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2889. Jenerator - 4/7/2005 4:58:52 PM

Ha ha ha!

My mom bought that book on the way back from San Diego. She hasn't tried to the leek soup yet but is enjoying the light humor of the author.

My mom's best friend is French and she is the size of a small child - very petite and eats incredibly rich food. She eats it much slower than us Americans. She seems to savor each bite and so I can't help but wonder if Guilano really is on to something.

Anyway, hello webfeet. Marshame and I both send you and your family our best.

My son Dylan is 3 and is growing like crazy. He's close to four feet tall and has the cutest personality. My mom adores him and she is his "Mur mur." My husband and I found out in January that we are expecting another one in Spetember. All of us are hoping for a girl, but another boy would be just fine. I turn 34 tomorrow, and so I feel differently this pregnancy. I am developing all kinds of new aches and pains that I either forgot the first time around, or my bodyis handling it in a new way by stripping all of my bones of their strength and calcium. Ha!

Marshame and I were in Paris last October. Were you with your belle-mere at that time? We could have smuggled in some food for you.

I do hope you'll post more frequently. Your anecdotes are wonderful.

2890. thoughtful - 4/7/2005 5:48:25 PM

Hahaha Ronski. Exactly. When I realized that the peepers are all these males hoping to get lucky, well I never sit out on a warm night any more in quite the way.

Birds do it...
Bees do it...
Even educated fleas do it....

and my favorite line from that song

They say in Boston even beans do it!

2891. ronski - 4/7/2005 6:41:40 PM

My favorite is:

"Lithuanians and Letts do it; let's do it, let's fall in love."

2892. judithathome - 4/7/2005 7:35:14 PM

Webfeet, Magoseph answered you in a post in Mote Matters(post # 2666)...she asked for it to be moved to the Mote Cafe so look for it in both places.

I called to see how she was doing after her dental surgery this morning and she asked me to alert you to the fact she'd posted it in the wrong thread...she took my advice about taking a pain pill and not being used to them, she is getting maximum benefit. She is writing off the rest of the day due to now being pain free but slightly high. ;-)

2893. webfeet - 4/7/2005 11:31:29 PM

Thanks, Judith. Both for the message from Magoseph and the tip about the posts per page, once I find out where that is. I couldn't even get on this thread today it took so long to access it.

And I will publish the recipe for leek soup once the tots are in bed. It has been a hectic, jet lagged day.

Jen, I had a feeling you were up for Number 2, it's about that time. Now that I"ve exposed myself in the fiction thread, I can't pretend to tell you that it's a joy ride, but I definetely felt more empowered with the second child. It felt so complete and there is so much joy. More fatigue, to be sure (enlist marshame tout de suite!) but the sense of happiness just multiplies.

And I laughed about Paris. I'll travel anywhere in France as long as I don't have to stay with Belle-mere!

2894. judithathome - 4/7/2005 11:36:03 PM

Webs, the posts per page box is right above the posting window and to the right.

2895. judithathome - 4/7/2005 11:36:54 PM

If that doesn't work, go to Mote Matters and ask Alistair what to do.

2896. webfeet - 4/8/2005 1:53:02 AM

Magical Leek Soup (a trick used by french women for generations)

Leeks are a milk diuretic and low in calories but highly nutritional. Forty-eight hours of leek soup plus all the water you want would provide immediate results to jump-start the recasting.

2 pounds leeks


1. Clean the leek sand rinse well to get out the sand and soil. Cut off the ends of the dark green parts, leaving all the white parts plus a suggestion of pale green. (Reserve the extra greens for soup stock.)

2. Put the leeks in a large pot and cover with water. Bring to a boil, reduce the high and simmer uncovered for 20 to 30 minutes. Pour off the liquid and reserve. Place the leeks in a bowl.

The juice is to be drunk (rehearted or at room temp) every 2 to 3 hours, 1 cup at a time. FOr meals, or whever hungry, have some of the leeks themselves, 1/2 cup at a time. Drizzle with a few drops of extra-virgin olive oil and lemon juice. Season sparingly with salt and pepper. Sprinkle with chopped parlsely if you wish.

This will be your nourishment for both (weekend) days, until Sunday dinner when you can have a small piece of meat or fish (4 -6 oz) with 2 vegetables, steamed with a bit of butter of olive oil, and a piece of fruit.

And there you go. Happy draining!

2897. judithathome - 4/8/2005 3:29:03 AM

Thanks, Webfeet...I plan to try this next week for 2 days.

2898. ronski - 4/8/2005 4:16:38 PM

Asparagus is also diuretic, and catnip tea.

2899. thoughtful - 4/8/2005 4:22:03 PM

Didn't know and it was bothering me so I had to look it up.

A group of turkeys is called a rafter of turkeys.

Go figure.

2900. thoughtful - 4/8/2005 8:57:59 PM

relief at last. Every a.m. I'd hear a bird calling and I could never see who was making the sound. Now I know. Red bellied woodpecker. It was driving me nuts.

2901. Jenerator - 4/8/2005 10:06:59 PM

Thanks Webbie.

As you may or may not know, I am a teacher by trade. Although I make decent money because of education, experience and stipends, I am still not rich. We can't afford a nanny or a regular babysitter. My mom has been the real blessing with giving us free time.

When I found out I was pregnant - which was pretty miraculous because we weren't planning on another one and had taken no different precautions than during the three years Dylan has been around - I was somewhat scared. To be honest, my first thought was, "Oh no, I really amnever going to have any free time or sleep ever again!"

;-)

But it's been an answered prayer in so many ways. I had begrudgingly resigned myself to not having any more children; my husband didn't want anymore and I was not going to sabotage him, and yet I came up pregnant!

I started praying about it because I am due smack dab in the middle of the fall semester, which is a horrible time to have a baby if you're a teacher. We literally have the worst maternity policy in the state- probably the nation. I wouldn't be surprised.

I get a whopping 6 weeks total. So, if I have to be on bed rest before the pregnancy for say, two weeks, I only get four weeks with the baby. In other words, in order to get the maximum time with the child, I had better work up until the day I start having labor pains. Secondly, I want to breast feed,a nd how on earth am I going to be able to do that once I go back to work and have to put in 50 hours a week? And where would I pump any way, the girl's locker room? No thanks.

I decided to talk to my principal about going part time, which is alternating days. If I could work every other day I would have time for my new baby and I would be able to feed him/her. Plus, with some of the problems I have been having already (pulled my back badly last fall and the pregnancy weight is aggravating it), I just know that I will be having a hard time come August.

My mom then surprised me that she will be able to step in and take care of the baby this fall. She is officially retiring in December and this will help us so much. I alreadypay $500 a month for Dylan, which is cheap, and the best price I could find up until now for an infant was $650 a month. She is saving us so much money.

I was really nervous about cutting my pay check and then adding a significant bill.

But God has a cool way of answering prayers.


I just hope my boss says yes!

2902. Ronski - 4/9/2005 4:36:41 AM

Good luck Jen, and blessings.

2903. Ronski - 4/9/2005 4:39:15 AM

And here are some tulips, given to us for Easter, in the last of their glory:


2904. wonkers2 - 4/9/2005 4:10:10 PM

Some of the "socialist" countries, Sweden, for example, have policies which are infinitely more supportive than those in this American Culture of Life or at least of life support.

2905. Ronski - 4/10/2005 3:13:45 PM

Down the road, coltsfoot:


2906. Ronski - 4/10/2005 8:33:37 PM

Yesterday morning, at a nearby dam:


2907. alistairConnor - 4/10/2005 8:44:38 PM

We had snow this weekend, too. Nothing serious, nearly covered the ground Saturday morning but mostly gone in the afternoon.

I spent this afternoon fencing : cutting off branches and trunks that had fallen on the electric fence, pulling up blackberry etc, replacing the electric ribbon, I've done about a third of the paddock. I was a couple of years behind, as with all the outdoor work.

By the end of the summer I hope to have the place looking decent, in my eyes at least.

2908. Ronski - 4/10/2005 9:24:12 PM

The snow at the dam is the last of a huge amount of snow and ice that catches there as winds whip across the lake. The last snow we had was some wet snow last weekend, that didn't even collect.

There's one little patch left near driveway, where the plow leaves a huge mound of snow during the winter. It formerly was more than ten or twelve feet high:



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