Monday, August 29, 2011

New Month's Resolution

Sometimes New Year's Resolutions end up being a big flop. You either start out strong and burn out in a few weeks or you figure you have all year and never quite get started. If you are among the few that can set New Year's Resolutions and stick to them, Kudos to you. For the rest of us here is a simpler and hopefully more effective solution. 

New Month's Resolutions give you a month to accomplish your goal. At the end of the month you have a chance to make a new one or if you have failed miserably you can have a do over and try again at the same goal.  One or two resolutions should do it. You don't want to get overwhelmed and not do anything. I encourage you to have your children set New Month's Resolutions too. It doesn't matter their age, even a 2 year old can have a goal. It might be something simple like staying dry all day or not hitting the cat but goal setting is a good habit and the younger you teach your children to have goals and follow through the better.

Here are some examples of goals for children: (help children pick goals appropriate to their age)

  1. Make bed daily
  2. Complete homework in a timely fashion
  3. Learn multiplication tables
  4. Feed the dog
  5. Keep bedroom clean
  6. Read a chapter book
  7. Use good manners daily
  8. Better time running a mile
  9. Learn 5 constellations
  10. Lean to make cookies
  11. Double number of pushups they can do
  12. Memorize a poem
  13. Learn the State and Capitals
  14. Tell the truth every time
  15. Learn to ride a bike
  16. Keep hair brushed 
  17. Get out of bed on time
  18. Learn to tie 4 knots
  19. Write in a journal daily
  20. Do chores without whining
  21. Help with the baby
  22. Learn 1-10 in Spanish (or another language)
  23. Learn to change a tire
  24. Do 10 hours of community service
  25. Make a new friend
The possibilities are endless. Teach your children good habits by setting a New Month's Resolution yourself, share that resolution with your children, then follow through. At the end of the month sit down and talk about how you all did and what could you have done differently. If you failed, don't make excuses. Take responsibility for your failures and try harder next month. It's a hard thing to do but if your children see you failing than making excuses as to why you failed you can't possibly get them to complete a goal. You will just get excuses.

My New Month's Resolution for Sept. is to lose 5 lbs. I will report at the end of Sept. Feel free to share yours and your children's New Month's Resolutions. It would be nice to do a post with what other people have chosen.

Our New Kitten

Saturday we got a baby kitten. We named her Juniper Rosetta Snow. We call her June for short. (Although she is so tiny I've been calling her June Bug.)

She is part of a litter of a cat I used to have. Her mother Lola used to be mine but I had to give her up a year ago. Now I have the opportunity to raise her daughter. She looks exactly like her mother did when she was a kitten. I love her. She is little ball of curiosity and is constantly getting into trouble. 



There will be more pictures later. These are just a few that I snapped with my phone.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Mom, Irene hit me!

As you East Coasters may have noticed, Irene has swept up the coast leaving power outages and destruction in her wake.

Last night around 7:45 PM I checked the weather on my phone and told my husband that the torrential rain warning was only in effect until 9:45 PM. Excellent! This is good news. It was warm and sunny out and there was pink on the horizon. (Pink sky at night is a sailor's delight) I guess Irene is going to miss us. We went to bed expecting the best. Around 12 AM I awoke to rain beating in the roof of our little 5th wheel. Darn! I woke Mike and we duck taped a trash bag to our ceiling over the skylight hoping it would keep it from leaking on us too much.

By 6 AM our trash bag was bowing, the sky light over the kids bed was leaking and we had put an empty trashcan under it to catch the water and the wind was picking up.

Around 9 AM we decided to pack it up and go to my mom's house to weather the storm. We packed up the dogs, kids and our new kitten. (Yes, we got a kitten yesterday. She is so cute. But that is another post.) On the way to my mom's we passed a power truck clearing a fallen tree and downed wire from across the road.

The rest of the day has been pretty good. We lost power twice but it wasn't for long either time. I was concerned a few times that we were going to lose some of the tall pines around the house, but so far so good.

I've been reading on Facebook all day of others in the area who have lost power and someone even lost the roof on their barn.

7:52 PM, by now Irene has been down graded to a Tropical Storm. There are still flood warning in effect and wind speeds of 50-65 miles per hour. It's been quiet and dry here for a few hours but I suspect we are in for more wind and rain before the night is over. I did take a few pictures today that I will add to the bottom of this post tomorrow. My prayers go out to all those who have been less fortunate than us.


Friday, August 26, 2011

Home Made Treasure Maps

Treasure Maps

White printer paper cut in ½
Pen or Marker
Tea or Coffee
Cake pan
Hot water


1. Pour about an inch of boiling water into a cake pan
2. Seep tea bags in water or dissolve coffee grounds in water until the water is dark brown or black.
3. While waiting for the water to cool off, rip the edges of the paper on all four sides.
4. Soak the paper in the cake pan for at least one hour.
5. Remove paper from the water and let dry.
6. Using pens or markers draw your very own treasure map.

Tip: I soaked our paper twice. The first time in herbal tea, which didn't make it dark enough brown. Than in Postum which did the trick. You may want to try black tea or coffee.






Thursday, August 25, 2011

Lamentations of the Father By Ian Frazier

Love it! My dad read me a print out of this a few weeks ago and ever since I've really wanted to have it framed so I can hang it on the wall in our house when it's built. I looked it up on YouTube.com first but when my dad heard me listening to it he told me where he had found it online.

Ian Frazier does an amazing job reading this. (Why wouldn't he though? He's the one who wrote it.) He brings such life to the already very funny poem. I can  relate to a lot of the things it says too.






I will put the link to the text as well. It was featured in Atlantic Magazine in 1997.  The link will bring you right to the poem. The title of this piece is: Laws Concerning Food and Drink; Household Principles; Lamentations of the Father  By Ian Frazier. I hope you like this as much as I do. It's genius.

Creepy picture I wanted to share

I was helping my best friend a couple days ago at her land. We were weed whacking near the barn and ran out of gas. We decided to pick the weeds by hand until I saw this......



Creepy. I hate spiders. Does anyone know what kind of spider this is anyway? All I know is that I'm glad it didn't touch me.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

September's Giveaway, Less then 3 weeks left to enter.

The deadline for September's giveaway is just around the corner. In a little less than 3 weeks we will be announcing the winners of two $50 gift cards to leapsandbounds.com. All you have to do to be eligible to win is "Like" us on Facebook, Follow this blog than shoot an e-mail to raisemestrong@yahoo.com to let us know that you have done those things. Remember to include your name in the e-mail. That's it! Winners will be announced on September 12, 2011.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Pinwheel Cookies

Pinwheel Cookies

½ cup shortening
cup plus 1 tbsp butter softened
2 egg yolks
½ teaspoon vanilla
1 Package of marble cake mix


1. Combine shortening, cup butter, egg yolks and vanilla in large bowl. Mix until well blended.
2. Set cocoa packet aside. Gradually add cake mix to blended ingredients and mix well.
3. Divide dough in half. Add cocoa packet and remaining 1 tbsp butter to half the dough and kneed until well blended and chocolate colored.
4. Roll out yellow dough between two pieces of waxed paper into a 18 x 12 x inch rectangle. Repeat for Chocolate dough.
5. Remove top pieces of waxed paper from chocolate and yellow dough. Lay yellow dough directly on top of chocolate. Remove top waxed paper and roll up jelly roll fashion, beginning at wide side.
6. Refrigerate dough 2 hours.
7. Preheat oven to 350˚F. Grease cookie sheets. Cut dough into thin slices and place 1 inch apart on cookie sheet.
8. Bake 9-11 minutes or until light brown. Let cool 5 minutes on cookie sheet than move to cookie rack.

Note: I didn't refrigerate my dough. As you can see from the pictures my dough was soft and didn't hold the circle shape very well. But they still tasted good.






Monday, August 22, 2011

Weekly Update

This last week has been major crazy. All the days have become a big blur but I'll try to get them straight.

Last Monday Morning I headed to my mom's house to use the computer and to visit. My husband and Caleb headed to a friend's garage to help fix a car. When I stopped by a couple hours later to see how they were doing I found out that Buddy had bolted when they open the truck door upon arriving. I drove around for almost an hour trying to find him with no luck. Feeling defeated I headed back to the garage to let Mike know our poor bud was still MIA. Luckily a few minutes after getting back someone pulled into the driveway and asked if anyone their had lost a Beagle. Someone had found him and we were relieved to find out he was ok. The bad news was that they had called animal control and Buddy had been brought to the pound. We called only to discover they aren't even open Mondays and we would have to pick him up the next Morning. Go figure. I called and rescheduled his vet visit that was supposed to be the next morning.

Tuesday. I woke up bright and shiny in the morning, practically at the crack of dawn, so we could go get Buddy from the pound. I woke up my husband and reminded him that we could pick up Buddy at 8 A.M. and I wanted to be there at 8 A.M. He told me to go ahead and get him. Slightly annoyed, I reminded him that I don't like dogs, Buddy is his and that he needed to go with me to pick him up. I than waited around while he dragged out of bed, got dressed, ate breakfast and got Caleb in his truck. At 9 we pulled out of the driveway in separate vehicles so I could go to my mom's after. I left before him and so naturally I arrived at the pound before him. Figuring he would be right there I went in to get the dog. I was informed that there was a $25 fee despite the fact that the day before the animal control officer had told us there would be no charge. That, combined with the fact that my husband still hadn't shown up yet, had put me in a bad mood. I told the woman I couldn't pay till Friday and argued about the $15 per day holding fee until she gave in and said I didn't have to pay it and that she would release the dog that day if I signed something saying I would pay Friday or the police could come haul me away. (Why was I even having to sign at all? It's my husband's dog. Where was he anyway??) I then had to sign a 10 Day license for him. What? Dogs need licenses? AAARRRGGG. Ok, I sign the piece of paper saying that if he hasn't had his shots and we haven't gotten him licensed in 10 days that Animal Control can slap us with a huge fine. I'm now beyond annoyed. I've been there over 30 minutes and no Mike. (Who happened to have the leash in his truck by the way) I'm not at all impressed that I had to sign for a dog that I don't really even like that much. I walked Buddy out to my car just holding onto his collar and called my husband. No answer. I drove the 2 minutes to my mom's house and sat in the car calling Mike over and over while listening to Buddy bark in my ear and jump all over the car. After getting his voice mail 18 times (yes, I was mad enough that I counted.) I called his son's phone and asked to speak to him. I not so nicely informed him that if he didn't come get his stupid dog that I was going to bring it back to the pound. He was 5 minutes away hanging out with friends. I sent him on his way with Buddy and stayed at my mom's house the whole rest of the day to cool off. Or at least that was the plan. I figured I would breath for a while and than by the time I went home I wouldn't feel like ripping off heads. It didn't work out that way at all. I went home cooled off, that part worked. I was miffed when I got home though because he had hooked both dogs up out in the yard and they had dug holes everywhere and up rooted all my newly planted grass. I just sat in my car. I didn't get out for almost 4 hours. I had no choice, I was really that angry. (The first day we moved to the land I had made it more than clear that there were to be no dogs on the lawn. I didn't want holes, I didn't want the grass sprouts disturbed and I didn't want to ever have to worry about stepping in poop.)

Wednesday. Uneventful. Thank goodness.

Thursday morning bright and early I asked Caleb to hook out the dogs. They are house broke just as look at they are hooked out by 7 AM, otherwise the use the bathroom anywhere they feel inclined. He did bring Tracker right out to use the bathroom but only shut the screen door when he left, (which opens out with minimal effort) and Buddy immediately pushed the door open and was gone again. I jumped out of bed, got in my car and headed up the road to find him. There he was at our neighbors house, I stopped the car and called to him and he came running. To good to be true, I opened the door and motioned for him to jump up on my lap. Nope, off he went in the opposite direction. I pulled up the road a bit farther and watched him go through the next neighbors yards and into the woods headed to the main road. Crap! Ok, the theory is that I'm smarter than a dog. Think, think, think. I know. It's the first thing in the AM, he hasn't been fed yet. Starving dog + people's food = victory. I rummaged through my car (thank goodness I hadn't cleaned it out yet) and found 1/2 a broken Pop tart left over from yesterday's breakfast. I parked my car, walked up to the main road and waited. Sure enough a few minutes later he came booking around the corner at a dead run. I chucked 1/2 of what was in my hand at him as he blew past me. It bounced off his hind quarters landing in the road. Worked like a charm. He stopped, whipped around nose to the ground and started backwards towards the Pop tart. I crouched down holding out what was left in my hand. "Bud Bud, come here. Do you want some Pop tart? Huh? It's yummy." Of course, what starving dog wouldn't want a yummy bit of people food. I grabbed his collar and carried him the whole way home. Getting away twice in one week though. Probably not a good thing. I'm glad we found him this time before anyone else did.

Friday. Yes!! The best day of the week yet. My boys came home around noon. I missed them so much. It's so nice to have them back. My best friend also came over to spend the night. She and her girls camped in a tent in the yard with their dog Hope. We had a campfire and all stayed up until nearly 11 PM.

We woke up Saturday morning to the rooster crowing. Out of all the farm stuff so far, that is my favorite thing. The first hour or so went great, then we heard Lilly crying outside. She had stubbed her toe on one of the anchor bolts sticking out of the garage pad. I called her in thinking it was going to be a little scratch. Nope, she had dripped blood all the way through the camper, up the stairs and into our room before I realized this was not just a minor bump. I escorted her out to the car and had her sit on the seat sideways while I grabbed my car first aide kit and a gallon of water to clean off her foot. I poured a bit of water over her foot into my hand. Very bloody. It only took one look at her toe and I called Mike over to have a look. I couldn't assess the extent of the injury and he had worked as a EMT for 15 years. (I only have my CNA and technically only worked for like 6 months.) He checked it out and thought perhaps it called for a trip to the emergency room. I bandaged her toe as best as I could and packed gauze between her toes to help slow the bleeding and catch some of the mess. Off they went. Jen and I opted to stay at the land with the other 6 kids. An hour or so later we were all hot and thirsty. No prob. My dear husband had filled our 20 gallon holding tank a day or so before. We all drank some water but it didn't cool us down much. Around 11 Jen had to take off and asked if by chance I could watch her girls over night. Sure. No prob. Ok. Now, how do I entertain 6 kids who are hot and board when we have no electricity, no toys or games or anything else for that matter.You know, aside from a nice yard, baseball gloves and ball, a trampoline, rock wall, a frisbee, bikes to ride and a jump rope. ( I haven't really let them bring many toys because we don't have much room in the 5th wheel and I don't want to deal with the mess.) I asked if anyone was interested in walking down to the brook and playing in the water. I got a YES from everyone. We had never been down there before but it seemed like a great idea. (And it was) The water wasn't very deep in most places but it was ice cold. I'm not even kidding. It was so cold I started getting muscle cramps after a min or two. Fortunately they went away after a while. I let the kids play for over 2 hours. They caught frogs and raced them, splashed in the water and climbed on the rocks. We weren't there for very long before I noticed something weird looking swimming through the water. I couldn't help myself, I felt the need to catch it. Yep, it was a leach. That freaked Kaleb and Dante right the heck out. It took considerable effort to convince them that they were harmless and they wouldn't die some horrible death if one touched them. Kaleb fell in love with them and named them all Bob the Leach.

The people that lived across the street from the brook had a brand new looking mattress and box spring for FREE at the end of their driveway. Caleb and I grabbed it with the intent of carrying it home. We gave up part way and left it on the side of the road for Mike to pick up on the way home.


Lilly and Jayda walking to the brook

The Brook


Bob the Leach swimming

Kaleb holding Bob the Leach

Bob the Leach and his girlfriend Bob the Leach

Two of their racing frogs

It was several hours after we got home that Mike finally showed up. He had run out of gas 5 miles away and he and Lilly had been walking for nearly 2.5 hours in the heat with no drink to get home. Sad day. :( It was a bit of a fiasco but we got gas in his truck and got it home. The evening was filled with thunder showers and so we had all the kids sleep inside. All 4 boys slept on the big bed and the 3 girls slept on our new mattress on the floor. I'm not sure that the 5th wheel was meant to hold 7 kids, 2 adults and two dogs but we packed in like sardines and made it through the night unscathed.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Book Review ~ The Quest For Paradise

The Quest For Paradise By Geronimo Stilton. What a wonderful book. My children enjoyed me reading it to them. To call this piece of literature colorful would be an understatement. Not only is the story imaginative but bright colorful words and pictures adorn every page. Follow Geronimo Stilton on a thrilling adventure as he and a group of friends go on a quest to find paradise. The short chapters make it easy for children to read themselves or for you to read to children with short attention spans. This nearly 300 page hard cover book is well worth reading. My 8 year old son, who has Autism, loved sitting next to me as I read so he could see all the colorful words and neat fonts they used. Check for it at your local library or surprise your youngster with their own copy from Amazon.com.


Friday, August 19, 2011

Opposite Day

As part of our summer vacation fun we had a backwards day. The idea was Kaleb's. Here is what we did.
The night before we went to bed in our clothes. In the morning we put on our P.J's and I made homemade pepperoni pizza for breakfast. Right after "breakfast" I let the kids play video games. For lunch we ate a normal lunch meal. Late in the day I made pancakes for supper. Before bed we got dressed back in our day time clothes. It was a simple day. Nothing big or fancy but the kids loved eating breakfast for supper and supper for breakfast. They were also tickled pink that they got to sleep in their clothes twice and wear jammies all day.

Check out our NEW Toolbar.

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Thursday, August 18, 2011

Banana S'mores

What a fun great way to get your youngsters to eat some fruit with their dessert. I personally dislike the taste of bananas but found that a warm banana covered with melted chocolate and gooey marshmallows hit the spot. I ate every bit and found myself wishing I had opted for a whole Banana S’more and hadn’t decided to share. In fact, I might just have another one today.

Ingredients:
·         Banana
·         Chocolate Chips
·         Mini Marshmallows

You will also need tin foil, a knife, an oven or grill, a fork to eat it with and plenty of napkins.

Start by peeling the banana and slicing it length wise down the middle. Put the banana on a piece of tin foil big enough to wrap it in. Place as many chocolate chips and marshmallows between the banana slices as you can. Wrap the tin foil around the banana s’more and either bake or grill it for a few minutes. I baked mine in a 350 degree oven for about 5 minutes. It smelled wonderful and tasted great although next time I think I will give it a few more minutes because the marshmallows weren’t gooey enough. (Make sure it’s cool enough to eat, you don’t want to burn your mouth.) It’s a bit of a messy treat too so a fork and napkins come in handy.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

What? The Summer is Over?

I was hit with a bit of a wake up call this morning when Caleb reminded his dad that Junior High orientation day is tomorrow. Where did the summer go? It flew by so fast!

We started the summer by making a list of 20 things we wanted to do this summer. Unfortunately we didn't finish them all. Here is what we did do.

  • Went camping
  • Jumped on the trampoline
  • Stayed up all night watching movies
  • Roasted Star-bursts over the campfire
  • Fed the ducks
  • Went swimming
  • Had a backwards day*
  • Played on the playground
  • Made ghetto s'more*
  • Shot off film canister rockets*
  • Visited the Library
  • Played with Oobleck*


Not a bad list although there are still a few things that we didn't get to that I want to try to fit in before the snow flies. We wanted to eat at the Pizza Hut Buffet for one. I also need to finish the stop action project we started. I didn't put it on the list above because we took the pictures, I just haven't animated them yet. There just never seems to be enough time to fit everything in. I wish homeschooling was an option for me to do with my kids. I feel like it would give me more hands on time with them.

I'm picking up Kaleb and Dante this Friday from their dad's in Mass. School doesn't start for them for another 10 days after I pick them up. I miss them so much. A month is definitely to long to be without them.

The items marked the an * I will do posts on in the next week. I don't know if it will be several posts or one really long one. Let's see what I feel like doing when it gets to that point.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

August is National Spinal Muscular Atrophy Awareness Month

What is Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) anyway? The Muscular Dystrophy Association says "Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a genetic disease affecting the part of the nervous system that controls voluntary muscle movement." Their website has a wonderful article giving in site into this condition. You can click on their name above to visit the site and read more.

Getting the diagnosis of Spinal Muscular Atrophy can be scary. What does it mean? Where do you go from here? Families of SMA is a great place to start. It is a network of families, doctors and other professional who can answer questions and lend support.

If you or someone you love is living with Spinal Muscular Atrophy we want to hear from you. Send your story to raisemestrong@yahoo.com. Feel free to include pictures. Stories and pictures will appear on our blog and Facebook page. Let others know what you are going through and help spread the awareness.






Monday, August 15, 2011

September's Giveaway!! Two $50 gift cards to Leaps and Bounds.

Next month we will be giving away TWO $50 gift cards to leapsandbounds.com, a wonderful site with products to help your kids grow. They offer a large selection of toys and tools to keep them safe at home and on the road.

So, what do you have to do to be in the running for one of these gift cards? Just like us on Facebook and become a follower on our blog. That's it. Once you have done those two simple things, just shoot us an e-mail saying you've done both and you are automatically entered into the running. Winners will be announced on Sept. 12th (my birthday). E-mails can be sent to raisemestrong@yahoo.com.

Each individual person may only enter once, but it's perfectly fine to have your spouse enter too. They just need to like, follow and e-mail. It's a piece of cake.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Blackberries and Dogs



Today I went to my mom's house and picked a bunch of blackberries. Yummm. I can't weight till next year when we have blackberries on our land. Maybe some cherry trees too.

Owen and Lilly went home today, but not till after they each had a shower. (And we listened to our fair share of whining about how it's more fun to stay dirty.) I decided to photograph the dogs today too. I unfortunately woke Buddy up to do this so he looks miserable in this photo. I think it looks like he is about to cry. Tracker on the other hand was all excited......til he realized I wasn't there to play with him, just to take his picture. 

Tracker

Buddy

At some point in the next week I will get around to photographing the chickens too. (And maybe Buddy again, he doesn't always look so miserable.)




Thursday, August 11, 2011

About Me and Some Land Stories

Hi, My name is Eliza. I recently started Raise Me Strong because of my passion for my children and my desire to raise them to be strong, healthy and responsible. Today's world is a hard place to grow up and our little ones need all the guidance we can give them to become hardworking, responsible, trustworthy adults.

Here is my Family: I have two wonder sons Kaleb age 11 and Dante age 8. My dear husband has 3 lovely children, Caleb age 12, Lilly age 9 and Owen age 7. Dante was diagnosed with Autism when he was 4.

Recently we bought 7 acres of raw land. We have spent the last 2 months putting in a well and septic and having the pad for our garage poured. Finally last Saturday we moved our 5th wheel onto the land and decided to camp there while we built our home and cleared the land.

We had Lilly and Owen with us and Kaleb and Dante were dropped off Saturday afternoon to spend a day with us. Michael (my husband) and I worked painstakingly the whole day to get the trampoline up, 5 pesky trees near the driveway cut down and a fire pit built. That evening we roasted hotdogs and starburts over the fire. It was wonderful. We had a very long conversation with the four kids about how things were in the old days. (It started because Kaleb was complaining that we didn't have power yet and therefore he couldn't play X-box.) We explained that we had things pretty good because we were able to start the fire with a lighter instead of needing flint and steel. We also had beds to sleep in instead of a sleeping bag on the ground and a cooler to store our hotdogs instead of having to hunt down and kill an animal, gut and skin it and cook it in the fire. It was a good learning experience and they loved our first day of "camping".

Sunday Kaleb and Dante went back with their dad for a couple more weeks before school starts. We roasted over the campfire again that night. Mike and I made our selves tuna sandwiches because hotdogs two days in a row wasn't sounding that appealing. Mike also fixed the toilet in the 5th wheel. Yeah!! No more squatting in the woods.

Monday we packed Lilly, Owen, Buddy (our beagle), and some food and started a very long trip to NY to pick up Caleb from his mother's house. I had planed on reading to the kids on the way but got car sick after the first 30 minutes so we had to come up with other forms of entertainment. We finally hit NY around 3pm where we picked up Caleb, his dog Tracker (who his mother had gotten for him during the month he was down there and didn't want to keep him at her house) and 6 chickens and a rooster that Caleb had asked to bring home as well.  (Using the argument that it would lower our food bill each month because we could eat the eggs). Then we started the 6 hour drive back. The whole trip went surprisingly well.

Tuesday my dear husband left early in the A.M. with the 3 kids and Buddy to go run errands. I stayed home with Tracker, the 6 chickens and the rooster so I could build a temporary chicken coup and haul the brush from the 5 trees Michael had cut on Saturday. Things I thought were going great. I got the coup built and put the chickens in it......when the last of the chickens were in I looked up and saw that they had found a gap under one side and one of the chickens and the rooster had already gotten out. I closed the gate and quickly grabbed the chicken and dropped it over the top then chased the rooster around for a bit till I got him back in too. I finished securing the gate and was going to go get them food and water but one of the chickens flew up over the wire. (Not just once, but several times) I finally discovered that if I stood in the far corner, providing them with some shade, that they stopped trying to escape and would huddle in my shadow. I stood like that for an hour till my husband got home. By then I was sunburned, hot, very thirsty and really, really hating owning chickens. My sweet husband gently resolved all the coup issues and managed to do so with out making be feel like an idiot. What do I know about owning chickens anyway........that's right, NOTHING!

Wednesday I went to the library and checked out a book about raising chickens, then sat in my car and read all 384 pages. I now know more then I ever wanted to know about owning, raising, breeding, killing and eating chickens. For supper we grilled burgers, hotdogs and a can of corn, then we started the campfire and roasted marshmallows and skittles.

I suppose that brings us current to today. :) I'm sure there will be many more stories as we build our little farm.

Remember, when  you like us on Facebook and become a follower of our blog before Sept 1, 2011 you will be eligible for a chance to win one of two $50 gift cards to Leaps and Bounds.