Friday, April 29, 2011
Good Training Hike Today
After the cold front came through last night...luckily for us, with no tornadoes or bad storms, just pleasant rains...the temperature was in the high 50s this morning. Yahoo! We grabbed our backpacks and headed to San Felasco Hammock for a long training hike. Russ posted photos on Random Ferments.
Labels:
Camino 2011
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Daylillies
These are our first big ones of the year. Others are on the way.
We are hoping for rain, but surely don't want anything like they got in Alabama and Georgia.
We are hoping for rain, but surely don't want anything like they got in Alabama and Georgia.
Labels:
Florida Outdoors
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Sheriff's Office Building Dedicated to Neighbor Joe Crevasse
Our good neighbors Peggy Ellison and her father Joe Crevasse had an unusually interesting afternoon. Alachua County dedicated the Sheriff's Office administrative building to Joe, who served in the elected office of sheriff longer than any one before or since..21 years! The dedication was packed with politicians, law enforcement officers, family, and friends all of whom were eager to be part of this appropriate honor for Sheriff Joe.
| A few of those in attendance |
| Sheriff Joe Crevasse and current Sheriff Sadie Darnell |
| Peggy Ellison and her brother Buddy Crevasse |
| Peggy and friend Marion |
Sheriff Joe Crevasse and Gainesville Chief of Police Tony Jones
|
Labels:
FAMILY and FRIENDS
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Countdown to El Camino
We have been training fairly regularly for our third experience with El Camino de Santiago de Compostela, the 1,000-year long pilgrim trail in France and Spain. We leave in three weeks and hope to hike 300 miles, from Pamplona to Leon and a bit beyond to revisit some of our favorite places from the last time we went. If we cover the planned segment of the trail, we will have hiked the whole 500 miles, from the French side of the Pyrenees to Santiago...in three sections.
We did the first 50 miles of Spain in 2008, as well as about 100 in France. In 2009, we covered about 200. It is such a wonderful personal challenge. Each day is different. Each segment of the trail is different.
This year we know three other couples who will be hiking more-or-less at the same time...college friends of mine, Maureen and David; Russ's sister Phyllis and her husband Otis; and another college friend of mine Blanche with her husband Ben and daughter Colleen. We won't hike together; our schedules and routes are not identical. But it is nice to know they will be out there when we are.
We are down to the wire and ordered our last little bits of equipment...more sock liners and a new belt. We adapted my backpack to my increasingly old back by shortening it an inch so the hip belt hits my back right where I like it to massage away the achiness, and we keep thinking of things we don't really need to carry so the packs can be lots lighter this time.
Sunday we gave a talk about the Camino and our earlier experiences there for the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Discussion Group. That got us all the more motivated. We are ready! And...best yet...Pam and James got tickets to fly down and see us off! What a great surprise.
We'll be posting regularly (we hope) to Facebook this time, instead of this blog. We'll post to the blog more occasionally when we get access to a relatively fast and convenient computer where we can upload photos.
Can't wait to get started.
| A big wind storm blew this tree onto the trail the day before we hiked here. |
This year we know three other couples who will be hiking more-or-less at the same time...college friends of mine, Maureen and David; Russ's sister Phyllis and her husband Otis; and another college friend of mine Blanche with her husband Ben and daughter Colleen. We won't hike together; our schedules and routes are not identical. But it is nice to know they will be out there when we are.
We are down to the wire and ordered our last little bits of equipment...more sock liners and a new belt. We adapted my backpack to my increasingly old back by shortening it an inch so the hip belt hits my back right where I like it to massage away the achiness, and we keep thinking of things we don't really need to carry so the packs can be lots lighter this time.
Sunday we gave a talk about the Camino and our earlier experiences there for the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Discussion Group. That got us all the more motivated. We are ready! And...best yet...Pam and James got tickets to fly down and see us off! What a great surprise.
We'll be posting regularly (we hope) to Facebook this time, instead of this blog. We'll post to the blog more occasionally when we get access to a relatively fast and convenient computer where we can upload photos.
Can't wait to get started.
Labels:
Camino 2011
The Summer of a Thousand Cheeses continues
This week we will give a presentation based on the research from our book for the Newcomers Club at Temple Shir Shalom. It will be our third cheese talk since we taught the Amazing American Cheese class at Santa Fe College in January and February. We did two presentations in Cedar Key. "What Ever Happened to the Cedar Key Cheese Factory" was really about how people adapt their businesses to the resources of their locales, and how such adaptations have created the phenomenal recent growth of artisan cheese in America. "What Makes Blue Cheese Blue and Stinky Cheese Mild?" was a huge cheese tasting, with 14 artisanal American cheeses...three local to our Florida region.
The owner of a local restaurant, Edie from Kona Joe's, was there and invited us over to make mozzarella with her. Such a thing being news in Cedar Key, we had a full page story in the Cedar Key Beacon. Nice!
The owner of a local restaurant, Edie from Kona Joe's, was there and invited us over to make mozzarella with her. Such a thing being news in Cedar Key, we had a full page story in the Cedar Key Beacon. Nice!
Friends of the Refuges
The Friends of the Lower Suwannee & Cedar Keys National Wildlife Refuges, El Camino de Santiago, and the Summer of a Thousand Cheeses are keeping us with lots of new challenges, and even retirement-style deadlines.
Russ is working on a Paddling Guide to 12 trails in the Lower Suwannee Refuge. His focus is the biology of what you see along each trail, while his partner on the project maps out the trails themselves. They're planning to come up with multi-media, maybe even interactive materials...print, laminated carry-alongs, downloadable voice descriptions, blogs where paddlers can input information about their observations along the trails...maybe more. The Refuge just received some additional funding to support material production. So, activity is about to gear up even more.
We didn't even own kayaks until this project captured us. It gave us a great excuse, and we are becoming almost skilled enough at using them to get in and out without falling in the drink.
I developed an electronic newsletter (this link will take you to the issue that went out yesterday) and set up a website (here it is.) And, it has actually been sort of fun to run the Board Meetings since taking them on in last month. We worked the Friends Booth at the Cedar Key Arts Festival and will work it next Saturday at the Suwannee Stone Crab Festival.
We've had jam sessions and Friends Lectures on Fish, Ticks, Archaeology, and Geology.
But Russ's project gets the gold star for getting us out into the Refuge itself.
Russ is working on a Paddling Guide to 12 trails in the Lower Suwannee Refuge. His focus is the biology of what you see along each trail, while his partner on the project maps out the trails themselves. They're planning to come up with multi-media, maybe even interactive materials...print, laminated carry-alongs, downloadable voice descriptions, blogs where paddlers can input information about their observations along the trails...maybe more. The Refuge just received some additional funding to support material production. So, activity is about to gear up even more.
We didn't even own kayaks until this project captured us. It gave us a great excuse, and we are becoming almost skilled enough at using them to get in and out without falling in the drink.
I developed an electronic newsletter (this link will take you to the issue that went out yesterday) and set up a website (here it is.) And, it has actually been sort of fun to run the Board Meetings since taking them on in last month. We worked the Friends Booth at the Cedar Key Arts Festival and will work it next Saturday at the Suwannee Stone Crab Festival.
We've had jam sessions and Friends Lectures on Fish, Ticks, Archaeology, and Geology.
But Russ's project gets the gold star for getting us out into the Refuge itself.
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Happy Easter
Our favorite decorations have appeared on the mantle.
We told the bunny story here. The Easter Retriever was a 2010 gift from our friends Donna and Larry.
We told the bunny story here. The Easter Retriever was a 2010 gift from our friends Donna and Larry.
Labels:
FAMILY and FRIENDS
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
In Training Again
El Camino de Santiago de Campostela here we come! We walked with our packs today and realized that we're in a zero sum game; the more extra pounds we can shed from our bodies, the more things we can bring along in our packs.
Labels:
Camino 2011
Sunday, March 27, 2011
My Birthday
I had a great 68th birthday today. We finally got our kayaks wet on a lovely paddle on a quiet backwater in the Gulf of Mexico. Good thing I wasn't born a day later because storms are expected tomorrow.
Labels:
FAMILY and FRIENDS
Thursday, March 24, 2011
A Fragrant Spring
Three of our four grapefruit trees are blossoming--more profusely than in any of the past 14 years. As can be seen in this photo, many of the blossoms have already set fruit. The yard smells great, and if all goes well we should have a bumper crop of grapefruit come December.
Labels:
Florida Outdoors
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Jake and Varmints
Our golden retriever Jake is conscientious about keeping varmints away from our house. He drives away rabbits, some of the legions of squirrels nearby and, presumably, the many raccoons and opossums that would course through our yard. He hates black vultures also and keeps them barely at bey, but they are persistent and are a challenge because they don't cower readily. Like them, some varmints bear continued attention. He apparently doesn't deal with snakes, but that has been an important contributor to his longevity.
Some instruction book we read how to avoid screwing up your dog's life cautioned that one must keep his dog mentally stimulated. Thank you, armadillos; whatever else you may have accomplished, you have kept Jake meaningfully employed.
Labels:
FAMILY and FRIENDS
Southern Blue Flag
Southern Blue Flag irises (Iris virginica) are at their peak now. We photographed this one last Monday on the Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge, where roadside ditches are often choked with hundreds of blossoming plants.
Labels:
Florida Outdoors
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Another Great Day of Hiking
Here is a view as we were beginning today's six-mile hike in San Felasco Hammock State Preserve. It was a beautiful day in a beautiful place, but don't take my word for it. Just try to put yourself in the photo. As followers probably know, we are planning to do the Camino again this year, but we have come to enjoy the dreaded "training" almost as much as the main event.
Labels:
HIKING
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Ready to Go
We took one step closer to the allure of Lower Suwannee waterways this week. Here you will see our kayaks prepared to depart for the launch site. Our attachment seemed to work very well. Stay tuned for reports delivered from the superhighways.
Labels:
Florida Outdoors
Friday, February 4, 2011
The Amazing Cheese Story, Preparing for Day 4
Tuesday, February 8 is the final night of our mini-course, The Amazing Cheese Story. Follow the link for photos and thoughts about preparing for the big finale!
Monday, January 10, 2011
Curds and Whey
In the last couple of photos in the post below this one, you see the curds and whey we produced in our cheesemaking. Well, here they are again. First are the curds after they have been pressed into a farmhouse cheddar, bandaged in cheese cloth, and set aside to age. And then is the whey, transformed into a home made cabbage and whey soup...yummy!
Labels:
Cheese,
LEARNING ABOUT CHEESE,
THINKING FOOD
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Making Cheese at Home
Had lots of fun, and only a few frustrations and gasps of concern, making farmhouse cheddar today. We made a video too. Maybe we'll try YouTube.
Labels:
Cheese,
LEARNING ABOUT CHEESE
Friday, December 24, 2010
Christmas Color
Each year the red maple tree near our shed in Cedar Key seems to get colorful just in time for Christmas. Most of our other trees are palms and evergreen oaks, so this red and yellow display provides a cheering contrast.
We missed a holiday opportunity with another of our trees. Seedling sand pine trees are always popping up in the yard, and we routinely pull them up with the abundant other weeds. This year we noticed that one of the fast-growing trees had escaped our attention and made it to nearly six feet tall. So, belatedly we removed it. With just a bit of foresight, we could have left it alone for a few more months and had it for a fresh-cut Christmas tree.
We missed a holiday opportunity with another of our trees. Seedling sand pine trees are always popping up in the yard, and we routinely pull them up with the abundant other weeds. This year we noticed that one of the fast-growing trees had escaped our attention and made it to nearly six feet tall. So, belatedly we removed it. With just a bit of foresight, we could have left it alone for a few more months and had it for a fresh-cut Christmas tree.
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| Our Red Maple |
Labels:
Florida Outdoors
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Dressing up the Cedar Key House
Those who know us well are aware that we tend to be financially conservative and environmentally sensitive. Nor are we big spenders. None of these qualities would appear to apply to people who own a house on a barrier island. However, we do own a house on Cedar Key, Florida, having acquired it more or less by chance. Getting the place wasn’t part of a long-range plan or the dream of a lifetime, but to our surprise over the past five years we have enjoyed it immensely. Once a week or so we escape into a new and alluring world, only an hour away, but far removed from the daily routines and relative bustle of Gainesville.
This year we have dressed up the Cedar Key house in two ways, just in time for the holidays.
First, just after Thanksgiving we took advantage of a visit from Pam and James to install (James actually did the installation) a new lavatory in the main bathroom. The old one was funky and we discovered it even had a pedigree of sorts. After removing it we found a mark on the underside indicating that it was made in 1948. Venerable as it was, unfortunately its style was 40s modern. It seemed incongruous with our claw foot tub and did nothing for our decor. We’re enjoying the new one and keeping the old one for some other use.
Then this weekend we set up an early Christmas gift—an electric space heater that is also a faux wood-burning stove. It has already served us, last night taking off a slight chill as we enjoyed an otherwise lovely evening.
This year we have dressed up the Cedar Key house in two ways, just in time for the holidays.
Labels:
FAMILY and FRIENDS
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