Writings

  • Sewing with Soph

    One of my Christmas presents to my little girl was a basic sewing kit. I was unsure she would be ready for this, but the packet said 36 months + and so I took the plunge.

    Turns out she’s not so ready, but she is ready to learn. So we are using this kit to get her sewing fingers toned and practiced. She is doing well! We do a fraction every day and already over the few days we’ve been going along there is improvement. She is very determined to do it herself which demands a lot of patience from me, but we sit there together every day and I point to where she needs to put the needle and correct her when wrong.  She takes it so long as it is her in control (which I guess is fair enough, it is her learning situation after all, not my own, I am there to help and facilitate not dictate!!)

    Here’s our progress:

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  • Salad Garden

    This is a true garden salad! Everything in it was personally picked from either mine or my friends garden.

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    Ingredients:
    Rocket
    Fennel Leaves
    Basil
    Parsley
    Chives
    Mint
    Kale
    Tomatoes
    Snow Peas
    Zucchini
    Cucumber

    No dressing but the herbs added loads of flavour.

    I could also have added baby beets, but I forgot to,  and in a few weeks I will be able to add green beans & capsicum.  If I’d thrown an egg in there I could still call it home grown! I love that. I love that about growing things and keeping chickens.  Chickens are the most rewarding of pets – and ours are pets – they are friendly, fairly independent, quiet and oh so useful!

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    I only wish I could keep these kind of meals up through the entire year.  One day…one day…

  • Word for the Year

    There are some things I never think I will ever do. ‘Too cheesy’, ‘too sentimental’, ‘too dumb’.

    That’s sort of how I felt about that ‘Word for the Year’ fad that I’d only ever encountered on the blogosphere.

    Well, it’s time to swallow my words (in this case my thoughts – glad I never bragged about not doing this one!) because I am doing it.

    The only reason being: I need it.  I need to improve in this area and I connected the dots and realised that if I did make this my Word it would help me keep on track with it.

    And actually, I have two, only because when thinking of the one I kept thinking of the other and so the two seem intertwined. One is internal and the other external.

    1) Gratitude. Internal gratitude for all lifes blessings and all others bless me with.  Gratitude for others generosity.

    2) Generosity.  Return that generosity…though actually also to extend generosity where genosity is backward in coming forward.

    I suppose these two are very much linked because in order to be freely generous you have to be free of want. Want (also: greed) are the opposites of gratitude. That is: always thinking of what you don’t have rather than being thankful for what you do have.  When we are genuinely appreciative for all we do have then we can freely, joyfully, extend that hand to others.  I want to get into the practice & spirit of extending my hand in Generosity this year, in all and to all.

    It’s also important for these two to coexist as there is the type of breed who are very generous but feel either too guilty or too proud to accept generosity. I kind of fall into this basket.  I am proud of my independence and expect others to be independent also.

    I also fall into a basket which I think most people fall into, though I have met the odd and wonderful exception to this rule, and that is that I find it much easier to give to those who are generous than to sinkholes where resources are seemingly sucked in and not dealt out again.

    I’ve been reminded of a saying from my youth, actually from 2000 years before my youth. Here it is:

    “Most people say that you should love your friends and hate your enemies;  But I say love your enemies and pray for those who misuse you, for God makes His sun rise on the wicked and on the good. If you only love those who love you, what reward is that? Anyone can do that! You must be perfect.”

    Generosity. Generosity! Come to me!

  • Henna Feet

    Zoe and I have been madly into painting henna. We were inspired when we got free henna tattoos at Corinbank (yay for that!). Sometimes it just takes a free offer to get into some thing big time.  We have plans for our henna, for now we are just perfecting the art.  It takes a bit of skill, and is a whole new medium, squeezing the cone to get the right pressure, guiding your hand into perfectly even lines. Nothing like a small challenge.

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  • 2013

    This was a bit of a different New Years for me.  Firstly, of course, with pretty little kids there was nil to little chance of going out.  Mentally though, I like to reflect a little every New Year and I often do.  My usual practice is to write the New Year in.  Not this year though.  This year I merely felt full of all the little projects I have ongoing and also waiting in the wings to get done.  So more than anything it was a year of planning or at least anticipating and I couldn’t think of a resolution that was anything other than what I am currently doing.

    I’m happy with my fitness, I’m strong and can work hard. I go for a jog on a semi regular basis and I am happy with that as rather than a fitness blitz I want a lifestyle I can sustain over a long period of time, and this I am doing.  In these hot summer months running seems to go out the window a bit, or just lie down on the floor, scared to break a sweat, so I’m not in a fret about it.  However a big goal of mine is to go on an overnight bushwalk with my husband.  We will probably go in March when it cools down so I need to be working up to this!

    My major thing is being the best mum I can be, but as my children are fluid and always growing, so the way I parent constantly changes, so it’s a hard one to pinpoint as to how I am supposed to change, as really…I never know.  I am so aware though that I need to challenge my little girl’s brain as she is speeding ahead and I often (mistakenly) underestimate her abilities.  We do things though like spelling, sewing, cooking, cleaning, sports, play games, gardening and all the good things.  Patience is a big area I can work on, and I am.

    In other areas I am totally full of interests. Too full.  I write. Play piano. Learn French. Felt. Do Henna. Attempt to draw. I have so many small business and personal ideas locked up in my head.  Things I simply don’t know how to go about acheiving.  Things that I think are important and will be my contribution to the improvement of this planet.  Some business ideas are simply drawn from my desires (i.e. Own a Venue and Cafe!!) and so perhaps are more selfish – or perhaps self-fulfilling is a better term – but that’s alright so long as it’s constructive.  I have to remember that I have a life ahead of me (I plan on living to a healthy 105 or more year old) with time to do all these things.  I would like to be like a certain Margaret Olley, and though perhaps not a painter, I will be productive up to the end. I suppose at this present time the thing most stopping me is a lack of capital. That must be the first thing to address.

    I am also totally keen to support my husband in his endeavours, particularly in his music and particularly with his band, The Burley Griffin, I believe in their music. They are a good band with good songs. Songs you can dance to and think along with. Songs with a soul. So that is something I also need to factor in.  He is also a very talented and sought after Sound Engineer. I am so proud of his strong work ethic and his perfectionist tendencies in his work (they are a pain when they spill out into our personal life, but we cope – with jocularity) It makes him good at what he does.

    I have been thinking a lot about our efforts in this physical world.  In particular our apparent lack of care of it.  We live in a throwaway society and have almost developed a throwaway attitude to our planet.  My dad made a point to me recently about the fact that old cultures care much more about the health of their environment then new(er) settlers as they are there for good.  We however (Australians, Americans) do not have ancient and permanent ties to our landscape. It must take many centuries to develop this mindset.  Britain seems to do better with a ‘Right to Roam’, edible hedgerows and seemingly a more long-term view of their management of their little isle.  We Aussies would do well to deeply care about Australia not as something we can make the use of and plunder but as a long-term (the longest term) investment.

    I have come to see that we are inextricably linked to this world and  are as much a physical part of it as any animal or plant, our role is as carers, guardians, protectors of our planet and so we must invest into it, not merely take from it like selfish children.  What we do in this world matters.  It matters to the planet, it matters to future generations.  We must use our brains and make ethical decision when it comes to our consumption of natural resources, unnecessary travel, over population (a problem that will not go away and will escalate if anything, escalate until, as in China, the government must have a say. I don’t know about you but I would rather play a part now than have outside forces dictate to my children or my childrens-children about the number of offspring they can produce. We must at least think about it and make the decision that we feel is best.), in fact everything we do must be thought about with foresight as to its effects long down the track. I do believe we will be held accountable for it.

    So, when thinking of what I will be pursuing this New Years that is what I think about.

    Joni Mitchell stated that her passion for the environment was developed simply through seeing what was happening and envisioning the natural consequences of such developments. ‘Pave paradise, put up a parking lot’. And it’s true we won’t ‘know what we’ve got til it’s gone.’ I’d hate to get to that point.

    (I really did not mean for this to reach such a lengthy read, so if you’ve read this far I congratulate you! I don’t know if I would’ve stuck it out!!)

  • Life

    “It’s never to late, or in my case too early, to be whoever you want to be.  There’s no time limit, stop whenever you want.  You can change or stay the same; there are no rules to this thing.  We can make the best or the worst of it.  I hope you make the best of it.  And I hope you see things that startle you.  I hope you feel things you never felt before.  I hope you meet people with a different point of view.  I hope you live a life you’re proud of.  If you find that you’re not, I hope you have the strength to start all over again.”
    – F. Scott Fitzgerald

  • Christmas Break

    Still indulging in a relaxing, cosy Christmas time.

    Things have started happening for us. I have my Truck License (so I can drive our bus around Australia).  I have been accepted into University to study Sustainable Development (by correspondence of course) – so am busy confirming, enrolling in units and organising my life so I am ready to do it come term beginning!

    My friend and I have been getting into Henna tattoos and I am going a little bit crazy for them.  It’s a lot of fun and our plan is to take it with us around Australia, maybe set up some festival stalls around it – who knows.  Also am felting a bit and making some necklaces (felt is my textile passion) which is a whole lot of fun. Learning new piano pieces. Cooking lots of vego…

    Me in a nutshell. Of course there’s so much more.

    I was so proud of Sophia when she put some letters (sounds/phonics) together to make words. She is starting to recognise them of her own accord and I can really tell it’s all coming together in her clever little head.  It gives me enough encouragement to keep on going with her reading & writing.  We went on a coffee date yesterday and did some spelling together. Going on coffee dates is my favourite thing to do with her.

    More later – perhaps some henna pics.

    xo

  • Camping

    What drives us to camp?  Is it a cry back to our primal days?  A chance to live as we used to? To absorb nature? Is it the dream of rest and relaxation? Because all these things seem to exist more in either the anticipation or in the reflection of the actual event.  The actuality is full of modern contrivances so that we do not have to live as ‘primitively’ as we might like to think ourselves capable of. In part I might welcome the opportunity to sleep out in the open and live off bush berries for a few days if it seriously cut back on all the cooking & cleaning I had to do!

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    But, the memories make it worth it…

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    The Australian bush is beautiful and it was fun to cook on the fire, build sandcastles, collect shells, discover our own ‘Mermaid Cove’, swim with the fish, dive in the surf.  And we saw a lot of wildlife, from crabs to possums, a red-bellied black snake, a very friendly goanna and of course kangaroos and a wallaby.

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    We slept to the scratching and scrounging of who-knows-what animals, and gum leaves and sticks falling on our tent, in fact it was an area prone to trees falling and we saw one suddenly & entirely collapse only a hundred metres from our campsite.  Which kept me awake at night! In the morning it was noisy!  So many birds just having a party.

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    I felt absolutely exhausted by the end, cooking & cleaning in makeshift conditions, dragging the kids around the beach and back, but times like these call for extra effort and the memories will always be special.

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  • Corinbank 2012

    A photo blog post of the Corinbank 2012 festival held in the beautiful Brindabellas near Canberra.

    This was one of the best festivals I have been to.  I tried to make the best of it, dragging the kids around from the wee small hours to the early night hours, but kids move slowly and they do not tolerate too many and varied adult type activities, so…? What can you do.

    Things I didn’t manage to photograph:

    Nudist in the nudie hot tub

    Swimming in a secluded (freezing!) bush pool early in the  morning

    Swagging it

    Getting henna tattoos

    In the chai tent, where we spent a bit of time each day! (This was the best chai most of us had ever tasted, by the way.)

    The smells

    The sounds

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  • Home Grown

    It is sadly, satisfyingly novel to cook from your own garden.  Sadly because, really, it should be the norm to gather our own food rather than pay for it. Satisfying because there is a real sense of acheivement (though one does so little!) in watching a seed that you have planted grow into a tiny sprout, into a bigger plant and finally fruit to make its way to your dinner plate.

    A few days ago I harvested Broad Beans, Garlic bulbs and Garlic flowers and Thyme to make a Broad Bean Casserole. (I will not include the recipe as I’m not a particularly fussy eater, and though I enjoyed it immensely, others may not, and really you would probably have the same results if you just played around with your ingredients as I did!)  The total list of ingredients were: Broad beans (pre-boiled), green beans, one garlic bulb, a few garlic flowers (with stems), sprigs of thyme, onions, mushrooms vege stock, cornflour. Short & simple. Everything could collected from the garden, it’s all in the timing. In fact I have all of these things in my garden a times

    Speaking of garlic flowers, have you ever tried them?  The first time I ever ate one was in New Zealand whilst being hosted on the property of a woman who had the most incredible permaculture style garden I had then yet seen.  They are…sublime! The flowers are unbelievable exactly like a very young garlic bulb, without the dirt, a lovely subtle flavour.

    Growing veges is easy peasy, I would encougage anyone to try it.  Sometimes all you need to do is push a few seeds under the earth, water them a few times a week, and wait and watch.

    Glorious.

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    Garlic Flower Head

    Dandelion Head among Rocket Flowers (I like to grow Dandelion in my vege ‘patch’, they are edible and good for the soil, they aren’t given enough of a chance.  Great for the liver!)

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    Broad Beans above.IMG_0297

    Leek Flower Heads

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    All from my garden Garlic Cloves, Thyme, Garlic Flower Heads

    The assembled dish! Don’t you just love my orange counter top!
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