September 14, 2016

It's Apple Season! 12 Picture Books to Enjoy Together

September is apple orchard time! We have an orchard within easy driving distance (about 40 minutes away), that has cider presses and u-pick fruit. Almost every year we choose a Saturday morning in September and head up for some time in the orchard. It is so much fun!

[At the orchard last year. It was an applesauce year!]

This year I'm not planning to can any applesauce, so we will probably make cider, then just pick enough apples to eat fresh. I want to pick a few of several different varieties, so we can have a taste test and see which ones we like the best.

Not only that, our only little apple tree FINALLY produced some fruit this year! (We are going on year 6 since it was planted.) However, after bugs, hard winds, and other mishaps, we are down to 2 apples left on the tree. I will let you know how they taste, once we finally pick them!

I really enjoy reading books with my kids that fit the season we are experiencing. It makes it all come alive.  With that in mind, I hope you enjoy this list of apple books!



The Apple Orchard Riddle, by Margaret McNamara
Illustrated by G. Brian Karas

Tara's class takes a field trip to an apple orchard. Her teacher, Mr. Tiffin, asks the class a riddle: "Show me a little red house with no windows and no door, but with a star inside." The class protests that it is unfair, especially since they already have to learn about apples, but their teacher insists. So throughout the day they try to solve the riddle. In the end, it's day-dreamer Tara who comes up with the correct answer, much to her classmates' surprise.

* * * * *

The author's blurb in the back mentions that she wanted to explore the idea of different learning styles. I'm not sure I got that from it, except perhaps that Tara's approach to the riddle was quite different from that of her classmates. The riddle was a nice connector between all the bits about apples and the orchard.



Apple Picking Time, by Michele Benoit Slawson
Illustrated by Deborah Kogan Ray

A girl tells the story of how her whole town gets together to pick apples at harvest time. From the very early start, before the sun is even up, to lunchtime under the trees, to a crescent moon punch on a purple ticket, her day is full of hard work and a community that feels like an extended family.

* * * * * *

This was another more unusual find that I really liked. The little girl was proud of growing bigger and set a goal to pick a whole bin full of apples all by herself. She worked surrounded by family and neighbors, and although it took until the very end of the day, she did it! Everybody was so proud of her and celebrated her success. I loved the last sentence:

     Mama and Papa talk in low voices, and I dream about apples, and dancing, and two half-moons on a purple ticket.

She's already dreaming about her next goal! What a hard-working girl!

It was a quieter story, but satisfying. The illustrations were soft, with hazy, blended backgrounds and few hard lines.



Apple Trouble, by Ragnhild Scamell
Illustrated by Michael Terry

Hedgehog has just finished building her nest under the apple tree, when plop! An apple falls down and sticks to her prickles. Oh no! She tries everything she can think of, including suggestions from her friends, to get that apple off. She won't fit into her nest with it on her back. Each suggestion leads to something else getting stuck on her prickles. Finally, her friend Goat helps her out.

* * * * *

A great little cumulative story that my kids have asked for many times. (We own this one!) In addition to the silliness of it, they get a kick out of the ending. I appreciate the rich vocabulary in the text. For instance, Squirrel scurries, Hedgehog patters, the pond water is "murky," and so on. In addition, every new object that sticks to Hedgehog's back is described with 2 different adjectives, such as "crumpled brown leaf" and "small green pear."



Apples, Apples, Apples, by Nancy Elizabeth Wallace

Mom, Dad, Minna, and Pip take a trip to Long Hill Orchard to pick apples--for pie, crafts, snacking, and for a surprise. Mr. Miller teaches them about apples as they go along. When they return home, it's time for Minna to cook up her surprise!

* * * * * *

Cut-paper illustrations bring to life the family of bunnies on their apple-picking adventure. There are many individual illustrations that make this a great one for teaching. For example, the endpapers include full-page illustrations of the 4 seasons of an apple tree. It also includes instructions for making apple prints, plus a recipe (for the surprise!), apple sayings, and an apple song. I have used it for teaching preschoolers about fall, seasons, and apples.



Apples to Oregon: Being the  (Slightly) True Narrative of How a Brave Pioneer Father Brought Apples, Peaches, Pears, Plums, Grapes, and Cherries (and Children) Across the Plains,
by Deborah Hopkinson
Illustrated by Nancy Carpenter

Delicious, the pioneer's oldest daughter, tells the story of how her Daddy brought wagonloads of plant babies across the plains (and also the family.) She helps her Daddy do everything from build a raft for fording the Platte River, to protecting the tender leaves from hailstones with all of the clothing anyone can spare. She even builds a bonfire one night and has a showdown with that ornery varmint Jack Frost. They will do anything to make sure those trees survive the journey (and the children too!)

* * * * *

Loosely based on a true story; told like a tall tale.

Many of my Mormon pioneer ancestors came across the plains--though headed to Utah, not Oregon. This version of that trip was entertaining, and I even recognized some of the landmarks along the way. Also, I can appreciate a man so concerned with his plant babies. That there's a true kindred spirit!

p.s. I couldn't resist including that subtitle! I have a weakness for long subtitles, and this one should get a prize!



Applesauce Season, by Eden Ross Lipson
Illustrated by Mordicai Gerstein

A boy tells about his family's applesauce-making tradition, including buying the apples at the market, bringing them home, and making the sauce. Eating it too, of course. The very last page has the family's applesauce recipe.

* * * * *

There's a couple of things I really liked about this book. First off, it gave an urban perspective on fall and making applesauce. Many, many books talk about the orchard experience, or picking apples from your own tree, but let's be real here--for most people, this book is probably closer to life.

I also liked how it showed the steps to making the recipe, and that it was a family effort. I loved how this family had traditions built around applesauce--how cool is that? In addition, it talked about using different apples as they got ripe, and how that changed the look and taste of the applesauce. This is something I don't usually think about or experience, since I generally make a whole bunch at once and bottle it. It makes me want to try a season of making it fresh regularly!

The illustrations were full of warmth. I loved those bright red glasses that connect the generations, and the chicken bowl.



How to Make an Apple Pie and See the World, by Marjorie Priceman

Making an apple pie is easy. You just gather your ingredients, mix them together, bake, and serve. Unless the market is closed. Then you will be off on a whirlwind tour of the globe!

* * * * *

I remembered this whimsical book from when I was a librarian and was glad to find it again. From the wheat fields of Italy, to a sugar cane plantation in Jamaica, you see it all--and have apple pie at the end, too! Of course, there's a recipe on the very last page. Good luck gathering your ingredients! [Confession: I bought a copy this month!]



Johnny Appleseed, by Rosemary and Stephen Vincent Benet
Illustrated by S. D. Schindler

A celebration of the life and times of Johnny Appleseed--or at least, what there is to know about him.

     Of Jonathan Chapman
     Two things are known
     That he loved apples,
     That he walked alone.

* * * * *

This text was a poem that was written in 1933 by the Benets, to honor John Chapman--the man who became known as Johnny Appleseed. Schindler's illustrations added vitality and humor to the poem.



The Seasons of Arnold's Apple Tree, by Gail Gibbons

Arnold's apple tree is his very own special place. It provides him shelter as he plays in and around it, and gives him apples to eat and decorate in the fall.

* * * * *

This one is from 1984, so it has been around for awhile. It's another good one for teaching kiddos, as it showed the apple tree in all 4 seasons throughout the year. Each page had 1-2 simple sentences on it, with text boxes on some pages for more information. While the Apples, Apples, Apples, book focused in on a fall excursion to the orchard, this one showed Arnold playing in his tree all year. He put up a swing, he built a tree house in it, made a wreath from its spring branches, and even juggled the green apples. Of course, once his apples were ripe he gathered them up and took them home. In the winter he built a snowfort around it.

There's a recipe for apple pie included, as well as a page about how a cider press works. The cider press page included a cut-away drawing to illustrate it, which was interesting.



Ten Red Apples, by Pat Hutchins

A farmer has 10 red apples on his tree. Each animal on the farm comes by for a snack--will there be any left for the farmer?

* * * * * *

You practically have to sing this one! While it didn't quite fit the tune of "Fiddle-I-Fee," it was close enough for me to fake it.  Each page followed a similar pattern of rhyme and refrain. The bright red apples on the tree, with a number and apples in a row on the top left of each page, made the counting easy for my 4-year-old.

The illustrations were not my favorite; everything was drawn to look like those old Fisher-Price farm toys. However, I should mention that my kids didn't seem to mind them at all.


Nonfiction

I just picked out 2 from the nonfiction section of the library this time, but there were several. Many of them looked pretty similar in content, but there was a good range from easy reader to middle grade. Check in your library's nonfiction section under the 634's and see what you can find!



Apple Harvest, by Calvin Harris
J 634

A book for beginning readers, about harvesting apples from an orchard in the fall.

Part of the "All About Fall" series put out by Pebble Plus.

* * * * *

Each page had 1-2 sentences of very simple text to go along with full color, full page photos. Four sections, including: Fall is Here, Picking Apples, Fun with Apples, and Other Signs of Fall. Also, a glossary at the end, a short list of books under "Read More," and directions on how to use the FactHound website to find other sites.



The Life and Times of the Apple, by Charles Micucci
J 634.1

Packed with information about everything from grafting apple trees, to parts of an apple flower, to leading apple growing states and countries.

* * * * *

This was a versatile book due to its format. Each 2-page spread was its own section. The left-hand side of the page summarized the information in 2-3 paragraphs. The right-hand side of the page delved into the subject further, with pictures that included detailed labels, some as long as a paragraph themselves.

So, when reading it to my preschooler, I only read the shorter page, then mostly just looked at the pictures on the other side. For my 1st grader, we will probably read the entire thing--which at least doubles the length of the book. I could also see picking and choosing certain parts that your child was most interested in to read completely, and leaving the rest.

The illustrations are colored drawings, and add a great deal to the information.




September 13, 2016

Flower Recipe: "Cosmos with Company"

I tried out a recipe from my Flower Recipe book!
My 2 younger kids ended up making arrangements too, but they didn't follow a recipe. :)

The recipe I chose was "Cosmos with Company."

Ingredients:
20 stems of cosmos, assorted colors
5 stems of yarrow
5 stems of tweedia
5 stems of scabiosa

Vessel:
Tall ceramic vase

Okay, I had TONS of cosmos, so no problem there.
I knew I had some yarrow, didn't have either of the other two.
So I looked at the pictures to see what they were used for.
The tweedia had small flowers in a contrasting color to the cosmos.
The scabiosa were taller with bendy stems, sticking out above the arrangement.

Also, I don't own a "tall ceramic vase." Yet. :)
Quart jars would have to do!

I really wanted to experiment, so I planned to make 3 bouquets following this recipe.
The pint-sized jar was for my little buddy, my youngest, who wanted to do it too.

20 stems of cosmos (x 3): check!

As I looked around my flowerbeds, I realized my yarrow was not actually in bloom right now.
So I chose other flowers with a similar shape.

Bouquet 1: A Study in Pink

5 stems of sedum
(+ 1 Echinacea flower with a really short stem)

5 stems each of oregano, mums

I did not take pictures of the intermediate arranging steps.
Maybe next time!
 (The book gives instructions, with photos on how to arrange them.)

A Study in Pink: Finished Bouquet

Front 

Back 
Top

[Yes, 3 angles is probably overkill, but I'm using these pictures as a tool to learn and remember what I liked and didn't like.]

Assessment: I liked the colors together, but the sedum overwhelmed the cosmos in this one.
I either needed bigger/more cosmos, or fewer stems of sedum.

Bouquet 2: Ho Hum

5 stems 'Little Lime' hydrangea

5 stems each coreopsis, catmint

Ho Hum: Finished Bouquet

Front

Back

Top

Assessment: The coreopsis stems were too short for this arrangement! They basically got lost in the end. I liked the airy catmint and the clumps of hydrangea. Though this one is nice, it's also kind of boring. There's nothing that really makes it sparkle.
 (Not that it stopped me from giving it to a friend.)

Bouquet 3: Vivid Lady

 
1 'William Shakespeare' English rose
5 stems guillardia + 3-4 stems zinnias

I was going to just do zinnias, but didn't have enough, so then I cut the guillardia to add to it as well.
I could have done 5 roses probably, (there were enough blooming), but I didn't want them to become the focal point.

5 stems salvia
(By this point my daughter was home and eager to help, too!)

Vivid Lady: Finished Bouquet

Front 
Back

 
Another view

Top

Assessment: This one was my favorite of all 3 bouquets.
I thought the orange tones would clash with the pink, but happily, they didn't.
This one also had the biggest cosmos, which I think made a difference.

I gave it to my neighbor right after I had made it!

Just for fun, here's the one my little guy did: just cosmos and oregano.
He would go out, clip one stem at a time, then run it back into the house to put in the jar.
Arranging flowers, the cardio workout version! :)

* * * * * * * *
So what did I learn overall?

I need more flowers!!
(Ha! Are you surprised?)
I had enough for 5 stems here and there, but not much more than that.

Also, I'm not sure why I feel compelled to name the bouquets, but there it is.

This was so much fun!
Do you like playing with flowers too?
Made any pretty bouquets lately?


September 12, 2016

Anne's House of Dreams, by L.M. Montgomery




Anne's House of Dreams (Anne of Green Gables #5), by L.M. Montgomery

5 stars: I just finished reading this one again. If I had to pick my favorite books in the series, this one would be 2nd, right behind the first book. Rilla of Ingleside (book #8) would be 3rd. The rest--eh--somewhere in the middle. Don't get me wrong--the entire series is near and dear to my heart, but this is one of the nearest and dearest.

Top 5 Things I Love About This Book:

5. The house itself, and Four Winds harbor.
As with all of Montgomery's books, the scenery is practically another character, it plays such a part. The beauties of the shore, the little garden tended by generations of happy women, and the cozy little house to come back to at the end of the day. Just lovely. [Happy sigh.]

4. "And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." (John 8:32) A scripture made literal in miraculous ways.

3. Anne's heartbreaking loss of her first baby, and despite shadowy fears, a healthy baby to love the second time around.

This didn't mean nearly so much to me when I read these books as a teenager. Now that I am a mother, I feel such a kinship with Anne. I experienced a miscarriage with my first pregnancy, then delivered a healthy baby boy the second time. So I've been there. I am not ashamed to admit that I was in tears reading the chapter of baby Joyce's short life.

2.  Captain Jim.

He's one of my favorite characters in the whole series. He's such a fine old gentleman, even though he was never taught to be one, and so humble and selfless. Still human though, as his baiting of Cornelia Bryant proves. I can just hear his voice as I read his dialogue, and my mental picture of him is crystal clear.

1.  She FINALLY marries Gilbert!! Did it take them long enough?

You see it coming in Anne of Avonlea, then Montgomery makes you wait for 2 whole books more! First, they both go to college, then he goes to medical school while she goes off to teach at a girl's school, then finally! It's about time. That's all I'm saying.

I just love seeing their relationship finally have a chance to develop. This is really the only book that you get to see inside their marriage. The last 2 books are mostly about their kids, with Anne and Gilbert present, certainly, but more so as background.

They are sweet but not sappy, with some tender moments, and even have some lively disagreements. In fact, the chapter of their big fight is one of my favorites--just because you can see that they're still 2 individuals, each with their own strong opinions. So true to life. Then they make up and later Anne defends Gilbert using some of the arguments he used on her. Yes!


* * * * * *

How would you rank the Anne books? Do you have a favorite? Do tell!

September 9, 2016

Last of the Summer Read-Alouds

I guess since school started last week, it's about time to get this post up! Our last installment of summer read-alouds were all sequels of books we had read earlier.



Gooseberry Park and the Master Plan, by Cynthia Rylant
Illustrated by Arthur Howard

4 stars: Kona, Stumpy, and the gang work together to save Gooseberry Park's animals from an awful drought.


There is a drought going on and all the animals in Gooseberry Park are suffering. Stumpy is worried about her babies--and all the other babies, too. If something doesn't happen soon to help, the weakest animals will not survive. What they need is a plan.

So the friends get together and come up with a bold plan. It's going to involve the firehouse dog, a cat, a possum, a couple hundred owls, drinking straws, chewing gum, and the big tank of water inside the fire truck (inside the fire station.) Many, many things could go wrong, but if they don't at least try, the animals of the park may not survive the summer. 

* * * * * *

A sequel to Gooseberry Park, though this one stands on its own. We enjoyed this one just as much as the first. It could start some great discussions on serving others, community involvement, friendship, and how to get an owl to help you. :) Murray the bat was our favorite character--he's so funny!

(Finished reading Aug. 14)


Here Comes McBroom! by Sid Fleischman
Illustrated by Quentin Blake

5 stars: Three more hilarious tall tales about intrepid farmer Josh McBroom, his dear wife Melissa, all 11 children, and of course, their wonderful 1-acre farm.


In "McBroom the Rainmaker," there's a drought so fierce that the children have had to teach polliwogs how to swim--they had never seen any water! The skeeters are also the worst anyone can ever remember. McBroom comes up with an ingenious plan to take care of the drought and the woodpecker-sized mosquitos all at once.

I don't usually read ghost stories to my kids, so they were not sure what was up when we started in on "McBroom's Ghost." There's all sorts of trouble when a dry-bones starts mimicking all the sounds around the farm. Plus, Heck Jones--their hee-hawing scoundrel of a neighbor--has bought a whole bunch of razorback hogs, which he feeds by way of turning 'em loose on the McBroom's property. I have to quote one of my favorite parts:
    
     "Well, I'll admit he was right about that. We fenced our farm, but those infernal hogs busted through and scattered the pieces like a cyclone. We strung barbed wire. It only stopped them long enough to scratch their backs. Barbed wire was a comfort to those razorbacks."

Makes me smile just typing it out! By the end of this chapter my kids were laughing (and relieved, I think!) Spoiler: it's not actually a ghost causing all the trouble.

When a cyclone sucks up every inch of McBroom's marvelous topsoil, he and the family follow it to see where it dumps it all. Unfortunately, the pile is so big and so far away, that they aren't going to be able to get it home without help. Along the way, they find all sorts of rare and unique creatures, including the Sidehill Gouger, the Desert Vamooser, and even the extremely endangered Great Hairy Prairie Hidebehind. Well, they try to find the Hidebehind. Problem is, it's always hiding behind you, so it's awfully hard to catch sight of. They end up starting "McBroom's Zoo" with all their marvelous animals--for a time anyway. Just long enough to make some cash, so they can hire help in transporting their topsoil back home again.  

* * * * *

Another hit! Just like the first, McBroom's Wonderful One-Acre Farm, this one was filled with all kinds of colorful words like "gallinippers," "confounded," "flapdoodle," "hornswoggle," and "shoofly pie," among many others. Fun to read and fun to listen to! Not only that, this time around the kids could recite all 11 children's names with me! The stories themselves were short, self-contained, and satisfying.

I'm really glad I bought these two. We'll definitely be re-reading them again!

(Finished reading Aug. 12)


Talking to Dragons (Enchanted Forest Chronicles #4), by Patricia Wrede

3 stars: Daystar is finally old enough to wield the sword--if he can figure out what he's supposed to do with it.

Daystar has lived with his mother Cimorene on the edge of the Enchanted Forest his whole life. She has taught him all kinds of rules for living near or with enchanted beings. Also, a whole lot about dragons, most especially, to ALWAYS be polite to a dragon--whether or not it is polite to you.

One day, a wizard shows up--who seems to know his mother, strangely--and Cimorene melts him. Shortly thereafter, she hands Daystar a sword and sends him off into the forest, with hardly a word about what he's supposed to do or how. Daystar is supposed to figure it out on his own.

Once he's in the forest, he meets up with a fire witch named Shiara, who has a trouble controlling her magic and her temper. Oh, she's also got a bunch of angry wizards after her, as well. They decide they would probably both be safer travelling together, while Daystar tries to figure out what in the world he's supposed to be doing.

* * * * * *

First, I have to say it: Daystar is a dumb name. Setting that aside, we liked the story. It was good to have cameos by all of our old friends and enemies, including Morwen, Telemain, Kazul, Antorell, and of course, Cimorene and Mendanbar. Of the new characters, the jelly-like Quozzle was probably our favorite.

Like the previous two installments, this is the story of a hero's journey, so there's quite a bit of wandering, setbacks, and wrong turns. The ending was probably my favorite part, just because we finally got to the exciting battle between the wizards and everybody else. It was satisfying to have everyone all back together again at the end, too. (Wait, was that a spoiler? Sorry. You had to know it was coming, though.)

There were some things that bothered me (other than Daystar's name, I mean.) For one, the whole premise of the book is that no-one can tell Daystar anything about the sword or what he's supposed to be doing with it. Supposedly, because if he knows what he has, it will allow the wizards to find him and the sword right away. So Daystar spends pretty much the entire book bumbling around, with practically everyone he meets knowing more about his quest than he does. I prefer my heroes to be capable and smart, (like Cimorene, incidentally), rather than just happening to stumble on the right path through politeness and good fortune.

Secondly, Cimorene and Daystar's relationship was a bit odd. So, he's grown up with his mother telling him all this stuff for survival in the Enchanted Forest, but when it comes to his father, all we get is--it didn't come up. WHAT? And apparently, Daystar never pushed it, because let's be honest-- he's a bit intimidated by his mom. Again, what?! 

I mean, Cimorene obviously still loved Mendanbar, and it seems there would have been a great deal she could tell THEIR SON without compromising the whole Plan to Defeat the Wizards. Also, I really can't imagine a teenage boy just letting that drop--no matter how much he loves/respects/fears his mother. Particularly in a (one assumes) otherwise loving relationship with his mom. He doesn't even seem to wonder very much about his dad. How did feisty, convention-breaking Cimorene manage to raise such a docile, passive boy? Just baffling.

Anyway, for me it was probably a 2-star read, but my kids liked it enough to bump it up to 3. We've also listened to all but the first now, and enjoyed that experience even more than me reading them.

For reviews of the others, follow the links: Dealing with Dragons, Searching for Dragons, Calling on Dragons.

Content: clean

(Finished reading July 30)

* * * * * *

As usual, we didn't read as many as I had planned this summer, but that's okay. For the most part, we really liked the ones we did read, and it's the positive experiences together with books that counts as much as anything. How did you do with summer read-alouds this year?

September 8, 2016

Pruning the Forsythia

Are you familiar with a forsythia bush?
Even if you didn't know the name, you probably would recognize it if you saw one.
They bloom in the spring, absolutely covered in bright yellow blossoms.

Like this one:

(This is not my bush....or my picture. Picture in the public domain.)

The branches tend to arch out in a fountain shape.
Unless--that is--your forsythia is old and has been allowed to grow any which way.
Then they tend to be tall, ungainly, sprawling, and perhaps blooming a little at the very tips of the branches. As a sort of "in your face" gesture. Or maybe I'm just imagining the gesture.

In any case, there's a forsythia at the very tippy top of our slope that has been bothering me for quite some time. I didn't even realize what it was until this spring (we've lived here for 6 years), when I just happened to notice some yellow blossoms at the tops of its tall, unsightly branches.

Here it is, on the right, pre-pruning.
Can you see the broken branch leaning way down to the left?

It has needed pruning. Badly.
Okay, problem: it's not actually our bush.
It's very, very, close to our side of the property line, but not there.
However, I did talk to our neighbors about it--the ones who are the official owners of the bush.
They: 1-didn't even realize it existed and 2--didn't care what I did with it.
YES!

A quick note before we go any further:
If your forsythia is healthy and pumping out the blossoms in the spring, STOP!
Walk away from the loppers!
This is NOT the right time of year to prune forsythias that just need a little maintenance.
They flower on old wood, so you would be cutting down next year's flowers if you pruned now.
The best time to prune a healthy forsythia bush is right after it's done flowering in the spring.
Okay, thank you.
Moving on...

Now, why did I completely ignore that advice?
Basically, this particular forsythia hasn't been flowering anyway--so I've got nothing to lose, baby!
Also, as I mentioned above, it had one big broken branch and many of its branches were dead from the middle down.
Just about anything would be an improvement at this point. 

Now, I could have just lopped it all off to about 4 inches above the ground and called it good.
(Not sure what the neighbors would have thought of that sort of shrub intervention!)
In another 2-3 years, it would have grown back into a respectable little shrub.
However, I could see several newer shoots amongst the old, decrepit branches.

Before pruning.
See the brown shoots in the picture above, with healthy leaves growing on them?
I didn't want to get rid of those!
The broken branch is on the left there--if you look closely, you can see where it's splitting.
Also, notice how packed the middle of the shrub is--so many branches that you can hardly see what's what.

Plan B for rejuvenating an older, unruly shrub like this is to cut about 1/3 of the oldest branches all the way down to the ground each year, for 3 years.
Obviously, this method takes a lot longer, but it's less drastic.

So that's what I did.

After pruning.

That ugly broken branch was the first to go, and I actually had to saw it off--it was too thick for my loppers. My, it felt good to get that old boy out of there.

To determine which other branches to cut down, I looked to see which had the least amount of healthy growth on them. On many of them, whole side branches were completely dry and could snap right off. Not a good sign!
So, I cut down probably 4 or 5 of the worst offenders--all the way to the ground.
Then I threw the branches down the hill, just because I could. 
They made quite a pile at the bottom!

Here's another "after" picture.
You can see that the middle is much more open now, which will help with blooming next spring as the sunlight will be able to reach the branches lower down.

I was sorely tempted to chop this thick gray branch as well, but I refrained.
I had already taken my quota.
Next year, though. It's gone.

The forsythia bush, after pruning.

2 funny things about this little project:

1. My kids were so happy to have a big pile of branches to play with!
They immediately started snipping off side shoots for toys and walking sticks and such.
This was helpful, as I was able to stuff most of it into the trash can after they were done with it.
[This falls into the category of--why do I ever buy toys for my children?!]

2. I am almost 100% certain that no-one else will even notice or care what I did, but that's okay, because it I notice it!
Even just getting rid of that broken branch has done a lot for my peace of mind when I look up at the corner. It bothered me every single time I saw it!

Perhaps in the spring they will be happily surprised when it blooms.....

* * * * * *

Do you have a forsythia in your yard that could use a good whacking?
If you're local, I'll do it!
(Have loppers, will travel.)

September 7, 2016

Mini Theme: Under the Big Top

After I read Girl on a Wire, I realized there were a couple of others on my "to-read" list that also used a circus as the setting. So, I thought it would be fun to read them all at once--get immersed in the whole circus world, you know? In reality, they were all so different in tone; they bear just a passing resemblance to each other, despite their shared circus bones.

Oh, and FYI: these run the gamut from middle grade to adult.  Enjoy!


The Book of Speculation, by Erika Swyler

4 stars: Once I got into the story I couldn't put it down.

Simon is a librarian who lives in a derelict house--a house in danger of crumbling into the Sound. He is currently alone. His mother committed suicide several years ago, his father died a few years after her, and his younger sister ran off to join the circus. Yep. Simon finds comfort in books, in answering reference questions, in solving puzzles.

One day an unexpected package shows up on his doorstep. It is an ancient book--a logbook, of sorts--apparently from a travelling show way back in the late 1700's. A antiquarian bookseller that he doesn't know sent it to him, having tracked Simon down from the name on the inside cover of the book. It's his grandmother's name. He comes from a line of circus mermaids--women who could hold their breath for 10, 15 minutes at a time. Longer, maybe. Simon himself learned from his mother how it was done, when he just a young boy.

As Simon begins to research this book and what it means to his family's story, a disturbing pattern emerges: all the women in his maternal line have drowned at a young age, all of them on July 24. Then another unexpected thing happens: his sister Enola returns from the circus show she has been working with. It is July, and it is obvious there is something not quite right with her. Simon has to unravel the mystery and protect his sister before it is too late. Again.

All the while, his personal life is in shambles. He has lost his job (budget cuts), his house is unfit for habitation, and secrets await him that he will not want to know.

* * * * *
This was a book with many layers. It had a dual narrative: Simon in the modern day, and then a long time ago, a showman named Peabody, a mute boy named Amos, and a cursed girl named Evangeline. In both times tarot cards, readings, and water appeared and reappeared. Slowly the two ends of the story curled together, until you got to the heart of it all.

Simon was a likeable character--always the responsible one, and caretaker of his sister in the face of glaring neglect. It's not very often that you find librarians as the main characters in novels. Perhaps that sealed my sympathy for him from the beginning. There's a line about how he can't stand to watch books drown. Yes, that would be hard for me, too. But they're only books! (you may say.) To which I reply, books have the potential to change a person's heart, soul, and outlook, and hence the world. The scene with the flood in the library was only a small part of the narrative, but it seemed to represent a much bigger part of what was happening.

Anyway, back to Simon. There were echoes from the past that still resounded in his life, some he was already aware of and some he became aware of as he tried to solve the puzzle of his family's curse--if such a thing existed. Certain people had been drawn into his life with deep connections to his family.

There were threads of magical realism at work here, too. Nothing that overwhelmed the story or stood out on its own, but circus performers who actually were what they claimed to be--for instance, Doyle the Electric Boy, and of course, the mermaids themselves.

Content: There's some language, including many uses of the f-word in dialogue. There's the whole suicide theme, plus a handful of non-graphic sex scenes--mostly of the fade-to-black variety. There's some abuse and a fatal beating. There's quite a bit about tarot cards: reading them and descriptions of the cards themselves.

For adults.

(Finished reading August 19.)



Church of Marvels, by Leslie Parry

3 stars: A fascinating and dark story set in New York's underbelly.

It is turn-of-the-century New York, and Odile and Belle are identical twins, whose mother has raised them in the circus life on Coney Island. She built a show up from the ground all on her own, called The Church of Marvels, and it was full of real (never fake) acts of amazement and wonder. Belle began swallowing swords as just as child. With her crooked spine and legs, Odile is never in the spotlight as much as her sister, but she prefers it that way.

Then there's the fire. Their mother and many of the performers die, and the Church itself burns to the ground. Nothing left. After a few months, Belle slips away leaving nothing more than a note. Odile is bereft, and eventually decides to go into the city by herself and find her sister.

Back in the city, a night-soiler named Sylvan is doing his rounds, emptying out the privies, when he finds a baby. A baby girl who--unbelievably--is alive. He can't bring himself to just leave her there, as his foreman demands. He brings her home. He cleans her up. He knows he's going to need help--he himself is just a lone man with no relations. Perhaps he might even be able to find the child's mother somehow. He has to try.

Meanwhile, a girl named Alphie wakes up to find herself on a boat to a women's insane asylum on one of the islands. She's had a hard life of it: sent away from home when she was young and lived her whole life since then in the slums and alleyways, with the bruises and scars to show for it. When she got married, she thought that hard life would be over, but her husband frequents the opium dens and her mother-in-law hates her. Her memory is fuzzy when it comes to the events leading up to this disaster, but the one thing she hangs onto is her husband--Anthony. Anthony will come for her, and soon this whole thing will just seem like a bad dream...one of many. 

The lives of these four characters slowly begin to intertwine and converge upon each other. They have all experienced loneliness, rejection, and the loss of parents. There looks to be nothing rosy ahead for any of them. And yet. There may be glimmers of hope here and there. If they can survive the present, that is.

* * * * * *

A gritty, evocative story. The asylum was horrifyingly brutal, and Sylvan's world--somewhat similar to what Alphie left behind--wasn't much better. The twin girls grew up somewhat sheltered, though they had their share of worldliness being onstage and dealing with the crowds.

I had to keep reminding myself this was New York City--it had the feel of old London about it. Somewhere in the middle there's a twist that had me exclaiming out loud--"Wait, what?!" much to the amusement of my husband. Maybe I'm naïve, but I didn't see that one coming at all--though now that I think about it, I suppose there were clues all along. When you get there, you will know what I mean.

The story unfurled slowly, with alternating chapters from the viewpoint of the different characters, and as each piece fell into place, a few more things made sense that didn't before. However, just when I thought, "Ok, now I know what was really going on back there," Parry would throw in another twist or two.

Beautifully written. It brought me right there: onto the streets, into the despair of the asylum, on the sidelines of Sylvan's fight, into the waves and onstage with Odile and Belle, in the bedroom that one pivotal night.

It's one I would love to discuss with somebody, so you if end up reading it--tell me! Let's chat!

Content: Some language, descriptions of abuse in the asylum, violent fights, prostitution and sex (talked about, though not graphically described), LGBT issues, drug use. Definitely a book for adults.

(Finished reading August 4.)



Circus Mirandus, by Cassie Beasley

4 stars: A magical circus and a grandfather's promise come together to rescue a boy.


Micah Tuttle has heard stories about the Circus Mirandus his whole life. A magical circus that suddenly appears; and while it demands an entrance fee, the fee does not necessarily have to be money. Stories about a wonderful magician called the Lightbender and a woman who can fly. Stories from his grandfather's boyhood.

Now Micah's grandfather Ephraim is dying, leaving Micah all alone in the world. However, Ephraim Tuttle has something in reserve: an unredeemed miracle, promised to him by the Lightbender himself. Ephraim has sent a message and is still awaiting the answer. The awaited answer may be all that is keeping him here on earth. While the miracle may very well be impossible, the Lightbender has been known to make the impossible happen. It's Ephraim's (and Micah's) last hope.
 
A simple story, magically and wonderfully told. For middle grade audiences.

(Originally reviewed Dec. 2015)



Girl on a Wire, by Gwenda Bond

4 stars: Jules and Remy fall for each other, despite the long-standing feud between their two families.

Jules has been a wire walker since she was tiny, and hasn't fallen since she was 4. She feels at home on the wire, much like her dad, who is a master at wire-walking. That's why she can't understand it when her family has decided to pass up the chance for a job with the Cirque American, a new show recently started up by a wealthy businessman. The family's old rivals--the Garcias--will also be headliners in the show, but Jules can't believe that would keep them (or her, especially) from pursuing bigger and better things.

Jules takes a chance and forces her dad's hand. It works! The Amazing Maroni's are going to join the Cirque American! What with her grandmother's dire warnings, however, and her parent's uneasiness, Jules is not sure what they will find when they get there. What she definitely doesn't expect to find is handsome, charming Remy, one of the teenage Garcia trapeze artists. He doesn't seem to mind having her around--unlike the rest of his family--and soon they become friends...with the possibility of something more.

Any interest they may have in each other will have to be put on hold, though, because apparently the old feud is far from over, and superstitious unlucky objects have begun turning up. Worse, accidents begin to happen. The Garcias and others in the circus already think Jules' grandmother is a witch. This is not helping matters any. Jules doesn't believe in magic and she is determined to get to the bottom of this--before it's too late for her or someone she loves.

* * * * * *
This retelling of Romeo and Juliet sucked me in! More than I expected it to, actually. I was ready for a high-drama rendition, with added elephants and tigers, but in this one Remy and Jules are actually the more sensible, level-headed ones. I thought their investigative tactics were age appropriate and believable. The friendship/romance managed to stay on this side of sweet, with the obsessive nature notable in the original downplayed quite a bit. It's more "I'm crushing hard," rather than, "I will die if I can't be with him," which was a nice change.

I don't do well with heights (an affliction that has gotten worse the older I get, for some reason), so the wire-walking descriptions were fascinating and slightly terrifying. How could anyone on purpose do such a thing?  Just--gives me the shivers.

Anyway. A fun little diversion for those who like circuses, Shakespeare retellings, or teen romances.


Content: A tragic death, and some passionate kissing. Recommended for teens and up.

(Finished reading August 1.)



The Night Circus, by Erin Morgenstern

3 stars: Some beautiful, dreamy bright spots, with unanswered questions lurking in the background.

Celia and Marco are two magicians, each raised by a different master to be weapons--or pawns, depending on your point of view--in a game. It is to be a game of skill and of mastery. The venue: a circus that only opens at night: Les Cirque des Reves--The Circus of Dreams. The two don't know the rules and for a long time, Celia doesn't even know who she is competing against. They add exhibits and tents to the marvelous circus and circle each other unknowingly as though in the main ring.

The circus performers, including Celia, are a tight-knit group, from the contortionist to the twins who were born on the very first opening night. They are all involved in the game, whether they know it or not, and their very lives depend on the outcomes.

Meanwhile the circus has gained a cult following of its own. Those who inform each other as soon as it pops up in a new location, who write about its wonders and form a club of like-minded enthusiasts. A family of fans. There's also a boy named Bailey, who first discovered the circus when he was young, and met one of the twins. Now he is a man and finds it is like an addiction--a thirst that cannot be slaked. Little does he know his fate is bound up with that of all the others, as well.

As the game wears on, Celia and Marco fall in love, and even (gasp!) begin to collaborate on various projects that were meant to be a competition. That's when everything else starts to fall apart.

* * * * *
This book had a dreamy quality to it. When I think about it, it's in images: the fantastical clock at the entrance to the Circus, Celia's dress at the party that took on whatever color she was standing near, the tent of ice sculptures, bright red scarves against black and white. The fantastical shows and events of the circus were lovingly described with an eye for detail, as though one of the fans themselves had written about them. What an amazing place it would be if it were real! The Cloud Maze, and all the rest.

The bits involving the circus itself was where the book really glowed. However, the story faltered and began to blur out around the edges. At the end of the book I was left with quite a few questions. Who were the 2 masters, really? Why must this "game" be played out over and over? Why couldn't the contestants know the rules (perhaps the author wasn't clear on the rules herself)? How was it a fight, if all they ever did was make new exhibits?

Celia and Marco were okay, but I didn't actually care about them very much. Were they products of their strange upbringings? Why didn't they ever ask why they had to do this, or even try to rebel, or something? Once again, the book is primarily about the Circus itself--the characters are more of an afterthought.

Unlike some, I didn't mind Celia and Marco's solution to their seemingly unsolvable problem. In a world where The Night Circus exists, what's one more snip of impossibility, after all? Plus, it was a lovely, romantic impossibility, so cut it some slack alright?

Of all the characters, the twins were my favorites. Literally born and raised as part of the circus, they were able to step outside its bounds in ways some of the others couldn't. Bailey's involvement was a nice touch. I was satisfied with the ending for their sakes, as well.

Content: There are a few rather traumatic scenes, for instance, where Celia stabs her own hand through with a dagger (to prove she can heal herself), and mentions of her father cutting open the tips of her fingers--over and over--for the same reason. Recommended for teens on up.

(Finished reading Aug. 14)

September 6, 2016

Roasted Garden Tomato Sauce


Okay, I did end up making some of this extra delicious tomato sauce last week, and I even took a few pictures! A cooking blog this is not, but everything looks better with some illustrations, right?

In case you missed the earlier link, I used this recipe from Our Best Bites.
If you click on the link, they've got the printable step-by-step recipe & instructions.

We had all of these tomatoes to use up, plus the 2 bowls-full of the same size from last week.
[These are the rest of the onions. I probably should have pulled them all up a few weeks ago, as some of them were getting eaten by bugs, or something.]

My little 4-year old was my best helper, as big brother and sister were in school.
He especially loved using the kitchen scale to weigh everything.
(The recipe calls for 2 lbs. of tomatoes, but he decided all of the vegetables had to be weighed!)

I have found that this recipe is pretty forgiving.
You blend everything up at the end anyway, so you can totally sneak in some other veggies!
In addition to our tomatoes, both cherry tomatoes and regular, I had 2 yellow squashes that needed to be used up, so I cut up one per batch. My smaller garden onions were perfect--I probably put in 2-3 per pan, and we used up 4-5 of our smaller garden carrots per pan, as well.
After you prep everything: wash, stem, peel, etc., then you just chop everything up, into roughly the same size pieces.
Drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with salt & pepper (as per the recipe), and put it in!

Here's the first pan, all ready to go in oven.
Pretty, isn't it?

 Our top oven is a convection oven.

This was in the convection oven, on 285 degrees F for about 2 1/2 hours.
It's a bit overdone.
The tomatoes are more like dried tomatoes, and you can see the one corner is quite brown and crispy.
That's okay, though! They have great flavor and will go in the blender, anyway.
I did pull out the ones that were completely brown and crunchy, first.


This pan was in the lower oven on 300 degrees F (no convection) for about 2 hours.
This is more what you want.
You can see it's a lot juicier-looking than the first pan.

I combined the entire contents of both pans in my food processor.

I also added 1 cup of beef broth, 1 tsp sugar, 1 tsp of minced garlic (from a bottle), and a drizzle of balsamic vinegar. Blended it all up.
I did not add any herbs or spices, beyond the salt & pepper prior to baking.
I will add those depending on what I use it for.
It was so delicious, I could eat it with a spoon.
Seriously. Yum!

From this double batch, I ended up with around 6 cups of sauce.
I divided them into 2 quart-size freezer bags, let them cool completely, then put them in the freezer.

This makes wonderful spaghetti or pizza sauce, and it's also really good as a tomato-basil soup, if you add in some cream or milk on the stovetop, and some basil.

As far as using your harvest, this project is comparatively easy and very satisfying.
Basically, the main work is chopping things up.
I hope I'll get enough tomatoes to make at least one more batch before frost!