Susan's fancy
Gardening in Zone 7 (working for food)
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Fondant experiments - June 10, 2026
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
Regrouping - June 9, 2026
Over the next few weeks, two granddaughters, a son, and a BFF will celebrate their birthdays. I haven't bought any presents, and I've two birthday cakes to make by the weekend. A few minutes ago, I removed half a garbage bag of petrified stuff from the big freezer to make room for the cake layers. A trip to the grocery store is imminent. Tomorrow the baking begins.
I am stressing over cake-decorating ideas. One birthday girl is a gymnast, but last year's birthday cake used that theme. She loves horses, but I don''t have the skills to model one from fondant, and I refuse to just plunk a plastic one on top. Wonder if I could paint one (with food coloring) on white fondant? Maybe I'll give it a shot before the baking begins....
Yesterday, I spent a good bit of time tying up loose ends in the craft room. The table is littered with baked polymer clay jewelry components in various stages of usability. Some were ready to assemble, some needed sanding, or holes drilled, or a touch-up coating of resin. I got busy doing those things and ended up finishing several pairs of earrings and three or four pendants. Go me.
I want to make BFF's birthday present. I have an idea, but it'll have to wait until the cakes are done and the remaining ready-to-assemble jewelry components turn into actual jewelry. Her birthday present might be a tad late this year. ;)
Monday, June 8, 2026
Yardwork Part Deux - June 8, 2026
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Yardwork - June 2, 2026
Our yard has very little grass in it - at least not the kind people actually want. What we have is ground cover, every kind of ground cover that exists. Creeping Charlie. Henbit. Clover. Chickweed. Name it, and we probably have it.
And poison ivy. OMG, the poison ivy. It is everywhere. I have sprayed it, chopped it, and dug it up, but there is just too much to eliminate it all, and unless you eliminate ALL OF IT, it's coming back. Between the poison ivy and the English ivy, we may wake up one day to find that they have imprisoned us in the house.
All of these weeds are thriving from the good rains we've had over the past few weeks. Yesterday afternoon, despite the rain that came in the morning, I decided that mowing the yard was absolutely necessary.
We keep our riding mower in Nanny's big shed because we mow her yard, too. Just after lunch, I walked down to Nanny's to get the mower. Our yard has all sorts of places where the mower can't go - banks, ditches, etc. - so when I finished mowing, I cranked up the weed-eater-on-wheels and attacked the edges of the property, where the poison ivy thrives. With the ground so wet, it was a battle. About 4:30, I called it quits. The yard looked nice. I came back to the house cool off and drink some water. While I was resting, it occurred to me that the garbage truck would run the next morning, so I got up to drag the garbage can to the edge of the road.
I had not viewed the yard from this perspective. The area at the end of the driveway was still a mess, a tangle of honeysuckle, wild grape vines, and poison ivy. There's a 30-year-old forsythia bush in that mix, as well as a half-dead 40-year-old rosebush, both of which were entangled with vines. Sleeping Beauty would've been safe in this corner. I went back to the house for the weed-eater and the clippers. It took an hour to cut all those vines out of the forsythia and the rose. I cut the vines as close to the ground as I could and pruned that rosebush back to a nub.
The Husband got home about the time I finished. I told him he'd have to take the lawnmower back because I was too pooped to do it.
The debris pile from that final assault is still laying by the driveway. I should deal with it before it gets any hotter.
Monday, June 1, 2026
New Week, Same Stuff - June 1, 2026
It rained almost every day last week. The moles have been digging so industriously that the yard is like soup, and the grass is getting so tall that it's hard to see the mole tunnels to set traps in them. I was hoping to mow today, but it rained again this morning. It is hot and muggy, a good day to work inside.
So I've been making jewelry.
Last week was "clay week" in the craft room. I fooled around with the gooey Creative Hands ClayStudio clay all week, trying this and that to stiffen it up enough to use it. There is not much to show for my efforts. I intend to use this clay to "stretch" more expensive clay, but I probably won't buy any more of it.
My sweet niece texted me Friday afternoon to tell me about a hydrangea sale at the botanical garden in the big city. The flyer that came with the text said that they were selling some macrophylla hydrangeas that I have been wanting. I picked them up from her Saturday afternoon, and Sunday afternoon I planted it about 4 feet away from an Annabelle growing at the edge of the woods., where we can see them through the living room windows. These will be the only hydrangea blooms we'll see this year because of the late freeze we got in March.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Kitchen Duty - May 26, 2026
Sunday, May 24, 2026
Every morning, I bring my coffee out to the back porch and fire up the laptop. I work a puzzle, read some news, and check for new craft videos.
This morning, I came across a video about polymer clay that appeared to have been filmed in a camper. It gave me a flashback to about 12 years ago, when we were on the longest camping trip we'd ever done - nine days, two or three different campgrounds, best camping trip we'd ever taken. I took my sewing machine on that trip. Don't remember now what I was making, maybe a quilt top. But I remember sitting at the kitchen table, with a view of a lake and squirrels scampering around the campground, thinking that it was a most delightful place to sew.
The video made me think FORWARD a couple of years, after The Husband will have retired. He says that we're going to get a Class A camper, one that has a motor and a steering wheel, and we're going to drive that sucker all over the country.
It's going to have to be a big one to hold all my crafting stuff.