Film – Plan B

I took a moment this weekend to reflect on the garden. Here is a picture from earlier this week, our pond with some complementary ducks:

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And then the pool company came over…

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Chris thinks we will be able to swim in it before we go away, but, unless I find an affordable wet suit for toddlers, I am severely doubting it.

Back to the rest of the yard. Each year we set an achievable goal and a budget for the yard. Two years ago it was the fence towards the neighbor’s house, last year it was clearing out the side. This year it was pruning and removing trees which we have had done a few weeks ago. This left me with very small budget to do anything else so I restricted myself with only purchasing mulching. Two weeks and ten bags of mulch later, this is done.

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I haven’t mulched in about four years so mulching made our front yard a bit more presentable. Good thing that dandelions are coming back in style, I have no intention of doing anything about them on a large scale. There is a bungalow around the corner selling for over half a million dollars. A four bedroom, unfinished basement bungalow for crying out loud! It is on a busy street and, apart from being newly renovated, there is not even anything terribly special about it. I really don’t think that our neighborhood needs my help to look any fancier than it already does.

Ok, back from ranting. Now I have an overgrown weedy yard and no budget. This is when things get exciting…

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The original dirt in our yard is really bad. It is clay so compacted that I broke a pitchfork (metal part of it) without even trying to dig deeper than 10 centimeters. It is so dense there are no worms in the soil. The previous owners did apparently buy some better dirt to put over it, but it looks like they only used this to raise beds for landscaping, rather than to improve the conditions for the vegetation. As the result, a lot of the shrubs and smaller trees are sick and there are more weeds than perennials. These poor guys are sick little trees:

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This year I will not try and shape them like I did in the past. I am going to let them grow as they will and see if they improve by next year. If they don’t improve I will have to cut them down.

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To the credit of the woman who sold me the house, I think she would buy a truckload of annuals every year, but I am just not at a point in my life where I think annuals are a good idea. I am too busy to grow my own from seed (I will re-start doing this in a year or two) and too cheap frugal to buy them grown. In any case, I am stuck with at least one major garden bed that is, from the horticultural point of view, completely unusable. I could have bought a truck load of compost last year and rototilled it when we rented a bobcat, but it was just not in the budget. My actual strategy is to dig a small part of it every year, plant something new there and observe the results. Last year I bought two shrubs and half a dozen perennials and it looks like they all came back this year. This year I quickly dug another hole and planted tomatoes I got from Maria. Trevor got some pumpkin seeds at a birthday party last week so we planted those in the remaining holes.

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If you can spot the bent trowel in the above pictures you will know where the pumpkin seeds are planted. Trowel is bent because I attempted to dig in the clay. Silly me. Also, Trevor only planted the first five seeds. After that, he decided he would rather wash rocks in my watering can. Gardening with a three year old is as exciting as it is unpredictable. I did not mean to plant vegetables in the flower bed, but I really don’t care where they are planted, and I was not terribly interested in getting new perennials until I see how the ones I got last year fare by the end of the summer.

Another issue with gardening in my yard are the weeds. The thorny ones get pulled out as soon as I can get to them. The rest I am more philosophical about. Up until last year, I hated forget-me-nots, because they spread like wildfire and, once they are out of bloom, look horrible. This year, I have completely embraced them. They are supper pretty in bloom and very easy to pull out once they are done blooming. Once they are pulled out, they leave nice patches of ground unpolluted by other weeds and are short enough not to kill perennials. I am considering changing my opinion on the small yellow flower weed in the back of the above bed (are they buttercups?). They are much more difficult to pull out, but once I improve the soil and plant taller, leafier perennials they should be short enough to be pushed out by the incomers while still providing some shade and interest as a ground cover.

Charissa brought me some more perennials yesterday, but after I plant that, I will be done with the garden for the spring. Chris, on the other hand, has a few projects of his own. He is going to repair the birdhouse and make a little play area with sandbox for the kids.

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Film – Date Night

Ever since Trev turned two and a half he has been really easy to take care of. In part this is because he has become able to play on his own. This is a wonderful development but it does leave a mom a bit perplexed as to how to connect with the little guy. I suppose I could play Tonka Trucks with him, but that is just not my scene. My strategy therefore is to take him places that he is interested in and make toys that he (hopefully) likes. Since he showed some interest in spacial arrangement of houses as well as in the process of building houses, I decided that we should make a house model that takes this into consideration.

So, this is what we got so far: A diaper box with “insulation”.

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I am about to start making the roof. Trev was really excited about the windows so we made some provisional ones. We will cut them out properly later

Film – Young Victoria

Today might not be the first day of spring, but it felt like it was. Owen and I went for a nice walk. He is getting very heavy, this was probably the last time I will carry him in the sling for a longer period of time.

I just realised the next week is the Canada Reads panel on CBC. I managed to get through two of the books and am half way through the third one. I really hoped to have read all the books but I just was not in the mood lately. I finished “Good to a Fault” and “Jade Peony”. Both were pretty good. I am now reading “Nikolski” which is promising as well. I don’t think I will get to the other two, but I will try. Last year I was hoping to save the podcast for until I am done with the novels, but with radio and internet, I ended up seeing/hearing who won before I was ready.

Film – Dear John and Valentine’s Day

The strangest thing happened to me last week. I started to miss work. No, I do not miss sitting at the desk for 8 hours at the time or the constant decreases in the size of the local workforce or things that irritate me. But I miss doing engineering, I miss the coworkers, I miss the lunches with Heather, I miss rolling my eyes at adversity, I miss the two loudmouth managers a cubicle row over whose comments on the state of their projects and the rest of the World make me spit out my coffee laughing every morning. I have been wondering how my team is doing since I left, but I am afraid of finding out.

Film – When In Rome

My free ride is over. It has been nine weeks since Owen was born and the last grandparent on duty has finished his shift. It’s swim or sink now. While the grandparents were here I managed to finish up and do a few crafts. It is not so much that I had the time to do them (I didn’t) it is more that I had to do them to keep my sanity.

The first craft I started late last year. I wanted to make a couple of pairs of gloves. Here is the recipe I decided works best:


Yarn: Brown Sheep Nature Spun Fingering
Needles: 2.25mm dpn
Size M

Cast on 58 sts
Ribbing (k2p2)* to the top of the wrist
In the last row of ribbing increase the number of stitches to 70 by adding a knitted sts k2 in 2k. (or something, don’t feel like looking up terminology now)
2 rows of k
3rd row k2 m1 (slant backwards) k m1 (slant forwards) k* (this row reverse for the other hand)
2 rows of k
6th row k4 m1 (slant backwards) k m1 (slant forwards) k* (this row reverse for the other hand)

last increase row k20 m1 (slant backwards) k m1 (slant forwards) k* (this row reverse for the other hand)
2 rows of k
then put the thumb gusset stitches on the waste thread , cast on seven stitches and continue for two rows in k then decrease the seven stitches with ssk k3 k2tog, two more rows of k, then ssk k1 k2tog, two rows of k, slip1, k2tog, psso. Similar decrease is done on the thumb.

For fingers, knit until you get to the bottom of finger, knit the finger then knit the remaining fingers together until you get to the finger separation. I don’t have a good strategy for fingers yet.

This has been heavily borrowed from Knotty Gloves on Ravelry. I don’t think this is plagiarizing since the pattern used in here does not seem to be too original and I have made enough modifications to make the look and feel of the glove different.

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My mom modeling the fancy red gloves

A lesson I learned is to not mess with the yarn. I got a different yarn for my sister’s gloves and the result was disastrous. I still gave her the gloves since I did not have the time to make new ones, but I will never, ever, make such drastic substitutions ever again. Sorry Barbara, I’ll make you something nicer later.

The second craft was a travel bag for my dad. This isn’t really my craft since my dad did all the design and cutting. All I did was sew on the line.
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My dad and Trevor testing out the travel bag

This bag is the perfect airplane bag as long as you don’t mind your belongings being banged around. It is the largest allowed size and it weighs next to nothing allowing for maximum capacity. It is also made of sturdy recycled pre-faded fabric. The toddler does not come with it.

The last craft is my needle case (etui for you crosswords solvers). It is smaller version of this pattern except I did not sew the top fold because it would make the cow’s face look funny. I might add some clips to keep it folded properly though.

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Next challenge: socks.