Monday, October 23, 2023

One Little Corner

Take a big deep breath in ... let it out.  Repeat.  I seem to be doing that a lot these days, which is obviously a good thing.  Even with my back on the mend, I'm not getting much done.  Distraction comes easy to me and suddenly I find I've been on my phone checking out new recipes and new photography ideas for two hours!!  I suppose it's cheap entertainment!   

However, it keeps me from doing what needs to be done.  Mrs. Chance send a note to me.  If you are overwhelmed with cleaning and organizing, just do ONE little corner.  Ha!!  This is a pretty big corner that looks just the same today as it did yesterday!!


The star of this little headache is my grandmother's rocker.  You've probably seen these with the strange wooden mechanism underneath that allows it to rock.  The tapestry was done by her many many years ago.  Surprisingly, it's even still sturdy enough to sit in and rock.  

Instead of being hidden in the back bedroom, it needs a place in my house where it can be seen and enjoyed.  I just haven't found that place yet.  


In case you wondered why I'm so scatterbrained sometimes ... this is it.  My sewing room is an absolute disaster.  It makes me crazy every time to go in, which is multiple times a day!!  Cleaning this little "corner" is going to take some doing!!


It being Sunday and all, I didn't do much but hang out with Mr. Cooper.  I did work on this quilt and got two more squares done.  These patterns are pretty complicated, requiring sewing, cutting, ironing, sewing, cutting and MORE ironing.  If I don't concentrate, I make mistakes, so progress is slow.  You'll see lots of different varieties of this since my wall isn't big enough for the king size quilt it will become.


Towards the end of the day, Cooper and I went out for a walk.  What??  It's RAINING?  When did THAT happen?  I never heard a sound the entire time.  No, the gardeners have STILL not trimmed all the rose bushes!!


For dinner I whipped up a dish left over from the old ranch kitchen.  When I say old, I mean OLD.  The kitchen was the biggest room in the house.  It had the stove in one corner, the sink in the far corner, and a built-in buffet/display cabinet for the fine china.  Since there WAS no fine china, it held the jelly jars we used for water glasses and the mason jars we used for canning.

When you walked in the door, you noticed a definite slant to the floor.  That was for cleaning purposes.  You scrubbed the floor with a mop and soap, then tossed an entire bucket of clean water at the highest point of the floor.  The water ran down to the low corner, where two big slots were cut in the wall at floor level.  That's where you swept the dirty water out.  

Did critters come in those inch high slots?  Why yes they did!!  A broom was kept close by to smack them.

That's where we cooked the toughest chunks of meat.  Our stove had one burner that would drop down into the stove.  It held a big pot for long slow cooking, kind of like a slow cooker today.  We would cut up the meat into chunks, chop up some onion, add a can of chopped tomatoes (for the acid) and a can of green chilis.  It would simmer on the stove the entire day, making the house smell wonderful!!

Even the toughest piece of an old cow that died mysteriously, would come out tender enough to eat.  Surprisingly, we never died from eating any of it.


It was quite tasty and brought back memories of the old kitchen floor.  It might have been better over mashed potatoes.  I may have to go to the store today.

But first ... I'm off to DMV to get my truck registered.  Why not register it out of state?  I'm basically honest and mostly afraid I'll get caught.  It only takes one time of getting detained in a jail cell in Santa Cruz at 17 years of age to make you follow the rules.  But that's a story for another day!!





20 comments:

  1. That is a crazy complicated quilt, but I love the colors! As for cleaning that corner, just leave it, it is not going anywhere!

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  2. Nancy your grandmother's rocker is beautiful. Just love it!
    Frances:)

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    1. It's pretty unique. I hope it ends up somewhere where it will be appreciated.

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  3. I am going to try again do not know what happened to the comment I thought I left on yesterday's. I have been catching up on my reading.
    I must say you have been one busy lady. Reading about the cleaning and packing up of your house in Arizona what a big job. Congratulations on the sale. I do really like your red room that furniture is gorgeous and your grandmother's rocker what a treasure. I think your friends advice one corner at a time is good advice...slow and steady wins the race.
    What a beautiful new quilt you are working on.
    We had a stove with a drop down burner, also, when I was growing up. I remember my mom's chili cooking all day in that pot. Take your time and take care.

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    1. I've been a busy little bee. Hopefully that will cease pretty soon!!!

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  4. I've never heard of a drop down burner. Very interesting and handy. That tapestry on the chair is gorgeous. No wonder you are so talented.

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    1. I think it was a GE stove. The burner was about 12 inches deep. You could stick a pot in the hole and let it simmer, or you could reach in, pull it to the top and use it as a regular burner. Not sure why they built it that way. Maybe so nosy little children wouldn't knock the pot off the stove.

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  5. I think you should look at Grandma's Rocker from a different angle...not 'where' it would look the best, but 'where' would be the safest place...you sure don't want people sitting in that old gem, it is lovely!

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    1. That's actually pretty true Dave. It's been hiding in the bedroom. Maybe I should put a rope across it with a DO NOT SIT sign! LOL

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    2. Do you have a large doll you can put on the chair???

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  6. Nice rocker. We have several. One sits in the kitchen. Loved your kitchen cleaning story. Never knew that.

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    1. Those rockers are treasures. When we remodeled the house in the 80's I think it was, they closed the holes. Too bad .. it sure was easy to clean!!

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  7. We used to simmer things on the woodstove all day long and it was always tender and flavourful. I love the rocker and agree with the commenter that thinks it shouldn’t be used, it’s too delicate I think. A beautiful piece that would look amazing anywhere you place it. As for the corner cleaning idea, start with 15 minutes at a time, do it twice a day. STOP at 15 minutes, use a timer. The trick is to truly work for 15 min, not putz or putter but work. Throw out whatever you destine for trash at the end of time, no hesitation, place the give away stuff in a box in the garage NEAR the truck and take it the next time you leave the house, or better yet, store it in the truck until it goes. It works for every room. Soon you will be finished. Good luck.

    Deb

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    1. That's the best idea I've heard yet Deb ... about cleaning a little at a time. I'm going to try it!

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  8. Of course we are home. We arrive back in Oklahoma on Sept 30. And it was still 90 degrees here! And now it is late October and we had three 90 degree days last week! I am working on catching up my blog, I just wasn't into it this summer. But now I am caught up through August. Just got to do September and then you will know I am home. We had a tree cut down in our back yard $1400! Also two years ago we got the two sycamore trees in our front yard cut down. That was expensive also! Nothing is cheap these days!

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    1. Ahhh ok, I thought you were still on the road. Those sycamore trees are not fun!!

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  9. I try not to think of Santa Cruz. 🤣🤣

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    1. Hahahaha I think of it all the time!!! Too funny a story not to tell!! I won't use names .........

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  10. Love the rocker! However, if your Grandma used it, in my old(er) self says Use it! We put good China dishes and antiques off to the side, saving them for what? If we're never going to sell them for what they're worth, enjoy them now. 💓
    There is no deadline on when things need to be done, i like Deb's idea. 15 minutes, then a break.

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