photo-of-the-day

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  1. Winnie Nielsen says:

    Sandbakkel tins! I am lucky to have some of my husband’s Nana. They make the prettiest cookies and are so easy!

  2. Sharon D. says:

    I love these ornaments and am actually going to be making some today 🙂

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And a little more holiday shopping…

Look what I found at our local coop, in our very own Glamping fabric!

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Alicia at Pink Sweetie is busy making some adorable hair gizmos, snappy pouches, and magnets. She has a great selection on her Etsy store. Happy shopping!

P.S. Can you believe I get to live the background of this photo every day?? I was on my way to the farm with snappy pouch in hand so I thought I might as well enjoy the view and the sun for moment and snap a photo of my snappy for you.

  1. Winnie Nielsen says:

    How cute is that?? What a clever idea for your adorable glamping fabric too! Yes, you are indeed very lucky to live where that landscape is your back yard. The rest of us just live vicariously through the beautify photos you post here on the blog!

  2. Terry Steinmetz says:

    I love my snappy pouch that my quilting instructor made for me a year ago. Now I’ll have to make one of my glamping material! The beauty you see out your landscape is beautiful. I love mine as well! We have 40 acres, 18 of which are fields and 22 that is wooded. I am constantly wandering & looking at all the beauty. But thanks for sharing yours!

  3. CJ Armstrong says:

    Hey, I recognize that! TOO cute!
    I, too, live in some of the most beautiful country there is with my own view of the San Juan Range of the Colorado Rocky Mountains!
    CJ

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Reinventing the Snow Shovel

This winter, try an eco-friendly snow thrower called the Sno Wovel. Recognized by Co-op America and National Green Pages for its positive, pollution-free environmental standards, it was also chosen Time Magazine’s “best invention.” The wheeled snow shovel design clears away snow three times faster than shoveling, and greatly reduces the physical strain of shoveling and the related risks of back and heart injuries. No fuel, fumes, or deafening noise to harm the environment or the operator.

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If you know how to use a seesaw, then you can Wovel. The Wovel works on the principle of leverage. “Give me but one firm spot in which to stand,” Archimedes declared 2,200 years ago,” and I will move the earth.” The Wovel gives you the power of leverage to safely move more snow in less time with greater ease then ever before.

Watch a variety of videos of the Sno Wovel in action here.

  1. Winnie Nielsen says:

    Very cool device! With no snow here, I cannot imagine how efficient this would really be to use, but it looks like it would be must have if you live where it snows!

  2. Terry Steinmetz says:

    I’ve seen this in action & it moves snow efficiently & helps those using it from straining.

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photo-of-the-day

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  1. Elizabeth says:

    Snow cute!

  2. Winnie Nielsen says:

    Oh my, that is the cutest use of yo, yo circles ever! What a work of art!!

  3. Debbie Fischer says:

    What a sweet idea, love the yo yo’s.

  4. Laurie Dimno says:

    Oh how precious! What a clever idea!

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Upcycled Holidays

What to do with all those little bits and pieces of remnant doilies and edgings? Paint them with water-diluted Mod Podge in layers until the piece is stiff enough to hold its shape. Put a wire hook in the top and call it a snowflake ornament!

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  1. Elizabeth says:

    Such a neat idea. A couple of my favorite (holiday~special occasion) barrettes are made from starched(?) shell shaped doilies with crocheted mini roses running the length of the clued & stitched on clip. They are treasured gifts that I’ve had for many years.

  2. Winnie Nielsen says:

    Another great idea for all of those lovely old doilies that our grandmother’s made and are currently just stashed in a drawer! They would make great gifts to give anyone. You could hang them up in a window all winter long or adorn a tree with them. Thanks for sharing this simple idea!

  3. Debbie Fischer says:

    What a wonderful idea, so simple yet elegant and who does not like snowflake ornaments. Off I go to make a few as I have so many doilies and ones that could use a bit of TLC.
    Thank you again MJ for sharing a great idea.

  4. Terry Steinmetz says:

    Way cool! And an easy gift!

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a bit of holiday shopping …

Baby, it’s cold outside! With temperatures at zero and the windchill factor scheduled to be in the negative twenties, we’re all noticing where the cold is creeping in. Hubby is home installing that storm door we’ve been meaning to get to all fall and my dad is out hanging plywood to the milking parlor and hay barn. Our animal shelters were built with their openings facing east because our winds always come from the west, but the winds are coming cold and fast from the east like they never do … go figure.

And me, well, I’m also finding ways to avoid the chill. Christmas shopping. For cold weather attire none-the-less, and perfect for any farmgirl …

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Handmade, cozy leg warmers. Love them! And it’s a beautiful story. Owner of Grace and Lace, Melissa, was moved by the loss of her infant daughter to get busy with her hands, thus evolved a line of hand-knit items for sale. I mean, how cute are these?

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And this tiny pair? I can think of a few farmgirls I know that need a pair of these. Precious! Thanks to Melissa for sharing her story and her fabulous knitting skills.

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  1. Winnie Nielsen says:

    I recently attended a huge Holiday Market in Perry, Ga. and these leg warmers were all the rage. There were several vendors who had created all sorts of adorable leggings for all ages. Way back in the 1950s, when I was a child, we used to have thick wool leggings that went under winter coats since girls did not wear pants in those days. I sure wish they had been as cute as these are today!

    • tracy says:

      I SO remember our leggings. We sort of looked like the Michelin man when geared up for snow, galoshes (NOT the boots of today!)
      included!!

  2. Elizabeth says:

    I love these too! One of the first MaryJane Farmgirls catalogs I recieved had an advertisement for similar leg warmers & I followed the links picturing some fantastic designs. I have always been a leg warmer kind of gal (since I was a teenager~quite some time ago) so I started making my own, once the Splashdance ~again, a long time ago~ fever wore off:-) But the ones I was making were fairly plain compared to these pretty leg warmers.

    I often wondered why they stopped making leg warmers b/c to me they were still a necessary item as much so as say, gloves in the Winter. I remember searching every store in town with my mom & then later as an adult I widened the search but could not find one pair of leg warmers. Even now some of mine are still no thrill double thick fleece LW which I made & always wear when I’m shoveling snow; on walks or hikes in the cold & quite often just around the house:-)

    Melissa’s are so very cute & I believe she has started a Pinterest leg warmers craze & may have even broken a record for visited Pins? I hope she makes tons of money! It was a design long past due. These designs are great for my dress boots:-) Thanks for sharing Megan & to Melissa for making leg warmers a Hot item once again!

  3. Phyllis. Colborne says:

    I have two pair of them also ,love them

  4. Carol says:

    Went on her site.. and she has some really cute cloths on there.. wonder what US elderly could get away with wearing 🙂 thanks for sharing this. Love the site

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Our Thanksgiving Travels

Look who we found while shopping for a few Thanksgiving ingredients at Whole Foods last week…

Photo Nov 28, 9 47 26 AM

I should clarify… Mia hollered, “Nanny!” and ran up to give the snowman and Nanny a big smooch. After that excitement, I enjoyed a big salad for breakfast just because the salad bar at Whole Foods is so fun to pick from with so many options. Then we headed back to the house where we were staying to get cooking! (Excuse the quality of the photos of our pie; I’ll get better at taking pictures!)

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The ingredients looked pretty yummy, but the end result was even better.

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  1. Winnie Nielsen says:

    Stella Jane, don’t you think Whole Foods is just the best grocery store ever?? I love that place too and it is even better when you see your Nanny at the magazine stand greeting everyone! Mmmmm, that pie looks so delicious!!

  2. Terry Steinmetz says:

    The pie looks so-o-o yummy!

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Ice Music

When temperatures drop and the forecasts fill up with snow, many of us feel irrepressible urges to create.

You’re feeling it, right?

Me too.

Thoughts of knitting, baking, and holiday decorating …

But when I caught wind of a sonorous story lilting from the frozen waters of Siberia’s Lake Baikal, I realized …

Not all cold weather creativity happens indoors.

Needless to say, the Russians are a hearty breed, and a particular group of intrepid percussionists have not let sub-zero temperatures keep them cooped up inside.

Sergei Purtyan, a member of the Etnobit Percussion Group, discovered themagically melodic potential of the world’s deepest lake when his wife took a tumble on the ice.

Let’s just say, a new form of holiday music was about to be made …

“As she landed on the ice, she made a very musical ‘boooooom’ sound, so nice and deep that her husband, who has a very good ear, said ‘Hold on, what was it? How did you make that noise?'” the group’s founder, Natalya Vlasevskaya, told the Siberian Times: “She laughed, but then got curious, too, and they started touching and drumming on the bits of ice, realizing it was making a melody. He recorded it on the phone, got back to Irkutsk, and let us listen, asking if we might want to go together to the same spot and try and record our ice drumming.”

For some reason, as yet unknown, the specific spot where Purtyan’s wife fell has unique resonance and harmony when thumped, and Etnobit was thrilled to try their hands at ice drumming.

“Never mind that it was a six-hour drive to that particular spot!” Vlasevskaya says.

Ice in other parts of the lake, which reaches depths of 5,387 feet, doesn’t produce the same sounds. The group’s natural masterpiece was recorded with only about 15 feet of water below them.

“You see your hand touching the ice, you hear the sound, but your mind just can’t take it in,” Vlasevskaya explains. “You cannot believe that, yes, this beautiful clear sound is indeed produced by ice.”

It is lovely, as you can hear for yourself in this video:

  1. Winnie Nielsen says:

    This is amazing. Who would have known such a beauty was to be found in music on the ice? I cannot imagine just using my bare hands for any length of time out there. Thanks for sharing such a great story of winter and ice!!

  2. Henry David Thoreau wrote in the 1850’s about making music with the ice of Walden Pond. The used to throw rocks of various sizes in different places on ” his” pond. And he joyously did this all winter and wrote about it ecstatically in his journals. So nice to hear these cold-hardy Russians enjoying making this eerily wonderful music on their frozen lake !! I really enjoyed this clip.

  3. Laurie Dimno says:

    Thank you for sharing this story and link! The music of nature is most certainly the BEST, whether it is ice music, birds singing, chickens clucking , cows mooing, well you get the idea! Ha ha.
    My kids thought this was pretty neat too!
    Hugs to you!

  4. CJ Armstrong says:

    Beautiful! Thank you!
    Makes me shiver, however! Brrrrrr . . .
    CJ

  5. Vickie says:

    This is so cool! (pun intended) Not only are they making great music, it looks like they are having an enormous amount of fun! Thank you for posting this amusing clip!

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Bee Art

Canadian artist Sarah Hatton collects dead bees.

“Why on earth would she do that?” you ask.

Like many an artist, she is out to make a point, and it’s a significant one.

Arranging dead bees into elaborate mandalas on fields of white,

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Hatton is making a stark visual statement about the connection between declining bee populations and the use of pesticides.

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“The link between neonicotinoid pesticides and the worldwide decline of bee populations is a crisis that cannot be ignored,” Hatton explains on her website. “I have arranged thousands of dead honeybees in mathematical patterns symbolically linked to monoculture crops, such as the Fibonacci spiral found in the seed head of the sunflower. The viewer experiences the vertigo of this lifeless swarm, a dizzying optical illusion that echoes the bees’ loss of ability to navigate due to the toxins locked within the very source of their sustenance.”

Powerful stuff.

A picture, after all, speaks a thousand words.

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  1. Winnie Nielsen says:

    The complexity of honey bees is one of nature’s most interesting secrets. All of their relationships to plant life and humans is both beautiful and haunting. With declines of bee populations at startling rates, we are finally getting what we need to be doing to help them in focus. I hope it won’t be too late!

  2. Karlyne says:

    Powerful! Granddaughters were amazed at these pictures!

  3. Debra says:

    The more I hear about this issue, the happier I am that I became a backyard beekeeper to help nurture these critters. They are utterly fascinating. Thanks for sharing this art with us.

  4. Carol says:

    I, too, am a backyard beekeeper and loving it. I encourage every to learn more about this important issue and help our planet’s bees.

  5. Glenda Kelly says:

    We all need to speak up about pesticides killing our bee population, and also the bad effects the pesticides have on our own lives.

  6. Teri Blackmon says:

    So beautiful. I have never seen this before.

  7. Vicki says:

    Makes me sad. I love the honey bees. People need to know about their plight though.
    I care about them and a Sustainable earth. Beautiful art though.

  8. Nancy Cushion says:

    I and my husband have been beekeeping for several years. The Honeybee is an amazing! The members of the colony are working together, no complaining, towards only one goal to maintain the colony. We have much to learn from bees. We need to help sustain our Bees. Beautiful art but sad it comes from our planets loss.

  9. Terri Smith says:

    So disturbingly beautiful. I love and admire bees. When I spend time with my flowers in the spring, bees keep me company! I love it that they come to my yard and gather without fear. Thank you for bringing this reality to light.

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Crafty Sunday

Happy Monday morning! Hope you all had a wonderful weekend. We spent the weekend whipping up a few handmades.

 

Photo Nov 24, 11 27 59 AM

  1. Winnie Nielsen says:

    Hi Meg!! I love your crafting table complete with resident artist!! It is that time to be working on our handcrafted gifts for December.

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