Showing posts with label shopping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shopping. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

A Quick Trip To Lowes


Homeownership. It's one of those goals in the lives of most Americans. One of the joys of homeownership is to create a home that YOU want. Different from what the previous owner had.

We've had our house for seven and a half years now. In that time I have taken an almost blank slate and created many flower beds, and a vegetable bed. I've begun working on garden rooms interspersed throughout our lawn. This began with spending so very very much money at Home Depot. This year my youngest began working after classes at Lowes. Lowes was always my personal favorite but my husband isn't a fan. No reason other than his uncle likes Home Depot. After being given a tour of Lowes by my youngest, my oldest and I prefer to do our shopping there.

This time was no exception.

My oldest and I went to Lowes with a loooooong shopping list. He recently purchased his own home and has some things to do around there, but owning his own home hasn't stopped him from working around our house.

A new shrub (hyacinth) and boards for a couple of new gates for us to build
were just the larger items from this huge shopping trip.


While my son was securing the lumber I folded up the back seats and filled the truck with our goodies.


Off in the distance my youngest was getting ready to head out. We were in the store until his shift ended.


Time for us, and my new houseplant, to head home. I found her in the plant section, where she was the last Mother's Day plant (I didn't discover this until I read her tag later that day). I had to bring her home.


Oh My God! They match! How cute!!



            
            Stay Happy!

                    Ingrid


Monday, January 28, 2013

Memories of the Blizzard of '77

It's raining.  A change from the last week when we got over two feet of snow in just four days.  My kids were excited by it since they had a day off from school. India was frustrated by it since she was stranded on the wrong side of the state from college.  Matthew had to keep snow-blowing the driveway so the build-up wouldn't get too deep for the push-behind snow-blower. I was watching the weather with much more interest.  The strong winds, the white-out conditions along with the snow falling so quickly reminded me of the biggest blizzard I have ever seen.  A blizzard that became notorious.  When the winter snow turns to blizzard conditions I always wonder, is another one coming...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

January 28th, 1977 was just another winter day.  We had several feet of snow built up from the snow that had fallen since October - when the first snowfall fell that winter, after an extremely rainy summer.  Like so many people in Northern New York State, I had just gone about my day.  

I was 13 then and in 8th grade.  It had been a long day at school and I was eager to get home but as the clock on the wall slowly ticked away, everyone was unaware of what was about to strike.  If we knew, perhaps things would have ended up differently for so many people. 

Like this winter, our temperatures so far the winter of 1976-1977 had been bitterly cold and Lake Erie had frozen over early.  Further up north, in the Lake Ontario Region, we never saw a frozen lake.  Ontario was much too deep for that. The cold was so widespread that even Miami reported snow that winter. In Lowville Academy everyone was used to the snow by now. It had snowed almost every day since Christmas. 

Down in Western New York (where I now live) Lake Erie was covered in a deep layer of powdery snow.  With the lake frozen there was little moisture in the snow and this would make driving conditions nearly impossible. Earlier that day a wall of snow, similar to the one in this photo, had made it's way across Lake Erie and was traveling across Western NY, Ontario Canada and as far south as Erie, Pennsylvania. 

School was going to be letting out in just a little while when the sky went dark.  Everyone turned toward the windows as we watched the darkness be taken over by unrelenting snow, like we had never seen before.  People crammed against the windows to watch and the announcement came over the PA system that the buses would not be running.  Only children living in town were allowed to go home and they needed to do so right away.  other children in our K-12 school of around 2000 students would be sleeping in the "Big Gym" and the school would be feeding them.  I lived the next block over from the school.  A quick 3-minute walk any other day of the year.  My walk home took me around 20 minutes that day and when I arrived home, my Mom told me that my sister's mother-in-law had called and wanted us to bring her 12th grade son to our house.  So Mom sent me back to school.  
West Port Colborne North St. Catharines,
Ontario, Canada
By then the sidewalk was gone and the mailbox marking the corner of the intersection was in the process of being buried.  After crossing the street, I had four houses and a stretch of parallel parking to get past before reaching the first door in the elementary wing of the school. I couldn't see!  The snow was coming so fast and coating my eyelashes, making my eyes too heavy to open.  My nostrils were frozen and the 49 mile an hour wind gusts were taking my breath away, making breathing almost impossible.  40 minutes later, I arrived at the breezeway door. I was frozen and had to take a few minutes to re-group so that I could walk down the hallway to the big gym. When I got there, most of the kids were gone. Other people had come and taken all but a handful to their homes.  Ken was nowhere to be found.  I finally found out that he had gone home with the high school music teacher, who lived with his wife behind the school. 

I was dreading the walk back home but I didn't have to worry. When I walked out of the gym I saw flashing lights and one of the teachers told me to go out the door where the police car was parked.  Uncle Clarence had come to get me and take me home. My Mom was worried that I hadn't come home and had called Tante Clara.  Tante Clara was my Mom's sister and she also lived in our hometown where my Dad had recently retired as Chief Deputy Sheriff. But Uncle Clarence was still the Sheriff , until his own retirement the next year.   
And you thought you had a hard time finding your car in a parking lot?
I made it home and stayed there for the next week.  Schools were closed and people were stuck in their homes, unless you were lucky enough to live in town, or had a snowmobile. 

The school buses left out were all buried. 


Western NY got relatively little snow, but the blowing snow off the lake made conditions terrible.  Northern NY was dumped on with continuous snow until January 31st, when the blizzard finally let up.  The Lake Effect Storm covered our Tug Hill Plateau with almost 100 inches of snow. 
Volunteer firemen clearing off the roof of a house in Depew, NY. 

Thankfully, we never had our electricity go out and we had the fireplace going in the den, so we could shut ourselves in there to get away from the draftiness of our old house. The windchill was well below zero.

Many people made tunnels to get into their homes.
My cousin cleared out a tunnel from the road,
up an angle and onto our front porch.
(this is not my photo)

Uncle Clarence kept us up-to-date on what was going on around the county. So we heard when Camp Drum (now Fort Drum) brought out 14 Amtrak vehicles to help.

C-130 bringing in badly needed supplies.


There were so many people stranded, and buried, in Montague and throughout the rest of "The Tug" and New York State. 
Because of the sudden onslaught of the snow, people were stranded on the roads.  We heard about a police car that was parked next to a stranded car when an Army vehicle came through and ran them both over. 
A front-end loader is trying to clear Furhmann Boulevard.
You can barely see the buried car.

29 people died during the course of the storm, including nine who were found frozen to death in their cars. Most of the deaths were in Western NY. Five lives were lost in Northern NY.
Roof collapsed by weight of snow.

Red Cross volunteers searching for  trapped people




QEW between Niagara Falls and Fort Erie

Snowmobiles became the only means of travel for those without a military track vehicle available to them. While the highway department tried to keep even a single lane open for traffic.

Miser Hill Road, Town of Rutland, Jefferson County

Of course, you had to find your car first. 



There was a full-size van under there.


When the Blizzard finally ended on January 31st, a State of Emergency was declared and traffic was banned except for essential vehicles. While the clean-up continued. 




Buffalo wasn't the only place hit by the storm - this was in Watertown, NY. Jefferson County had snowdrifts that were 'only' 18 feet high.


Rt.177 in Barnes Corners


Snow plow coming up road ...


After things calmed down, people ventured out to explore the damage. Cars were towed out of the roads in the hopes that their owners would find them. 1,900 stranded travelers in Northern NY were allowed to leave on February 1st because supplies were running out.  The dairy industry lost $8 million as a result of the storm. Northern NY is a dairy region and the farmers had to dump their milk. They also had problems getting to their barns to feed their livestock, while several barns collapsed under the heavy Lake Effect snow. 


.

Rt. 11 looking south at the Rt.177 intersection maybe 200 feet away


The utility poles were almost buried. 


I thought it was so cool how we could actually walk up to the stop lights. 


I used to have the game, but lost it in a divorce.  The game was more based on Buffalo but it was still fun to reminisce while playing. 


The blizzard was such a hard thing to endure - even living in town. But what I will remember the most about this terrible time in so many lives will be the people.  Everyone cared so much about others.  Not just the many, many highway crews and military from throughout the United States who came to help us.  We were blessed to have this happen in a time when people cared for each other.  If you needed to have someone checked on, you simply called the local radio station and told them the address you needed someone to go to and a complete stranger would go there and let you know if your friend or relative was alright and give them any assistance they might need.  Neighbours would check to see if you needed anything before they would brave the storm to go downtown and pick up supplies. People in even the smallest homes filled them with stranded strangers. With the inside scoop from my Uncle we heard so many stories of people helping people. The show of compassion was often overwhelming but this is my strongest memory of the Blizzard of '77. 

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Just Another Saturday...

Last night India told me she had made a hair appointment for first thing this morning, and then she headed off to bed.  I was a bit worried because she has been bugging me to get a perm and she has short hair, having recently gotten 18 inches cut off so she could get her adorable multi-layered style. (Of course, she donated her locks to Locks of Love:)  I kept picturing her looking like Little Orphan Annie after she gets a perm. 

This morning we headed out after she reassured me that she was merely getting a trim.  I'm okay now...

I made it through her appointment despite forgetting one of my omnipresent books and as a result having to gag my way through magazines telling us of the latest Hollywood gossip.  *Hack!*

We headed over to the grocery store for some essentials. While we were looking at produce, India stood next to me and held out the coconut that she had in her hand so that it was next to the lime in mine.  Without thinking, both of us started singing   "You put the lime in the coconut and drink it all up" as shoppers circled around us, looking befuddled.  

(I love that word, don't you?)

On to the drug store for make-up essentials. We decided to check out the perfumes while we were there so India and I tested several by spraying the air in front of us.  The cashier commented on how nice the store suddenly smelled.  If I could remember all that we tried, I would buy them all and mix them because the scent that covers me now is perfect.

Next, the hardware store.  We ended up parking practically behind the store since everyone apparently wants to do work around their homes on Saturday - who knew?  We bought the screens to repair damage done by Dang Dog and then to...


Agway for chicken feed and to play with Riley for a few minutes.  She is a beautiful Tortie/Tabby who lives in the store and loves being petted but hates when people leave. 

Last stop, the thrift shop.  India didn't want to volunteer today so we decided to see if Jerome's sweatshirt was still in the office.  No luck.  It probably was sold.  *Sigh*  Anyway, I found all sorts of nice shirts and some various items that I just couldn't resist - like this sweet Lori McPhee print that made me think of Johannes because of his love of jazz, 
and this adorable kitchen clock. The hour hand is a fork, the minute hand is a knife and the second hand is a spoon.  How cute it that?

One of the shirts that I debated on, India picked up later to buy.  We chatted for quite a while with two of India's friends who also volunteer there and with the adult volunteers, before checking out.  At the register I looked at a watch but decided that I would just get a battery for mine.  While I was being rung up, India came up and asked to see the same watch.  How fun that India and I have so similar taste!  Although I completely disagree with her theory on our shared clothing.  When she goes away to college, she DOES NOT get custody of the clothes!!!  

Finally - home. Matthew replaced the torn screen and then we spent the next half an hour trying to figure out how to remove a seven-foot glass panel from the storm door so we could put the screen panel in.  Eventually he discovered how.  Now we can take advantage of the constant wind on those hot days. 

As for my recent discussion with Amanda:  Yes, we have cold patches that randomly appear throughout the house.  Now say "Excuse me" to the people who share the house with us. You obviously just walked through someone. 


Until next time,

Ingrid





Thursday, December 1, 2011

Christmas Advent Countdown

I find the most fantastic ideas around the blogosphere.  I love incorporating the crafts, recipes and ideas into my home-life of raising my kids.  As they get older, it gets more challenging to find things to do together as a family.  Especially with four teens (God help me).  So far I have been blessed to have children who do still enjoy doing things together, as long as it's something they ALL want to do. 


Someone, who shall remain open for debate, left my camera in the sound booth at church so I was at the mercy of a very busy son to use his android phone to take this photo (I did run it through picasa but the sun was an issue).
Change is another issue.  Every year for the last three years, since I bought our advent house at the gift shop in Cracker Barrel Restaurant (don't you LOVE that place?), we have put candy behind each door.  This year I thought I would try something different and put activities inside the little boxes.  


I found this in 24/7 Moms and thought it was the cutest idea.  I'm actually combining a couple of her ideas to create this one.  For the sake of time, I'm copying and pasting most of it.


How to create your own Christmas countdown plan:

STEP 1: First I begin by going through my list I have saved from year to year of various activity ideas. ( list is below)

STEP 2: Next, I then choose 25 ideas I want to do that particular year. A few examples are: decorate a tree, make cookies, visit Santa Clause, read the Christmas story, movie night, serve sparkling Cider for dinner etc. Like I said, many of these are activities you already do with your families. We are just creating a little more Christmas excitement.

STEP 3: Then I look at my calendar and see which days I can do each of my chosen activities and I write them on my calendar.

STEP 4 : Next, I go to my computer and type up little notes to go with each activity such a “ Artists are you ready? It’s time to make a masterpiece in our bonus room” This is for the day I allow my kids to paint the windows with a Christmas scene. Another example is “Get your hammers and nails out it’s time to build and decorate” did you guess this one? Time for my kids to create a ginger bread house.



STEP 5: Then you can do a variety of things with these notes :
* place each note in a separate numbered envelope. Each day your children can open an envelope and read what that days activity is. I do not recommend you seal the envelope until you hand it to your kids because if life goes crazy and you were planning to see Santa but Suzy got sick, you can quickly change it around. Which is also why it is important to keep a list of which days you are doing what.
* Place each note in little numbered boxes or Chinese take out boxes hung on a small tree. You can download 24/7 MOMS 25 day numbers by clicking here.
*Place each note in a numbered Bag. You can download our 25 day count down numbers by clicking here.

*Hang 25 small stockings on a clothes line and place a number on each stocking . Need numbers get our free ones that you can download here.

*Purchase an Advent Calender with pockets to place the notes in.

*Purchase an Advent curio cabinet with little drawers to place each note in.

*Purchase an Advent curio cabinet with little drawers to place each note in.

Keep it simple choose carefully what activities you will do so that you do not become overwhelmed. Make this season a time to make memories with your kids and make it special.

This is the time of year we Celebrate the birth of Jesus, not living each day in complete stress and on overload. Make it Simple. Make it Fun!

Advent Countdown Ideas:

1. Present advent calendars to your children
2. Sing Christmas carols together then eat yummy cookies
3. Visit Santa Clause and have their picture taken
4. Go shopping and allow each child to pick out a new ornament
5. Attend a Holiday event like a local Christmas play or concert
6. Host a family game night and invite another family
7. Take kids to pick out your Christmas tree
8. String pop corn
9. Build a Ginger bread house together
10. Serve Sparkling cider with dinner
11. Bake and decorate cookies together
12. Paint holiday scenes on your windows
13. Coloring night...each year color in the same book and date it
14. Have a happy Birthday Jesus party, invite the neighbor kids
15. Make Christmas cards
16. Family movie night - watch a Christmas movie and either have pizza or treats 
17. PJ Night...everyone gets a new pair
18. Go for a ride and look at all the decorated houses
19. Have dinner by the Christmas tree picnic style
20. December 6th Sinterklaas Night. Have kids place their shoes out with carrots and apples in them and 
while they are sleeping replace with a small gift
21. Make homemade fudge
22. Decorate your Christmas tree while listening to Christmas music
23. Have a gift making day - help your kids create gifts for others (some great ideas: The Happy Housewife: 100 Days of Homemade Christmas Gifts
24. Host a Christmas craft club for your children and their friends
25. Help a family in need ...choose ways to teach your children to give.
26. Make or purchase Thank you gifts for community service workers then take your children around town 
to drop them off.
27. Red or Green night….Serve food in these colors, decorate the table in these colors
28. Tell the Christmas story and place a light in your window inviting Jesus into your home
29. Make paper chain garlands
30. Snowman night—decorate table with snowmen be creative
31. Ice Cream night ..make sundaes or go out
32. Take kids shopping for Daddy or Siblings or Grand Parents
33. Wrap gifts…. kids love to help
34. Bake a pie
36. Elf hunt 
37. Let your kids decorate their bedrooms
38. Bake a gingerbread man and tell the story
39. Play bingo with dollar store prizes...invite your neighbors over
40. Make an Advent wreath
41. Learn about another Countries traditions
42. Celebrate Hanukkah
43. Tell the Christmas story and wear costumes
44. Dec 22nd first day of winter..take a day trip to the snow
45. Have a slumber party by the tree

46. Elf on the shelf arrives.
47. Jingle your neighbors. Ring and Run Christmas fun with You've Been Jingled. click herefor how to instructions.
48. Star your neighbors ( ring and run). Click here for FREE download
49. Create Christmas Blessing Mix for friends and classmates. Click here for FREE bag topper.
50. Make Snowman Soup for family and friends. Click here for FREE bag topper.
51.Write a letter to the child we sponsor
52. Begin a Holiday Blessing Jar
53. Date with Mom
54. Date with Dad
55. Read a book night - Unwrap a new or old book to read
56. Visit a retirement center or hospice center and deliver goodies
57. Host a Hot cocoa and cookie night with friends
58. Go Ice skating or Roller Skating 
59. Deliver donuts to your local Fire Department 
60. Teach your kids to make appetizers and have a dinner of appetizers 
61. Random Act Of Kindness (RACK)- choose an act of kindness to do for others
62. Volunteer at the local food bank or to collect canned food items around the neighborhood
63. Bring your Child's teacher their favorite muffin or baked good
64. . Help in your child's Classroom - Kids love when mom or dad spend the day at their school
65. Build a Shoebox online for Operation Christmas Child
66. Shop for gifts for children in need - Angel Tree or other organizations

Add your own family traditions.

Saturday, November 12, 2011

It's Flu Season!!! Yippee?

Pregnancy puts some sort of anti-virus into your body.  This must be true because the only times I didn't have the flu were when I was pregnant.  Those winters when my ex talked me into a flu shot I still managed to find a strain that wasn't covered by the shot.  This year, true to form, I started early on my "bug collecting".  Can't miss out, you know.   

This fall I thought I would start out slowly.  Maybe with something a little mellower.  Some aches and pains.  Throw in a chronic headache and toss in some dizziness.  Take it easy, we don't want to get over-whelmed too soon.  After all, it isn't like life is going to stop and let me relax.  Heck no!  There's school concerts, parent-teacher conferences, grocery shopping, Thanksgiving prep.  

My poor kids had to suffer too.  After all they had to eat all that homemade soup that I kept serving them.  In their minds, if it isn't Ramen or tomato soup then it's just a cruel form of torture that I like to inflict on them.


Thank God for tea.  I drank so much tea that I may quite possibly be developing a British accent.  Recommendation: cinnamon apple spice left steeping overnight.  It turns so sweet!  Yummy!!!  (I learned this when I fell asleep half-way through the cup.)


After sitting through a meeting at church where I thought for a second that the carpeted floor of the narthex looked like a really comfortable place for a nap.  Followed by the "quick" 90 minute trip to the store and the drive home through the star-field created by the falling snow in the headlights, I feel amazingly better.  


That was a piece-of-cake.  


Come-on flu season. I'm ready for more.... Bring it on!!


Just remember to be kind.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Thrift Shop Finds

As I've mentioned in a previous blog, my gang and I started volunteering at the local Thrift Shop.  One of the benefits of working there is that we get to see what comes in.  Being a weak person, I have very low resistance for a deal. Especially if it's something we can use around the house.  

Andrew and I discovered this CD rack for fifty cents.  It was originally supposed to be for him but he ended up deciding it would work best in the living room.

This was my take the last time I worked.  I am always on the lookout for baskets to use in my organizing.  I also found a vegetable grinder for $2.  The shoes were also $2 each (you know about my shoe fetish) and the tea cups were seventy five cents each.  I got the little dutch couple for $1.25.  Not Delfts Blue but still cute. The cookbook was thrown in.

Finally, the pièce de résistance.  This was unburied on the loading dock while we were sorting.  I snatched it up right away.  The chair set is in perfect condition and when I laid eyes on it I knew it would be just what we needed for our remodeled sun room.  It is amazingly comfortable and I think it was $10.00 well spent. 

I can't wait until next week.  I am still in search of a side table and lamp for the sun room...

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Shoes




I don't know when my obsession with shoes began.  As far back as I can remember my Mom would buy me shoes whenever she saw a pair she liked.  In high school my collection was around 27 shoes, most of those were the high heels my Mom preferred to buy me.  She said that women in high heels walk like Marilyn Monroe. I just like the way I feel.  After I moved back to NYS, I had kids to raise and shoes just weren't high on my priority list.  After the girls and I realized we had the same shoe size I started buying shoes again.  I would pick out shoes that would work for all of us so that we could borrow from each other.  Inside I knew I couldn't avoid heels any longer.  I started with a pair of five-inch heeled, copper "Ingrid" shoes.  As soon as I put these shoes on something happened.  I wanted more shoes. I would look at shoes in websites and my heart would start beating faster. I can go months without thinking about more shoes but as soon as I see a pair, I have to have them.  After I order those, I think about the next pair.  I need shoes, they are my drug.