What a blessing friendship is!

http://christis-blahblahblog.blogspot.com
Welcome to our newest contributor Christis.
She is the author of blah-blah-blah.

Here is the 411 on her-
Preacher’s Kid~ Youngest of three~ sister/wife/daughter/sister-in-law of teachers, and teacher myself~ Eve Plumb’s (Jan Brady) cousin Email me: christis at gmail dot com

Here is her first post with us!

Isaac’s best buddy D. broke both his wrists on Thursday evening at home on his swing set. They’re not exactly sure how he did it, but they took him to Urgent Care that night to get it looked at. They saw an orthopedic doctor on Friday, and both arms are in casts.

I just talked to his mom, and she said that when she was wondering aloud how he would be able to function at school, D. piped up first thing and said,”Well, Isaac will help me!” It touches me so much that they are so close and know that they can count on each other! It is an additional blessing that his parents are such wonderful people and also special friends of ours.

I thank the Lord for including them as friends in His ultimate plan!


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Tuesday Twitters

I am still dealing with the painfully slow, want-to-rip-my-hair-out-because-of-it Internet. That whole “patience is a virtue thing”? Yeah, I am oooooooooozing virtuous patience…

Oh wait, pretend one of those cute Geek and Poke cartoons is up there…I can’t upload/download/whatever them…

My son was helping my dad carry in the groceries when he said, “mom, I don’t think I’ll be able to eat these…they are baby BAT ribs!”

You know what joy is? I’ll tell you; NO SALES TAX!

Until, however, you go to the Saturday Market and pay NINE DOLLARS for two ice cream bars for your kids…then it’s like, who the heck cares?

I was flashed a gang sign on the road; I had pulled up too far in my car, and then pulled back a bit for a guy walking across the street. I gave him the, “hi, I see you, sorry!” wave and he shot me some weird gang sign, and I can say that, since I am fairly fluent in sign language, because I did not recognize it, therefore it had to be gang. Then he rubbed his hands all over the car next to me before walking away. Ahahahahaah! Sometimes I forget where I am…

And yeah, I have told my kids several times to STOP STARING AT PEOPLE who are yelling at other people in other cars…it’s just not safe anymore.

I am maintaining my tan…in Alaska…that says a lot, seriously…

We went to the Alaska Experience theater, which has a screen that wraps 180 degrees around the amphitheater. Then I read a sign on the wall that said if you have too much “experience” while the movie is on to please dispose of it in the many small garbage containers sitting at the end of each row. That’s great to read on the wall, with a room full of people, eating popcorn., and two kids, who get carsick/airsick or start to heave at the word, “vomit”. Well the story ends there. We made it through.

Did I mention I am sleeping in my old bedroom, with my two kids, and have done so for a month, and I am actually sleeping, and my neck is totally better? Amazing, eh?

I almost ran over some Russian tourists’ dog today in a parking lot. But I made up for it by helping them pay for their parking place. Well, I didn’t give them the money, but, maybe I should have…

I think I am allergic to pine trees.

Oh, and there are a lot of flies here, like, I mean, a LOT! I have problems with bugs ya know, and I really don’t remember these…or the small black jumping bugs at the park…I also forgot how much the mosquitoes hurt as they jab you and take out a pint of blood. My son, who is allergic to them, has looked like Quasimodo one too many times…

It’s 11:30 and perfectly light out. Ummm, P.M.!

I am totally loving seeing my family and friends. And the mountains. And the fresh air. And the water. And my hubby gets here today! WOOOOOHOOOOOO!

Wow, I made it through posting this post! Thanks to w. for helping me out this past week…I shall be back in full force posting/commenting very soon. I miss ya’all, sniff!! Thanks for not leaving me, um, those who haven’t…yet…


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Annie and her Rainbows


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about a week ago, i posted about the rainbow karen and i saw on the day we got together to work on our book proposal. i suspected that what we were seeing was a very rare occurence, but one that was almost impossible to manifest given the conditions. the great thing about having a research assistant is that she checks out my hunches. here’s what she sent me regarding our noon-time rainbow:

Annie:

You were on the right track about conditions for and time of day for a
rainbow…See the link below. An excerpt is below…. Not only did we not
have local,morning rain to create refraction, we saw this rainbow between
12:15 and 1pm, when the sun is highest in the sky. No rainbows are seen
at noon when the sun is directly overhead. Quite the anomaly we witnessed! There is more info at the weather channel website, too.

Earth Science-Rainbow

A rainbow lasts only about a half-hour because the conditions that create it
rarely stay steady much longer than this. In many locations, spring is the
prime rainbow-viewing month. Rainfall is usually more localized in the
spring, and brief showers over limited areas are a regular feature of
atmospheric behavior. This change is a result of the higher springtime sun
warming the ground more effectively than it did throughout the previous
winter months. This process produces local convection. These brief,
irregular periods of pre cipitation followed by sunshine are ideal rainbow
conditions. Also, the Sun is low enough for much of the day to allow a
rainbow to appear above the horizon—the lower the sun, the higher the top of a rainbow.

The “purity” or brightness of the colors of the rainbow depends on the size
of the raindrops. Large drops or those with diameters of a few millimeters
create bright rainbows with well-defined colors; small droplets with
diameters of about 0.01 mm produce rainbows of overlapping colors that
appear nearly white.

For refraction to occur, the light must intersect the raindrops at an angle.
Therefore no rainbows are seen at noon when the sun is directly overhead.
Rainbows are more frequently seen in the afternoon because most showers
occur in midday rather than morning. Because the horizon blocks the other
half of a rainbow, a full 360° rainbow can only be viewed from an airplane.


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Barbecue and Food Safety

We are gearing up for the 4th of July.
Every day this week, we will be posting tips and information to get everyone in the spirit.

Barbecue and Food Safety
Cooking outdoors was once only a summer activity shared with family and friends. Now more than half of Americans say they are cooking outdoors year round. So whether the snow is blowing or the sun is shining brightly, it’s important to follow food safety guidelines to prevent harmful bacteria from multiplying and causing foodborne illness. Use these simple guidelines for grilling food safely.

From the Store: Home First
When shopping, buy cold food like meat and poultry last, right before checkout. Separate raw meat and poultry from other food in your shopping cart. To guard against cross-contamination — which can happen when raw meat or poultry juices drip on other food — put packages of raw meat and poultry into plastic bags.

Plan to drive directly home from the grocery store. You may want to take a cooler with ice for perishables. Always refrigerate perishable food within 2 hours. Refrigerate within 1 hour when the temperature is above 90 °F.

At home, place meat and poultry in the refrigerator immediately. Freeze poultry and ground meat that won’t be used in 1 or 2 days; freeze other meat within 4 to 5 days.

Thaw Safely
Completely thaw meat and poultry before grilling so it cooks more evenly. Use the refrigerator for slow, safe thawing or thaw sealed packages in cold water. You can microwave defrost if the food will be placed immediately on the grill.

Marinating
A marinade is a savory, acidic sauce in which a food is soaked to enrich its flavor or to tenderize it. Marinate food in the refrigerator, not on the counter. Poultry and cubed meat or stew meat can be marinated up to 2 days. Beef, veal, pork, and lamb roasts, chops, and steaks may be marinated up to 5 days. If some of the marinade is to be used as a sauce on the cooked food, reserve a portion of the marinade before putting raw meat and poultry in it. However, if the marinade used on raw meat or poultry is to be reused, make sure to let it come to a boil first to destroy any harmful bacteria.

Transporting
When carrying food to another location, keep it cold to minimize bacterial growth. Use an insulated cooler with sufficient ice or ice packs to keep the food at 40 °F or below. Pack food right from the refrigerator into the cooler immediately before leaving home.

Keep Cold Food Cold
Keep meat and poultry refrigerated until ready to use. Only take out the meat and poultry that will immediately be placed on the grill.

When using a cooler, keep it out of the direct sun by placing it in the shade or shelter. Avoid opening the lid too often, which lets cold air out and warm air in. Pack beverages in one cooler and perishables in a separate cooler.

Keep Everything Clean
Be sure there are plenty of clean utensils and platters. To prevent foodborne illness, don’t use the same platter and utensils for raw and cooked meat and poultry. Harmful bacteria present in raw meat and poultry and their juices can contaminate safely cooked food.

If you’re eating away from home, find out if there’s a source of clean water. If not, bring water for preparation and cleaning. Or pack clean cloths, and wet towelettes for cleaning surfaces and hands.

Precooking
Precooking food partially in the microwave, oven, or stove is a good way of reducing grilling time. Just make sure that the food goes immediately on the preheated grill to complete cooking.

SAFE MINIMUM INTERNAL TEMPERATURES
  • Whole poultry: 165 °F
  • Poultry breasts: 165 °F
  • Ground poultry: 165 °F
  • Hamburgers, beef: 160 °F
  • Beef, veal, and lamb (steaks, roasts and chops):
    • Medium rare 145 °F
    • Medium 160 °F
  • All cuts of pork: 160 °F
  • Cook Thoroughly
    Cook food to a safe minimum internal temperature to destroy harmful bacteria. Meat and poultry cooked on a grill often browns very fast on the outside. Use a food thermometer to be sure the food has reached a safe minimum internal temperature. Beef, veal, and lamb steaks, roasts and chops can be cooked to 145 °F. Hamburgers made of ground beef should reach 160 °F. All cuts of pork should reach 160 °F. All poultry should reach a minimum of 165 °F.

    NEVER partially grill meat or poultry and finish cooking later.

    Reheating
    When reheating fully cooked meats like hot dogs, grill to 165 °F or until steaming hot.

    Keep Hot Food Hot
    After cooking meat and poultry on the grill, keep it hot until served — at 140 °F or warmer.

    Keep cooked meats hot by setting them to the side of the grill rack, not directly over the coals where they could overcook. At home, the cooked meat can be kept hot in an oven set at approximately 200 °F, in a chafing dish or slow cooker, or on a warming tray.

    Serving the Food
    When taking food off the grill, use a clean platter. Don’t put cooked food on the same platter that held raw meat or poultry. Any harmful bacteria present in the raw meat juices could contaminate safely cooked food.

    In hot weather (above 90 °F), food should never sit out for more than 1 hour.

    Leftovers
    Refrigerate any leftovers promptly in shallow containers. Discard any food left out more than 2 hours (1 hour if temperatures are above 90 °F).

    Safe Smoking
    Smoking is cooking food indirectly in the presence of a fire. It can be done in a covered grill if a pan of water is placed beneath the meat on the grill; and meats can be smoked in a “smoker,” which is an outdoor cooker especially designed for smoking foods. Smoking is done much more slowly than grilling, so less tender meats benefit from this method, and a natural smoke flavoring permeates the meat. The temperature in the smoker should be maintained at 250 to 300 °F for safety.

    Use a food thermometer to be sure the food has reached a safe internal temperature.

    Pit Roasting
    Pit roasting is cooking meat in a large, level hole dug in the earth. A hardwood fire is built in the pit, requiring wood equal to about 2½ times the volume of the pit. The hardwood is allowed to burn until the wood reduces and the pit is half filled with burning coals. This can require 4 to 6 hours burning time.

    Cooking may require 10 to 12 hours or more and is difficult to estimate. A food thermometer must be used to determine the meat’s safety and doneness. There are many variables such as outdoor temperature, the size and thickness of the meat, and how fast the coals are cooking.

    Does Grilling Pose a Cancer Risk?
    Some studies suggest there may be a cancer risk related to eating food cooked by high-heat cooking techniques as grilling, frying, and broiling. Based on present research findings, eating moderate amounts of grilled meats like fish, meat, and poultry cooked — without charring — to a safe temperature does not pose a problem.

    To prevent charring, remove visible fat that can cause a flare-up. Precook meat in the microwave immediately before placing it on the grill to release some of the juices that can drop on coals. Cook food in the center of the grill and move coals to the side to prevent fat and juices from dripping on them. Cut charred portions off the meat.

    USDA.gov

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    Weekend Photos

    AJ and I spent some time at a nature facility this week. In talking about each aspect of his project, our guide might as well have been telling us about his children. Here, he was pointing out how the soy plants looked like ocean waves as the wind blew across the fields. I wish I could have captured the movement. This place really is like a baby to him. I can see why he’s fallen in love with it.Photobucket

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    Betty Crocker Quick Chocolate Chip Cookies


    1/2 cup butter or margarine, softened
    1 cup packed brown sugar
    2 teaspoons vanilla
    1 egg
    2 3/4 cups Original Bisquick® mix
    1 cup semisweet chocolate chips (6 oz)
    1/2 cup chopped nuts, if desired


    1. Heat oven to 375°F. In large bowl, mix butter, brown sugar, vanilla and egg. Stir in Bisquick mix, chocolate chips and nuts.
    2. Onto ungreased cookie sheet, drop dough by rounded teaspoonfuls about 2 inches apart; flatten slightly.
    3. Bake about 10 minutes or until golden brown. Remove from cookie sheet to cooling rack.
    High Altitude (3500-6500 ft): Heat oven to 400°F.


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    Lightening Awareness


     lightning at night

    Help Keep Your Family Safe!


    Lightning has been seen in volcanic eruptions, extremely intense forest fires, surface nuclear detonations, heavy snowstorms, and in large hurricanes. However, it is most often seen in thunderstorms. In fact, lightning (and the thunder that results) is what makes a thunderstorm. Lightning can occur from cloud-to-cloud, cloud-to-ground, cloud-to-air, or within a cloud.

    Thunderstorms and lightning are most likely to develop on hot, humid days. If lightning is seen or heard, take protective action, such as seeking shelter, immediately. According to the National Weather Service (NWS), a safe building has a roof, walls and a floor, such as a home, school, office building or a shopping center. They provide safety because lightning will usually travel through the wiring or the plumbing into the ground. Additional lightning safety tips from the NWS include:

    • Know the weather forecast, and the weather patterns of the area.
    • If far from a car or shelter, stay away from tall, isolated objects like trees. Lightning tends to hit the highest thing around.
    • Do not place your campsite in an open field on the top of a hill or on a ridge top. If you are in a forest, stay near a lower stand of trees. If you are camping in an open area, set up camp in a valley, ravine or other low area. A tent offers no protection from lighting.
    • Do not seek shelter under partially enclosed buildings, picnic shelters, carports, dugouts, sheds or other small structures.
    • Wet ropes can make excellent conductors. If you are mountain climbing and see lightning and can do so safely, remove unnecessary ropes extended or attached to you.
    • Stay away from metal objects, such as fences, poles and backpacks containing metal.
    • Stay away from showers, sinks, hot tubs and electronic equipment such as TVs, radios and computers.

    You may also wish to view the following information:

    Please note: All lightning victims should have a medical examination, even if it does not appear to be needed. Call the local emergency department for help. Get to the victim as quickly as possible; it is not dangerous to touch someone who has just been hit by lightning. Check for burns, especially at fingers and toes, and areas next to buckles and jewelry. There may be more than one burn area, one where the current entered the body and another where it left. Besides burns, lightning can also cause nervous system damage, broken bones and loss of hearing or eyesight. Victims may also experience confusion and memory loss. Check for other injuries, such as possible fractures, but do not move a suspected spinal injury victim.

    Finally, Lightning Safety Awareness Week is observed annually in June. The week emphasizes indoor safety and outdoor risk reduction tips, lightning medical facts, and the science of lightning. In 2009, it takes place from June 21 through June 27.



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    Friday Flashback!

    The moody teen & the diva being fish!

    Wow, taking the diva to the pool has brought back some memories of me taking a then two year old moody teen to the pool! He adored the water, still does! I remember chasing him around the baby pool when it was time to go home! He would run one way and then dodge me as I went the other! It usually ended when the life guards, whom we had come to know very well, would help me wrangle him! He would kick and scream the whole way out!!

    Fast forward 14 years and the moody teen and I are chasing the diva to leave! Like her brother, kicking and screaming the whole way until I promise her that we will come back again! She adores the pool and I am happy to take her because I want her to have the great summers that I experienced growing up! My mom always made sure we had pool passes and there were trips to Rockome Gardens and Six Flags and Voorhies Castle!

    Yup, I have some great memories and I hope to give my kids some great memories that they can pass on to their families! I wish everyone could have those great family moments, but it took me getting married to someone who was raised very different from me to realize that is not always the case and we don’t always see eye to eye on those family moments that I hold dear! The solution, do it anyway, with or without him! My kids are GOING TO HAVE those memories with me because I think it is important that I invest my time in my kids!

    Are you investing your time in your kids? What are some of the fun things you like to do together? Now, go make some memories and don’t forget to take pictures!



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    CHECK OUT THESE BLOGS!

    Photobucket

    Every week Lola brings us ‘sitings’ from around the blog world.
    Check out these ‘sitings’!


    “Summary Of Life”
    http://factsoptional.blogspot.com/2009/06/summary-of-life.html

    “Today We Touch On Splogs” (Slog = Spam Blog)
    http://thesuss.blogspot.com/2009/06/today-we-touch-on-splogs.html

    “10 Reasons For Editing Your Published Blog Posts”
    http://www.searchenginepeople.com/blog/10-reasons-for-editing-your-published-blog-posts.html


    “I Remember When…”
    http://www.buckrobin.com/?p=962

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    Because I’m the Mom Wednesday


    Because I’m the Mom and traveling is VERY stressful it okay for me to say things like….

    * if you ask me one more time when we are going to be there I am going to open the door of this plane and toss you out!

    * just eat another cookie and be quiet.

    * if you touch her again, I’m going to come back there and TOUCH you and not in a nice way. Do you understand??

    * we are NEVER going to get there. We are just going to drive and drive because every time you ask it adds extra miles! Thanks.

    * the next person that let’s off a stink bomb in this car is out of the family. Stop laughing it’s not funny! No it is not, it’s just rude and gross!

    * if you talk to him in “that” tone again, I’m gonna smack your face off, get it!

    * kick that lady’s seat again and I’m gonna cut off your feet. Try walking around Yellowstone on nubs. Does that sound fun? No, well quit it then.

    Why is it okay for me to say such awful things? WHY?? because… vacationing with 4 kids is paybacks for my teen years I’m that Mom…that’s why!



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