Kids, crafts, country life and more...

This is what you get when you mix two toddlers, two border collies, a Shetland pony, two cats, a gaggle of turkeys, a former construction worker, a former lawyer and the family cattle ranch. Thanks for visiting. All images copyrighted. Do not use any text or image without permission.







Search This Blog

Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

The Big Island

We decided we needed to head for the sun this winter and we settled on the "Big Island" of Hawaii because we wanted ocean and volcanoes.  Alice informed us that she "only wanted to visit the extinct volcanoes," but we decided to head to Volcanoes National Park anyway.  We rented a house through VRBO that was in Hilo on the eastern side of the island.  It's the non-touristy side which is to say there are still a lot of visitors, but no fancy hotels at all, never saw a golf course, and a lot of actual Hawaiian folks at the beach with us.  

Alice and Clyde were great on the flight over. 


We headed right to the beach the next day... well, Alice and I had to detour past the store to buy her a swimsuit.  We found her a cute neon one with some Hawaiian print board shorts.  She was easy to spot on the beach!



 Alice continues to love flowers.  There were a lot of different varieties in our yard and then we headed to the farmer's market where there were tons of beautiful fruits and flowers. Produce was way cheaper at the farmer's market than it was at the grocery store, the opposite seems to be true at home. We definitely should have bought more when we were there.  Bread, on the other hand, was ridiculously priced at the market and the french loaf we got was mediocre (of course we're spoiled at home with Ben's award winning bread).


This is the rambutan fruit we got at the market.  Under that prickly outer shell is an extremely sweet fruit with a large seed.  It was kind of a tough fruit but the kids liked it.


King Kamehameha became the first ruler of the entire Hawaiian archipelago by pushing over this stone, the Nala Stone.  Even with all three of them working on it, we couldn't budge it.  So I guess we'll not be ruling Hawaii until our next try.

Here are Tarzan and Jane out in the back of the house.  They kept asking "Mom, can we go to the jungle?"  It was an amazing yard and so nice to have space to play safely right at home. 


We trekked south to check out Volcanoes National Park.  In August of 2013 the lava flows changed so now the fresh lava is flowing into a rainforest in an inaccessible area and not into the ocean as it had been.  So we didn't get to see hot lava, but we saw miles and miles of the hard stuff!  You can really see the pahoehoe (pu-hoy-hoy) and aa (ah-ah) types.  The kids were great at identifying them.  Pahoehoe is also called rope lava and looks like this photo.  It cooled slowly as it flowed.  Aa is sharp and chunky.  It cooled quickly.



Here we are where the lava flowed into the sea many years ago and now the ocean has beaten an arch into the cliffs.  It was really dramatic and the waves crashed into the cliffs, and got us wet at the top even though we were probably 50 feet up.


We took a long hot hike through the desolate lava field to some petroglyphs at Pu'uola.  I couldn't fathom that anyone would want to live out there with no trees for shade, no fresh water streams.  Ben thought maybe they'd been banished or something.  There are more recent flows near the site, so maybe there used to be trees closer, but it didn't seem like a great place to live.


We walked through the Thurston lava tube which is highly trafficked but still really cool.


 Our last stop was the giant caldera of Kilauea.  Much of the Crater Rim Drive is blocked off due to the sulphur gases you can see here.  The caldera is huge and I could imagine how amazing it would've looked when it was bubbling full of lava before the big 1924 explosion.  Now the active lava flows are from the Pu'u O'o Crater.


Another day we went to the Lava Tree State Park.  Here lava flows surrounded trees and left these pillar looking formations.  It was lush jungle again with lots of crazy rock formations.



We stopped at the Mauna Loa factory.  It was Sunday so they weren't packing nuts, but we learned how they harvest and pack the nuts.  Then we played in their garden.  Alice kept saying, "I'm in my chickee.  This is my chickee."  I didn't get it at first but then I remembered at Thanksgiving time we read about Native Americans' homes including the Seminole chickees which did look a lot like this little shelter in the garden.  It's wonderful to realize they really do listen to what I'm reading and remember it months later.  


We headed north to Waimea and stopped at Akaka Falls which drops about 420 feet.  It was a great walk through the thick rainforest. 


In Waimea, I was looking forward to the Parker Ranch Visitor Center, but as it turns out it's just a store in a large strip mall.   We did eat some great, but very expensive, burgers at the Village Burger next door.  I did like the stop signs though!


 We visited another lava tube close to Hilo - Kaumana Cave.  It had no lights in it like Thurston had, so you could really see the contrast between the rainforest and the dark cave with no vegetation.


Downtown Hilo was hit by a tsunami in 1960.  Rather than rebuilding, they made some big parks.  The kids loved the crazy bridges.


Clyde said this was a "Darth Maul" duck.  It really did kind of look like Darth Maul with it's red and black skin.


I tried to get a good photo of Alice in her new Hawaiian dress, but she was not into being a model that late in the week....


Clyde loved the boogie board.  We spent a lot of time at Richardson Beach State Park right across the street from our house.  There was a big lava rock outcropping that blocked the big waves and made for a nice fairly safe swimming area.  The sand was black and if you looked closely it had a lot of white shell bits and a lot of green sand in it too.  




One day we went for a walk in the rain out onto these rocks where the surf was crazy - we called it the washing machine.  We saw a pod of whales jumping out in the water.  I didn't have my camera that day, but I can still picture it.  I also didn't get a photo of any of the sea turtles, but there were a lot of them right where we were swimming.  I even tripped over one while pushing Clyde on the boogie board. 


We visited a huge botanical garden with a very steep walkway.  It was great to see all the different plants and the great views of Onomea Bay and Onomea Falls.   I'm always so overwhelmed by the scale, variety and abundance of plants in the tropics.  Growing up in the desert sure makes you appreciate the rainforest environment.  





The first day in our house, Alice started screaming in the hallway, "There's a lizard!!! There's a lizard in the house!"  We had a hard time convincing her that geckos are harmless until I read in the house information book that they are lucky.  The rest of the trip she kept talking about how lucky she was to see the first one.  She was also really consumed with worry about tsunamis.  I don't know how the subject first came up but she was so worried about it.  She kept asking how we would be safe and wanted to go away where there were no tsunamis.  There was a siren right in front of our house with solar panels on it.  She wanted to know what would happen if the regular electricity and the solar panel both were not working when the tsunami came.  We tried to tell her that we were safe but she was hard to convince.  So then we talked about how there's danger everywhere.  Which may seem like not the best approach, but I think it helped for her to know that in Idaho we have avalanches and forest fires and that we've managed to be safe.  And we talked about how people have jobs to watch for tsunamis and other disasters, how they're watching around the clock.  I think that made her feel better.  It's wonderful to have a discerning intelligent child.... most of the time! Boy, that was quite the tangent... anyhow, here's a cute gecko.








Hang Loose Friends!

Thursday, January 2, 2014

November 2013

We started off November shipping calves.  It went pretty well.  They were big and healthy.  We had some rainy shipping days but it was all right.

The ranch is so beautiful in every season.  I probably have 100s of pictures of this view and no two alike.


Janelle's family came to visit after moving into their new cabin in McCall.  She went with the boys and the men to move cows.  We had a scare when Boots ran off with Clyde.  I was completely a wreck, but Clyde did a great job.  He was like a little jockey.  Boots isn't accustomed to cows or open fields and we don't know what got into him, but when he balked at a ditch it sent Clyde flying.  Luckily he had a  soft enough landing.  But as a mother it just kills a little part of you to see your kid in danger.



It snowed and we played!  Daddy gave Alice an intertube for her birthday and it was great on the snow.



What did I tell you? Here's the same mountain from a slightly different angle in different light.  We live in a wonderful place (well at least half of the year).




Mumsy gave us a bunch of bulbs so Daddy fixed two feed bunks made out of an old water heater so we could plant in them.  Alice helped me transfer the dirt and plant the bulbs.  We also salvaged a huge old trough (about 4 feet by 20 feet) and filled it with soil for a new raised strawberry bed.


Here's Clyde's new tractor (Daddy's new project).  I looked it up it's about a 1950-52 John Deere basic tractor.  We heard it last ran about 7 years ago or so.  Clyde rode on it while Ben towed it out of the brush.  He said Clyde was so proud trying to steer it - it doesn't exactly have power steering so it was pretty tough for a six year old.


We went on a walk with the Wises and found some Winter wonder.


Monday, April 23, 2012

My not so new lilac bush...

On Saturday I bought a lilac bush at D&B.  I was so excited to plant it, and now it looks like this:


I'm pretty sure that a newly planted full price lilac counts as a delicacy for goats.   Ours are licking their lips right now. I put it back in the ground but the odds are against its survival.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Yard improvements....





(This is the before... hopefully next year I have a nice lawn photo for the after...)



We extended our fence to the south, put in two garden beds and moved the kids play area (dirt pit) to the back of the house. Our front yard was pretty much completely excavated after Alice's birthday party (big kids can really dig) and earlier in the summer Mumsy referred to our front yard as "Tobacco Road" so let's just say it was getting pretty junky. We found a couple of my old toys when we leveled the part of the yard where my sandbox was 35 years ago. I actually remember Dad going down the Payette River and shoveling in sand for it. Clyde and Alice have already claimed the vacant garden bed as their new digging place and we filled the other with raspberry plants from Mumsy's Raspberry Ranch.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Spring in the Garden




Last Monday night (4/4) we hurried to finish our 1/2 done raised stacked rock bed so we'd be able to put in the plants that Ben's Aunt Rinda gave us. The kids "helped" by making some mud soup and digging in all the beds for us. The bed turned out nicely and Alice got plenty of "mineral supplements". We've got rhubarb, chives, irises and allysum in there for now. I'm planning to plant some herbs and maybe more vegetables. It's finally started warming up and we're spending a lot of time outside, most of it working because things weren't in very good shape around here.