Pioneer Woman at Heart
One Flourishing, Frugal and Fun Family!
One family learning to live off the land, cut back on expenses, and to live a simpler and a more self-sufficient lifestyle.
Adopted Motto
"Eat it up,
Wear it out,
Make it do,
Or go without."
~A Pioneer Sampler, by Barbara Greenwood~
Friday, November 24, 2023
Refrigerator Rolls
Wednesday, November 22, 2023
Just the Bits
We are on the hunt for a wider ridge cap for the chicken coop. We will need to be creative and resourceful, if we cannot locate one.
We have another leak in the kitchen, but it's under the floor, so yay us. We may have to cut out the bottom of the cupboard and check under it. Not what we need right now at the holidays. It could be another issue.
The weather turned much colder and brought rain. Lots of rain.
Tuesday, November 21, 2023
Handiwork ~ Baby Washcloths ~ Crochet
Tucked away in one of my yarn totes is yarn from a store closeout. I think I bought it, thinking I was buying cotton yarn the thickness of a 4 yarn. It is very thin cotton yarn, and about a thin 2 maybe? the label doesn't even say what hook size to use or even the thickness. It is USA made, and I think the company closed back around 2011. I've had the yarn that long.
Not that I need another project right now, as we have so many going on, but I wanted to find a use of this yarn. I'm trying very hard to get stuff made for the last craft show.
By the way, I was invited to another craft show, and once again the cost would be $50.00. This particular show was $20.00 for a 2-table space the last time I participated. Crazy high prices, unless you sell high priced items. It just takes the "fun" out of fun.
Anyway, back to the subject of this post, which I apologize if it's boring.
Funny, how I can get hooked onto a new project. I was moving my binder project to another area (for a winter snowy day project), and a pattern fell out. It was for baby washcloths (crochet pattern). I him-hawed, and left it sit on the end table. Well, I had written the source of the pattern, and borrowed the library book again, just for fun.
I had the pattern, but not the photo, so hence the book borrowing. The color of the yarn (to me) was perfect for something "baby" so I gave it a whirl. I figured 100% cotton was just right for a baby washcloth with the thin cotton yarn.
I think they are turning out nicely. I used a "D" hook. I have yet to try them myself, so I may be asking a friend to try them first, but I may have found a purpose for the yarn, and will make some up for gifting or donating.
I also have some cotton blend baby yarn I mistakenly ordered several years ago, and forgot to return. I made a few washcloths with that too to try. It's not 100% cotton, but I found a pattern online where they used the same blend for dishcloths. I mean, if it's a "washcloth" you would not be re-using it, so I believe I found another way to use up another "oops" yarn purchase.
Just in case you crochet, this book has the pattern for the baby washcloths, and there are 3 patterns. I have only made one so far.
Monday, November 20, 2023
Happy Homemaker Monday
I'm joining Sandra at Diary of a Stay at Home Mom.
The weather . . .
We went from 60-70's to 50's and rain, and this week we'll barely see 50°F with lows in the 30's. I was successful at crossing off "wash rugs" and they dried outside before the weather turned.
Right now I am . . .
Posting this blog post and sipping coffee.
Thinking and pondering . . .
Well for starters, I'm searching to see if they sell metal ridge caps that are wider than 10 x 10 inches, and possibly covering the coop with a tarp until we figure things out.
We have another set back with the chicken coop roofing. He hand built the rafters, and the roofing he cut is too short for the ridge cap by about 2 inches. Not what we needed with the holidays and such. Otherwise the ridge cap would have been up last night.
How I am feeling . . .
Tired. However, I taught my granddaughter how to crochet. In the amount of time she was here, she learned to chain stitch and by the end of the night, I taught her how to go back the second row using single crochet. She left with a bag of yarn and a crochet hook, and a happy kiddo. I fear though, she will drive her Mom mad with questions now (ha ha!).
On the breakfast plate . . .
Egg, bacon, and cheese breakfast sandwich.
On the lunch plate . . .
Have no idea yet.
On the dinner plate . . .
Leftovers thankfully.
On the menu . . .
-
What I am wearing . . .
PJ's - still sipping coffee and getting this posted.
On my reading pile . . .
On my TV this week . . .
Christmas on Mistletoe Farm (Netflix). I picked this randomly, when I my husband worked overtime, and found it quite fun to watch. Very quirky, and at one point you'd think of it as a musical. A father with 5 kids inherits a farm and the animals with it. The town is very small, and the funny part is there is a woman in the town who crochets/knits for everyone and everything, including kid goats. Everything in this movie is surrounded by something crocheted in the scene. Family friendly.
Looking around the house . . .
Update on the home renovations/repairs/improvements:
When we moved in this house, the entire kitchen, and master bath had zero hardware on the cabinets. I bought plain wood knobs, and hand painted them with acrylic paints to appear like weather paint. They have lasted 14 years, and still look the same as the day I painted them.
I've been installing new hardware in the master bath. I've had it in a box since last year, and we got so far behind, painting in there did not happen (yet). I decided to install all the new hardware, and will beautify as the weather sees fit. Now I'm not shuffling the box around to sweep and mop.
To-do list . . .
-make a breakfast dish
-put trash out, including a lawn chair I keep forgetting about
-work on menu/grocery list for the week
From the camera . . .
Marinated cheese. A first time trying, and why I wanted a basil plant indoors. You can't buy fresh basil this time of year (atleast here anyway). Delicious.
Saturday, November 18, 2023
Hillbilly Hen House
The recent days have been in the high 60's and low 70's, up until Friday. We dipped just a hair, and the rain moved in. The rain did not stop me from working on the new coop. I've dubbed it the "Hillbilly" hen house, ha ha! We've had to do some crazy work in order to make things work with what we have. Nothing seems to come together straight, nor level, but it's getting done.
I decided to do things a big backwards, but it's a race against the clock with painting trim. Instead of waiting for a day to measure and cut the trim, then paint it, I just painted what we had. I can touch up later, but it's painted now, before the weather gets too cold. The weather is quickly changing here.
I bought my husband that wrist wrap that is on his wrist. It is magnetic and holds the screws for him. Now he needs a carpenters apron and/or a tool belt.
Friday, November 17, 2023
Homemade Cleaning Spray ~ Money Savings Tip
You'll need a sprayer bottle to make the homemade cleaner. I just picked one up at our Dollar Tree to try this cleaner out.
In the sprayer (24 oz) add 1/4 cup rubbing alcohol, and fill with water. Leave room to add only 3 drops of Doctor Bronner's Pure-Castile Soap. Shake and spray to clean surfaces.
Note: We have well water, so I filled the sprayer with distilled water.
Money Savings Tip:
SOS pads - where ever you buy these at a low price, lower that cost more by cutting them into smaller pieces. It's a one time use item, and will last a lot longer for scrubbing your sink or whatever you use them for.
I last purchased a box of 10 at Ollies for $1.99. Cut those in half or in 3rds and you get a better bang for your buck.
Thursday, November 16, 2023
This and That ~ Something I Learned
Just when I was getting the scissors to cut my under-the-sink mat, I opened the cupboard to eye-spy another leak on the other side of the sink.
I'm awaiting a new gasket for that side, before I can clean up my kitchen floor (again).
I am starting to bring my craft totes downstairs. The inventory is being packaged and priced. There is a lot to sort, so this is taking over the living room, while I try and take advantage of the outdoor weather for those projects. Anxiety at is best, ha ha!
Not sure if I mentioned this, but the store on the island that sold my crocheted camper Christmas ornaments closed it's business recently. The museum that was selling my dish scrubbies, jar openers and soap saver bags had a major flood last Christmas, closed for repairs, and asked me to pick up my items. I have called local market stores where you rent a space, and they are no longer taking new vendors. The general store about 20 minutes away also told me they are not taking new vendors.
Anyway, I had purchased the packaging for said stores, so I am packaging these ornaments, but I do have a question. I am packing up make up washcloths, face scrubbies and such, but would you buy packaged hot pad sets, or should I just price them and not package them? I'm thinking people will want to feel the thickness of them, and same with the knitted dishcloths.
Something I learned:
Homemade Buttermilk (preparedness item):
-4 1/2 oz. dry powdered milk
-2 Tbsp. Cream of Tartar
Whisk well.
To make:
-4 Tbsp. of dry mixture with 1 cup of water = 1 cup of buttermilk
If the power goes out, you can make buttermilk, but you will need a way to cook via a generator, wood cook stove or camper propane stove.
Purge this week:
-crocheted cat blanket donated to a daughter
-donated a cookbook to a daughter
-donating 3 more fiction books
-one decoration from a bathroom went in the donation box