I haven’t lost my touch

For a long time, I made all of our bread. Loaf after loaf of every kind of bread issued from my oven for years on end. Then came what Larry refers to as “The Bad Time” [not very imaginitive, but he has other fine characteristics that make up for this]. For 4 years I low carbed. And if I am low carbing, Larry is mostly low carbing too. Not only is he not that imaginative, but he can’t cook much either. I made no homemade bread during those dark days. There was often weeping and gnashing of teeth, but no bread baking.

But now I am not low carbing anymore and I can bake bread again. I wasn’t sure if I would even remember how to do it anymore. I was, I admit, inspired by the fact that Ellyn and Jason bought a bread machine and now Ellyn makes all of their bread. But, I didn’t bake bread to compete with Ellyn, or because I felt guilty or any sort of petty motivation like that. It was to forestall the inevitable whining mild protestations I would hear when Larry gets to eat Ellyn’s homemade bread. “You never bake bread anymore.” [think of little sad-eyed puppy dogs]

But now I did, so he can’t say that. It is really yummy too.

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Old Lady Underwear

In this post, I made reference to my grandmother’s old lady underwear. I was thinking about this yesterday and by my calculations, in 1961, Grandma was 2 years younger than I am right now. I should explain about the underwear on the clothes line I suppose. We lived in a small town, on a street that was about evenly divided between families like ours, with children and older people like our grandparents. Our backyards all bordered one another so that you could move freely from one to the next. As you can imagine, this fact was not always pleasing to some of the older folks in the neighborhood and you would have to count my grandparents among that group.

They were a tidy people, my mother’s family. Far, far tidier than us or any other family on our street. Far tidier than anyone I have encountered in my entire life actually. The untidiness of all these children was the bane of their existence. There were 5 of us grandkids living next door on one side of their house, and on the other side, a family with 6 boys. The next two houses had 4 kids each. There were bunches of other kids all around the surrounding blocks. They were encompassed, besieged and beleaguered.

I should interject that I loved my grandparents. They had their ways about them that through the years I could have done without, but don’t we all? They did love us and we spent hours at their house, helping Grandma bake, eating endless rivers of snickerdoodles, drinking from Grandma’s evaporated milk soaked coffee and watching Mannix while we ate club crackers topped with sliced cheddar cheese accompanied by glasses of ginger ale. And all that tidiness meant their house smelled good. I still don’t know what it was, but somehow their house always smelled so clean. If I close my eyes, I can still conjure it up.

And we were terrible children. We were dirty and loud. We fought with each other. We threw things. We trampled flower beds. We yelled and screamed and laughed way too much. And there were so freaking many of us. We drove them nuts and our untidy kid-ness distressed them, but they loved us anyway.

You would think that such tidy people would not have their underwear out on the clothesline all the time, but you would be mistaken about that. Now personally, it would not have bothered me at all if it weren’t for the notice other kids in our neighborhood took of it. And they were worth noticing, my grandmother’s underwear. So white, it nearly hurt your eyes to look at them. And they had legs. This was the odd part to me really. In my experience, men’s underwear, like my Dad’s, had legs. Women’s underwear, though not quite the fashion statement in 1961 that they may be today, did not have legs. But Grandma’s did. They were quintessential old lady underwear.

Their appearance on the clothesline a couple times each week caused, I am sure you can imagine, a great deal of merriment and jocularity around the neighborhood. This was only made worse by the fact that the majority of other kids in our neighborhood were boys. They could not make fun of Grandma because their parents would tan their little hides if they did that. Nooooooooooooooooo – they made fun of me. These boys were for the most part, my friends too. As girls often do, I got tall younger than they did and I was stronger than a lot of them too, at least until we all hit our teens. And I liked to play baseball and basketball. They were nice to me so I would be on their team in the pickup neighborhood games, so they could win. And we had a lot of fun together, but the old lady underwear was just too good to let go by without comment. Comment and running jokes and hand-drawn comics. Little jerks.

But Grandma was 50, maybe 55 at the time of these memories. She and Grandpa moved to a house they built outside of town when I was 12 so I know at the most she was 56. Which means, at best, I have 4 years until I get mine issued to me. Or so I thought.

**disclaimer** I am now going to talk about my own underwear, so if that will bother you, avert your eyes or come back tomorrow or something. **end of disclaimer**

I do not wear old lady underwear. I wear what you could call a sort of medium kind of underwear. Not little bikinis, not thongs, not underwear with legs. Mine are french cut or high thigh, depending on the brand you buy. A couple weeks ago I purchased some at Wal*Mart that said on the package – Buy 6 pairs, Get one pair free! Well that seems like a good deal doesn’t it? So I get them home, take them out of the package and throw them in the laundry. They get washed and when I am folding that load of clothes, I find this pair of………..my pair, apparently of ………….. I just wasn’t expecting this so soon ……………………… grannie panties. They are even a size bigger than my regular size! It is like the cosmos has worked through Wal*Mart [that part does make sense to me at least, because if I were the cosmos, I would use Wal*Mart to send this kind of message] to let me know that my time has come. I am a Grandma now after all. “Here you go – you won’t buy them, so we have to use whatever means necessary to get them to you.”

Why, would Hanes, a company that wants my business, put a completely different style and size of underwear in a package as a premium? If I wanted granny panty style underwear in a size larger than that I usually wear, would I not just make the decision to buy them myself? And, not having made that particular decision, why do they think I would be happy to get them just because they are free? This is a question of such intense interest to me, that I have written an email to the Hanes company about the matter. I will certainly let you know what they say. Unless it is that whole “the cosmos thinks it is time for your granny panties” thing.
If that is the case, you will not hear about it from me.

Posted in family, me, too much information | 8 Comments

I hope he gets over this pretty soon

These pictures are all of my grandson Mark, taken over the past 6 months or so. I could, trust me, have put up many more examples of the phenomena we are going to see here, but I believe these are sufficient to my purpose.

It’s a digital age and that has great advantages when you live far away from your grandchildren. Between the digital camera, computer, email and cell-phone-with-camera, we can have daily photographic delights to help keep track of their progress. When our kids were little we took quite a few pictures, but it was with a 126 Kodak, later upgraded to a 35mm Pentax. Film was expensive and getting pictures developed wasn’t cheap either. Where, back then we took 5 pictures, now you can take 50. Or 100, 200 or maybe 500. More pictures don’t cost you any more money so you can be as extravagant as you like with your photography skills.

There is a downside to this though.

Mark may be suffering from camera fatigue:


Anna is watching the master see how it’s done:

Just as soon as she gets some teeth, we are all in trouble!

Posted in grandchildren, photos | 7 Comments

A nice morning for pictures

Who goes out to take pictures when it is only 4 degrees?
On only a half of a cup of coffee?

This little crabapple tree is one of my favorite things in the whole world.

It really is gorgeous out.

Astilbe looks nice with snow on it.

Miscanthus looks nice with snow on it.

Even junk looks good with snow on it

Almost like art really.

You don’t see such a pretty morning very often.

There is no better time to take a picture of a black dog, than on a nice snowy morning like this one.

He may not be the sharpest knife in the drawer, but he does have a point.
Posted in photos, riley, winter | 6 Comments

Snowman anyone?

This is Steve.
He is married to our younger daughter Lauren. Steve grew up in a faraway land called Georgia. They do not have snow in Georgia. Steve had never in all of his life been able to build a snowman.
Isn’t that sad?
Well, a few years ago, Lauren and Steve got to come to NY for Christmas. They were planning to be here for nearly an entire month. We’re in the part of NY where seeing snow in December is not usually a problem. Around here, we are generally up to our butts in snow from just after Thanksgiving until sometime around Easter. Or Mother’s Day. It just depends on the year. We felt pretty confident in promising Steve that he would see snow. That he too, could be up to his butt in snow if that is the kind of holiday experience he was looking for.

The day they flew in it was raining. It rained for quite a few days. It did not snow. It did not snow the next day. Not the day after that, or the day after that either. It did not snow for Christmas Day. We did not have snow up to our butts. We did not even have snow up to our little baby toes. Finally, a couple days before they had to leave, the forecast said we would get some snow! Yay! In the morning when we got up, it was snowing lightly. It did finally accumulate about 4 inches or so. Steve was not discouraged. He scraped up snow from about a half an acre of our yard and he built a snowman.


It cannot be denied that Steve’s snowman bears a eerie resemblance to Steve himself. He has a way of doing this. I stole this from his Myspace page:

See? That looks a lot like him doesn’t it? How many people can use “MS Paint” and make a credible likeness of themselves? My future grandchildren will be geniuses. With red hair. What more can you ask for? Anyway, after the snowman was built, there was great rejoicing throughout the land.
This is Lauren and Steve, rejoicing after the snowman was all built. Aren’t they cute?

Lauren and Steve are coming to NY one week from today. I do not believe that Steve will have to scrape up snow from a half acre this year. Not unless he plans to build a Godzilla sized snowman.
Here you go Steve – it is waiting for you:

Better make sure you bring your boots.

Posted in family, winter | 2 Comments