Tag Archives: prepping for winter

Fall is Almost Gone

@miya1156.bsky.social

I’m feeling a bit nostalgic about fall in the United States today. In Thailand, there IS no ‘fall.’ There is a ‘cool season,’ where the constant rain finally stops and temperatures drop to a low of 50 and highs in the mid 80s. It was late this year, but officially it’s from November 1st through mid-February.

It’s funny, the temperature is not that cold, but there is no heat in Thailand. The emphasis is rightly on the other 3/4 of the year where cooling is a necessity. 50 degrees with no heat seems cold, and I’m learning to dress in layers, I put the throw Brian got me on my bed, I’m using the water heating unit in the shower now at least a bit, and I heat up hot water to drink.

___________________

Whitaker Point – Jeff Rose – AR.com

In Arkansas, the fall was a busy time for us. Our place was a little more than 8 acres of pretty heavy woods on top of a ridge line. Because the summers were hot and dry, the leaves started falling early. I spent days and days raking and blowing leaves, then grinding them up to create mulch for my planters all around the house, and then redistributing the mulch, packing it down to try to protect our plants for the coming winter.

We had a small square foot garden where I grew a lot of veggies for us. In the fall was the time I would finally harvest the last of the veggies, do a final weeding of the special soil I created combining vermiculite, peat moss, and as many different kinds of mulch – including my mulched leaves – as I could to use in place of regular soil. This combination was put in 4’x4′ boxes we made and put on welded frameworks that made the boxes come to about my chest level. We filled the boxes with the soil alternative up to the top to prepare for spring planting, and then covered the boxes with tarps with a tall thing in the center of each one so that ice and snow would drain off. This way of planting kept me from having to bend over double or get down on my hands and knees to tend my plants. We made an irrigation system for the 6 boxes we had and surrounded the whole thing with fencing to keep critters out.

Fall was time to make sure our generator was working well and would come on reliably in the winter when we lost power and needed it. We had a well house where we had piping for both public (city) water and well water. We used well water for things on the outside. We had a propane powered heater in the well house to keep things from freezing up and we lit that in preparation for the winter. We also unhooked the irrigation system we used to water all the plants around the house, drained the LONG hose system we created, and put faucet covers on all the outside faucets.

We mowed one last time and I weed whacked and pruned carefully so that it would look like someone cared. We cut back trees in the driveway on both sides that we thought might fall into the driveway with a winter storm. No matter how much we did, though, it wasn’t enough, and we would have to chain saw our way down our 650 foot driveway to the street below.

We would make sure we had firewood ready to be lit and stored where we could get to it easily. We lit fires in the fireplace more because we loved being able to sit on the hearth and warm our backs, plus see the glow of the fire, rather than really NEEDING the fire for heat, but we had peace of mind having it.

One winter we had no public water and no electricity for 14 days. This made us get really serious about preparing for the winter up there!

All this preparation needed was one of the reasons we decided it was finally too much for us and that we should move to Thailand to retire. We have some fond memories of the fall season, though, in Arkansas when the heat of the summer had finally eased off. We could open doors, air out the house, turn off the a/c, and enjoy spending lots of time outside in the yard, on the screened back porch, on the deck with our pets, and more.

Like the song that says, “Sorry, not sorry,” – I ‘miss it, but don’t miss it.’

10 Comments

Filed under Seasons

One Trip, Two Trips…

I’m back.

There weren’t many people at the tire shop when I got there, so my truck got almost immediate attention! I was really happy until they guys were obviously talking, then getting the owner/manager, then coming in to talk to me.

The owner told me that the lug nuts I brought for the snow tires didn’t fit. I went out and looked at the bag my husband had put in the truck and let out a huge sigh. The bag clearly said, “Jeep Lug nuts.” We don’t even HAVE the Jeep and haven’t had it for YEARS now. I don’t even know why we still HAD these.

The guys put things back together so that I could drive back home and get the bag of lug nuts we SHOULD have brought in the first place. My husband came out to the shop when I was still out there, and I showed him the bag he had put in the truck. He was embarrassed. He redeemed himself, however, because he turned the truck around for me, something that I have NEVER been good at, and have only gotten worse at over time.

I drove back to the tire store. This time things went well. Before I left, I made sure I had the bag of lug nuts and the special lug nut that is necessary to either put on or take off our regular Honda tires. (The snow tires don’t need that.) I found it, but not the shiny socket wrench part I was looking for.) I checked again in the store, but they confirmed all they had was in the bag.

I drove home again. I took the bag of lug nuts and showed my husband where they live, right above the tires. I asked him what he had done with the bag of Jeep lug nuts. He had squirreled it into the back part of a shelf. I got it out and found the shiny socket wrench part I was looking for. I told him we should throw the Jeep lug nuts away. He was adamant we keep them. (A fight for another day.)

We got the tires back into place in the shop, the bag of lug nuts where they belonged, and I put the special lug nut and the shiny socket wrench into the bag in the glove compartment.

My husband again turned the truck around and we went to the house. We won’t have to do this again until spring (about mid-March), and now we have a way we might be able to negotiate our driveway and the roads in bad winter weather in an emergency. We agreed (and I HOPE this is still in effect) that barring emergencies, when our driveway is ice or snow covered, we will simply stay home until it melts and things are safe. One broken collarbone falling on the ice and trip to the ER is enough. My husband was telling me that I was overreacting to the danger when he fell. 10 weeks of healing changed his mind, at least then…

4 Comments

Filed under Challenges, Changes

Wednesday 11-6-2024

VIEW –

My sister-in-law said it was a shame I didn’t get any photos of the morning view out of our back yard, where I was talking about it looking like someone had spread rolls of cotton between the ridge lines. It’s almost impossible to take pics of this, but I tried. This is for you, Sweet ML.

_____________

LINDA’S CRAFTINESS –

Hand-painted one-of-a-kind 8.5″x4″x24″ memory box. Thoughtful gift to ‘purple lovers,’ people who love to save things that might get lost if not lovingly stored. $15.00 with Free Shipping. See this and other memory boxes HERE on HandmadeHavenbyLinda on Etsy.

_____________

ELECTION –

We’re feeling kind of bleery-eyed after staying up to watch the election returns. I was up a full hour earlier than usual this morning, needing to get up and join my husband, who was already downstairs. I’m hoping the people in our country can now calm down and try to solve our many problems together.

______________

WINTER PREP –

Freepik

Not sure what plans are for the day yet. Since it’s November, we need to start getting to things on our prepare-for-the-winter list. One of those things is to get the snow tires on our truck. My husband and I have always done this ourselves. The tires are already mounted on wheels, so it’s a case of just changing the tires and airing them up.

As we’ve aged, though, it’s gotten more and more difficult. Last year I finally convinced my husband that we should get the tires and lug nuts into the back of the truck and that I would drive to the local tire place and ask THEM to change the tires for us.

It’s enough for US to get each set of tires in and out of the truck. I just called and they can do it for us tomorrow, so one of today’s chores is to get the tires and lug nuts into the back of the truck so I can take it tomorrow.

_______________

Enjoy your Wednesday.

Leave a comment

Filed under HandmadeHavenByLinda on Etsy, Thoughts on a ________

Wednesday 10-16-2024

Китайский медведь. – Pinterest

It’s almost time for me to leave to get my hair cut. I’m really lucky that I can depend on my stylist, Michael Remillard, of Tangles Hair Studio in Greenwood AR 479-996-6366 to make sense of what lives on top of my head. My hair has always been thin, fine, and awful to work with, but now that I’m ‘mature,’ it takes even more. I come out from Michael’s looking like someone has a plan, and that means a lot to me.

After fighting to get both of our irrigation units reprogrammed after our electricity went off and on quickly the other day, we had another really short power interruption yesterday, making us realize we probably needed to do it all over again.

I also noticed, though, that several counties in Arkansas were under freeze alerts overnight. Not us, but it will happen soon, so we’ve now decided it’s probably time for us to turn off both units and drain the system as best we can for winter. That means our plants will kick the bucket since we’ve been really short on rain for quite a while now. In fact, the whole area is under a burn ban and a wildfire sprung up yesterday that they are still trying to contain.

We’ll have to get out our ‘get-ready-for-winter’ list soon. I much prefer the spring, when all is opening up again, rather than all this shutting down and prepping for possibly being stuck up on our ridge line. We have a great start on things now since Richard Billett came and worked on the driveway vegetation for us. And so it begins…

Enjoy your Wednesday. I hope it’s a good day for you.

2 Comments

Filed under Thoughts on a ________

Trying to Embrace the Winter Season

SnowDayProject-Etsy

I have always loved the LOOK of snow. I love seeing big, fat, flakes coming down like being in your own, personal snow globe. I enjoy being out in the yard for a few minutes, enjoying the spectacle of the snow, the way a blanket of it changes the look of everything, muffling sound. As much as I like to be in it, I love coming inside FROM it.

Arkansas does not do winter well. We have ICE. Thin ice. Thick ice. Black ice. Slick ice. TOO MUCH ICE. Usually we have ice and THEN the snow, making it almost impossible to drive safely. And even if YOU are able to move around safely, you get creamed by someone ELSE who CAN’T…

Our driveway is 650+ feet of ‘steep.’ When it’s icy, it’s very possible you can end up across the road, over the barbed wire fence, and in the pasture beyond. The ice brings down the trees on either side of our driveway, bending them over into the driveway, many times breaking them off. One winter in 2001, we were stuck up on the top of our ridge line for 14 days. No public power. No public water (thank goodness for our well). And days and days worth of chain-sawing before my husband and I could clear it enough to drive down.

We get ‘serious’ about getting ready for winter around here. We have our snow tires on the truck now (the first time we’ve taken them in to the experts to have them put on, rather than doing it ourselves.) We’ve unhooked and drained the irrigation systems in the yard. We’ve turned on the automatic electric heater in the well house. (Later we’ll light the propane-powered pilot light for more serious heat in there.) We’ve opened a couple of cabinets where our plumbing froze in the house once. (We now have an automatic electric heater in the cabinet in the utility room bathroom.) We’ve brought in wood for our wood-burning fireplace, we’ve lit the pilot light for the propane-powered heating system in the shop. We’ve drained our mower and other gasoline-powered things for the winter. The bed has our electric blanket on it and the heavier comforter. We have heat pads in our recliners and our nice throws to go over us. :0)

Since many times we’re stuck up here when the snow has melted elsewhere, we try to stay stocked up on food, water, and other supplies. We can’t get down the driveway, but no one could come UP, either, so we’re serious about having what we need to last a couple of weeks or so.

Another thing I really do like about winter is snow people. We don’t often get the good kind of snow – or enough – to create snowmen, but I LOVE seeing the creativity of people. We once caused trouble for my parents by creating a man and a woman who were a bit ‘too true to life and over-abundant in parts’ in their front yard. My husband still laughs like a loon over that. :0) Meanwhile, I collect pictures of snow people I think are wonderful, and I’ll share them with you through the season.

Jimmy Conover-Unsplash.com

We’ll enjoy our comfort foods, hot chocolate, snuggle-y sweaters, and a fire in the fireplace from time to time, not because we need the heat, but because we love the ‘feel’ of it. Happy winter!

Leave a comment

Filed under Seasons

It’s Monday 11-6-2023

thefunpost.com

When we bought our truck, we bought a set of snow tires at the same time and had them mounted on wheels so that we could simply change the tires from regular to snow tires and back again when needed. We had everything we needed in our shop.

For 17 years now my husband and I have changed the tires twice a year – changing the regular tires to snow tires – and back again. It has become more and more difficult as we have gotten older – no surprise – but last time was so difficult that I was afraid we wouldn’t manage it.

We had a frank talk after we finally prevailed and agreed that it was getting to be too much for us. We’ve had ‘frank talks’ in the past about various things. When push comes to shove, we either remember the talks differently or are back to square one when actually faced with the subject again, the ‘agreement’ having flown away with the wind.

I saw that my husband had printed a reminder that it was time to change to snow tires.

I reminded him that we had agreed last time that I would take the tires to the tire place and have THEM change them out for us. (This still leaves us getting the wheeled tires out of the shop and into the back of the truck, finding the lug nuts and the special ‘thingies’ included in the nuts for the regular tires.

Then we’ll get the regular tires and lug nuts that go with them out and stored in the shop again once the job is done, but that is nothing compared to trying to muscle the tires off and on the truck rims.

My husband shocked me, agreeing. He added that he would listen for the people who are supposed to be contacting us regarding a new instant hot water heater delivery while I’m gone. Can you see I’m struggling to close my mouth?

HUGE relief! We’ll gather our trash in a bit, put that and the tires in the back of the truck. I’ll drive the trash down, get it set up by the road at the bottom of the driveway, get our mail, and head for the tire place.

Leave a comment

Filed under Challenges, Changes, Seasons

Going, Going Gone

I worked for about an hour and a half on our two tomato planters that are close to the house.

This is the 8 foot long planter. As you can see, it is in need of attention.

Here’s another view.
Here’s how it looks now. I’ll mix up more Mel’s Mix to fill it up before planting in the spring.
No matter what I did, or what stakes I used, these plants just went nuts, spilling out over the planter into the yard.

Here’s a second view.

This is what it looks like now. Before spring planting, I’m going to research methods of tomato plant support to see how we can improve.

Leave a comment

Filed under Gardening, Square Foot Gardening - Raised Beds

End of the Season

hometalk.com

A couple of days ago my husband turned off the irrigation system to the planters in our yard, turned on the propane heater in the well house, and plugged in the electric heater out there. Several weeks ago I cleaned out my raised bed square foot planter boxes and put tarps over them for the winter.

Today I unhooked the hose on the outdoor agricultural faucet that goes to the garden and unhooked the garden irrigation system control and stored it in the shop.

I will now try to clear out and neaten things up for the winter in the yard, along the driveway, etc. so it looks like someone cares. I will try to do something out there each day where the weather is cooperative.

The end of the growing season makes me sad, but I realize that everyone needs a rest before the whole cycle can start again.

cafepress.com

Leave a comment

Filed under Fun with Fingerpaint, Gardening, Mother Nature, Seasons

A Lot of Worx

 

This is my wonderful Worx Leaf Mulcher. (This one is MUCH cleaner than mine. Picture this with a leaf bag between the orange part and the top ring of the legs, and a cord attached to it and you have a great picture of what I’m doing in the yard this afternoon. I also have two plastic yellow leaf-gathering ‘hands’ that allow me to pick up a bunch of leaves at once to put in the top of the mulcher. Once the leaves are pushed down into the top, I pull the power button out and the mulcher grinds up the leaves. When the bag is full, I pick it up and distribute the mulch in my flower planters.

I told you recently, when I was trying to prune and weed after the freezing temperatures essentially killed all of my blooms, that I have 12 brick planters in the front yard, plus two concrete pots. Ao far, I have finished an hour out there, first using our leaf blower to amass a large pile, then processing the pile and distributing the mulch. I have filled two-and-two-thirds planters. At this rate, I’ll probably croak before I finish, but I’m giving it my best shot today. It’s a bit after 3pm now, so I have a good two hours of light left. I’ll see how much more I can accomplish, and then take it up tomorrow, hoping I don’t get rained out.

I’m certainly not a stickler for a perfect looking yard. That was one of the reasons we built our home in the sticks in Arkansas over 30 years ago. Neighborhoods are nice, but we really don’t want to have to go around with the manicure scissors making sure that no blades of grass are any taller than the others or that we don’t have any weeds or yellow spots in the yard. We have moles, voles, and other oles here, plus fire ants, plus grubs, plus all kinds of other stuff. Our ridge line is woodsy. If we weren’t pretty good about hacking things down around here, I think the woods would simple cover the house and it would look like it did before we came in a short amount of time.

I DO like the idea of ‘free mulch,’ and I DO want to protect my flowers and the good potting soil in our planters, so I’m going to mulch as many leaves as it takes to fill up my planters and then leave whatever remains.

I’ll tell you – even with my leaf blower, my Worx leaf mulcher, my plastic ‘hands,’ etc., this is a really good amount of exercise today for this old broad…

2 Comments

Filed under Gardening, Housekeeping - Maintenance

Thoughts on a Saturday 11-16-2019

Jeff Jett

I think one of the most important paths to happiness is REALIZING all you have. Today my main feeling is thankfulness.

I have a beef roast in the crock pot for tonight. I have a cup of coffee. Molly is resting comfortably at my feet as I type.

 

My husband is almost completely recovered from his stroke. (He still gets words garbled occasionally, but we smile at each other when that happens. He has to really work to use his keyboard on his computer. He still has bursts of anger, saying hurtful things, but the episodes are father apart. I’m avoiding triggers I know about, and talking to him calmly about the ones that do happen, making it clear that I don’t deserve it. Things are improving.

Our son is happy in Thailand. We are talking to him on the chat program almost daily, so it’s ALMOST like he is still here with us.  If a person figures out to send HUGS through a chat program, he or she will be a gazillionaire. :0)

Our weather is good, with a nice, sunny day. I’m hopeful it will warm up enough this afternoon that I can get outside. I want to rake and shred leaves, putting the mulch in our flower planters.

I have ideas rattling around in my brain on what I would like to do next in my art room. I’m even DREAMING about them! SO many fun things to play with!

 

 

7 Comments

Filed under Family, Gardening, playing in my art room, Thoughts on a ________

Mulching Mania

worx1

Recently I finished cleaning out our big brick planters – pruning roses, cutting back bushes, weeding, etc.  Today I am finally mulching all the big flower planters.

This is my WORX leaf mulcher. It’s a good system and I made 6 large leaf bags of leaf mulch. I started to actually use it, and decided that it needs to be run through again to make it finer. The mulch I’m making isn’t perfect, but at $3.00 for a small bag at the store, I’m very happy with what I’m making.

I’ve mulched 7 planters so far. I’m taking a water and rest break before starting in again. I’ve used 4 of the 6 large leaf bags. I have 6 planters left to mulch, so I’ll probably need to make more to get the job finished. We’ll see.

I was putting one leaf bag’s worth of leaves through again and suddenly nothing was happening. I managed to take the WORX apart, seeing that the mulching cord was used up. I went to get the expert (my husband) to help me. We found the extra cord we bought and he easily put new cord in. Since I watched him carefully, I’ll be able to do it next time. :0)

The leaf mulching set up we have now is almost perfect – except it makes me sneeze.  I have to admit that about the 50th time I sneezed today, I added some bad words…

I can’t believe the wonderful weather we’re having! It’s a bit chilly if one is just walking around or sitting quietly, but it’s PERFECT if you’re doing something active in the yard. I’m trying to use these rare, glorious days to good advantage. I hope you’re enjoying your Sunday.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under Gardening