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Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Long Day, Birth Day, and Earth Day

60°f/15.5°C, showers and overcast. Happy to see the rain, we need it. 75% of eastern US is in drought conditions. 

Our old cherry tree is covered with green fruit. Fingers crossed that they make it to ripening!

It was a long day yesterday, delivering a dresser to Charleston, visiting a friend in a retirement home, lunch at a favorite restaurant in the farmer's market, buying (lots of) plants. Then back to Ripley to pick up electric fence supplies, more plants, potting soil, gas for the van. And last, stopping at Shari's for the open mic. Home by 10pm, in bed by 11.

I don't  think my friend Beverley ever expected to be in a retirement home.  She and her husband had a place in the country, and were doing well until one day his heart stopped briefly and he fell from a ladder. She tried to lift him and broke her back! He ended up in a nursing home while she was in the hospital, then to the retirement home where they had assisted living until he passed. She now has a small apartment at the same place.  

It's funny how we find friends. I met Beverley when I did a storytelling performance for a state reading group. She later invited me to do a presentation for a women's group, and we have stayed in touch ever since. One of the benefits of my storytelling years was making so many good friends along the way. I value all these connections more and more as each year passes. 

While having our lunch I saw a man walk by and instantly recognized him, not by his face, which was turned from me, but by his walk! Todd worked at the library with me and is just the happiest-natured guy. I hadn't seen him since I retired 15 years ago, so we had a nice chat, catching up.

The open mic last night was excellent, mostly new performers. One was a man who had started playing the fiddle 3 years ago. I thought he did quite well, as that is one hard instrument to play. 
And this guitarist,  Randy Barr, was so nervous the first time he played here, but now is very relaxed 




Another thing I noticed is there are now a few musicians who met through the open mic series and are now playing together. So cool to see this networking happen. Last night Amanda and Barry played together, and their harmonies were really nice. The new fiddler is working with them on a few songs too, a good way for him to advance his skills. 


The featured presenter, Ricky Cooper from Boone County, played a mix of covers and his original songs. His accompanist Chuck Willis was amazing, switching from electric guitar to fiddle to harmonica and singing harmony. I am not a fan of the electric guitar but I sure enjoyed this man's playing.



Today is Earth Day. I will be planting flowers, and thinking of the ways we do our small part in conserving this precious planet's gifts. While we don't do the typical recycling,  our work reselling is a kind of recycling. We save cardboard to use as mulch, shred paper for the same use, compost our garbage or feed it to the chickens, buy used clothing and other things we need aa much as possible, consolidate our trips out to save gas, use hand tools for many things that most use electric tools for, grow a lot of our food and reuse jars and plastic bags when feasible, etc, etc. I can't say we do these things as conscious conservation--they just make sense and have become part of our lifestyle.

Today is also our great-granddaughter Cadyn's birthday.  She is 17 now, a rising senior in high school. She was my first great-grandchild. Although we rarely see her, she holds a special place in my heart. How well I remember the day she was born! 


I am so thankful that my late son Jon was able to see his first grandchild, and have a little bit of time with her before he left us the following year. He would be proud of the young woman she is now, a thinker, writer, and training to be an esthetician. 


Life is a crazy thing, sometimes seeming to have no rhyme or reason, but somehow we blunder on, licking our wounds and looking ahead. Here's to a great year for Cadyn, our Earth and all us hopeful souls who live here, however long our time may be. 

Ending with a video taken earlier this month of our very busy birdfeeder.



Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Monday, April 20, 2026

Cold! And a Question

42°f/5.5°C, clear and beautiful start to the day. High of 56 expected.


Boy is it chilly! Yesterday stayed cold after the rainshowers of the night, never getting above 50°f. 
A friend posted a photo from Canaan Valley in eastern West Virginia, where they had a stiff of snow last night and temps in the 20's.  They can keep it, I like snow but in its time and place--winter!

Larry worked on the van most of the day; a shield underneath that protects the oil pan had come loose and was dragging. It was a headache of a job, as he had to take it off, heat it a little to get it straightened out and then put it back on,  all of this while laying on his back because we don't have a lift. The ramps helped a little, but he had a long cold time of it.

Me? House cat, stayed inside most of the day! I made omelets for breakfast--cheese, onion, asparagus,  and tomato--with whole grain toast, ham and grape juice. A morning feast! Thrn I packaged the rest of that big ham for the freezer (we bought it on sale for .89 a pound), and made brownies to warm up the kitchen. The rest of the day I spent working on a chest of drawers and ebay, doing listing and packing sales. Dinner was rice and beans with sliced cucumbers and, you guessed it, asparagus. We are getting plenty.

A friend posted this on Facebook, asking, which foods would you NOT eat? Here's my no-no list:

1.Miracle Whip--only if real mayo isn't available
2.Pickles --yum!
3.Almond Milk --why not?
4.Black Jelly Beans --nope, yuck
5.Pineapple Pizza --my favorite!
6.Sardines--love them broiled on toast
7. Oysters--sure
8.Sushi--um, no. Raw fish? No.
9.Candy Corn--love it, rarely have it
10.Vienna Sausages --nope
11.Brussels sprouts--if cooked properly,  sure
12.Mushrooms--yum
13. Liver--love it
14.Circus Peanuts --they're okay, not a favorite 
15.Bologna--if nothing else is available 
16.Black Olives--yes indeed!
17.Green Olives--nope
18.Blue Cheese 🤮
19.Fruitcake -- you know I love it, the homemade kind only though
20.SPAM --if I have to 
21.Cabbage-- good stuff 
22.Potato Salad --absolutely 
23.Eggnog--yum!
24.Black Coffee --only way to drink it
25.Anchovies--love them on pizza
26.Grits--a regular item here in the past, and I still enjoy them
27.Sauerkraut--yes, on the menu pretty often 
28.Mountain oysters 🤮
29.Pigs feet--never tried them, but I would if offered
30.Coleslaw --good food!

How about you? Any you won't eat? Anything you would add as a no-go?

Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Blooms and Birthdays

53°f/11.7°C,  this morning, now 84°, windy, cloudy, with storms moving in as I write.

I am very glad to see the change in the weather coming. It has just been too hot for me. Tomorrow night will be in the 30s again--too cold! Can't please us, this crazy weather.

I was happy to see that most of the seeds I planted last week are now up, although apparently Clyde the cat decided they needed to be stirred up into humps and holes in places, so my neat rows now look like I just sowed the seeds randomly. Ah well, it will be fine. Today I planted broccoli and cabbage plants, and seeded a row of green beans. Larry intended to get some corn in, but after mowing he ran out of steam. I did my stringtrimming, or at least most of it, and now I am pretty tired too. And since rain is coming soon, I intend to spend the evening reading!

I did a garden walkabout and took a few photos of what's in bloom now. The poor tulips didn't get a chance to show off much this year, and are already gone. But columbine and iris are starting to bloom now.

First though, my one and only azalea, which is in a very sheltered corner. I have tried planting it other places, but I think our crazy temperature swings are too hard on it. This one, though, has survived for about 30 years in its little corner.


30 years, and only this big! The columbine seeded itself everywhere, including right here by the porch steps. So did that fallen-over daffodil and the ajuga. (Pip helped me take photos....see him on the right?)


The columbine started with one plant I bought about 4 years ago. It was purple, but the seedlings vary from white to pink, lavender, purple and white mix, and deep purple.



The first of the iris opened on Wednesday. 


Columbine made itself at home in this garden too. 


So did fleabane, a wildflower/weed that is much too prevalent here, but so pretty when it blooms.


The alliums are just about done.



Below is an odd space, not really a garden. We stuck daffodils in here a couple years ago when a friend begged us to dig some up because her garden was overcrowded.  Then I tossed in a pack of wildflower seeds, and coreopsis came up and took over. Last Fall I put in some extra tulip and allium bulbs, and this spring tossed in more wildflower seeds. 


The walks are still a mess. I hope I can pressure wash soon, but look how the columbine has nestled up against the stone.


I really like the way this purple columbine tucked itself in beside the white iris. The Star of Bethlehem is beginning to make a nuisance of itself in this garden; it resurfaced after a good 40 years, when I used to have a garden here but abandoned it when I started working full-time.


These next two are actually different varieties of iris, but they look very much alike.



The original columbine, still thriving.


Lots of work ahead: weeding, pressure-washing, getting the planters filled, painting, and planting the rest of the vegetable gardens. I guess we will get it all done. Sometimes it seems overwhelming,  then mid-June I look around and realize that somehow we did it. Or if we don't get it done, will it really matter? The plants will grow, flowers will bloom, and nature will continue doing what she does without our interference.

Today is my oldest son's 57th birthday. How did he get so old! He is talking about retiring this year. I hope he does; it is so good to be able to retire young enough to still do the things you don't have time for when you're working--like long mountain hikes.


It's also my Granny's birthday.  Granny was born 132 years ago, and i often marvel at the changes she saw in her lifetime. She died in 1993, just a few months shy of her 100th birthday. Since she lived in England, my sons never had the chance to meet her, and the last time I saw her was in 1963, I think. But I remember her well, a sweet, loving, gentle, but strong lady who had lived most of her life very simply in rural England, and raised her 5 children alone after her husband died in 1930. Naomi Florence Hagger was in some ways a woman ahead of her time. This photo was taken around 1954, when she came for an extended visit around the time of my sister Mary's birth. Here she is holding what looks like a pretty big birthday cake!








Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.
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