If you do stuff, stuff gets done.......

If you do stuff, stuff gets done.......

Thursday, July 9, 2020

July #3- more plants, a new mask and a DIY scooter rack

Hello everyone 
This is our zinnia patch-the easiest, least amount of effort for a field of flowers that bloom all summer.  
They are grown from seeds that I save each year.  


 Ducky posing with the flowers 



New veil mask sewn this afternoon and I really like it.  
 
veil mask instructions from JenniferMaker.com
It fits closer at the bottom than it looks like but is cooler and more breathable than other masks I’ve sewn.  


I plan to sew some more and make them an inch longer so I can tuck the bottom of the mask into whatever shirt I am wearing.  
My husband tried it and he thinks it’s great too.  
I did not put nose wire in,  the tuck at the top makes the mask fit closely.  
I used elastic for the ears and didn’t add the optional filter pocket.  

The designer says this mask can be sewn by hand and I agree with her.  If you need a mask and don’t machine sew,  I think her free pattern and instructions could help you make one.  
I’m afraid we are going to be needing masks a long time.......



This would also look much better if this mask didn’t clash with my shirt .  


We keep scooters here for the grands to ride (not that they have been here much with all the shutdowns and such 😑)
None of our scooters have kickstands and they make a big mess pile without something to stand them up.   Believe it or not, we have even more scooters but they are in a shed.  

My husband built this nifty scooter stand from scraps of 2 by 4s.  


It works perfectly and keeps the scooters upright and out of the way. 



Below is another oddball plant called a Mules Ear.  It seems to reproduce new plants on the end of the leaves.  

When it makes a new plant,  the leaf gets heavy and it drops down and I’m assuming if this was planted in the ground,  then the new plant would just grow from there.  
I plan to cut some of the babies off and put them in small pots.  



There are tiny roots coming out of the underside.  


Hope you’re all well, staying as busy as you want to be and also finding some good things to enjoy during this hard time 

❤️ Rhonda 






Wednesday, July 8, 2020

July things #2- food and oddball plants

Hello everyone 
Below is the produce I prepped at the first of this week 



The square dish is fresh salsa made with many grape tomatoes from our garden and they are so good! 

The grandchildren all enjoy the fairy gardens but they haven’t been here much because of covid.  I enjoy these dish gardens,  they’re just fun to rearrange and play with when we’re sitting at the patio table.  
So,  I made a second one.  I used a big a Tupperware lid that was in our discard pile and this one mainly has a turtle theme as one grandson is very fond of “tuttles”. 


And the original one 


You can buy things for fairy gardens but a lot of the stuff in ours is doodads we already had,  seashells,  little found rocks,  a sign made by a granddaughter 


We have some odd plants this summer 


This pot started out with one small succulent on the left and a painted plant my husband bought last summer. 
Both have doubled, maybe tripled in size this spring/summer. 
The one on the right has a bloom starting, similar to how a hosta blooms.  
Leaves that fell off the left succulent and landed in the pot have started many new plants,  all on their own with no help from me.
Succulents do OK inside during cold months but they really thrive outdoors in warm weather.  



2 more odd plants are Mother of Millions and Mother of Thousands.  
They both reproduce by growing baby plants along the edge of their leaves.  Then the baby plants grow into big plants when they fall in the dirt. 




These 2 plants are considered invasion in really warm climates and should be kept in pots to prevent them from taking over. 

And it’s hot here and getting hotter- but we are enjoying being outside early mornings and late evenings.  
Hope you are all well
❤️ Rhonda 

Sunday, July 5, 2020

July things #1 - First to do list




Weeding
  Under bushes and move caladium pots 
 Under the tree that turned into a bush 
   Berry patch                   Mow? 


Kitchen 
  Boil eggs           Bottle water in kitchen 
  Make salad        Make veggie tray and dip 
  Make fresh salsa            Bake dessert 
  Make chicken veg soup maybe 

Plan meals 
  Turkey sloppy joes 
  Turkey lasagna 
  Burgers 
  Roast 
   Whole chicken 
    
Housekeeping 
  Guest room bedding     
   Hall bath
   Master bath 
   Vac            Mop 
   Dust 
   Laundry      Master sheets 

Extras 
Ducky to Spa 
Pay bills 
Grocery pickup end of week? 
Amazon thingie straightened out 






Hello everyone,  I’ve been busy with lots of yard and garden work,  and also feeling at my wit’s end deciphering this Covid yuck and how to live the new normal as people in the higher risk group.    I’m guessing a lot of you can say the exact thing.  

Anyway,  above is my to do list before I print it out and hang it in our kitchen.  


I’m still doing some food prep to make meals easier.  
Below is last week’s ......
We especially liked the hard boiled eggs with salad and sandwiches.  



Also a big bowl of naval oranges for snacking 



Some of our grandsons are playing baseball and one of them loves to slide in the Oklahoma red dirt when he crosses home plate (even when he doesn’t need to) in his white baseball pants.  
His mom asked if I could get his white pants cleaner than she was.  
First I washed them in Tide, my go-to stain remover and it helped but didn’t clean the red dirt from the knees.  
So I did some research and saw Out White Brite was recommended by other people washing white ball pants.  
Out White Brite is a powder and is sold at Walmart for less than $4.  I’m sure it’s sold other places too but my town has 3 Walmarts and not a lot of other stores so it’s where I mostly shop.  
I put 1/2 cup of it with hot tap water in a big bowl and soaked the pants an hour or so and they came remarkably cleaner!  




The only bad part is the cleaner has the same scent of hair permanent solution but the scent does wash out.  

Hope you’re all fine and enjoying summer πŸŒ»πŸ‰⛱ πŸŒžπŸ‘πŸ—½πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ

❤️Rhonda 








Friday, June 12, 2020

June Homemaking #4- sewing, a frog and a Stromboli




This weeks finished sewing so far- 
16 off white napkins
9 checkerboard napkins
4 kitchen towels
All made with fabric on hand that I got who knows where 



All will be used in my kitchen 




Can you see the tiny tree frog sitting on top of this ceramic tile sign?  
At first I thought it was a leaf and almost brushed it off.  
He was sitting on top of the outdoor smoker last week.  






Homemade Stromboli by my daughter and son in law 



 "we just rolled the dough out on the counter, put on sauce, cheese and toppings, then you roll it up like a cinnamon roll.  Seal the edges and the end and put it on a baking sheet.  I brushed the outside with an egg wash and sprinkled with garlic powder and Italian seasoning.  Then I baked it for 10 minutes at 500°, then for about 15 minutes at 375°."


Covid cases are going crazy in our little town- 25 new positives in the last 2 days- 
I thought we were almost in the clear but apparently we are not.  
I’ll just keep staying home and taking all the precautions we know to do.  

Let’s stay home ❤️ 🏠❤️
Rhonda  

Monday, June 8, 2020

June homemaking #3 - just a jumble of stuff

Good morning 🌞

First, here is my new to do list 


I’ve been busy already and have walked and weeded and have a red, sweaty face to show for it 



My husband picked a few edibles this morning 


And he picked up our weekly Walmart
It’s not much but we had plenty of other stuff on hand.  Not shown- 3 boxes of Great Value ice cream sandwiches already in the freezer 


I’ve talked about zinnias many times. I’m so happy this batch of  volunteer zinnias in a front flower bed are starting to bloom. 
I didn’t plant this batch this year,  they grew from seeds spread from last year’s zinnias. 



He’s a little late but one solitary Easter lily is also blooming in that front bed 


Here’s a quick meal a put together in about 10 minutes.  Our oldest and 2 grandsons were here one day helping with a backyard irrigation pump (in the end it didn’t work though and the pump is going back to Amazon)
The veggie tray was already made and the onions cut up.  
I took 2 packs of franks and 1 pack of buns from the freezer- cooked the franks in water on the stovetop and toasted the buns in the broiler.  



We ate on the patio and there were no leftovers except chips.  
We have enjoyed so many meals on the patio this spring but summer heat is here now and we probably won’t be eating out there much at all.  

I hope you all are fine. 
I must confess I have had some “down” days,  just feeling so bad about so many things.  
But staying busy helps much more that just sitting so that’s my plan.  

❤️ Rhonda