Archive for June, 2009

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009
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Dad stood at the front entrance, looking outside at the rain, turned and asked the children, “You guys wanna play in the rain?” They were a bit confused. The rain this season has been heavy with lightning and thunder, but this rain was clear of that. It wasn’t the big, fat rain, but it was thick enough to wet one’s clothes.

They liked being out there. Ty ran laps with Taylor and Kyle while I kept calling out, “Be careful. Don’t run. It’s slippery.” For a good ten minutes, they played and splashed in puddles. After they were sopping wet, I had them change into dry, clean clothes.

Rearing Florida Crackers

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009
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Since the beginning of hurricane season, the temperatures have been reaching the mid 90s by the mid-afternoon and dropping down to the high 70s for a few hours at night. The humidity isn’t bad yet. Living on a corner, we have good cross-ventilation. We also bring in the relatively cool morning air into the house with oscillating fans.

But the night after the solstice was bad enough to wake me up about an hour after midnight, and the morning offered no relief. The wind (and fans) blew warm and sticky. It helped to suck on ice cubes. Standing in front of a fan was of some relief but only for the first few seconds. I thought of what Cody Lundin would do in our situation. So we drank water and stayed put. The sun shone and baked our cinder block house. Stripping off our clothes was not an option because the mosquitoes would eat us alive. That evening, we did our best to sleep. It didn’t help that the babies were waking up every hour and a half.

On Tuesday morning, after the babies woke me up for the tenth time, I stayed awake to record “Between the Lions” on the local PBS station. Everyone else started waking up early, too. I thought we could go for our walk earlier than usual, which wouldn’t have been a bad idea because the heat tends to get worse as the day goes by, but the skies were gray. The weather was obviously unstable.

As quick as you can say, “Something wicked this way comes,” cold gusts were picking up dry leaves from the ground and swirling them about like small funnels. A wave of cool breezes passed throughout the house. It started sprinkling. After a minute or so, it was pouring big, ol’ fat rain. Lightning and thunder added excitement to our dulled senses. The chill was wonderful. While the weather announcers in the local media noted the change, there are few people who actually LIVED the change.

Today, it’s not as chilly, but it’s pleasant. When we chose to go without modern marvels such as air conditioning, we are blessed with the great fortune of fresh air.

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle isn’t just for Greenies.

Friday, June 19th, 2009
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With seven people living on a part-time income, we have to use our resources efficiently to feed, clothe, and entertain ourselves.

We don’t have a mango tree, but our kitchen has processed at least a hundred pounds of mangoes in the last several weeks. Several of the families for whom I teach music have given me a bag or two of mangoes at each visit. I made eight small jars of chutney and froze them. I think we are down to four jars. I had only eight jars, so I made smoothies with leftover mangoes. And with the mangoes that I didn’t use to make smoothies because there were too many, Dad sliced up and put into our beans and rice. He added curry, green peppers, and other spices. It was delicious.  And we are still collecting mangoes because some trees give two (or three) harvests. Some trees aren’t ready for the harvest until weeks after the first. So every week, there are two or three families that are giving me bags and bags of mangoes.

As the babies are growing out of their old clothes and into Taylor’s clothes, I’ve been putting away their baby clothes. I’ve also been noticing stains and rips in both sets of small and medium clothes. So I’m cutting them. Yes, cutting them with scissors (and it’s wearing out my scissors!). I’m making my first freehand quilt. I’m just cutting pieces and sewing them back onto an old bed sheet that I cut into square foot blocks. They are coming along nicely. I was thinking of making a larger patchwork piece and using it as fabric for clothes, being that it used to be clothes. Perhaps it can serve as the skirt of a dress.

Last week was the first week of summer for the public school children. We at the Greenleaf School took that week off for catching up on housekeeping and play. Ty saw that one of his favorite television characters, Curious George, had made musical instruments using things around the house. Ty made a guitar out of a milk carton and rubber bands — It was more like a lyre than a guitar. He used Taylor’s kitchen pot lids as cymbals. And he asked me to help him make a water xylophone out of beer bottles. THAT was difficult. All of Thursday morning, I was tapping glass bottles with a spoon and adjusting the water level in an attempt to play a major scale. And all afternoon, I was suffering a headache from the high-pitched dinging. Albeit, it was worth it. The boy learned a bit about musical instruments.

The question is not, “How do you do it?”
The question is, “How will you use it?”