Followers

Saturday, November 23, 2019

Counted Cross Stitch Mini-Pillows

     My sister is an expert cross stitcher.  She whipped up several small Christmas designs that I turned into little pillows.  I donated the pillows to the Smithville Mansion Christmas Boutique.
     Here they are:

The bigger snowflake on the blue aida cloth, is the largest at 10" X 10". 

I used polyfill and leftover cotton fabric to make some pillow inserts.  Then I used leftover decorator fabric (satiny white and a plush dark red) to make the pillow backings.  There you have it. 

Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Grow Your Own

     Besides growing another container vegetable crop in 2020, I will continue to gown my own impatiens from the seeds I gather and dry this fall.  Impatiens are a staple of the suburban landscape, and it's extremely easy to harvest their seeds.


Pretty!
I grew these impatiens from 2018's seeds.

Impatiens produce seed pods at the end of the season.  When the pod gets plump and develops distinct ridges, it's time to carefully pinch it off the plant.  Use a light touch because pressure will cause the pod to explode, spraying seeds all over.

I spread the pods out on paper towels and I cover with another towel.  The pods with dry and pop.  The towel that you placed on top will keep the flying seeds contained.  After the seeds have dried (I usually forget about them for weeks and weeks), separate the seeds from the dried green pod material, and store the seeds in an envelope.

You can separate by color.  If you pick pods from a red flowering plant, you get a red flowering plant next year.  I haven't observed any deviation from that, but I suppose there could be some cross pollination that produces a color that varies from that of the parent plant. 


     Impatiens are like weeds.  The seeds germinate quickly, and they grow fast.  Oh, you can also snip cuttings off of a mature impatien plant, stick them in some dirt, and they will take root.

     Cool Fact:  Impatiens are also know as Busy Lizzie plants because of the way the seeds shoot out of the pods.

Friday, October 4, 2019

Underground Railroad Museum of Burlington County

     Louise Calloway founded the Underground Railroad Museum and operated it for several years in Burlington, New Jersey.  After the museum closed in the spring of 2013, the Burlington County Freeholders announced that her collection would be permanently exhibited at Smithville.  The museum is a part of the Burlington County Parks System.
     I recently visited the museum.  The displays inform the visitor of the Afro-American experience in the Americas, from indentured servitude to slavery to establishment of the escape network known as the Underground Railroad to the American Civil War and elimination of slavery.  The Underground Railroad ceased operation during the Civil War.  From this point, the museum's displays feature stories of prominent Afro-Americans up to the present day.
     The museum hours are Friday and Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. and Sunday from 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.  Admission is free, but donations are accepted.  Picture taking is usually not allowed inside the museum.

     Here is a link to a document about the Underground Railroad published by the New Jersey Historical Commission:

https://dspace.njstatelib.org/xmlui/bitstream/handle/10929/24563/h6732002.pdf?sequence=1


Th Underground Railroad Museum of Burlington County



Some local safe havens or "stations" on the Underground Railroad were the Elisha Barcklow House in Moorestown, Dr. George Haines House in Medford, and the present day Burlington Pharmacy in Burlington.  Many other local places are rumored to have been part of the escape network. 

The Museum's Brochure

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Container Garden - Part 3

     Summer is winding down, and it's time to make the final report on the container garden project.  Here goes.



I began during the first week in March.  I cut a hole in the lid of a plastic bin and used Gorilla tape to attach a mylar window.  I drilled drainage holes in the bottom of the bin, added commercial potting soil, and planted radishes, lettuce, and spinach.  I left the bin outside, even during snow storms.  I had home grown salads at the end of April.     



What's better than a fresh green salad?



I like radishes, and I tended to pull them when they were very small.  I just couldn't wait. 



I saw this brainy idea on the internet - turning toilet paper and paper towel rolls into tiny seed starting pots.  You start the plants indoors.  Then you transfer the seedling into a bigger pot when the weather is warm enough to put the plants outside, and the paper roll is supposed to decompose during the growing season.  I found that the paper grew white, fuzzy mold.  Some articles said the mold was harmless, and other articles issued dire warnings.  Everyone agreed that the cure was to sprinkle cinnamon all over the soil and seedlings.  This worked like a charm and smelled nice, too.  Since my seedlings sat uncovered, under a sunny window, and were not over watered, I blame the mold on the toilet paper rolls.  My advice is forget about recycling TP and paper towel rolls.  Just start seeds in a bin of potting soil or use plastic cups.   



Two baby tomato plants and a corn stalk.



Green beans are the first plants to produce.  They flower and produce beans all summer long.



My zucchini plants were duds.  These plants produce male and female flowers.  Insects do the job of fertilizing the female blossoms or you can do it yourself by rubbing the male blossom onto the female blossom.  I had insect activity, and I also tried pollinating the flowers, but I had very few squash.



I had a bumper crop of parsley.  I inspected my plants every morning when I watered.  In August, I noticed an army of striped caterpillars devouring my parsley.  It turns out that the black swallow tail butterfly lays its eggs in carrots, parsley, and other herbs in this family of plants.  Since I had dedicated myself to raising plants without insecticides, I spent a good half hour picking these little nuisances off and tossing them into a plastic bag.  I found a few more caterpillars in the days to come, but no where near the numbers of that first infestation.  



My corn was a complete failure.  My eggplants are probably also a flop.  I'm still holding out hope that I might harvest one or two eggplants.



I had a lot of delicious tomatoes. 



Vine Ripened Maters



This is a tomato hornworm.  They attack tomato plants.  They are voracious eaters and can defoliate a plant quickly.  I picked a few of these guys off my tomato plants, using gloves, of course.  Big, green, and disgusting.



The pepper plants produced even more fruits than the tomatoes.  This pepper is almost finished turning from green to red. 



My Garden
I have to admit that this year's vegetables came at an outrageously high price.  Now that the garden is established, I will take the lessons I learned and grow a more productive garden next year.  How many years do you suppose it will take to break even?


Monday, July 22, 2019

Nancy's Things

     I'm a big fan of  https://freecycle.org/   It just makes a lot of sense to recycle, reuse, and repurpose. 
     In March or April 2019, I posted a request for stainless steel pots that I could dedicate to making candles and campfire starters.  The lady who responded to my post was cleaning out her mother's home since her mother had relocated to assisted living.  She would set aside the pots, and she asked if I had any other requests.  I decided I would not be shy.  I asked for an assortment of craft related items.
     Sunday, July 14th was the big day when I finally met Lisa who presented me with two big, plastic bins and a grocery bag full of her mother's things - Nancy's things.  There were pots, lids, big spoons, muffin pans, cooling racks, stainless steel bowls, measuring spoons, and knitting needles.  The grocery bag was full of dozens of crochet pattern books.  Later, I sorted out some things that I would not use.  Lisa told me I could re-post on freecycle or donate the items, so I added them to a pile that I plan to take to the Virtua Thrift Store.  There were some well used 1950s era aluminum pots that I decided to take to Americycle for proper recycling.  I got $1.62 that I put in the yarn kitty.  The crochet pattern books will first be offered to the ladies at the crochet guild.  If they cannot use them, I will donate them to the Friends of the Burlington County Library for the next book sale.
     Thanks, Nancy.  I hope that my plans for your things will do some good.       
               

Friday, June 28, 2019

Thursday, June 27, 2019

I'm Sorry, Toad

     The nursery dropped four cubic yards of mulch in my driveway a couple of weeks ago.
     "That's a lot of mulch," my neighbor remarked.  "Are you planning to move all of that by yourself?"
     Well, yes.  Mulch isn't very heavy.  Moving and spreading it is not beyond my abilities, so I began moving my mountain, one wheel barrow load at a time.
     A pitch fork works best for shoveling up mulch.  I noticed that something remained stuck to the pitchfork after heaving a scoop into my barrow.  Oh, my God!  A rather large toad had burrowed into the cool, damp mulch, and I had impaled the poor guy.  I stabbed him through his hind leg, and there he was, dangling from my instrument of torture.
     With my gloved hand, I carefully slid him off his skewer and placed him on the driveway.
     "Oh, I'm sorry Toadie," I apologized.  How badly was he injured?  Would the wound be fatal?  Toads are good.  They eat bugs.  I was filled with remorse.  The toad sat on the stone driveway breathing heavily and glaring at me with one eye.
     There wasn't any fluid leaking from the leg, and then he hopped.  Good, no broken bones, maybe no serious muscle damage.  Should the wound be cleaned?  I filled a watering can with water and began showering the toad.  He bounced away at lightening speed.
     I have seen turtles with scarred shells, one-eyed cats, and three legged dogs.  I supposed the toad would heal and live to eat bugs for another season or two.  I felt really awful about what I had done, though.  Unless that old toad decides to hold me accountable for his punctured hind leg.  If that happens, then my position is going to be that he shouldn't have been sleeping in my mulch pile in the first place.   

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Gunsmoke II

     Finally, some Gunsmoke episodes have ended on an uplifting note.  Season 8 is not the downer that Season 7 was.  I feel better now.

Saturday, June 15, 2019

Gunsmoke

     Back in 1992 Bruce Springsteen released a song titled "57 Channels (And Nothin' On)."  What was true then is truer now.  I have 1,000 channels, and there is not a darn thing to watch.
     The other night, I scrolled and scrolled, finally settling on "Gunsmoke" reruns.  I figured, if I had seen these programs, I wouldn't remember them.  More than fifty years had passed since they first aired.  I settled in for a late night visit with Marshall Dillon, the Doc, and Miss Kitty.
     At 1:00 a.m., I put down my crocheting thinking, My God, that was bleak.  
     In "Lacey," an innocent, young thing is convinced by her murderous boyfriend to take the blame for her father's killing.  When she finally understands that her fiancé never really loved her and that her father was right all along about the bum, she shoots the boyfriend.  As she is lead off to the jailhouse, she asks Matt Dillon if it's true that they have never hung a woman as young as she.  Matt assures her that he has never known a girl her age to be executed.  Of course, we all know she is going to swing.  Bleak.
     "Cody's Code" is about a middle aged guy (Cody) who falls for one of Kitty's saloon girls.  He worships this pretty, younger woman, builds her a house, and socks money away for their future.  Everything runs on course until a cad bothers the saloon girl and a handsome hero (her own age) saves her.  She falls for her hero and plans to run off with him.  Cody finds out and shoots the interloper.  Cody, up until that point, the best human being in Dodge City, is headed off to jail to await his fate.
     "Old Dan" is a hopeless drunk whom Doc sobers up.  Kindhearted Dodge City residents bend over backwards to give Dan a sober fresh start.  The owner of the general store thinks Dan is a terrific employee until he comes to work one morning and finds Dan drunk on the floor after bingeing on the vanilla extract.  Next, a farmer takes on the project of reforming Dan.  The farmer's wayward son comes home and forces his father and Dan to spend the night drinking.  During the brawl that follows the drinking, Dan kills the son and the father dies of injuries received during the fracas.  Dan thinks out loud as he carried off to jail.  He has finally realized that no one can reform a drunk until the drunk wants to reform himself.
     "Gunsmoke" ran for 635 episodes.  I'm wondering if there was one happy ending in the entire lot.  The show was for adults or probably should have been rated PG-13.  All the realism and explicit content went over the head of younger me.  I'm enjoying the show now that I finally get it.
     
               


Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Replacing a Delta Bathroom Faucet Cartridge

     Plumbers are expensive.  That's why I decided to replace the cartridge in my leaky bathroom faucet.  I should say "faucets" because I discovered the beginnings of a leak in the faucet of the second sink while fixing the first sink.  I assembled my photo tutorial using pictures from both faucet repairs.  Don't be confused by the left/right switches.



Step 1
The problem was not water leaking out the spout.  The water was leaking from the bottom of the faucet handle.  Water dripping from the spout usually means that the cartridge is worn out.  Water escaping from the handle usually means springs, seats, and O rings need to be replaced.  I decided to replace the whole shebang since this faucet is 10 years old.

Step 2
Gather an adjustable or channel lock wrench, needle nose pliers, an appropriately sized Allen wrench/hex key, and some old towels.  Then complete the most important step - turn off the water.  The shut off valves are under the sink.  Turn off both the hot and the cold sides.

Step 3
Faucet parts can be tiny, so it is important to close the drain stopper.  Your task will be oh so much harder if any parts go down the drain.  Once you have found the Allen wrench that fits, remove the set screw and pull off the faucet handle. 

You have exposed the cartridge and the nut that holds the cartridge down.

Step 4
Use the adjustable wrench or channel locks to remove the nut.  Turn counter clockwise.  It might be fused into place.  Add additional force gradually.

Step 5
Grab the cartridge with your needle nose pliers and pull it up and out.  Note the orientation of the cartridge, and sit it aside in the same position as it sat within the body of the faucet.  You'll see why this is important in Step 8.

Step 6
Use an old towel or rag to absorb any water in the hole.  Insert your finger, and you will find a round, plastic ridge in a well at the bottom of the hole.  This is the seat and there is a spring under this seat.  Use your needle nose pliers to grab the ring and seat and pull them out.

 Here is the old seat and spring.

Crusty Old Parts
Note the O ring on the cartridge.

Step 7
At this point, I used vinegar to remove the mineral deposits under the faucet handles.  They say not to use your finger nails as tools, but I scraped with my nails.  I didn't want to use a hard implement for scraping as that might have scratched the chrome.

Step 8
Cartridges come with a little plastic part that you insert.  Match the position of the plastic part in the new cartridge to the same part in the old cartridge.  The little plastic wedge controls the direction in which the handle turns (and I think whether hot or cold water comes out of the faucet) so you don't want to get this wrong..

Step 9
Place the spring inside the seat (wide end up and narrow end down).  Using the needle nose pliers, place the seat and spring in the well at the bottom of the hole.  You might have to apply some pressure with your finger to get these parts snuggley down into place.

Step 10
Drop in the new cartridge.  Note that the plastic tab on the cartridge must fit into the metal slot on the faucet body.  It might take a little pressure to push the cartridge down as far as it needs to go.

Step 11
Replace the nut tightening only with your fingers.  Once you have tightened it as far as it will go with your fingers, use the wrench to tighten just slightly more.  Tightening too much might damage the new O ring.  Now, replace the handle and tighten the set screw with the Allen wrench.  Turn on the water and check for leaks. 


     This repair cost $36.09.  Each cartridge cost $14.68.  A two pack of seats and springs cost $4.49.  Of course, there was sales tax.  You can get cheaper generic, plastic cartridges, but I decided to buy the brass parts sold at Lowe's that are designated as Delta replacement parts.

Monday, April 15, 2019

Eastern State Penitentiary

     Eastern State Penitentiary, located at 2027 Fairmount Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was operational from 1829 to 1971.  The property was abandoned through the 1980s while the city of Philadelphia considered various redevelopment plans.  The Eastern State Penitentiary Task Force successfully halted redevelopment in 1988, and the prison opened to the public for historic tours in 1994.  The prison is a U.S. National Historic Landmark, and it is open for tours every single day of the year from 10:00 a.m until 5:00 p.m.  I visited using a museum pass, one of many free passes available from the Burlington County Library.
     Eastern State was the first true penitentiary in the United States - a place where people were not  physically punished (whipping, for example), but where they were separated from society and from their fellow prisoners.  They served out their sentences in separate cells.  Prisoners didn't speak to each other.  They did not work together or take meals in a common dining room.  Silence was so important that guards wore socks over their shoes to muffle their footsteps.  This quiet, solitary existence, brainchild of reforming Quakers, was supposed to help offenders reflect, repent, and reform.  No one knows if the system worked because, during the years that the prison operated under this "Pennsylvania System" of separation, there was no record keeping concerning rates of recidivism.  Many people thought the Pennsylvania System merely traded physical tortures for mental tortures.       
   
This impressive wall is 30 feet high and extends another 10 feet below ground.  A neighborhood group tends the beautiful floral display in the front of the prison.

The original floor plan called for seven one story cell blocks radiating like spokes of a wheel from a circular hub.  Before the prison was halfway built, it was apparent that it would not be big enough.  The plans were altered to add a second story of cells on blocks four through seven.  As time went by, additional two story cell blocks were built in the spaces between the original seven until there were fifteen blocks.   

Cells are 8 feet wide and 12 feet long.  The tiny door in the back of the cell leads to an exercise yard.  

Each cell had a toilet and a cold water tap.  There was a rudimentary form of hot water radiant heating.  When the prison opened in 1829, even the White House didn't have indoor plumbing or central heating.  It turns out that having a toilet wasn't as luxurious as you might think.  All toilets flushed at the same time, twice per week, when a prison employee activated the central flushing system.      

Each cell had a skylight.

This cell has been restored to show how it would have looked for the average inmate.  Al Capone was incarcerated at Eastern State Penitentiary for seven months in 1929.  Prison officials allowed Capone to decorate his cell with luxurious furnishings, artwork, expensive rugs, and a radio.  Renovations of Capone's cell are not completed, so I didn't see it.  

Cell Block 4.

Sentences then were both harsher and more lenient than sentences now.  A first time offender might be sentenced to a two year term for stealing a small sum while a murderer got only 8-10 years.  There were no life sentences.  I suppose execution rather than incarceration was the way it went in the early 1800s. 

Each cell had a tiny exercise yard in the back, eight feet wide, like the cell.  Prisoners were allowed to garden and keep pets in their exercise yards.  

The Philadelphia skyline is visible over the walls.

   

Read more about it:


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_State_Penitentiary

https://solitarywatch.org/2010/02/27/charles-dickens-on-solitary-confinement-immense-torture-and-agony/

https://www.easternstate.org/explore/exhibits/al-capones-cell

https://www.easternstate.org/press-room/press-releases/numbers-2017



Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Red Shoes

     When I was a kid, my mother kept a pair of red shoes under her bed.  That must have been the place where women of her era lined up their footwear.  The shoes didn't fit her anymore, not after having three babies, so I admired them and wore them during that brief period when I could squeeze my rapidly growing feet into them.  I'm sure my two younger sisters did the same.
     I thought about those pumps when I heard Dolly Parton's song, "Red Shoes."  My mother's shoes didn't have the same confidence building effect as the shoes in the song, but it was still nice to wear them.
     Enjoy the music.


Monday, February 4, 2019

Punxsutawney Phil Said Spring Would Arrive Early

     Punxsutawney Phil said spring would be early this year, but who thought it would arrive 48 hours later?  Let's hear it for sweat shirt weather.