Just peachy

Last Thursday night I made two peach pies — one from canned pie filling, and the other from peaches recently picked off a co-worker’s peach tree. The next day, a Facebook Memory popped up of the time, almost exactly ten years before, when I had made a peach pie from the fruit of the tree in my own yard. I didn’t even remember making it. Ironically, when I looked through my cookbooks for a good pie recipe I found and passed over the recipe I had used a decade ago in the Laurel’s Kitchen cookbook. This time I used the recipe from the Moosewood Cookbook.

Earlier in the year I had tried to start an avocado tree from an avocado pit, and my efforts went exactly nowhere. So I have no idea why I decided to save the pits from the six peaches that I had peeled and sliced. But save them I did, and then I found a short YouTube video that showed how to crack open the pits, release the seeds, and coax the seeds to root. How could I resist?

No pictures were taken during the pit-cracking process, but I can assure you that after much straining and squeezing, the use of inappropriate household tools, and the launching of several pit shards, Eldest and I managed to free all six peach seeds with a minimum of damage to the Seeds Themselves. I will leave the details to your imagination. It’s safe to assume that if we do this again (and Youngest made me “swear” that I would not), we will not be recording the process.

Here is what I did with the seeds:

Place damp paper towel in plastic container.
Place seeds on damp paper towel.
Place damp paper towel on seeds.
Put lid on plastic container.
Place plastic container near window.
Cover plastic container with towel.

The next step is to check on the seeds in a week to see if they have started to grow tiny roots. If they have not, then my job is to moisten the paper towel again and check it again after three or four more days. I think I might be able to handle this. And seriously, if I can raise a tree from this process, anyone can. Second or third-graders would probably do particularly well. If you know one, I would be happy to send them some peach pits and let them take it from there.

This afternoon I went back-to-school shopping with youngest, and when we got to Target I picked up a fresh bag of potting soil and a plastic pot that had been marked down to $2.10. Even better: it is peach colored. It’s destiny, I tell you.

In other news, I bought another vintage typewriter. It’s five years younger (1947) but belongs to the same generation as the Royal KMM I bought a month ago. For $20 I couldn’t turn down the opportunity to adopt another member of the Royal family.

Alas, both typewriters need new ribbons. That shouldn’t be terribly hard to arrange, since I can order universal ribbons and adapt the ribbon part to the Royals’ proprietary spools. I should order some latex gloves so that I don’t stain my fingers in the process. After that, all I will need is time and space….


Knitwise, there is still no progress on the scarf for SecondSon. I hereby pinky-swear that I will find the right-size needle and set up a project bag after I publish this post. A project bag means that a knitter is Serious About Starting the Project.

The other thing I need to do with my knitting is to stop it from cluttering up my bedroom. I need to start exercising again, but my right leg and ankle are still unstable after the fall I took almost two weeks ago. Sit-ups would seem to meet the requirement of non-weight-bearing exercise, but my room is too cluttered with things to give me enough room to put down an exercise mat. All I will need is time and space…. this is beginning to sound familiar.

Published in: on August 27, 2023 at 9:18 pm  Leave a Comment  

Lucky stiff

If you’re one of my Facebook friends, you already know my big news for this week: I missed a step on the stairs at work and took a short tumble. I didn’t break any bones or sprain any muscles, but I landed with enough force to render most of my body sore for several days. Though I’ve never been particularly graceful, I used to be able to recover from injuries more quickly. (Perhaps I’ll take a second look at that AARP invitation, if they ever issue one in my correct name.)

I’m grateful to my “work family” for helping me up, wheeling me back to my office, bringing me ice packs, wrapping my ankle, checking on me, driving me to the emergency room for X rays, and making sure that I (and my car) got back to my house.

As the temperatures rose, it proved to be a good week to be “grounded.” I took my crutches to work with me, but I didn’t really use them. As long as I walked straight ahead on a smooth, flat, level surface everything was fine. Driving wasn’t too difficult, either. By Friday I was feeling confident enough to test the stairs, but I soon realized that both ankles were far too stiff to make that a safe proposition. Back to the elevator for me, even to go only one floor up or down. Outside, I was clinging to the railings whether I was ascending or descending.

My usual plan is to use the stairs whenever possible. Well, plans change. As the school year comes closer and closer, I may be more inclined to stay in one place and let people find their way to my [new] office — where I’ll have my feet slightly elevated. I’m fortunate that my job doesn’t actually require me to move around very much.

I’ve used some of this “down time” to keep reading, mostly about owls and about the history of mathematics and mathematicians. (Don’t worry; someday all of this will [or won’t] make sense.) I also updated my reading journal with regard to a pair of completed books.

Coincidentally, I had a couple of page-layout jobs waiting for me that were the perfect projects to tackle while sitting down. The September newsletter is nearly half done, and I was finally able to get the right Word documents open to start working on the book design for a friend’s third volume of poetry.

In agricultural/environmental news, the wheat that had surrounded our property was harvested over the weekend, and the remaining stalks were subsequently chopped up and turned into the soil. My knowledge of farm equipment is not comprehensive, so I don’t know if any new seeds were sown — though I suspect that may be the case. If winter wheat was planted, we’ll probably see it sprouting in a few weeks.

Photo by Roy Lukes (2016)

We also seem to be the hosts for the pre-flight convention of Canada Goose Local 487. Eldest has counted upwards of 70 geese that peaceably gather in the fields when they’re not making practice flights and getting to know all the members of the new flock. The local Sandhill Cranes aren’t as peaceful; two sets of three cranes have been acting out “West Side Story” for the last week and when they depart for warmer places it will not be too soon for me.

Right now there’s no need for anyone to fly south for warmer weather. We’re in the middle of a heat wave that will see our temperatures peak in the upper 90s midweek before cooling to more seasonable numbers.


Knitwise, there’s been no action with regard to the requested scarf. (Don’t tell SecondSon.) I plan to do a 1×1 rib stitch in the round and then press it flat and bind off the ends. It should be extra warm, and fringe is always an option. All I have to do is choose the right circular needle, knit up a swatch to make sure the width will be right, and then keep going until it’s done. What could possibly go wrong?

Time out

I had a lot of plans for this weekend, and almost every one of them changed. And I slept through a good bit of Sunday as well. I hope that this will mean that I’ll be well rested and realigned with whatever tasks come my way in the week ahead.

Did someone just snort at their screen? If I published these updates in the morning it might have been a coffee spit-take, so you’re welcome.

At any rate, I’ve been staying still and doing some reading when I have the energy. Today I caught up on my page of Talmud for today (we’re almost finished with Tractate Gittin! Woohoo!), read a few sections of a 25-page chapter from The House of Owls by Tony Angell, read the short story “Christmas Eve 1953” by Tom Hanks from his 2017 collection Uncommon Type, and read “The Three Snake-Leaves” from Grimm’s Fairy Tales. (There’s a reason they don’t read this one to you at story time.)

Last week I also poked around on the Internet doing some research informal investigation on the Royal KMM and made the not-too-shocking discovery that this typewriter does not take the universal standard ribbon cartridges that will work with many, many other machines. I also watched a YouTube video that showed me how simple it is to modify a universal ribbon and spool it onto the KMM spools. So that’s another thing that I’ll be able to do in that mythical future where I have all of the time. (This may or may not be adjacent to the universe in which I have won the billion-dollar jackpot in the Mega Millions.)

Autumn is coming to my part of the world, and with it will come school, books, articles, notebooks, pens, fountain pens and their ink, pencils, time in the library, and more time in the car driving from home to school to work at dawn (or before) and back again at dusk (or after). I’ll be less in charge of my reading matter for the next few months, which may explain why I’m spending the end of summer buying books that aren’t related to the psychology of the contemporary college student. My “for fun” books may need to have shorter chapters so that I can still make progress during my retreats to them in any “free” time, and I might switch to books of poetry so that I can read between interruptions.


Knitwise, I have received a request to knit a scarf for SecondSon. (It was texted in the form of a challenge: “Can you make this?” accompanied by a photo.) I’m not yet sure if there is a deadline, but I’ll want to get it started soon so that I’ll have something to settle my nerves in case the fall schedule that I have outlined above turns out to be stressful in any way.

This much will need to do for now, as I’m getting tired again. I’ll take a look at my yarn stash and gather the supplies for the SecondSon StripedScarf. If I fall asleep while woolgathering, it will be a blessing.

Chasing rainbows

I had good intentions when I sat down at the computer tonight, I really did. I didn’t know what I wanted to write about, but I honestly intended to crank out those one thousand words about…something.

I’ll be honest. It’s been a busy week and my mind and my tasks have been all OVER the place. I’m doing research on a topic that might not bear fruit for years. I’m [waking up] thinking about what I need to do to help my department(s) prepare for the coming academic year. I’m bracing myself for the workload of this fall’s graduate course in higher education leadership. I’ll have two sons in college and my youngest son in his senior year of high school. I have Secret Projects About Which Nothing Shall Be Revealed Until Afterwards. And it’s Sunday night, so I’m also finishing the laundry for the week.

I sat here for a while, and what came to mind was the rainbow. Good people in Waukesha County, Wisconsin, Google it, have been making Good Trouble for the last couple of years over their support of other good people who support the students in their school district.

The Minocqua Brewing Company has been “shut down” by officials who don’t have the authority to shut it down, in part because of the company’s support of Progressive policies and persons who find community and shelter under a rainbow umbrella. When some businesses need to follow the rules and others don’t, that’s called “selective enforcement.”

So I did a Google search for CHASING RAINBOWS and I discovered a lovely song by John Mellencamp that was released on the 2022 album “Strictly a One-Eyed Jack.”

You can listen to it, and watch it, here: https://youtu.be/TMUpq8fIXKw

Here is “Chasing Rainbows” by Big Freedia and Kesha: https://youtu.be/ZlNI7UhRoyc

Please let the message sink in. There are folks out there who could use your support and protection. All human beings deserve human rights. If you need a minute to think about that before you come around, take the time. We’re waiting for you.

Then celebrate with Irish band The High Kings and their own “Chasing Rainbows”: https://youtu.be/46jAXMq7esQ


Knitwise, you know the drill. No stitches added, no stitches removed. No net gain, no net loss. It’s all good.

Published in: on August 6, 2023 at 9:29 pm  Comments (2)  
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