Hospitality, Friendship, Encouragement

Showing posts with label preparation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label preparation. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

My Faux Mantel

I don't have a fireplace.

In my dreams I have a scaled down version of the fireplaces at Cracker Barrel!  I love the hearth the big open firebox and all the stone!  Dreamy!

But back to reality.  I wanted a place to use a garland with lights and add a bit more sparkle to the living room, so I decided I'd use the top shelf of my bookcase.





Sometimes, you just have to think outside the box.

I like it a lot.


Emma, Vinnie, and Isla are driving to Pennsylvania today.  I'd appreciate prayer for their safety while traveling.  They'll be here for a week, then go to Vinnie's family for New Years.

I have a few gift cards to pick up still but otherwise I'm done with shopping and wrapping.  I enjoy it so much!  I love giving gifts to family and friends! 

 Now I can focus on the food for Christmas day.  We don't do a formal meal, I cook a head and we set up the food buffet style so everyone can eat when they want to.  We have ham, veggies, desserts.  Coffee, tea, hot chocolate, egg nog, sodas.  

Tim's brother and sister in law, and his niece are home from West Africa and we will probably see them on Christmas Eve.  We'll all be going out to celebrate Tim's birthday!

How are you doing on your Christmas preparations?

Monday, March 13, 2017

Preparation For A Storm


In Pennsylvania the joke is that as soon as snow is in the forecast, people rush to the store and buy out the milk and bread!  Its really crazy.

Here at the cottage we keep a decent pantry - with extras of things we like to eat - so that if a storm comes or some other sort of issue happens, we have food available.  We also have bottled water, and we have a lot of tea and coffee!

I'm happy I do not have to rush out and buy things at the last minute ahead of the storm that is expected to arrive tomorrow evening and last through Tuesday night.


This is the 2nd call from the Eastern Pennsylvania Weather Authority.

It may change but as of now we are preparing for 18-24 inches with high sustained winds.  It's going to be a blizzard where we live!

We are fortunate that our power lines are buried here, but if the weather goes out in another area that affects us, we are prepared.

We have a wood stove for heat, we have camping lanterns that run on mini propane bottles, we have a gas stove that can be lit manually.  We have candles, and we have batteries.  With it being so cold outside if we needed to we could put freezer items just outside the door on our deck, and they would stay frozen.  There also will be plenty of snow to scoop up and melt to flush toilets, if necessary due to a power outage.

Rachel and Tim both work tomorrow, but will be home before the storm hits.  Then no one is going anywhere on Tuesday.

If we don't lose power we'll likely watch a few movies, and we'll play games, nap, read.

Are any of you in the path of this storm?  How have you prepared?

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Wedding: Prep Work


As you know we are helping Nate and Kayleigh with their wedding.  In fact it is going to be held here on our property.  This means a lot of work, but it is also a good thing because it has given us the motivation to get some things done around here that have been needed due to neglect.  

Now we are lazy and purposefully neglectful, but with Tim working two jobs, basically from March until August, all the things he does around here got put on hold.  After all, a man has got to sleep!

This past Saturday was the best day to work on the flower beds around the house.  The kids and I had kept up with most of the weeding but there were a few areas that needed to be done again!  And there were smallish trees that had started to grow up close to the house, and well, it was a mess.  

Thankfully, we are used to working hard, even the kids, and we got it done!  


We have to finish mulching around the house, as we only got part of it done that day. 

Did I mention how the temperature was in the 90's and the humidity was high?  We were really clearing out toxins from our bodies with the amount of sweat we produced!  We rewarded ourselves with a swimming out at Camp Geezer!  The pool water temperature was 88 degrees!  It was delightful.  Not hot like a bath but not cold when you get in!

We have 2 1/2 weeks left before the wedding.  I am going out today to look for some more flowers for the table arrangements.

Oh, I have a mini rant.  Do people understand the importance of the RSVP?  I know that several years ago, I realized that many people think you only have to respond if you are attending.  The problem with this is that the one hosting the event has to assume you are attending, if you don't respond, or else the host is embarrassed when you show up and they are not prepared for you!!!!  When Lindsay got married, a relative on the grooms side, didn't RSVP until a few days before the wedding.  And they had 6 kids as well!  We couldn't have squeezed 8 people in, especially small children who need to sit with their parents!  Fortunately, we heard from someone else that they were planning to attend, so we were prepared for them!

Invitations to Nate and Kay's wedding went out 5 weeks ago.  Hardly anyone has RSVP'd.  Crazy!  Please, people ALWAYS respond with either yes, or no!  

Okay, my rant is done.  Just a little reminder of the importance of etiquette.  

Have you ever encountered this kind of issue?  


Monday, February 24, 2014

Wedding Prep: The Final Week

We've entered the home stretch.  5 days to go.  Last night Lindsay told me she looked down our row at church and realized that this is the last time she will sit there as an unmarried daughter.  She is saying her 'farewells' to her life as it has been, and welcoming it as it will be.

I wrote Tim a note in church and said, "I'd like to go out to lunch." We don't do this very often, and it was what I needed.  Sarah played with my phone and took this photo and the next one.


 My sweet girl is growing up.  She'll be 12 this year.  She's a mixture still of little girl in braids and young lady.  I love her so.

Our van has been making strange noises and it doesn't surprise me too much considering it has 245,000 + miles on it!  Tim found it needed a motor mount and a wheel bearing.  These two, along with Joseph's brother Daniel, made the changes and Tim says, "Your going to love driving the van now!"  He was amazed at how much of a difference those two things made.


 Meanwhile, I stayed nice and clean and texted with my friend who is doing the flowers for the wedding.  We are making a change to the table decor and we got that all worked out - she is a genius, and got my creative juices flowing!  So I tried out a few things with some flowers that I had that were left over from Lindsay's shower.

Then I made about 4 dozen pancakes that were devoured in about 15 minutes, and took myself off to my room for the evening.  I mostly had the time to myself but I was also Kyle's consultant for Balderdash.  He thinks I'm a genius and I'm happy to have him continue to think so!

This post sounds like it should be titled 'Scenes from Sunday" but really this is all prep for the week ahead.  It is the final week of having Lindsay in our home on a daily basis.  There are things to accomplish this week, but I think we have achieved our goal of a no stress final week.  Just busyness, which is a part of our daily life.  

Today, Lindsay has an appointment for a trainer/animal handler job at Sight and Sound.  She'd dearly love to get this job, as this is what she was doing when she injured her knee last June.  She's excited but trusting God to open and close the doors.

Our family from Florida and California arrive on Wednesday and Thursday, friends from out of state on Friday.  We are all so excited!  We pick up the wedding dress on Wednesday, get manicures and practice hairstyles on Thursday, and do the table settings at the church for the reception, Friday morning is making the flower arrangements for the tables, the rehearsal and the rehearsal dinner.  

Then Saturday is the wedding.

It'll be over in a blink of an eye.

Twenty-two years we have worked to raise a daughter to love Jesus, to serve others, to be ready to be a wife and mother, to love her family and her home, not just ours but her own home.  She's ready.  It's a joy to see.  

 I won't lie and say that there have been no irritations or frustrations along the way.  We are human after all, and prone to self focus and for me the expectation that my priorities should be everyone else's.  But our relationships are all good, and we are still smiling and laughing here.  We are holding onto the JOY of our family life.  It's a beacon and a blessing to us all.  

This last week before the wedding?  Bring it on!  We're ready to enjoy it in all its potential craziness!  You'll forgive me if I am scarce here, I know, but I promise lots of photos and stories to tell this next week.

Friday, February 7, 2014

Are You Ever Really Prepared?


My friend Brenda writes about being prepared for unexpected events.  Her Saturday posts are about living a pantry lifestyle.  They are good and encouraging posts and I usually am nodding my head in agreement as I read.

Monday we had a snow storm that dropped 9 inches of heavy, wet snow.  It looked amazing!

We woke the next day to blue skies and sunshine.  However late that night a storm moved through and left us with a half inch of ice covering everything.





We also awoke to no power. 


Lindsay got a call from Joseph saying that over at the house that they are renting (where he is living right now) he couldn't get his car out of the garage due to a tree down.




Tim stopped by on his way home from work and could have taken care of the tree easily with his chain saw, but the tree feel on the power lines to the house pulling them away from the house a bit.  Tim does not want to risk electrocution so no tree removal by him.  Joseph has called the property management people who have told him to call the power company who have said "We'll get to it when we can."  Meanwhile he's used Tim's truck and Emma's car to get to work.


Now, we were prepared for the possibility of losing power.  In fact, I had filled our giant bathtub full of water for filling the tanks on the toilets.  We have camping lanterns and oil lamps.  We have a wood stove and were able to cook a few meals on it.  The word from the power company was "your power should be back on by 11pm on Saturday February 8th!"  Wow.  These guys are working so hard to get power back on - there are so many people still without power but thankfully ours came back on after dinner!  So happy!  

It's been great to see people helping each other and offering a warm place to sleep and hang out, charge your phones, do laundry, get a shower….

When I woke up Wednesday there was crazy popping and snapping noises happening in the trees everywhere as limbs came down.  Later in the day I heard a strange noise and realized that the ice was falling off the trees!  Watch the video to see the ice fall but mostly to hear it fall!



We were able to get out to stores and to work just fine.  We were just without power.

I am thankful for how my kids all stepped up to the plate filling buckets with snow to melt to flush potties, after the tub water was gone, being cheerful, doing what they could.

We did our school Wednesday, but I gave them Thursday off.  They all needed a break.  We did do tons of reading though.  I am really enjoying Susan Branch's book "A Fine Romance."  Rachel is reading Ben Hur and was at the exciting chariot race scene yesterday!  Sarah is working her way through Jeanette Oaks "Love Comes Softly Series," and Kyle is reading a fictional diary of a young man on the Lewis and Clark Expedition.  He's enjoying that.


In spite of, or maybe more so in the middle of something challenging, I find it is delightful to have a warm, cozy, home, and a nicely made bed.  It's so civilized!


 One way we kept food items cold!
My husband is a genius!

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Crazy Weather - Are You Prepared?


This week we've had record setting lows and this weekend we are having record setting highs.  We went from from -1 degrees with a windchill of -13 to today's high of 59 degrees.  We also have gone from icy rain yesterday morning to heavy rain today.

The weather is wacky for January.  And our area is not the only place for this strange behavior.

My friend Brenda at Coffee, Tea, Books and Me has been blogging about keeping a pantry and preparing for the unexpected for years. This week they had blizzard conditions, arctic temperatures, lost the transmission on their van and had a water pipe burst in the garage!  

I'd encourage you to read her post from today, and then check her sidebar for links to other posts about Living the Pantry Lifestyle, Deepening the Pantry, and her Frugal Living posts.  Good stuff for all of us!

Friday, October 25, 2013

31 Days - The Season of Preparation



The season of preparation can mean different things to different people.  It does to me - sometimes at the same time!

I am currently in a season of preparation.  A cousin of mine mentioned last week that there were 10 Saturdays until Christmas!  Oh, man that got my attention!  Now there are nine Saturdays!  Yikes!  

This has got me knitting furiously on a lovely scarf made from my bargain bin chenille. 

I found two skeins of this lovely yarn at a local craft store for $1.00 each!  Love that and I know it will make a nice gift.  

I want to do more hand made gifts this year, or at least give things that are meaningful.

Another preparation is underway here, but that is my husbands' department.  It is preparing for cold weather by making sure we have plenty of wood for our wood stove to burn.  He does this for my parents as well.

All year he works on wood - getting it for free by taking a tree down for someone or removing a tree that is down already.  Its neat how the Lord provides and Tim is willing to do the work necessary.  

The wood goes from looking like this, 

to looking like this!  Oh and there is more - much more, this is just the wood in the wood rack close to the house.

We are thankful for this preparation as we have a freeze warning tonight, and our furnace is in need of a repair.  The house is toasty warm inside.

I am also beginning to prepare for our Ladies Tea in December and for our annual Fall Fest next week.  This is a family sponsored event for fun with our friends.  Hay rides, dancing, campfire, apple recipe contest, pumpkin recipe contest, fun.

What kinds of preparations are going on at your house?

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Garden Prep

We have been reading and learning more about gardeningWe want to do things that will allow us to grow healthy foods.  

This year we decided to try putting paper down, then wood chips.  This will get rid of the grass and weeds and also help the soil.  We'd like to be able to plant without having to till.

 Of course the first nice day in a while, was also the windiest.  Not great for trying to place paper downBut we got a system going.

 Here Kyle and Rachel are spreading the wood chips.

 Sarah and I both drove the mower today...She and Kyle worked hard - they are champion wood chip spreaders!


 We are blessed to have the hardest working man as the head of our family! He went to the township office and brought back three truck loads of wood chips.  He also shoveled them into the barrow and hauled it over to the garden area.

 Rachel and Sarah basking in the sunshine...


Here is the whole space seven rows of paper covered in wood chips.   I didn't measure the space so I don't know the dimensions.

We plan to grow tomatoes, peppers, squash, green beans, sugar snap peas, corn, lettuce, onions.  We are going to try for pumpkins again, and maybe melons.

We have quite some time before our last frost date which is May 15th.  Sometimes if the weather is mild we plant before then.  We are hoping the wood chips will break down well. We'll see.  It's all about learning new things.

Do you garden?  If so, what are your plans for this growing season?
Are you planning to try something new?    


Sunday, October 28, 2012

We're Ready, I Think

This is Sandy's projected path from yesterday.

We are in that white space in Pennsylvania.

We are nearly ready - just have to move the chicken coop and take down the awning from the deck.

I am thankful that we have been stocking a food pantry for a few years.  It makes these kinds of events, including winter storms, easier to deal with, as most of the preparation is already in place.

If you are going to be affected by this storm, know that I will be praying for you.  Cheryl, Vee, Becky, Katy, I am thinking of you and trusting you to God's care.

I am sure we'll have our stories to tell. Can't wait to hear about them.
  


Saturday, August 27, 2011

Today

We are in the red band "high" for threat level.  We are certain to get lots of rain - perhaps 8 inches.  We have cleared the decks so to speak - my whole deck is cleared off except the frame of the gazebo.  We also have taken the swings down, so they don't get broken if the wind is really whipping around. 
 


We are on the border of damage possible and widespread damage for wind impact.  This will be the problem for downed trees, branches and the possibility of power loss.  

My Mom and Nate are headed over to ride out the storm with us today.  My Dad is going to stay at their place or at the Fire Company - last big storm the guys just stayed at the Fire Station, they got called out so often.  If you think of it pray for my Dad's safety.  He is not a spring chicken anymore if you know what I mean, and the last hurricane that we got wind and rain from he was out in 75 mile and hour winds.  He is the guy in charge of closing roads etc, for flooding, downed trees, etc.

Tim is at work today, and has to work tomorrow.  Pray for his safety too, going to and from work and while at work.  

I am not overly concerned about this storm.  If we were in the evac areas we would be gone.  We are not "ride out the storm no matter what" kind of people.  We are west enough to not be in any danger to our lives.  We may lose trees, and power, perhaps the barn could have some damage due to a downed tree.  We may be inconvenienced but we will be fine.

Are you impacted by this storm? A blogging friend Kathy has an incredible story of when she lived through Hurricane Hugo over 20 years ago!  It is an amazing testimony.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Preparing

This baby is headed up the Eastern Seaboard.  We might only get rain from the outer bands, but we might possibly get much stronger winds and rain.


I am planning to take the fabric cover off of the gazebo on my deck and actually pretty much clear the deck of the table, chairs, plants, potting things.


We have some shallow rooted willow trees along our creek.  A previous owner cut these trees down years ago but never took care of the stumps.  Out of these stumps grew four to five trees each...too much rain - we lose one - too much wind, we lose one, so we anticipate losing a tree or two with this storm.  There are no trees that could damage the house, but we need to check the trees near the barn.  


Tim is supposed to work this weekend, so we are keeping an eye on the track of this storm.  His work stays open in all kinds of weather and we are wondering what the storm would have to be like for them to close.  I'd like to have him here with us if the storm is bad.


Another consideration is the animals.  We only have to think of the horses and dogs.  The dogs are easy - they will be in their kennels in the shop.  We will have to take them out to 'go' though, so that may be interesting, depending on how long the storm lasts.  The horses have the barn and the way we have it set up they can go in and out of the stalls as they wish.  The trick may be feeding time - though they have lots of grazing available to them 24/7.


We have food, water, lanterns, oil lamps, candles, books, and games here at all times.  We also have laptops that can play movies while the batteries are charged, so we are good.


We don't know what will happen electricity wise, but we are as prepared as we can be.  


I am going out to do my regular shopping for groceries, hopefully a day ahead of the crowds.  The family is scattered hither and yon today.  Busy as always.


Lindsay is doing an Autumn product photo shoot today for our friend Denny's online store.  It is up in a limited way - you can check it out here.  He carries really nice products.  Rachel is with her as an assistant.  Emily is working today, too.  Kyle and Sarah are going to hang out with Grandpa while I shop.


Friends are coming to have dinner with us this evening.  We are looking forward to it.


For those of you who are going to be impacted by this storm what are you doing to prepare? Are you in an area that is going to have to evacuate?  


Tuesday, March 15, 2011

This and That

Here is my beautiful little grand girlie!  She is 9 months old today and crawls everywhere and pulls up on everything! 
Lindsay and I spent sometime yesterday planting seeds and looking at the garden, plotting out where to put new beds, etc.
 

We are trying some new (two us) varieties of lettuce and we are trying onions this year.
 
I got these plant markers in the dollar section at Target.  They came with five markers and a fake sharpie to write on them.
 
In the garden we have some cilantro coming up!  We love it!  It smells and tastes so good!
 
The pile on the left is a compost pile that we started last year.   It has a fresh heap of wood ash on it, from the stove.  We need to turn it all over.  The pile in the middle is mulch and the third pile is compost as well, I think.  Perhaps mulch.  
 
I am thankful to be able to grow food, and work in the garden.  I am thankful to be able to work side by side with my children to learn new things.  

I saw footage on the news this morning of empty shelves in Japan, because folks are worried that if the crisis gets worse there that supplies will run out, so they bought them now.  Also one of the anchors has a friend who works and lives there with his family, which includes 2 small children.  He spent hours trying to find water and then only found 2 gallons. It made me think about how people here in Pennsylvania, stock up on toilet paper, milk and bread whenever they know it is going to snow.  They don't want to be caught without those essential items, if they get snowed in for a day or so.  Imagine what it would be like if there was a bigger crisis than snow. 

I think it is wise to have as deep a pantry as you can afford.  Brenda at Coffee, Tea, Books and Me has some great posts and resources listed on her sidebar about food storage and deepening the pantry.

A paraphrase of Psalm 112:7-8 has captured my attention and where I want to stand with the Lord. 
" She will have no fear of bad news; her heart is steadfast, trusting in the Lord. Her heart is secure, she will have no fear; in the end she will look in triumph on her foes." Psalm 112: 7-8 
 If we know the Lord then we really can live with no fear of the future.  Proverbs 31 speaks to the "virtuous wife" as the NKJV says.  This woman was a woman who had her household prepared and functioning.  She didn't fear the future, she was ready.  One of the ways she did this was by not being idle.  That is a convicting thing to me!  I am often idle, spending too much time checking blogs...I am working to only spend set times on the computer so that I too, may run my household in an orderly way and to be prepared - whether it is for unexpected guests or a crisis.
Well, this post has turned longer than I expected it too.  
Have a wonderful day!


Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Storm Ahead...

 We have had a lot of snow and cold temperatures.  Tomorrow we are supposed to get more snow, then ice or freezing rain or whatever...


 The snow can be difficult, but ice is a real problem.  They are saying we could get up to an inch of ice - that is a lot of ice!  That means trees down, power lines down, that kind of thing.  Our power lines are buried underground, but if the transfer station goes out, so do we.  

We have a wood stove so we will stay toasty warm, we can even cook on it if necessary.  We have lanterns and oil lamps, books to read.  The difficulty gets to be having running water and flushing toilets.  So I think that tomorrow we will fill the garden tub in the master bath full.  And there is always snow to melt next to the wood stove as well.


And as for refrigeration...well, it is usually below freezing outside anyway...

With all our preparation we will probably likely only get a bit of sleet.  But I would rather be ready for whatever may come our way.

With so many states affected, how are you all faring?  Are you in the path of this storm?  What plans have you made?

Monday, February 23, 2009

Our Missions Training

I haven't been able to find my missions training photos, but wanted to answer Lady Jane's questions about our training.

My husband grew up as an M.K. in New Tribes Mission.  His parents were the first from the mission to go to Senegal, West Africa.  New Tribes focus is to reach unreached tribal groups.  When the mission started in the 40's, the world had been in the midst of WWII, and so they used some terminology in those days that reflected what they had become used to, words like "boot camp."  This was your preparation for going overseas to a foreign land.  Today they call it Missions Institute, or M.I., but we "old timers" call it "boot camp" still.

Anyway, as part of our training we spent 6 weeks of living in the woods, so that we could get used to what it would be like to live somewhere that was remote, there was no corner store for supplies, and limited communication with the outside world.  This was the days before cell phones as well!

A few weeks before our training, all the men went up the "hill" to start work on our houses. (the woods were on mission property)  They couldn't come down all week.  Tim said that gave them the chance to really focus on getting things done.  Our house was pretty small, as we only had one child at the time and he was little.  The house had an area for eating - Tim made a great table,on which we laid cardboard and I put a vinyl tablecloth on top, and benches, which I later covered with foam and fabric when we all moved up the "hill" to Jungle Camp. Then he built a wonderful 6 foot long couch.  You know all that expensive willow furniture that was so popular a few years back?  That is what we had.  For comfort, we used cardboard from an appliance box on the back and seat portion and then foam.  I covered it all with a great old quilt, and voila!  We had a very comfortable place to sit, in front of our warm stove no less!  Next to the sitting area we had the stove and the counter tops.  The counter tops were wood from the forest and then cardboard on top, and covered with vinyl tablecloths.  This made a sturdy surface and the ability to keep things wiped up easily! 

The bedroom area, which also housed our shower, was cozy but built for comfort and storage as our space was the smallest site.  For shelves we used crates from a local tea company, and for a counter top we did the same thing as for the kitchen counters.  Our bed was built about 4 feet off the ground, so that we could use the underneath portion for storing supplies.  This area of the plastic house was the dark landscaping plastic for privacy obviously!  I was not so keen on looking at black plastic for 6 weeks so I brought up pretty "old" sheets and hung them on the walls!  Nate's crib was built in to the corner of the room, right by the window.  He loved to wake up in the mornings and look out and see what he could see!  

 We had no refrigeration, only a metal trash can in a hole in the ground to keep things cool.  Part of my training was to learn how to prepare foods that don't require refrigeration.  Did you know that mayo can keep for weeks without refrigeration, IF it has never been refrigerated?  And eggs?  We bought our eggs at a local Amish farm, fresh from the chickens, and we didn't have to refrigerate them at all!  I also learned to can meat, and we also brought canned meat such as tuna, chicken, and bacon.  Did you know that some places (at least in the early 90's) you could buy bacon that had been canned?  It was uncooked and very salty.  I would rinse the bacon in cold water over and over before using.  It was very good.  Our stove had a metal top, which made clean up a breeze, and with most of the meat already cooked in the canning process, meals were easy as well.  I made bread and rolls a few times a week.  

Part of the training is to get you used to how long it takes just to live when you don't have all our modern conveniences.  We had to start a fire in our firepit outside every morning and in our stove, so we would bank both fires at night.  The outdoor firepit was so that we could heat water (also to burn trash) for dishes or laundry in large kettles!  You have to think ahead, because you cannot just turn on your hot water faucet!  

We landscaped our place with ferns and rocks from around the area.  I had cute curtains at the windows, and fabrics ( old curtains and things kept just for jungle camp) that had similar colors in them.  We made it our home.  We had a hammock out front  that Tim and Nate napped in everyday after lunch.  We had people over in the evenings.

It was a huge learning curve! I grew up in Southern California, after all.  Even though we used to go camping and hiking, what did I know about doing anything from scratch?  

 What wood burns long and burns hot?  Do you know?  It is very important to know for cooking!  The hard woods are the best and maple is a great one!  Did  you know that Dogwood is a hardwood and really difficult to nail?  Not great for making furniture, unless you are lashing your pieces together!  For laundry I used a manual washer, with a hand agitator.  This was done by moving the lever side to side.  Then put each item through the wringer, into rinse water, and then through the wringer again.  Then they all got hung on the line to dry. 

At times, our mail was brought to us, and sometimes it was held.  When you are on the mission field and in a remote location, you are dependent on the buyers for the field and to the mission pilot to make sure you get your supplies.  If the plane was broken down, you may not get supplies for a while.

Today, there are few remote tribes.  Civilization has crept in all over the world.  It makes being a missionary easier.  Small towns even have the internet.  Missionaries had use skype to talk "face to face" with their loves ones around the world.  The need is still there however for missionaries to share the gospel with people who haven't heard the Good News of Jesus.


Saturday, February 21, 2009

A Link

I had a comment on my post regarding some new medical provisions that were added to the stimulus package...the commenter, whose blog I love, was unaware of anything like this in the stimulus.  I am thankful for her comment because I realized that while our family had been discussing this - my husband had heard of it - I had not read anything about it myself.  Here is a link to an article about it.

I am thankful for such good blogging friends!

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Sorry...

For not posting sooner...I have read all your blogs and enjoyed keeping up with you all, but just felt like I had nothing to say.

Last night the girls and I watched the second disk of this movie we got from Netflix.

I highly recommend it!  This is based on a book by Elizabeth Gaskell.  She is also the author of "Wives and Daughters" and "Cranford."  These are also movies made by the BBC.

I also have been working on decluttering the house...I worked in my room yesterday.  I also needed to rearrange the layout so that it was more "user" friendly - I think I did it!  I will show you photos later, as I finished around 8:00 p.m. and then we watched the movie.

I have been reading about the coming demographic winter, and watching our nation become a socialist one...if you have ever noticed, the average person doesn't do well in these countries so we are pondering and planning a larger garden, etc...here are a couple of good links for preparing for the unexpected.  Preparation: part 1

When Tim and I were in missions training we did a 6 weeks long program called "jungle camp."  Tim built our house in the woods, it had logs for the framing and landscaping plastic for the walls. He built all our furniture of wood from the woods...he built our stove and oven (it worked wonderfully), I did our laundry with a manual wringer washer....canned meat, etc...so that we could have our food for 6 weeks...we made a shower out of a 5 gallon bucket with a sprinkler head - it felt great at the end of the day, when we would climb into the platform bed Tim made and read by lantern light.  We are thankful for that training, as it taught us that you can live and have a lovely life anywhere!  I am seeing that it is great preparation for living in possible reduced circumstances, as well.

I guess I found my voice, eh?  

Information Friday

  The Assassination of Charlie Kirk The Turning Point USA founder was horrifically murdered during a public event for espousing conservative...