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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Knock out a cold with this nourishing tea ?

Fresh Ginger and Green Onion Tea
This is the recipe from my friend Carol B. Her doctor gave it to her and it is amazing. Try to use a couple of small (1x1 inch) chunks of FRESH ginger if you can. I keep some in the crisper drawer all winter. In a pinch you could try dry ginger in a spice can but I don't think it would work near as well.
It tastes GOOD when you have a cold. Buy some fresh ginger and be ready to make it next time someone is getting that scratchy throat or already has congestion
In a medium pot

2 pieces of fresh ginger, crushed
3 large or five small GREEN onions. white part and roots only( I look for some with long roots).
3 cups water.Bring to a boil, then simmer for 10 minutes.
Add 2 to 3 tablesoons of brown sugar.
Drink warm before bedtime ( or anytime you need a boost) Lin

Monday, August 31, 2009

San Franciso brand jeans, vintage 70's

"If you go to San Francisco, be sure to wear some flowers in your hair..." the song went.


San Francisco always seemed to be a part of my 20's.

My college friend and I did a road trip there one spring break. Rod and I honeymooned there, eating at the original Spaghetti Factory, a hole in the wall in a not so nice neighborhood then. We ran out into the street to hop onto open air streetcars that clinked up steep hills cresting the top for panoramic views. We watched the gulls at Fishermen's Wharf, ate crepes at the Magic Pan and fresh chocolate at Ghiridelli .

Even my favorite pair of jeans were San Francisco brand. They had a special fit and feel of their own, seems like every college girl needed a pair then; the perfect color of soft, blue, denim, and long flowing legs slightly flared over a thick soled shoe or boot.


I had a pair of brown leather shoes then that looked like a boot but really were a backless, high heeled shoe. Pretty classy look with those jeans although it made my 5'7"frame even taller. (Seems funny now to see all the young single women running around in flats.) It was a flowing look with my long, straight, red-blond hair parted down the middle.

I have very few items from those days but I kept that pair of jeans. They were in good shape and I guess I thought the look might come back someday. Was my waist ever that tiny?
I found them buried in storage the other day and decided there might be someone looking for them by now. They would be in perfect shape for being over 35 yrs old.

I didn't find any evidence of anyone looking for them, perhaps they are so rare now few know about them? Maybe I will put them on EBay and see what happens. Someone in Japan may be "up" on 70's West Coast culture and want to experience slipping on those magic jeans!

Thursday, August 6, 2009

From Blue to Blue, Surviving Loss

This hydrangea was from a potted plant that was given to the family when my mom, Zona died two years ago.

It had large vivid pink blossoms then, in fact so many people in town sent pink flowers that the local florist in Prineville ran out of pink and had to special order more. My mom was serious about pink, she would have loved Barbie!

Although pink is one of my least favorite colors, I planted this where I’ve always wanted a hydrangea and thought of my mom in her favorite pink dress with the little petal cap sleeves each year when it bloomed.

Then this summer to my amazement it bloomed blue, the color I would have chosen, I guess due to moving it to an acidic soil vs alkaline.

I thought as I stood looking at it from the patio this evening that the color change seems to have coincided with the end of my deep mourning for my mom. I still miss her and think of her everyday but the deep sense of loss and pain have lifted and it is obvious that God has brought things into my life during that time that provided not only healing but joy once again.

When we lay in bed at night worrying about the future and the losses we may have to face, we never factor in that God not only knows about the losses but He has already planned the remedy.

Rod used to remind me that 95% of what we worry about never happen, but even that which does happen is firmly in God’s hands…a good place to leave it.

Now we have lost Rod's dad this last week...we are orphans now, but not without hope knowing God knew the appointed time of each departure....was it a coincidence that his large picture fell off the wall in his room at home just as he was dying in the hospital? An exit of exultation!

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Fun in the sun - Mazatlan

Oh Mazatlan, I forgot your charms.
Two years ago we started saving for and planning a family trip to return to Mazatlan. The idea was that we would supply a couple of rooms and the kids would find their own way down there.
We were wondering if we had made a mistake when we began hearing about all the drug violence in other parts of Mexico but Mazatlan remains beautiful, warm, and culturally rich as usual. How can you go wrong with Mexican hospitality and culture, the beautiful Pacific ocean, and SUN.

Traveling with passports is still not for everyone but it does open doors to some of the best vacation spots in the world.
I almost feel at "home" when I am there...maybe it is just the loving people we have come to know there that makes it such a special place...and until their govt gets their act together, the tourist industry is a vital part of their livelihood. For that reason I like to be generous with my tips...these people work so hard and I know it is a way of sharing what we have. Join us with a peek at one of our favorite spots off the tourist beat for dinner in the old historical Mazatlan called the Machado. The little guy is grandson Micah...I took this video so he can have a record of his first visit to Mexico. (see video clip below)
http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=1111859032600&saved#/video/?id=1110622279

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

LAX...The meanest airport in America?



Is it me or is LA international the meanest place in America?
Rod and some extended family came through LAX last night to catch the last leg of our trip home on the late pm flight.
Leaving beautiful warm Mazatlan Mexico to land in LAX and go through customs is always a shock. First y0u are herded into "stalls" at customs staffed by foreign looking people whose job seems to be to assume YOU are a terrorist hell bent on doing the whole place in.
I prepared my son JR that you will feel like a slimeball trying to sneak in disease laden fruit that will destroy the entire agriculture industry of the US and the existance of many other countries. Then Alaska Airlines will herd you around via overweight female minority workers whose only people skills seem to be verbal yelling and gesturing until they get you and your "checked" bags out of the terminal and onto the sidewalk to try and figure out where to go with your "checked" luggage without a guide.
Every time it is the same, weary passengers, dragging heavy "checked" luggage down the sidewalk asking each other and total strangers "are we going the right way". Finally we all somehow find the right line in the next building only to be yelled out some more as we drop our "checked" baggage off for the airline and are told to DOUBLE BACK through the same crowded line of weary passengers trying to get their "checked" luggage to the next terminal for this ineffecient airport.
Daughter Bethany accidently had a third of a bottle of water in her carry on when she got to the last check point. The employee told her to go dump it out and go to the BACK OF THE LINE (now another whole flight of people had come in) and go through the whole security check again with her empty water bottle! (her favorite metal bottle was not going to be left behind)
I know people coming back from vacation and sun to the realities of life are not always that fun to deal with...maybe we have made these employees mean? But, seemed to me the passengers were the ones trying to get along and make things work?
I would like to write about Mexico....ahhhhh. Maybe I will once I get over the trauma of coming home!

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

The FaceBook Pickle

Pickle Ball...>
Ok, I almost forgot how to get back into my own blog....FaceBook has captured me! I have to admit that since I found out this week how to send and get messages (off line) to other face book friends I have found it to be more satisfying. Scribbling on each other's walls in plain site of everyone was the only thing I knew how to do!
Do you hate the idea of FaceBook? It took me a while to warm to it.
One of the things I hate about it is that other people have to tell you how to use it....there is no such thing as a true HELP feature.....I think the people who run it must all be aliens or robots! How people figure out how to do all the things they do is beyond me.

I will never be into all the "pokes" and cutsey stuff on FB but I must admit I have reconnected with friends from college and even a few from highschool. Fun to see what others are doing these days.
So between Face Book and spending some time working from Arizona I apologize if you have been looking for any updates here. It is hard to keep up both, esp when I would rather be playing Pickle ball in the sun.
I don't want to lose my blog friends tho, so maybe I can get you to be my "friend" on Facebook?
Or maybe I can figure out how to send people to my blog from FaceBook so my non FB friends won't be locked out because they haven't joined? Hmmmm