Showing posts with label trying new things. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trying new things. Show all posts

23 January 2025

Too Cute to Not Try

I tried my hand at craft fairing again last December, and although it was not a great experience, I did dip my crochet hook back into the amigurumi pot for the first time in what feels like forever.

I kept seeing these cute little hedgehogs that were just irresistable. I came up with a pattern, and I made a handful. I sold one. Many people said they were adorable. But they did not sell.

That's only part of the story, though. My first hedgehog was a big fail. It stares hopelessly at me every time I get on my computer because I placed it at the base of my monitor. I don't know what else to do with it. It's pretty useless. But I can't bring myself to cut it up to reclaim the glow beads. :)

My thread chickens, however, DID turn out adorable. I didn't sell a single one. But man, are they ever cute!!!

Every time I've ever made amigurumi, I've always had to try a thread version. The hedgehog was the first one that just didn't work.

Maybe I'll try again one day. This time with smaller beads...

03 September 2024

Holey Rhubarb!

Some really big leaves popped up in the lower level of one of my raised bed gardens this summer. I hadn't planted anything there. I assumed it was a weed. Things were so busy, I didn't bother pulling it.

My dear friend Sue from Mr. Micawber's Recipe for Happiness educated me. Once you have a rhubarb plant, you have rhubarb for life. That suits Lizard just fine; strawberry rhubarb pie is one of his favorite deserts.

I assume some critter planted the rhubarb for me, perhaps a bird, but I guess it could have been a racoon or squirrel. Whatever planted it didn't come back to eat it. We have had more than our fair share of grasshoppers this year, and they have stripped my salad greens to the stalks. Made a mess of a few peppers, too. I keep finding chew spots on the giant rhubarb leaves, and I assume they come from our ranch of grasshoppers. Perhaps that's helping keep the numbers less than what it could be. One leaf bite, and no more grasshopper...

The rhubarb is definitely a photogenic plant. I've read new leaves look like green brains. So I keep trying to get photos, but the leaves grow and spread out too fast. I think the stalks are beautiful when they turn red.

I finally worked up the courage to snip a few stalks. If I was still natural dyeing, those giant leaves likely would produce some wonderful spring shades on yarn. For now, I'm just composting them, but not for the vegetable garden.

I bought a big container of strawberries (because I've never been successful in growing my own), then chopped them and the rhubarb stalks. I put them in a glass casserole dish with about a quarter cup of agave syrup. I baked for 45 minutes.

Lizard enjoyed the jam-like concoction warm out of the oven with French vanilla ice cream. I also put some in our plain yogurt, and I froze the rest.

I had never tasted rhubarb. Now I'm as hooked as Lizard. I might even start buying rhubarb from the grocery store when I'm not growing my own!

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