This is a really cool recipe Beth gave me.
Each person cracks 2 large eggs in a 1-quart size ziplock bag. No more than 2 eggs. Shake to combine.
You put out a variety of ingredients such as cheese, ham, onion, green pepper, tomato, hashbrowns, salsa, mushrooms, anything you think might go into an omelet. Each person adds ingredients of their choice to their bag. Shake again to mix everything. Make sure to get all the air out of the bag, and zip it up.
Have each person write his or her name on the bag with a permanent marker so they don't get mixed up. Place into rolling, boiling water for exactly 13 minutes. Six to eight omelets can cook in a large pot. If you have more, heat a second pot.
Open the bags, roll out the omelets and serve.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Friday, March 13, 2009
Ghost Birds

My brother, David, has written a book called Chasing the Ghost Birds, Saving Swans and Cranes from Extinction.
From the Barnes and Noble website:
"Part environmental essay and part adventure story," Chasing the Ghost Birds takes readers to the front lines of three of the most important and innovative wildlife conservation projects of our time:
* Returning the trumpeter swan to the Midwest Flyway after an absence of 120 years
* International efforts to save the last of Russia's Siberian cranes
* Saving North America's whooping cranes from the brink of extinction
The book offers up details about the birds' biology, behavior, and habitats, and of the meticulous fieldwork required, without losing the sense of drama and excitement inherent in these efforts. Sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes funny, Chasing the Ghost Birds ultimately gives us hope that "with enough brains, resources, determination, and hard work," we humans can preserve and protect the wild world around us.
No other book, no other source, covers any of these three projects in as much depth and breadth as Chasing the Ghost Birds. Yet it remains a very engaging and readable book. George Archibald, co-founder of the International Crane Foundation, calls it, "a remarkable chronicle," told with "balance, accuracy, and lucid detail."
Since he is my brother, I may be biased (I doubt it) but I have to tell you, the book is really a good read. I even thought it might be dull until I picked it up and couldn't put it down. Read more about the book, and then go here to buy a copy.
Last year I decided to make a quilt for him and asked what he'd like. He said earth tones and if it had a crane on it, he wouldn't mind. So here is the result.
"Part environmental essay and part adventure story," Chasing the Ghost Birds takes readers to the front lines of three of the most important and innovative wildlife conservation projects of our time:
* Returning the trumpeter swan to the Midwest Flyway after an absence of 120 years
* International efforts to save the last of Russia's Siberian cranes
* Saving North America's whooping cranes from the brink of extinction
The book offers up details about the birds' biology, behavior, and habitats, and of the meticulous fieldwork required, without losing the sense of drama and excitement inherent in these efforts. Sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes funny, Chasing the Ghost Birds ultimately gives us hope that "with enough brains, resources, determination, and hard work," we humans can preserve and protect the wild world around us.
No other book, no other source, covers any of these three projects in as much depth and breadth as Chasing the Ghost Birds. Yet it remains a very engaging and readable book. George Archibald, co-founder of the International Crane Foundation, calls it, "a remarkable chronicle," told with "balance, accuracy, and lucid detail."
Since he is my brother, I may be biased (I doubt it) but I have to tell you, the book is really a good read. I even thought it might be dull until I picked it up and couldn't put it down. Read more about the book, and then go here to buy a copy.
Last year I decided to make a quilt for him and asked what he'd like. He said earth tones and if it had a crane on it, he wouldn't mind. So here is the result.
This was a quilt that didn't want to be made. I found the crane fabric and cut wedges - each block needed 6 identical wedges. I sewed them together by hand because it's more accurate. Then I found the blue-green fabric and decided the blocks needed that for sashing. Turns out the only way to attach sashing to a hexagon is to undo part of each seam, sew the sashing and then resew the seam.

I finally got it together and took it to my friend Marge's house so I could quilt it on her longarm. It sat there for months. Finally I loaded it on the frame and started to quilt the border using dark redish brown thread. I wasn't totally sold on it and was afraid that if I started quilting the center I'd really mess it up. So it sat on the frame for a month and I very carefully avoided quilting.

Finally she asked if I would mind if she quilted it. No! Of course I wouldn't mind! Thank you!!!! So she used metallic thread and outlined every feather. It turned out gorgeous. Then I had to take it back and pick out all the quilting I had done so that part of the border could be requilted with the metallic.

I gave it to him last summer (a late, or early, birthday, Christmas, Easter, valentine's, fourth of July present). It was supposed to be for his office, but he said it's going in his living room so he needs another quilt for his office. I'm working on it.
This is the back.
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Bathroom Remodeling
We had some cracked tiles in the master bath floor. Decided to fix the tile. You know how that goes. We discovered we only had 4 spare tiles, and then discovered that the toilet had been leaking and the whole floor had to come up. So, I'd always wanted to tear out the cheap plastic tub/shower surround and build a shower. I didn't necessarily want to do this right NOW, but since we had to replace the tile, it was now or never. Too bad I forgot to take a before photo of the bathroom. Here's right after we ripped out the surround. That's part of a curious cat in the lower right corner.
Here it is in progress. In this photo the shower walls were tiled, and the other walls painted but the floor wasn't done.
While we were doing everything else, decided why not make an even bigger mess, and scrape the popcorn texture off the ceiling and make it smooth.
A word of caution... Large tiles look good on shower walls, but they are a pain to install. They are too heavy for the mastic. We would glue a couple of them, hold them for what we thought was long enough, let go and the tiles would come crashing down. We finally had to put nails beneath each tile to hold it. But that wasn't easy either, because that isn't sheetrock, it's cement board. We would pound one nail in and two would fall out, then pound those in and another would come out. Aaaagghhh!

And here it is finished!!


I made a stencil and painted little "tiles" around the back splash to match the little insets in the tile walls and floor.
And I got a roller shade, took it apart and made this shade for the window.
We're on a roll - now we're working on the upstairs bathrooms!




And here it is finished!!





2009 Guild Challenge
Our Uncommon Threads Quilt Guild Challenge was "Opposites Attract" - to take a color and its opposite on the color wheel and make a quilt using only those two colors. Last night was the deadline and we had seven great quilts. Unfortunately, in order to enter American Quilter's Society's Ultimate Guild Challenge contest in Knoxville, we needed eight quilts, so we won't be going this year. Too bad because we had great quilts, and we have been accepted into the show every year but one. Oh, well, there's always next year, and anyway we first and foremost make quilts because we love to. Congratulations to everyone. And thanks to Marilyn L. for chairing the challenge and for the great little gift each participant received.
Monday, February 9, 2009
New Years 2009
Friday, December 26, 2008
My Beautiful Grandchildren
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
My Unexpected Journey

This is the quilt I made during my cancer treatments. I designed it one night in my head at 3:00 a.m. when I couldn't sleep. Had to get up the next day and draw it before I forgot what I'd thought up. It's meant to be a happy, hopeful, uplifting quilt, documenting my unexpected journey last spring. Making the quilt was part of the healing process for me. When it was finished, I decided it should go where it might help others, so it is being donated to the Methodist Breast Center where some of the most wonderful, loving, caring angels work.








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