Sunday, January 23, 2011

The skiing is AWESOME!

The Clothesline Trail is now open
8 inches of new snow on top of the crusty stuff--the skiing is awesome!

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Another snow day!

I can't believe it--two snow days in two weeks! We're getting another good storm, but unfortunately, it's supposed to switch over to sleet and freezing rain after midnight. I think there's another 6 inches out there now. I've shoveled once, and scraped the gutter clear. Just wish it would stay snow!

This morning started out with a bit of a headache--the woodstove pipe leaked like a sieve, smoking up the house horribly. I bought a replacement elbow (broke the old one getting it off), a brush to clean out the pipe, and cleaned out excess creosote. Now I can't get the dang elbow to fit and the house it getting cold with only the furnace working. It's less than 12 hours and I already miss the constant, toasty warmth of my stove! Hopefully I can get this fixed in the next few days since the mercury is going to seriously drop again by Saturday!

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Snow Day!!!!

At last, a real snow storm! We've got about 5 inches on the ground already and it's supposed to continue throughout the day with 1-2 inches per hour. Come on down!  No work today--everything is closed. The ground needs the insulation; and so do my carrots.
I love the quietness, the hush that falls over the landscape when all you hear is whooshing snow in the bare tree limbs. I'll do my shoveling, slap on the skis, and later, sit by the woodstove with a good book and Callie Lou in my lap.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Seed Savers Exchange Catalog
Last night, sitting in front of the ticking woodstove, I sat amidst a semicircle of seed packets spread around me. John and I inventoried what we had left to use, what to toss, and what we needed to order for the coming year. Snow flurries whispered around the windows, Callie curled up  in a dot by woodstove, and the two of us, planning and visualizing this years gardens--it still seems a long ways off, but the planning happens now.

John is once again, entranced by the pretty pictures, and like a kid, wants one of everything! He joined Seed Savers Exchange last year, and I have to admit, their catalog entices gardeners by sheer beauty alone. Half the fun is reading the descriptions of early heirloom varieties and their history.

I'll also put in an order to High Mowing Seeds for other stock we can't get from Seed Savers. And of course, in support of my Maine brethren, I'll order my seed potatoes from "The Maine Potato Lady" up in Guilford. Her simple black and white catalog may not look as mouth watering, but her descriptions go into great detail about which spuds are best suited for what type of preparation, and most importantly, storage qualities.