Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Winter Ride 2012

 It has been the best winter ever for riding!  Only once did Phantom have to jump through the drift and not on this ride.  Getting out on my pony seems to bring my life back to me, it's just me and Phantom. Of course the dogs, Lady and Selke, hate to be left behind. In fact if I pick up my boots they start pacing with theirs eyes glued to me.  It is such an adventure for all of us.  I decided last fall to ride any day it was possible and I've very nearly done it.  Phantom is in the best spring shape ever.
 Brandon Lane with a Sawtooth Ridge in the distance.

I don't know why I haven't any photos of Rowan's birthday, the day before this was taken.  This is the happy birthday for Melanie and Wally.  That cake was so darn cute!  Rowan's cake was beeautiful!  Just gotta find photos.
This is my test, can I get back into blogging without it taking over my life!  Lots more photos but I'm afraid to try loading them as my computer seems to freak out with more that three.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Christmas 2011

Such a beautiful tree this year thanks to all the helpers young, older and old!  So there IS life at Treehouse afterall.  This blogging on the new laptop is driving me nuts!  These are not the photos I thought I was loading but here they are.  This computer must feel it has to override my choices.  Oh well, here goes.  There is a photo of Melanie and Heather stringing the cranberries and popcorn, not sure where that went.


The blog no longer seems to be working...so the photo stays where it is...the cool Parisean apron came all the way from Germany, thanks Rose!  With thoughts of you I'm cook'in in the kitchen!  You may be very far away but you were sure in our thoughts and missed very much.
We were in the audience for the Christmas program at Peach Church in Duluth.
What a darling couple!  We sure enjoyed having Brian and Heather with us for Christmas. 

winter in the north



Tuesday, December 13, 2011

After Autumn - Before Winter and the Trapline

 Three generations of Ingebrigtsen's, David, Kay and Karl


One of the best ways to get in the holiday spirit is shopping at the annual Fiber Arts Guild show.  Such an array of unique, handmade tree ornaments, hats, mittens, scarves, earrings, necklaces, rugs, artwork and more! Having been here for 21 years, most are familiar faces even if their names escape me.  Funny how the longer I am here the more names I forget.  The Art Colony Building hosts the show.  We all know it will be crowded but none want to miss all that is there at the opening.

Live and lovely music from the choir loft of the tiny former church while we shop and chat.
 For the first time since we've been here and Dave has been trapping, I actually got my license and joined the week of martin harvest. This box is on it's way to a new location near the end of the line.
 
 Here is a trap box being set.  The bait at the far end. It was a small harvest this year for everyone that I have heard about.











Friday, November 25, 2011

Thanksgiving 2011

 November harvest?  What?  Dave brought this out of the garden in mid November and I couldn't believe it!  We've had frosts and freezes and some plants still survive. Amazing!



It really snowed, there is snow on the ground and I'm hoping this will be the last of the snow to melt in April or May. Everything is soft and quiet.  A few days later it was cold and crunchy.  I love winter!



I'm going out to work with the horses and I thought I'd get a shot of the winter fashion.  I absolutely love my winter riding pants.  Zippers, padding and suede where you need it.
Also winter riding boots make an amazing difference but I have never found riding boots good for + or - 10 above or below 0 degrees.  We'll see what this winter brings.  The jacket is one of Rose's old ski jackets and very warm.
 I have dreamed of driving Phantom for years and years.  Finally, here he is pulling a travois in the front yard.  The snow actually made it easier since the shafts slid on the ground so easily.  In the past I've been rather resistant to riding or driving horses in the winter because of poor circulation.  In other words, my finger turn white and hurt!  This year I am determined to KEEP riding or driving no matter what!  So I bought hand and foot warmers to have on hand if I need them. I also have my mothers fur coat to wear if need be.



Carving the Thanksgiving turkey.  I insisted that it be carved at the table while we were all seated just like when I was a kid.  The plates are passed around the table with the additions of dressing, potatoes, wild rice salad, fresh greens salad and cranberries as it passes from Cedric to Sophie to Karl to Grandpa to Patsy and finally Dominique.  None at the table had ever done it this way before.  It was fun!
 The Thanksgiving gathering for 2011. Shortly  Karl will head back to the U of M, Sophie to Perpich, Cedric is off the California in January and Dominique will join her husband Stephen in Kazakstan in late December. Grandpa thinks he may be mowing his lawn when he gets back to Fridley next week.  Minneapolis got up to 59 degrees on Thanksgiving.  The last time it got that warm was in 1939. 



Here we are the day after Thanksgiving, notice the snow is completely gone.  Phantom really enjoyed the walking and trotting with the soft footing of the front yard.  His hooves were trimmed yesterday so the grass feels much better than the driveway.  For the first time I drove him through the pasture with the travois and he handled it like a pro!
I just need to figure out how to build a sleigh for him to pull!
Phantom is just an amazing Welsh pony.  I just can't wait to be behind him in a sleigh this winter and then a cart next summer.  I have been dreaming about this for 7 years. Will I do it?  Can I do it?

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

First Snow!


























The First Snow was pretty but didn't last long.  So if the snow doesn't stay, is it the first snow? I don't think so.  It was so pretty but the first REAL snow is coming this Saturday (November 19, 2011).  That beautiful tamarac lost it's top in a big wind a few years back.



"Alright, I'm coming down!"  I watched this hen hop up 13 steps, circle the deck at the top a couple times and confidently step down each step.  It is so interesting to me that one hen would do this.  Not at any other time have the chickens showed any interest in these steps.  Chickens really do have personalities.
I am sorry to say I have had to cull another hen as she showed unhealthy symptoms which didn't change after she was isolated.  A healthy flock is of the utmost importance if you are going to consider raising your own chicks and that is my goal!



I have named my three roosters.  Alpha is the biggest and the dominant one.  Bernie is the middle guy and Clyde is the smallest and easiest to hand feed as he never tries to bite me.
I think is was Clyde's week with the hens.

Patsy: "Alpha, what have you been up to?"
Alpha: "Yes, I tipped over my water bucket, what of it!  You opened the door an Bernie thought he could drink out of MY bucket!"


Bernie:  He started it!  I wasn't doing anything and he just got mad and wouldn't quit picking on me!  I don't like being stuck here with Alpha, he is such a bully!
 "You are such a bully!  If you come on my side I'm telling!

Sylvia Kubes passed away on October 25, 2011.  She was a gardener extroardinaire and a wonderful woman.  At her memorial, Rowan picked out these two ducklings that used to grace her backyard gardens.  They will find their way to Rowan's house before spring.

Here is my one and only Barred Rock enjoying an afternoon out eating greens.  With the help of a light timer and 14 hours of "light" they are laying 8 eggs a day.  I still let them outside to free range every day that it is possible.  It won't be long and everything will be covered with many inches of snow and the free range days will be over until spring. 

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Welcome Autumn Brule Lundell



And the winner is...well I can't remember who the winner was.  One of Daddy Tim's cousins cut the baby wrapping tape to the exact measurement of Melanie's baby belly.  Shari Lundell hosted a wonderful baby shower for Melanie at her home in Princeton.  After an afternoon of tasty homemade food, treats, games and prizes we headed back to Duluth, our car packed with baby t-shirts, wraps, toys, clothes, crib sheets and more t-shirts, wraps and wraps and...Targets registry wasn't working so there were a few duplicates but we had a great time, laughed a lot, put names to faces, hugged hello and good-bye and wished Melanie and her coming little one well.
Welcome Autumn Brule Lundell, born Thursday, October 20th at 5:45 am.

 Melanie called Wednesday morning after her doctor's appointment to let me know the progression. I decided to leave work a little early, many thanks to my boss and co-workers who are all so supportive.  We spent the evening running errands, laughing about how she really could go another week like this.  I must say, she did have a convincing "duck walk" that night.  Off to bed with thoughts of grocery shopping and lots of cooking for the morrow.  My phone rang at 6am,  Tim Lundell was calling and naturally I figured they must be off to the hospital, nice of them to let me know.  "It's a GIRL!"  Tim said.  What?  She's here! And it's a girl!  They left for the hospital around 3:45am and Autumn arrived 2 hours later.  "Don't tell the kids, let them see for themselves."  So I kept mum. "It's a baby!" I said.  After feeding Oscar and Wally breakfast, waiting for Rowan to arrive home from her slumber party, we headed to the hospital.  They were excited to meet this little one and to  find out if it's a brother or sister!  We have dozens of fabulous pictures of that first meeting.  But this is my blog and this is my new grand-daughter!


This is now pre-Autumn Brule catch-up.

Fall has come and gone.  These leaves are down.  Thanks goodness for the evergreens!  The temp has dropped and it's dark in the morning when the alarm goes off at 6:30.  The spectacular beauty of the fall is rather short-lived but luckily I love lighting candles for dinner with the shorter daylight and even enjoy the stark silhouettes of the birch and aspen after the last leaf has dropped.



The reds, oranges and yellows have been replaced by muted grays and browns that I can barely make out on my early morning walk since the sun no longer comes up until I'm home doing a few yoga stretches.  It's chilly, frosty and dark as I hustle down the driveway trying to keep an eye on the dogs.  The white one, Kate, almost glows in the dark pre-dawn.  What are the names of those stars and planets that are the last to become invisible every morning?
 The task of throwing wood into the basement wood box has begun in earnest.  Karl, Rose and Dave always fill the wheelbarrow to a precarious heaping.  I would rather make twice as many trips and save my back.  Maybe I'll still be doing this when I'm 92!


Dave is off hunting for pheasants in ND and I spent all of yesterday cleaning and organizing inside. This morning, before I get sucked into the endless and thankless needs of housecleaning and kitchen maintenance, I am off to clear trails. The freezing rain and snow are coming.  It may be my last chance to get out and ride my horse with something real to do!  Phantom's favorite part of trail clearing is when I saw or haul and he grazes. 



We are back to post Autumn Brule.  I returned from the excitement of a new grand-daughter, rode my Zan who missed me enough to challenge all the routine warm-ups.  Jeri, Dave and I pressed another 18 gallons of apple juice.  I was definitely the apprentice this time, a little slow on the washing, plucking and slicing.  It seems the apple smoosher over-heats so we have to feed it more slowly with more cut apples. It rained long enough for Dave to put up the tarp but we took it down before we were finished pressing.

While we were pressing apples the hens were enjoying a little free range time with their rooster-of-the-week.  I'm keeping the roosters separate with each one getting a week in the hen house.  The first week went fine but when I exchanged roosters, the two left in the rooster coop fought till they were both bloody, the larger, dominant one clearly winning when I went to feed at 8:45.  They would have noticed each other in the daylight which means they duked it out for one hour, fifteen minutes.  The rooster coop has a divider so I closed the door to keep them separate but what a pain this could prove to be in the freezing cold winter and I have to keep three water buckets warm.  I hope they figure it out before too long.



Dave is filling gallon jugs to use for juice and the five gallon buckets will ferment for hard cider.  I think we should have a bottling party in a couple of weeks.  The color seems so much darker this time.  We quit pressing after six layers or two pressings.  The horses are thrilled with the apples I bring for them to munch every day as we had a bushel left after
pressing.




I am such a sucker for sunsets!  It was a spectacular sight. The fact that it had recently rained seemed to clear the air of debris, making the colors crystal clear.  It's been quite a week and the veggies are not yet in the root cellar, the gardens are not yet put to bed ready for winter, the meadow and hill crest fence lines have not been pulled, the flower gardens have not been clipped nor any tulips planted, the planters will crack with the cold if I don't get them emptied and I am ten wheelbarrows behind on moving manure to the compost pile.  Oh well, Autumn Brule Lundell has arrived and is perfect, my brother John continues to recovered from his motorcycle accident, Dave and I are healthy, willing and able,  Life is good!