Monthly Archives: September 2011

Make your pumpkin happy…

30 September 2011
Ann Hussey painting her pumpkin

"Thank you Annie," said the pumpkin. "Be quiet and hold still," said Annie. Photo by Jan Jackson

… by painting on it instead of carving it. You can see in the picture, how happy Annie’s pumpkin is – as it smiles and tries to hold really still for her.

Here is what to do:

  1. Pick a pumpkin that is smooth
  2. Give it a gentle wash
  3. Give it a thin spray coat of sealer or varnish
  4. Get out your acrylic paints
  5. Sketch the features you want it to have
  6. Paint your sketch
  7. Finish with another thin spray coat of sealer or varnish

Your pumpkin will thank you for bringing it to life – smile.

Luv,

Sissy

 

 

Pizza Fast Facts…

29 September 2011
Pizza Facts from Bauman Farms

Pizza Facts from Bauman Farms; photo by Jan Jackson

… Did you know that pizza has been around since time immemorial – in fact, foods similar to pizza have been prepared since the Neolithic age (the latter part of the stone age when stone weapons and instruments prevailed). It used to be a dish of the poor people and was not considered recipe worthy.

Here is something out of the Aeneid from the Latin poet Virgil referring to the ancient idea of bread as an edible plate:

“When the poor fare drove them to set their teeth

into the thin discs, the rest being eaten, and to break

the fateful circles of bread boldly with hands and jaws,

not sparing the quartered cakes, lulus, jokingly,

said no more than: “Ha! Are we eating the tables too?”

 

Lets hear it for pizza in the good ole USA – smile.

Luv,

Sissy

 

 

Pumpkins in blown glass…

28 September 2011
Hand blown pumpkins

Fall Harvest exhibit; photo courtesy of Lincoln City Visitors and Convention Bureau.

…you think it isn’t pumpkin time at the Jennifer Sears Glass Studio? There is a new “Fall Harvest” exhibit featuring pumpkins in glass. Opens October 1 and runs through December 31, 2011. I don’t think you ought to miss it.

Jennifer L. Sears Glass Studio

4821 SW Hwy 101

Lincoln City, OR

Wednesday through Sundays 10 am – 6 pm

For more information call 541-996-2569

Tell ‘em you learned it from Sissy –  smile.

Luv,

Sissy

 

 

 


Pumpkin patches near you…

26 September 2011
Bauman Farms Pumpkin Patch

Bauman Farms Pumpkin Patch; photo by Jan Jackson

Where do you shop for pumpkins? At the what? With all these wonderful pumpkin patches around where you can pick the perfect fresh, round and beautifulone? A trip to a pumpkin patch makes you want a pumpkin even if you didn’t want a pumpkin.

To quote the Oregon.Com website: “There’s no mistaking that harvest-time feeling. The brisk air, the warm apple cider and the sight of children climbing over large pumpkins in a field. There’s another Oregon tradition worth exploring this year – the corn maze. So grab a jacket and the kids and head for one of these locations. You’re sure to find plenty of family fun, food and even some warm apple cider.”  Keep an eye out for patches in your area or check out websites like http://www.oregon.com/oregon_corn_mazes .

Take a ride in the country and give yourself a pumpkin patch treat. Maybe this is the year to break that ‘pumpkin from the box-store habit’ – smile.

Luv,

Sissy

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Corn Song….

25 September 2011

Boeman's Farm Corn Facts…By John Greenleaf Whittier (1807 – 1892)

Heap high the farmer’s wintry hoard!

Heap high the golden corn!

No richer gift has autumn poured

From out her lavish horn!

Let other lands, exulting, glean

The apple from the pine,

The orange from its glossy green,

The cluster from the vine.

 

We better love the hardy gift

Our rugged vales bestow,

To cheer us when the storm shall drift

Our harvest-fields with snow.

 

Through vales of grass and meads of flowers

Our ploughs their furrows made,

While one the hills the sun and showers

Of changeful April played.

 

We dropped the seed o’er hill and plain

Beneath the sun of May,

And frightened from our sprouting grain

The robber crows away.

 

All through the long, bright days of June

Its leaves grew green and fair,

And waved in hot midsummer’s noon

Its soft and yellow hair.

 

And now, with autumn’s moonlit eves,

Its harvest-time has come,

We pluck away the frosted leaves,

And bear the treasure home.

 

There, richer than the fabled gift

Apollo showered of old,

Fair hands the broken grain shall sift,

And knead its meal of gold.

 

Let vapid idlers loll in silk

Around their costly board;

Give us the bowl of samp and milk,

By homespun beauty poured!

 

Where ‘er the wide old kitchen hearth

Sends up its smoky curls,

Who will not than the kindly earth

And bless our farmer girls?

 

Then shame on all the proud and vain

Whose folly laughs to scorn

The blessing of our hardy grain,

Our wealth of golden corn!

 

Let earth withhold her goodly root,

Let mildew blight the rye,

Give to the worm the orchard’s fruit,

The wheat-field to the fly;

 

But let the good old crop adorn

The hills our fathers trod;

Still let us, for His golden corn,

Send up our thanks to God!

 

 

Next Page »