. (free, had them around)
    • black spray paint, optional ($6)
    • black plastic sheeting (or garbage bag, though mine is thicker, .4 mil)
    • fan (free, from old treadmill)
    • solar top from a walkway light fixture ($3)
    • aluminum dryer hose semi-rigid ($10)
    • hose clamp ($3)
    • duct 6″-4″ reducer ($8)
    • 4″ plastic drain cover ($5)
    • toggle switch ($3)
    • 2 pieces of screen (4″x4″ each) (free, had it from a recently torn screen)
    • assorted tools, like: *safety goggles*, saw, cordless drill, sheet metal cutter, screws, 2″ hole drill bit, 1/4″ drill bit for can holes, staple gun, staples, solder gun, solder wire, electrical tape, packing tape or duct tape.

     

    solar-heater-1

     

    Here is the plywood we had in a closet that was renovated a few months back. I kept it thinking I could make signs or something with it, but it will certainly suit me for this project. I removed the extra pieces leaving me with just plywood.

    From this piece I made the base, a 1″ strip (details later), and a 8″ square to attach the fan and duct reducer.

     

     

     

     

    solar-heater-9

    After cleaning up all the soup cans I drilled 4 holes in the bottom of each large can (3 in the small cans) using a 1/4″ metal drill bit.  The small cans stay in the large cans in the box. Other plans I’ve seen do not utilize the additional cans, but I figured more metal would generate more heat. You can decide for yourself. The size of the box is determined by the size of the cans.  I didn’t measure anything. If you have more cans, you can make your box larger. It can be made smaller if you have fewer cans, just don’t expect as much heat.

    The holes allow the heat to escape the can and travel up and into the house. Other plans I’ve seen show removing the entire base of the can…not sure which works best.

     

     

     

     

     

    solar-heater-2

    Laid out the two side and the bottom pieces of 2×4. PERFECT! The width fits 5 cans. Had enough cans to go 5 high. Be sure to make the box slightly taller than the cans to allow for air flow. To be sure there is space between the cans and the bottom I added a 1″ wide strip of plywood about an inch from the bottom of the box, then allow an extra inch at the top. Cut all the wood to size.

     

     

     

     

     

    solar-heater-5

    After screwing all the pieces together I drilled a 2″ hole at the bottom and top, affixing the squares of screen on the bottom opening (one inside one outside, overkill perhaps, but I don’t like bugs inside the house.)

    Before inserting the cans, screw the 8″x8″ square with a 2″ hole to the 2″ hole at the top of the box.

    The cans are placed open end down inside to rest on the 1″ strip.

    Spray paint it black. This step likely isn’t necessary. Many of the solar heaters I have seen use a glass across the front of the box, so having the contents be black attracted more heat. Since I used black plastic, the heat is already being attracted.

    Then staple the black sheet plastic to the front. My cans basically stay in place, but at some point I *may* remove the plastic and wire the cans in there tighter somehow. Be sure not to cover the bottom hole.

     

     

     

    solar-heater-3

     

    Meanwhile, inside, I remove the base from a solar pathway light. It had been charging outside. You can see the light is on. Unscrew the cover to reveal the guts. This proved to be the trickiest part for me, having extra hands would be helpful here.  I soldered the fan wires to the ends of the battery compartment.

    ***CAUTION: depending which wire you attach to which end of the battery will reverse the direction the fan blows…don’t have your heated air blow back into the box. 😉

    I’ve also realized since assembling this that removing the light will be better for saving battery life. The light goes on in the dark, so the battery might not have enough power to get it going once the sun came back up.

    solar-heater-4

     

    That’s about the time I figured having a toggle switch would be useful, too. After the sun goes down I don’t want cold air blowing into the house…have to be able to turn off the fan. Can you see that it’s connected and spinning?

     

     

     

     

     

    solar-heater-6

     

    See the fan at the top over the 8″x8″ square, off to the right are the wires for the toggle switch and the solar panel. Just wire in the toggle switch between the fan and the panel, use electrical tape on the connections. Secure the solar panel to the box in a way that doesn’t block the sun. Tape should hold it well enough.

     

     

     

     

    solar-heater-7

     

    In front of the box you can see the duct reducer. To be able to affix it to the 8×8 square I used sheet metal cutters to flare out the side, making tabs to be screwed down.

    Behind the box is the duct hose. I chose the semi-rigid because the price was the same, if one was cheaper I would have opted for less expensive.  With that said, if it were windy, I would want it to remain secure, not blowing around, so semi-rigid is sturdier.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    solar-heater-8

    Stick the drain cover to the end of the duct hose and begin enjoying some free day-time heat!

     

    OK, yeah, there has to be more than that, huh? So the drain cover end goes in the house, but the rest stays outside. This means you need an access point, like a window.  This is where my plans need tweaking. Where it sits in this picture is the best place for sun, but there is no window. We had a pellet stove on the other side of the wall. The stove pipe opening is off on the right, that’s where mine will go. After we move, the best place will be the smaller bathroom with a south-facing window. I will measure the window opening, cut a bit of plywood to fit, making it tall enough to accommodate the hose.

     

     

     

    Soooo, thank you for sticking with me on this winded description. 😉 It took me a couple weeks to make, only because of interruptions and other family obligations, but once you have the supplies, it can be a fun weekend project.

     

    UPDATE: Well, before I had a chance to upgrade my fan, we replaced our bathroom vent fan exhaust hose with, you guessed it…my semi-rigid duct hose.  🙁  Hubby even used the clamps.  Back to Lowe’s for me…maybe I’ll just save myself the trip and order from Amazon.  😉

  • Lemonade

    This post has nothing to do about anything, except that it makes me happy.

    No, not lemonade…

    The Geico commercial where the kids have a lemonade stand and everyone walks by saying “iced tea” and Ice T says, “no, it’s lemonade”. Hystercial. That is all.

     

     

    2016-10-08

     

  • Remember me?

    OK, I haven’t been exactly regular about my posts, but I *have* been working behind the scene on the blog.  Quite busy setting up all the other parts to make sure I don’t miss anyone who may be looking for what these chats will contain. So, there is a Facebook page, Pinterest, Instagram (I don’t even know ho to use that yet), and Twitter. Before I set them up correctly (*hope* they are in fact set up correctly…), it was quite the challenge to figure out how to get the little buttons on the page so you can actually follow along on all those social medias. Geez! I feel so behind the times when I *used* to be really advanced in my computer knowledge.  There was actually a time when I was customer service for a software company, and I solved *many* technical issues. Now it seems like it’s a foreign language.

    Anyway, I’m almost completely back.  The plan is to post a project tomorrow, complete with pictures.

    Until then, be kind.  😀

Verified by MonsterInsights