Tuesday, March 31, 2026

The Wood Stove - Report

 The wood stove isn't happening. :(   Not right now anyway.

The guys came out Monday morning, measured everything, talked about where we wanted the stove. We all decided leaving the two gas fireplaces alone and adding the stove to the corner where it could be easily removed and the gas fireplaces wouldn't have to be taken out was the least expensive option and probably the best because a future owner might not want to mess with a wood stove.

Vince and I had talked about it and we had a price in mind that we had decided we would do. 

The price quoted us for leaving the two fireplaces alone and putting in the black wood stove was very close to double what Vince and I had said we would pay. Really, they have to put one hole through a wall, and add the stovepipe. The pipe does have to go from the basement to the top of the main floor (basically two stories) and I think he said 8' above the roof but when Vince and I were making our calculations, we looked at the prices for double and triple walled stovepipe. 

In addition, and no matter who puts in the stove, we will have to move the radon pipe. Vince talked to the guy from Kansas City who installed our system and he will come and move the pipe. It will have to go through the deck, which isn't ideal but it's a big deck and if I had my way, I would have made it smaller when we re-did it several years ago so I'm not concerned about the pipe going through the deck.

There's a Mennonite guy who does some work for us and Vince is going to call him. I'm sure they install quite a few wood stoves in their community. They do such good work and are usually reasonable. 

So, while this isn't the way I had expected it to go, there's still hope.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Week 13, 2026 Stitching Report

Monday, March 23, 2026
Project: Winter Rose Manor (Day 2)
Stitches Made: 606
Percentage Completed:

Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Project: Winter Rose Manor (Day 3)
Stitches Made:263
Percentage Completed: 54.55%

Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Project: 4th of July Rules
Stitches Made: 447
Percentage Completed: 57.18%

Thursdays, March 26, 2026
Project: Winter Rose Manor (Day 4)
Stitches Made: 552
Percentage Completed:

Friday, March 27, 2026
Project: Winter Rose Manor (Day 5)
Stitches Made: 621
Percentage Completed: 59.58%

Saturday, March 28, 2026
Project: Nothing! No stitches today!
Stitches Made:
Percentage Completed:

Sunday, March 29, 2026
Project: The Lord's Prayer (Day 1)
Stitches Made:  626
Percentage Completed: 29.66%


Stitches Made in Week 13, 2026:

Total Stitches - 3,115 (519.16 per day)


A Day of ZERO Stitches

It's pretty unusual for me to (1) not many any stitches at all and (2) be in bed by 9 p.m.

Yesterday we were busy all day. We left the house about 7:30 a.m. and got home about 2:30 p.m. Then I cooked the chicken, cleaned and sliced the strawberries and made all those things for the freezer. Then we went out and got the deck and patio furniture out, got it cleaned up and put where it goes. Then I took a shower, then got wheat ground to make three loaves of bread. I'm not even sure what else I did but we sat down to watch a movie about 8:30. I tried to stay awake but I just wanted to go to sleep so I asked Vince if he cared if I went to bed. He said "Do you feel bad?" Nope, just tired.

I went to bed and briefly was thinking I should get up and make at least one stitch so I wouldn't have a day on my record with no stitching, but before I processed that thought, I was asleep and slept til 8:30 this morning.

Now . . 10:45 a.m., I'm sitting down to stitch. Got the loaves of bread shaped and in the warmest room upstairs to rise; cooked breakfast, a load of laundry is started and I'm planning to stitch until bedtime except for stopping mid-afternoon to make hamburgers. Vince has gone to the storage units to work, the dogs have already gone to sleep next to me so it should be a good stitching day here.

Saturday, March 28, 2026

Sassafras Trees

 I'm pretty sure every place I've lived since I first moved out of my parents' home, we've planted a magnolia tree. Probably 15 or 20 years ago, we started planting sassafras trees in our yards.


Here, we have two trees that are small. We had three but . . deer love them!!  This is probably their fourth year. Vince rigged up some fencing to protect the two remaining trees but it needs a bit of sprucing up.

An old fashioned type root beer can be made from the roots. There's been some talk about it not being safe to drink so . . I doubt anyone is going to go foraging for sassafras roots but do some research before you do it.

When I was a child, my dad would take us out in the woods and find a few sassafras roots to bring home and he would make root beer. We didn't have Soda Streams back then and I doubt the little store in our little town even had fizzy water so we always had very flat, odd tasting root beer so I was never impressed. If I come across roots that I could harvest, I may try it again.

Besides them being pretty, I grow them for the leaves.  For gumbo lovers, the file' used in a bowl of gumbo is ground up dried sassafras leaves. Instructions for making file' can be found here. For most of us, gumbo is a cold weather dish. Harvesting the leaves is best done just before the leaves begin to change colors so the timing is perfect in about late August to mid-September to harvest the leaves, dry them, run them through the little Ninja chopper, sift them and have "fresh" file' for gumbo season.

Vince, Chad and I lived in Owensboro, KY for almost 10 years. The largest known sassafras tree is located on one of the main streets in Owensboro. Vince's best friend in Owensboro was Tom. His mother lived in the house where the tree was located and Tom had grown up in that house. The mom and Tom have both passed away but I was able to get leaves from that tree and make file'. I wish I would have kept some in a small bottle . . just for memories but that would have been something else Chad would find one day and think  . . oh, the clutter in this house . . and out it would go!  :)

Breakfast Prepping

Vince and I had to be in Carthage early this morning so we left home without breakfast. We ended up getting a light breakfast out between the four or five stops we had to make and that prompted me to come home and prepare some almost ready to heat and eat breakfast meals for the freezer.

The little Ninja chopper got a good workout!


And, the Souper Cubes are so handy. I'll pop everything out as soon as it's frozen. Most all of this will be used pretty quickly so it will probably go into zipper freezer bags instead of vacuum sealed bags.

Both "sandwiches" started with chicken breasts and jalapeno peppers. When it's time to serve them, I will heat the mixture with softened cream cheese, cook an egg and serve them either as a "pocket" using a tortilla or a sandwich using ciabatta bread



Half of the chicken mixture will be used to make my version of Jalapeno Chicken Pockets. I'll add a fried egg and some kind of cheese - cheddar, mozzarella, parmesan, pepper jack - whatever is open and waiting to be used.

To the other half, I added freeze dried basil, a bit of garlic, and extra EVOO - kind of pesto-ish.


These will be served in tomato/herb tortilla with a fried egg and probably mozzarella or parmesan cheese.

Aldi had strawberries on sale this week ($1.99 for a one pound package) so I bought four of those. Two are for snacking/eating and two were for making my favorite strawberry/matcha latte.


Next up . . feed the sourdough starter, get dinner served, eat, clean up the mess, get the bread dough ready to spend the night in the fridge.


I needed extra starter because both Nicole and Debbie need new starters.


The dough is now in the fridge and I can start stitching - 9 p.m. I must do better!  


Friday, March 27, 2026

One More Wood Stove Post

 I promise this is the last wood stove post until after the guys give us some info. They're coming Monday and I don't know if they will give us an estimate then or later.



I showed Vince the AI generated photo of the wood stove and he likes it in the corner BUT he said he thinks he remembers the wood stove guy said up through the roof. I know I've seen black chimney pipe on the outside of houses before but . . I could be wrong on so many levels. If Vince is correct, the only place the wood stove can go is in front of the fireplace. I think our current "fireplace" is a good bit deeper than the ones that are made now so I'm wondering IF it has to go in front, could we take out the current hearth and have a larger one built - half the wood stove would be in the fireplace opening and half would be out on the hearth.



Otherwise, see the placement of the stove in the corner . . our pipe would have to go on the small wall between the edge of the window and the corner. One problem that we may not be able to overcome is that the radon "chimney" is there. This entire house - front, back, left side, right side . . and the radon pipe is in that one spot we would need for the wood stove. 

In the picture above you can see the "chimney" with the two metal vents, which if I didn't know better I would think they were wasp habitat because all summer, we fight the wasps in those. There's a vent for the upstairs and downstairs gas inserts. Then the windows to the left of the chimney, that space to the left of the windows is where the pipe would have to go if I wanted a wood stove in the corner. See the big white pipe in the way - radon vent pipe! Can't get rid of that!

I'm overworking my brain thinking about all this. I'm not going to think about it again . . we'll get all the info we need on Monday.

More on the Wood Stove

 Like everything I do, I think I explained the current "fireplace" totally incorrectly.

What we have now is basically one of those "fake" - totally fake - the chimney is fake, there's a vent outside if that lets air in or takes air out. If you stand less than 2' from it, you feel heat - move any farther away and there's zero heat. What we have is probably not an "insert" - I guess it's just a fake fireplace with a fake fire. I think it's pretty but I'm more about function than pretty.

The last house we built in Louisiana had a fireplace with a blower and a thermostat and the whole house and separate duct work from the regular HVAC. We could set the thermostat and it kept the upstairs and downstairs nice and warm. Of course, it was southwest Louisiana and zero degrees doesn't happen there. In fact, when we built the house, we had decided not to put central heat in and just use the fireplace. The builder said "You may not live here forever and having no central heat may affect your ability to sell the house." We lived there two years and I'm very glad we listened to the builder.

Here's another question for you.


Here's the room with no furniture.  

(1) Here's what I think they're talking about with the wood stove. We'll know more Monday. The stove (probably the black Lopi) will sit in front of the hearth, the pipe will go into the hole where the insert is now and I don't know what happens after that - not sure they can vent it up the current "chimney" or it has to come out and go up.

(2) Here's a thought I had. Tell me if this is a dumb idea. To the right of the fireplace - basically that corner. What if we left the fireplace as it is and put the red stove over there kinda in the corner. That way, if when we start to sell this house, the new person has no interest in a wood stove, they can take it out, patch the one hole in the wall, put in new floor covering (because we'll have to have tile under and around the wood stove) and everything is back to normal.

I'm thinking I might like it better in the corner or almost in the corner because from where we have our furniture, we'd be facing it and be able to see the fire.

It would be a good bit less expensive because they aren't having to tear out the insert and retrofit everything there. And, because the stove wouldn't be sitting in front of the hearth, it would take up a bit less space.

Dumb idea?



 

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Another Project for the WIP Bin

 Losing things is nothing new for me. I know that pretty much everything I lose gets found sooner or later. A good percentage of the time, I don't get real worked up about something that's lost because it either turns up or it doesn't. That would be a different story if it was Oscar or Cooper so I'm just talking about "stuff", not loved ones.

I don't remember when I started The Lord's Prayer by Lila's Studio. This is how much I had gotten stitched.


I can't remember where or how I knew but somewhere in that inner border, there was a mistake. When I realized there was a mistake, I just stitched a few letters down the left side to make sure it was all going to fit and I'm pretty sure that it will.

I'm using Vikki Clayton silks and when I use those (they used to be on bobbins), I would keep them in a little rectangular plastic container and it made the project bags bulky so I pulled out all the plastic containers and put them on a shelf in the craft room. Then when I got ready to work on this project months and months ago, the little plastic container of floss wasn't there. I searched for it for a while and gave up. Then a couple of months later, I found it and thought "Great! I can get back on this project" but . . no, I had no idea where I had put that container down.

Yesterday when I was moving quilts from around the gas fireplace, and there was that little pink box. I held my breath for a moment, almost afraid to look at the floss key because I knew I would be disappointed if it wasn't The Lord's Prayer. Yay! It was! Now this one is added as #18 to the WIP bin. 

I will work on Winter Rose Manor the rest of today and tomorrow and then on Saturday I will start a five day stretch of working on The Lord's Prayer! 

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Gas Fireplace or Wood Stove?

 The Facts - The Current Setup:

1. We have a gas fireplace upstairs and downstairs. No real fire - just gas fake flames and a little heat - maybe. Both are 2003 models of a Lennox insert. We've been told some of the Lennox units from that era were about ambiance and not about heat. They do not put out much heat! Tons of cold air comes in around them during the winter. I think it has to do with the venting to the outside. I did put up magnetic "blankets" to block the cold air and I've stacked a dozen or more quilts in front of them but I still feel a real breeze coming through.


This is the downstairs fireplace but they both look pretty close to the same. The upstairs may be a bit larger.

2. The first winter I was here alone, I used the gas fireplace upstairs when I was sitting and stitching right next to it. There was some heat but not much and I went through a LOT of propane. That is an older, less efficient unit and I think you get about 2 hours run time on 1 gallon of propane. We had a 250 gallon propane tank at the time and I couldn't believe that in just a couple of weeks, it was down substantially. We turned it off. closed off the pilots on both of them and haven't used them since.

3. If the power was off and it was freezing, we could probably make beds right in front of them and not freeze to death but that's about it.

4. With a heat pump, our house is NEVER warm. This winter, we had three small room type electric heaters

More Facts - The Future Possibilities.

1. I have wanted a wood stove for as long as I can remember. We've only had one house that didn't have a real fireplace. But, I would much prefer a wood stove to a fireplace.

2. I think Vince sees the value in having something that gives off more heat and something that we can use when/if the electricity is off for an extended time.

3. Today we stopped by a fireplace shop and talked to the people.


If we get one, I think this is the one we'll get - the Endeavor by Lopi but, the red Vermont Castings stoves really are begging to come home with me.


I wouldn't get tired of red but Vince might.

The best part, besides warm heat, no drafts and the sound and view of a fire would be having a pot of stew or beans or chili simmering every day on the stove. I'm always downstairs and I have to go upstairs a million times a day with something cooking on the stove. OK . . there is a stove in the basement but it has canners on every burner. I leave them there even when I'm not canning. Sounds pretty lazy, huh?

The fireplace people are coming out Monday to check it all out and see if an installation is going to be as easy as I made it sound. I'm sure the answer to that is no because, as you know, I have no idea what I'm talking about - especially when it comes to wood stoves.

Questions:

I understand that not everyone loves a fireplace or wood stove. I know not everyone wants to deal with bringing firewood in on a cold, icy night or tromping through the snow to get firewood. We would keep some of it very close to the house and keep it covered. I know we're all different. I do not mind throwing logs on a fire. I don't mind pulling the ash drawer out and dumping wood ashes in my garden. 

We added the greenhouse a few years ago and it's just too hard/expensive to keep it warm during the cold nights of early spring so we aren't using it for much. It's about three steps away from the concrete patio so I figure we could keep some amount of wood in there and that would keep it dry so on rainy/snowy nights, we could grab wood out of the greenhouse.

It has been 45 or more years since I had a wood stove. What am I not thinking about that I will wish I had remembered? Are we too old to be doing this?

I have called our insurance company and it's less than $100 more per year added to our annual premium if we add a wood stove so that isn't a consideration.

One of the biggest thoughts for me is electricity. I don't feel like our grid is reliable. In the summer, we could survive in the basement without a/c. In the winter, with no heat, we could not survive - some winters. Not all of our winters get down to zero for multiple nights. Some do. In the six winters we've been here, about half of them have had multiple nights below zero. About half of them, it rarely got down to the teens. Who knows? I would feel like with the wood stove, we could stay warm in the winter; with the basement, we could survive in the summer so, for me it's about getting rid of these drafty gas inserts; having warm air, and having a way to cook/heat water if we needed it.

Thanks if you're still reading this far down and thanks for any info/thoughts you care to share.


Sunday, March 22, 2026

2026 Week 12 Stitching Report

 Week 12 - 2026

This is the first full week of my new stitching plan. I hope to keep up with weekly reports. I'm sure there will be some changes/improvements in my reports as I go along but here's the first one.

Monday, March 16, 2026
Project: Seeking Refuge
Stitches Made: 521
Percentage Completed: 11.69%


Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Project: Seeking Refuge
Stitches Made: 817
Percentage Completed: 14.83%


Wednesday, March 18, 2026 
Project: Seeking Refuge
Stitches Made: 234
Percentage Completed: 15.66%


Thursday, March 19, 2026
Project: Seeking Refuge
Stitches Made: 484
Percentage Completed:
 17.07%


Friday, March 20, 2026
Project: 4th of July Rules
Stitches Made: 565 
Percentage Completed: 44.76%


Saturday, March 21, 2026
Project: Seeking Refuge
Stitches Made: 743
Percentage Completed: 19.68%


Sunday, March 22, 2026
Project: Winter Rose Manor
Stitches Made: 478
Percentage Completed: 50.98%

Stitches Made in Week 12, 2026: 
Seeking Refuge - 3,277
4th of July Rules - 565

Total Stitches - 3,842 (average per day/549)

Here are a few pictures and a bit more info:


Seeking Refuse is the piece I worked on most this week. I didn't (and won't) make notes of everything I do but here's what I remember:

  1. Finished the bottom line of text.
  2. Added the red and gold flowers, finished the gold band beneath the text.
  3. Started filling in the black and goldish green near the bottom.
  4. Added a few more green squares on point.
  5. Stitched the bird at the right side of the text.
  6. Started on the two trees top right.
  7. Filled in some of the trim work on the doors of the house.

This is my current project I work on when stitching with Debbie. I almost always work on this one day per week. This week I finished the flag near the bottom and stitched "and Honor the Fallen" along with the three pinwheels to the right of the words.

Finally, Sunday (today) I started back working on Winter Rose Manor.

It had been so long since I worked on this one, I didn't even have it set up in Markup so I did that, stitched a few more flowers in the border, filled in a bit more "snow" near the bottom. The snow wasn't finished when I took the picture but I did get it finished.

I will work on this one four more days (Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday). Wednesday I will work on Fourth of July Rules. Not sure what the next project will be but I will work on it Saturday and Sunday.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

A Good Day

 My day started at 3:30 a.m. when Oscar woke up and decided there had to be something very scary outside. I don't think there was but I had to be up at 5 so by the time I got him calmed down, I figured - why bother with trying to go back to sleep?

This morning I had a colonoscopy. Yes, even that was good . . compared to what I went through yesterday with the preps. Before the procedure started, I asked the doctor . . If I have no polyps, can I go back to having a colonoscopy every 5 years instead of every 3 years? I'm thinking . . if it's every 5 years, I'll be old enough that I won't need another one. He said "Let's see what I find and we'll talk about that."

Turns out there were three polyps and he said "Once I get the lab report back, we'll see if you need a colonoscopy every ONE year or every three years." I suppose that's where "be careful what you ask for" comes into play!


But . . it was a good day. When we left the hospital, we stopped at Cracker Barrel and had breakfast. We used to love Cracker Barrel but after three not so great experiences there, we hadn't been back in probably two or more years. Today the food was excellent, our server was friendly and happy and checked on us several times and even got our order correct! 

In the picture of my plate (right to left): hash brown casserole (and it was as good as I remember it being), THREE scrambled eggs with fresh spinach tomatoes, mushrooms and green onions on top with a Hollandaise type sauce, bacon and apples. There were also two biscuits and real butter. I believe it was $11.99, which isn't bad these days. I ended up giving Vince some of my eggs. I had not eating since lunch on Monday (and today is Wednesday) and I barely ate it all - except those eggs I gave Vince and I could only eat one biscuit so he ate the other one.

The we stopped by Sam's because we wanted to get more dog food, salt for the water softener and something else that was heavy but I can't think of it now . . oh . . flour. I buy 25 pound bags of bread flour there. I use it when rolling out dough (dusting the countertop) and if I'm making bread or treats for people who may not love whole wheat bread, I use storebought white flour. 

The best news . . 

I can't remember if I mentioned it here but I've had this piece on a scroll frame for several years. I was 100% certain this was a Hands Across the Sea project (it wasn't) and I kept thinking I'd come across the chart. While I haven't been actively searching for the chart for months and months, for that long, it was in the back of my mind that I needed to find it. Last week, while organizing charts and formalizing my new stitching plan, I said to myself . . you HAVE to find the chart that goes with this piece. Nope, couldn't find it. I spent hours and days going through bins of charts.

Finally, out of desperation, I posted in one of the stitching Facebook groups . . does anyone know what chart this is? Everyone was nice and some really put some time into trying find it. After a few days, the comments became fewer and fewer and I figured no one would find it. I thought it was weird that I couldn't find it on Instagram or Facebook or anywhere. Did I buy the only chart that was out there? Did others buy it and lose it and therefore, don't recognize it?

On our way home from doing all the things this morning, I looked at Facebook on my phone and found a response from a lady with a picture of the chart and the name - In HIS Image by Teresa Kogut.


In a million years, I would never have guessed that was a Teresa Kogut border. YES! That was it. I looked on my X-Stitch app and I didn't have that chart listed. I looked on my spreadsheet - nope, not listed there either. What the heck??

I started searching all over again because MAYBE I had a project bag that had several of Teresa Kogut's charts in the same bag (Why do I do that?) and I had glanced at the chart in front but hadn't realized there were others in there. Nope - I wanted so badly to take a nap but I couldn't stop looking for that chart. 

I googled it and saw that it was an exclusive for Craft Gallery in Findlay, OH in early 2022. Then I remembered I had two bins of older charts that I haven't looked at in a couple of years. You know how you (maybe not YOU but me!) will buy so much when you first start something new and then find your niche and have charts you may or may not use?) I had taken those and put them in separate bins and apparently accidentally got In HIS Image in that bin. I need to go through all of those and see if there are other charts in there that shouldn't be. So I went to that bin and there it was . . chart, working copy of the chart AND the floss. I was a bit concerned about the floss because back in 2022, I didn't really worry about keeping the floss with the project but was so happy to see it there.


This afternoon I made the PDF and got it loaded into Markup XP, added labels to both the frame and the floss ring.


To further complicate this project, I made notes on my working copy and I don't have a clue what they say/mean. NOTE TO SELF: Write so you can read your own writing and make sure it makes sense!

I'm assuming when I get to that area (door is already stitched), I'll be able to figure it out.

I will add In His Image to my cross stitching plan and that will give me 17 projects. I definitely need to stitch faster, don't I?

OK . . it's been a full day. I'm going to try to get a few stitches done before I crash.


Tuesday, March 17, 2026

The Stitching Plan in Action

 There was a new addition to the list of projects, which makes 16 WIPS on the list, but there may be others that get added as I remember them or come across them. I don't mind if the list grows because having them front and center helps remind me to get them done and helps keep everything together in one spot.

The one that was added is Autumn Moon by Plum Street.


Yesterday was the first day I started stitching on the new plan and I realized that picking up a different project every 5 or 6 days is almost, at least for me, like starting a new project. 

My first project to work on was Seeking Refuge.


Yesterday I stitched 521 stitches.


And here's where it was when I put it down last night.


I finished the bottom row of text and I got almost all the way across with the gold band under the text.

Today I begin preps for tomorrow's colonoscopy so I probably won't get as much done today and may get very little (or nothing) stitched tomorrow.

Once I make enough progress that it's worth showing, I'll post again.


Sunday, March 15, 2026

A New Plan


 If I had a dime for every time I come up with a great new plan, I'd be a rich woman!  :)

One thing for sure - I cannot be a monogamous stitcher! I started America - 250 on February 15 and planned to stitch right through until it's finished. I'm 34.2% complete - which means if I stuck with it, I'd finish it probably by mid-May but I just cannot stick with it. I try to stitch at least 400 stitches per day. The last four days I've stitched 143, then 190, then 154, then 124. I find myself looking for anything to do other than cross stitching

I had to come up with a new plan.

I pulled out about 15 projects I want to get finished . . no deadline except I would love to get America - 250 finished and framed by July 4. We'll see. If I don't . . I'll get it done eventually.

For me the hardest part of getting back to an older project is finding the chart, the floss, my notes and whatever else I need to find to get back to it.

Today I pulled out the projects, and for all of them, I put the chart and the floss in a project bag, put them all in a bit with the bag right behind the frame.


Here are the projects I pulled out to work on.

1. This is the Day by Plum Street. There's not much left to be done on this one.


2. These are in no particular order as to how/when I intend to work on them. This is G. Leger by Reflets de Soie. There's a LOT left to be done on this one.


3. And God Saw by Teresa Kogut. Another one with a lot left to be done but it's so pretty!


4. Live on Little by Plum Street. This one also has a lot left to be done. The original verse says:  How great the blessing and how vast the art to live on little with a thankful heart.

I changed the verse to read "How great the blessing and vast the art to live every day with a thankful heart." We aren't wealthy by any means but when I think of "living on little", I would feel a bit weird saying we live on little, especially compared to how many are struggling these days.


5. Prairie Life Sampler by Heartstring Samplery. Still lots of stitching to do but at least the border met up! I LOVE the verse on this one:  The real things haven't changed. It is still best to be honest and truthful, to be happy with simple pleasures and have courage when things go wrong. That's where I would have failed being a prairie wife - I don't have much courage! 


6. This one is Mary Ellen Turner by Fox & Rabbit. There's a lot left to be done on this one too. See a pattern here? Lots to be done! But, again, the border met up. Considering the border outline is stitched, I may be close to one-third or more done on this one. It is stitched on a beautiful pink linen by X-Ju.


7. I've done a ton of stitching on this one but still have a ways to go. It's Let Freedom Ring by Lila's Studio. It will not be finished before July 4.


8. Next is Seeking Refuge by The Scarlett House.


9. And Be Kind to One Another by Needlework Press. This one is kinda narrow but long (about 5" x 21") so maybe it will go quickly.


10. Forever & Ever by Brenda Gervais.


11. Winter Rose Manor by Brenda Gervais. I started this one quite a while ago and I hope to finish it this year.


12. New Year Sampler by Owl Forest Embroidery. There's a lot to be done on this one but these individual motifs are fun and fairly fast.


13. Noel Sampler by Brenda Gervais. This is one I started when I was a beginner and there are quite a few mistakes I have to work around but once it's done, it should look fine.


14. And Heaven & Nature Sing by Kathy Barrick


15. And, here's America - 250.


16. Autumn Moon

This is one I started in 2026.


17. In HIS Image by Teresa Kogut.

This one was started in 2022 and kinda got lost (not the piece but the chart and floss). Just got "found" mid-March, 2025 so I'm going to get some stitches on it this year.



18. The Lord's Prayer by Lila's Studio.

I have no idea when I started this one. I'm using Vikki Clayton's silks and I keep those in little plastic containers. At one time, I kept them in the project bags but that made my project bags too bulky when they were all stacked together on a shelf in the craft room. But, when I went back to work on this one, the little container with the floss wasn't there. About six or eight months ago, I found it but I stuck it somewhere and couldn't find it again. When I was moving all the quilts I had stacked up in front of the gas fireplace for the guys to come look at it, I found the container that had slipped between some quilts. Now it's together with the stitching frame and in my stitching bin to be worked on and hopefully some day completed.


Here's how I plan for this to work:

1. One day a week I stitch with Debbie and I have a 36 count project that I work on those days. I usually keep the same project and work on it just that one day a week so it means that project will get four days per month of working on it and I usually stick with it until it's finished so that project kinda isn't in this plan but it does reduce my stitching days for this plan to six days per week.

2. I can pick any project I want to work on but when I pick it up, I have to work on it at least five consecutive days (As in . . days I'm stitching. There are days I may not be able to stitch at all so those won't count - but hopefully there will be few of those kinds of days.) AND I have to work on at least four different projects per month. So, in a 30 day month, take out the four days I'm stitching on something different with Debbie, that leaves 26 days. If I work on four projects for five days, that's 20 days so I can go back to one of the four projects and work more or those or pick up a fifth project and work five or six days on that. 

3. I can't work on the same project two months in a row except projects that have REAL deadlines (America - 250, a Blessing Sampler in January, a challenge every now and then).

4. New projects can be started but they are discouraged.  :)

This plan sounds like it may be challenging enough to keep my interest. We'll see. If it doesn't work . . I'll come up with a new plan! 

I'll keep you posted on how my plan works.



Saturday, March 14, 2026

Winter is Back!

 No one that I know invited winter back but, nonetheless, winter is visiting for a few days. Our low tomorrow night will be 15; our high on Monday will be just around freezing and our low Monday night will be in the low 20's. I don't see any more temps that low through April 12, which is as far as I can see. I won't plant anything tender until after Mother's Day though.

One thing I don't have to worry about are the elderberries because . . they are gone!


It is a very sad story. I am NOT happy about it. I thought I was past the tears but . . I guess maybe not yet. These were the very first thing I planted when we bought this house in 2020. There are a few small bushes that I planted from cuttings but they're outside the fence and the deer will get most of those. I loved the elderberries and I loved the flowers. OK . . it's done. We move on.


Peonies will be blooming soon. I've covered those with straw. I've never grown them before doing it here so I have no idea how they will handle a hard freeze but hopefully with the ground being somewhat warm and a thick blanket of straw, they will be ok.



I've covered several of the raised beds with straw - onions, rhubarb, garlic. I'm thinking they will be fine without it but since we have the straw, I spread it over them. 


There is one mineral tub that has some kind of squash from last year that came up volunteer. I covered those hoping to protect them but I have no idea if they will survive. They don't like cold temps. I'm guessing if they don't make it, maybe there are some seeds that haven't sprouted yet and they may come up after the cold. I love volunteer plants!

I do have beets, cabbage and carrots planted and they haven't come up yet so I left them alone.

One thing I know we're going to lose . . 


The buds are opening on one of the pear trees. One tree had buds several weeks ago when we had a freeze so this means two of our three pear trees will not produce this year. A "critical temperature" chart tells me anything below 25 degrees will kill 25% of the ability to produce fruit and anything below 19 degrees will kill 90% of the ability to produce fruit so I'd say we'll be lucky to get pears off one tree.


My most precious and loved tree now that the elderberries are gone is the sour cherry. Those buds are still tight. I may lose 10% with a 15 degree temp but there are a lot of buds and I will need to thin some of the fruit if a lot of those buds produce. I'm pretty optimistic they cherries will be fine. 

The peaches and plums are pretty much in full bloom but we do have two trees that are in pots and they're blooming like crazy. Young trees won't produce much but a plum or two would be very nice. They will be in the heated garage, along with the bay leaf trees, for the next few days.

It's too expensive to heat the greenhouse so I've brought all my little seedlings inside the house.

I'll be hoping for the best - especially with that one pear tree and the cherry tree.



Racing to Beat the Storm

  Today was my day to go stitch with Debbie and it was the day I drive up to her place. We've had storms predicted for almost every day ...