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Friday, February 20, 2026

Signs of Spring and Hope

48°f/about 9°C, beautiful sunny day but very windy. Last night was thunderstorms, hail, lightning, and apparently a tornado warning, but we slept right through that.

Buds on the silver maple! They won't last though, if the forecast for this weekend is correct. 

Wild, wild weather! The wind today was incredible, blowing things around. One of our antique malls called and said the eibd was pushing in the garage doors which form our back wall, and a few things had broken! They were moving other things away from that wall. I can't get back in to rearrange until next week, as i am leaving for granddaughter Cassie's wedding this weekend. I'm sure it will be fine until I get back.

It has been busy days here. I am working hard to get me ebay room cleaned out and am about 75% finished with that project.  I take totes of stuff out, sort it for booth or thrift. Then price what I am keeping, which of course means research. It's slow and time-consuming, but i have priced 13 totes so far, and 8 of those have been put into the booths. So, progress! In addition, I am also painting a few things: a high chair, a small table, an old chair that will be sold as a "garden chair", a chest of drawers, several picture frames, etc. 

Yesterday was haircut, pedicure, and booth restocking day. Larry ran errands (picking up oil change supplies for the van, post office to mail an ebay sale, etc) while I got prettified,  when we added stock and tidied booths at both locations before coming home. I made steak, baked potatoes and broccoli for dinner before we pretty much collapsed in front of the fire. Still no TV, just haven't had time to go pick out a new one yet, but we have really missed it. 

I've also been getting into a little spring cleaning, and that feels good. Chasing winter's dust out the door! Larry has been doing cleanup around the garage, getting manure spread on the gardens, and tidying up his workbench. Pretty sure the heavens are going to crack at that last one, as he has never done that in the 10 years he's had that workbench! 

My long campaign to get him to cut back on drinking is finally paying off--- he has realized the damage it was doing to his health and has switched to zero beer (0 alcohol, 0 calories, 29 carbs) during the week, quit drinking any hard liquor, and has his Guinness, in moderation, on the weekends. Hallelujah! He has more energy, is less tired, and is much, much more cheerful and easy to get along with. It has been a hard slog, friends, but we're getting there. I know there may be some backslides, but I am thrilled that he is finally doing this by his own choice. 

In other news, I heard Spring Peepers today! Also saw the first snowdrop in bloom, and was buzzed by a pollen-laden honeybee who apparently was working the buds on the silver maple. I worry about that bee; surely the wild bees haven't opened their hives yet? The weather will turn cold and snowy again Sunday,  so that will not be good for them.

It was lovely to have the doors open and to go outside and putter around in the flowerbeds a bit, and to have coffee on the porch. Oddly, I am not feeling the usual urge to get out there and plant lettuce,  which I have often done in February. Just not feeling it this year, and I think I am beginning a gradual reduction in the amount of veggies I plant. I think. We shall see as the season progresses.

I was thrilled to hear of the Supreme Court decision today that the Orange One's tariffs were illegal! What great news! But, it has cost businesses, and us, dearly. The other great news was Springsteen's concert tour. Yes! Finally,  people who are listened to are stepping up. It often takes the artists to make the first strong move, doesn't it? Politicians are too worried about their own skin. 

Of course, our state continues to slide into the Dark Ages. A vote to allow 18 year old to carry concealed weapons without a permit, a change to election rules to hide information about donors to political campaigns,  moving ahead with legislation to allow data centers to be built in some of our most pristine wilderness, and the list goes on and on. It's infuriating that they are so backward, but a whole slew of Democratic candidates, many of them women, are running this year. So maybe there is hope for this benighted state yet.

Leaving you with this photo of our thermometer, taken 11 years ago on this date. Our low that day was -16°f/-26.6C. Brrrr! Link to that post here


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

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Almost Wordless Wednesday: Roses, Cookies, and Other Random Stuff

56°f/13.3°C, overcast. A warm start to the day.

Roses from Larry, which he gave me yesterday. He gave me beautiful red carnations and Pacski
doughnuts on Saturday. If you know those doughnuts, you'd know how delicious they are, and only available for a brief time each year. When he went to the store yesterday he found the roses marked down from $22 to $5. Aren't they lovely?


Irish Shortbread cookies. Oddly, I can't find the online Dr recipe I used! Basically, it was 1 cup softened butter, 1/4 tp salt,  1 1/2 cups sugar, 4 cups of flour, and 2 tsp vanilla. I preheated the oven to 350°. I creamed the butter and sugar, added the vanilla, then the flour and salt. Idid not use cornstarch as most recipes call for, and did not refrigerate the dough, but they came out great. I rolled out the dough on a floured surface, cut them out, pricked with a fork to keep them from puffing up. Baked for 8 minutes, took them out and sprinkled them with sugar, then returned them to the oven for 5 more minutes. I allowed them to cool on the tray for 5 minutes before moving them to a cooling rack. It yielded about 48 cookies.


An aerial photo of our place, apparently taken recently as Sarah's is in the photo, upper right. Our house is sort of center, and not easy to see.


Found in my stash as I continue clearing out my ebay room. Centennial plate for WV's 100th year.


Also found this very old paper packet of tobacco. I bet it's dry as dust 


Time to break out the Belleek Irish tea set! 


I spent part of Saturday morning cleaning silver. Such rewarding results, after much elbow grease.


A new for us medicine cabinet. Our old one (it really was old, probably from the 30's) was replaced by this even older cabinet. This was likely from a hospital or industrial setting, as it is stamped Uwanta Linen Service inside. It doesn't match the other cupboards, but I am not painting it.
Found this stored away; we bought it prob10 years ago and planned to sell it, but I am glad we still had it.


Found on my bookshelf. Want to know what it says about your birthday? Shoot me a message! 


Last week on Joe's Run:






We stocked our Ravenswood booths yesterday.  This little table and chairs sold last week so we came in to find an empty space. Usually they call to tell us, but didn't do so this time for some reason.


And last but not least, I framed this anniversary card, sent to my mother from my father, probably very early in their marriage,  as he signed it "Billy". No one ever called him that in my memory, so this was likely late 40s to early 50s. 






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

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

In Charleston

31°f/0°C, clear. Light dusting of snow overnight tgat only stuck here and there, and is fast melting.

Our State Capitol building in the fog looked spooky. There are a few ghosts stories connected with it.


Across the Great Kanawha (pronounced KenAW) River, the University of Charleston also looks ghostly.


Closer up, not so much fog


The coal miner tribute sculpture on the Capitol grounds.


and the war memorial.


Behind the restaurant where we had dinner, someone was getting in trouble with the law.


Across the street from the restaurant this window caught my eye.


Dinner was not at the Irish pub, as we had planned; they were closed for a private event. We struck out at other places too. Who knew so many restaurants are closed on Sunday evening? We finally ended up at a place called Kel's Tavern. My smothered chicken was delicious and plentiful, enough for another meal. Larry could not eat all of his club sandwich and homemade fries either. We went into an Italian place across the street first, only to discover it was Muslim-run and so served no beer or wine. This was our Valentine's day celebration so we opted for Kel's, where Larry could have his Guinness and I had my favorite, Chardonnay. But we may try the Italian place again one day.


Murals around town: this one is the work of the late Jupiter Hamilton,  I believe.


I liked this one with the story of West Virginia legend John Henry.


Cute use of the awning!




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