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Thursday, May 14, 2026

Thankful

47°f/8.3°C, cloudy. 

Such green! What beauty surrounds us every day.

I am thankful today for blog friend Michelle, who reminds us every Thursday to stop a moment and appreciate something good in our lives. Often I am so busy I don't take the time to say, yes, I am fortunate, or yes, this good thing happened.

So today Larry had his twice yearly appointment with his doctor, and it was mostly good news. He's lost 10 pounds, blood pressure is amazing, blood sugar and other numbers all good. 

Then we stopped for lunch at Shari's and met up with several friends there, one who just won a seat on the Ripley City Council. A former teacher, she is a bright, intelligent lady and will be a good council member. Shari's saved boxes for us to use as mulch in the garden, and our friend Glenn has a load of grass clippings for us too, which we will pick up this evening.

Right now we are on the way to Ohio for the auction pickup. I was lucky enough to win a few quilts, an old iron bed, abd several other things, all for reasonable prices.

So all good things, and I am grateful for them all. Thank you, Michelle, for the weekly reminder!



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

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Catching Up

47°f/8.3°C, rainshowers, overcast 

I am so grateful for the rain we have had this morning. It is badly needed, although we are not as bad off as many areas. But my is it chilly! We tried to take our morning coffee out on the porch, but even with a sweatshirt on, it was too cold to stay out there more than a few minutes. The plants are quite happy, and I am wishing I had got more in the ground yesterday evening instead of pruning bushes. So much needs to be done at this time of year!  

A start on mulching the herb garden

I did get several tomato plants in, and a few replacement cabbage plants, as something ate some of the early ones. Monday I also planted pepper and marigold plants, and seeded sweet corn, purpke and wax bush beans, and a row of flower seeds I collected from my garden last fall. My basil and dill are up, and I think some of the onion seeds, although they are so tiny it's hard to see them. First time I have tried growing onions from seed. I planted more kale, lettuce, radishes seeds and onion sets too. The garden is just about full. I got more mulch put down but ran out of boxes, so will have to get some in town tomorrow.  I use hay or straw on top of the cardboard and it has been great for my soil.


My Mother's Day breakfast! I had to make it myself, since Larry doesn't know how to nake waffles,  but it was a real treat. 

We picked up more bagged mulch yesterday for the herb garden, more soil for my planters and plants to go in them, and 2 more cattle panels to use as trellis for the tomatoes. If you're not sure what a cattle panel is, here's a link to a gardener using them like we are going. They have become very popular for garden uses. At about $30 each, they are an investment for sure, but we should be able to use them for as long as we continue to garden. I am tired of buying stakes that rot after a couple years, and those tomato cages are pricey now, and in my opinion don't work very well.

Drift roses take so little care, one reason to love them. 

Since it's wet and more rain on the way, I will have an indoor day, hopefully finishing up the chest of drawers I have been working on intermittently, and getting things priced for the booths. Right now I don't have a single thing priced, so I need to get busy on that.

Yesterday while shopping, I heard some radio station playing a country music song. The theme of the song was the same as thousands, probably millions, of other songs: love relationships. Most of these songs focus on romantic love and all its many complications inherent in such love. I don't know about you, but I get tired of the same ol' same ol'. I really don't care if she doesn't love him, or he cheats on her, or hearing how the singer is promising forever love in his/her desperation to get the other into bed. It's not that I dislike romance, but I am so happy when I hear a song with some other storyline! 

And that got me thinking about love. Which made me think about the old veteran we met the other day, and his daughter taking such good care of him. Then yesterday a lady in line at the register in front of me had 2 full grocery carts of plants. A woman after my own heart! She told me that these were all for her parents' flowerbeds. She had already planted hers, and she always does theirs for them. "They love flowers so much," she said. "This just makes them happy." 

Behind me in line was a younger lady who was buying a straw garden hat. I offered to let her go in front of me, since i had quite a lot to check out. "That's okay," she said. "I take care of my grandfather, but today my daughter is home with him, so I get a break. I'm in no hurry!"

To me, these women all deserve love songs written about them. That's the real deep love that we all long for, isn't it, the kind that's there through thick and thin, not asking for anything in return. But I guess it's just not sexy enough for airtime. 

And ending with this ad in a local Facebook group. Iris, I can see you driving this!






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

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Just About People

49°f/9.4°C, mostly cloudy. Won't get very warm today, again.

Being on the road so much last week meant running into interesting people. 

Like the man at the VA. He was tall and thin, sitting there quietly, but had rings on every single finger. Some you might call women's rings, though they looked manly enough on his hands. I asked if he minded if I looked at them, and he held them up for me to see. 

"Tiger eye?", I asked, and he responded, with difficulty, "Cat eye." He tried to say more, but struggled, and his daughter beside him said, "He had a stroke last year,  and it messed up his ability to speak." 

Still, we had a good conversation.  I commented how frustrating it must be to know what you want to say but be unable to say it, and he nodded emphatically and grinned. I watched as he and his daughter (with whom he lives), through gestures and his halting, broken words, communicated. It was like watching charades, as she would ask, "Is this what you mean?" He would nod or shake his head, and in this way they worked out what he wanted to say. Her patience was a lesson in loving, and it was clear to see he adored her. 

Then at a store there was the strikingly beautiful woman in her early 60's whose head was completely shaved. I asked, "Is your hairstyle a choice? Because you look amazing!"

"Well," she said, "it is and it isn't.  I am going to have to have radiation and they said I will lose my hair, so I decided to just shave it off."

"It suits you," I said. And she replied, "I think I might just keep it this way. I like it!"

At the Farmer's Market, a lady was running the register at the place where I bought the Mothman chips. A lady came over and asked, "How are you doing, Ruth?"

"I'm a little tired," Ruth said. 

A man came over and said, "She's very tired. She's going home as soon as she finishes serving this lady, right, Mom?" 

I asked Ruth, "Do you enjoy working here?"

"Yes," she replied, "it's something to do. I do get tired,  but I like getting out. "

"If you don't mind my asking, how old are you?"

"I'm 80 my next birthday!" 

80, and still working at the market a few days a week. Go, Ruth!

Also at the market: three young black men smelling and identifying (correctly) the herb plants, and  another young man pushing a stroller holding identical twin girls. He couldn't go more than a few steps without being stopped by women who wanted to tell him how adorable the babies were. 
I told him he should rent them out to single guys as they were such excellent girl magnets!

At the Goodwill, I carried a 5-foot long set of longhorns to the counter. "Whoa", said the young male clerk. "Yeah," I said, "I was feeling a little horny." He laughed til tears ran down his cheeks. "I was not expecting that!" 

I think he meant hearing it from someone as old as I am. If he knew me, he would have known better.

And last, at dinner last night, a friend of Derek's who served in the National Guard in Iraq joined us at our table. Brian was there for a graduation party group, but their table was pretty much full, and he was happy to sit with us. I was so entertained as he, Derek, and Larry shared military stories. Some funny, some surprising, others, well...the kind you don't tell your mother until years after the fact. One story really struck me. When they were deployed to Iraq for the third time, they had to go to a training for those coming in-country. The trainer was a young second lieutenant who was in Iraq for the first time. 

As the guy started the training, Brian raised his hand and said, "Sir, many of us were in regular service before joining the Guard, and some have been here in Iraq before too." The second lieutenant paused, and said, "Right. So how many of you were in regular Army before?" Hands went up. "How about Marines?" More hands. He went through all branches of the service, and in the end there were only a handful without prior experience. "Well, I guess the rest of you can go," he said.

There were so many stories from Iraq, Korea, Germany, and of course Larry's tales from Vietnam. So many experiences, yet here they were, safely home, eating dinner together. I doubt they saw it as I did, these three men. It was just their lives, but to me it was a testament to resiliency, strength, and a whole lot of luck.

All for today. Happy Mothers Day to those of you celebrating.  Hold those children tight!

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