WORDPRESS FIREWORKS!

WordPress is the “host” for Snowbird.

Goodness knows how they do it.  I’m practically computer illiterate.  My friend, John, helped me do all the voodoo and set up the site last spring.  That’s all I know.  Except that I have had the most fun ever since, expounding on trivia, exposing bits and pieces of my soul, wrestling with forks in the path, detailing each step and turn, and almost always moving forward.

Thank you for accompanying me on this journey.

At this ending of 2011, WordPress delivered a recital of useage and a celebration of all that went before.  For instance, they have posted that it would take 5 trips of the New York subway which holds 1200 people to duplicate the number of “reads” on snowbird since it’s inception. THAT’S 6200!

I’m not sure that I have known 600 people in my lifetime.  Who are you?  Do I know you? Do you think you know me?

After baring my soul and my belief structure and my favorite things and my passions this past year – I hope you know me.  I may have been flippant at times, but I have always been honest.  I have spoken my heart as if I have been sitting at the judgment bench, and damn the consequences.  I have unearthed surprises just by writing, hearing my thoughts pop out barely formed as I type.  It has been a year of great change and transformation.

WordPress states that the most readers of snowbird have come (unsurprisingly) from the United States, closely followed by Canada and India.  In Asia (after India) there were 20% from Pakistan, 16 from Singapore, 8 from China and 4 from Vietnam.  In Europe – 20% from the U.K., 11.4 each from Russia, Germany, France and Poland.  And – bless their hearts – 100% from Oceania in the Australia continent.  That could be 1 or 100 or more and that could be anywhere in the greater coral atolls or volcanic islands of the South Pacific.  HELLO OUT THERE!

It’s an eerie, but thrilling feeling to know that when I sit down at my computer and type my heart out and post my dearest thoughts,  someone far across the world may pick them up and laugh or sigh or even applaud in  recognition of our commonality.

The report states that the posting “Mt. Faith” received the most readership.  It was certainly the introspection which most accurately captured, if in brief, my lifetime search for a faith of sorts and the twisted journey that ensued, and the “omen” which awaited at this end. It makes me think I should perhaps expand upon that theme, doubling down into the quest where I had only begun to scratch the surface.

WordPress says that the most comments were applied to the single entry “Frozen Storm”, and reading them back now, I suspect they  speak of the fellowship of gardeners who share and cross-reference and gratefully communicate the knowledge of the earth.   A more enthusiastic cadre I’ve yet to find.

For myself personally – after “Mt. Faith”, I particularly  atune to “Anniversary” which came spilling out from a mother’s love.  And “Lyra Deara”, the story of our alien child which always makes me happy AND weepy. And “My Wish” about my darling Nell.  And “The Girl in the Photograph” because it opens a door to my mother I didn’t know was there. And “Longings” for my father.  And “I Married Adventure” because that is what I did.

Back in March of 2011 I began the snowbirdredux journey – “We’ve actually already set in motion, if just barely, the plan which will eventually send us packing across thousands of miles to a life of which we have little or no experience, given blizzards, tornadoes, ice on the roads, mosquitoes, high humidity, not to mention – not a Trader Joe’s in sight.  Why, one would ask (and they do) would we give up the California sunshine, that whole vibe and lifestyle?  I keep thinking of my mother who came as a bride in the early thirties on the reverse journey we are taking, continuing to the day of her death singing the praises of what she discovered when she first saw the mountains and the ocean and the palm trees and “thought she’d died and gone to heaven.”  So how did it come about, this reversal of an entire way of life?”

The reason and the journey have unfolded this past year.

It has yet to end.

Thank you for accompanying me.   – Diane

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2011 in review

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2011 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

A New York City subway train holds 1,200 people. This blog was viewed about 6,200 times in 2011. If it were a NYC subway train, it would take about 5 trips to carry that many people.

Click here to see the complete report.

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BUT WAIT, THERE’S MORE – – –

THE SNOW PLOW ARRIVED MIDDAY.

AND SHORTLY THEREAFTER, OUR OWN PLOWING, BLOWING, SHOVELING ANGELS –

LATER – THE AFTERNOON ADVENTURE BEGAN —

 

HOW DO I BUCKLE THESE SUCKERS?!#%*&#@!~!

IS IT SUPPOSED TO BE LONGER?

 

I THINK I GOT IT!

 

WATCH OUT!   HERE I GO!

 

I’M STILL GOING——–

 

WHILE YOU WERE CIRCLING THE YARD, I WENT FOR THE MAIL.

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IT’S BEGINNING TO LOOK—-

 

We woke up late this morning.  It was exceptionally dim and eerily silent.  Eight A.M.!   The weatherman had predicted brown and more brown far into the midst of January.  Yet one glance out the window revealed not only a glaring error in that prophesy, but the reason for the present quality of light and soundlessness.

From the porch

Although we live on the outskirts of town just before the road becomes gravel, there is normally a fair parade of vehicles passing by between seven and nine a.m.  Today – we might be living on the moon.  Nothing.  I stood at the window and watched.  Nothing.

As a novice Minnesotan, I wondered what exactly might be the protocol?  Should I get out and start shoveling the drive?  Is everyone calling in sick today?  Has Fergus Falls ground to a halt?  Will the snow plow arrive soon?

But I did learn two things this morning.

First discovery.  When we had the light dusting three days before Christmas, Noelle and I were all agog to see animal prints in the snow and it looked to our untrained eyes as if we had been visited in the night by all sorts of feral creatures criss-crossing the yard repeatedly.   Deer and (maybe coyote) and certainly a large cat.  Very large.  Not a bobcat but, yes, certainly a puma. Who knew about the hidden, transversal world of  the garden by dark?

This morning as I stood at the kitchen window, watching the birds scramble in the snow for fallen seed under the feeders, a large grey squirrel sprinted quickly across the yard leaving behind distictive prints.  Large cat prints.

Second discovery.  It occurred to me that I  could use this winter wonderland to entice Kevin and Steve and Sheila and Tony and Jenny and Sean and Sam and Cassidy and Haley!  AHA!  And so it is with visions of sledding on Roosevelt Hill and skating on Alice Lake and skiing the Ottertail Slough that I proclaim (and no pressure intended) – HAPPY FIVE DAYS AFTER CHRISTMAS!

Welcome to Mt. Faith

 

 

 

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FLIGHT

Last spring when we were still living in California, I remember justifying our newly proposed Minnesota distance to my daughter, Noelle, by saying something like – “It won’t really be any different.  It’s been four driving hours up the coast ‘til now and the flight to Minnesota will be about the same amount of time and with the cost of gasoline, maybe even less expensive with  air fares.”  Something like that.  Or so I told myself.  And her.

Silly me.  Yes, all the above is true in a sense, but the actual process of booking the flight, jamming the world’s fair into a carry-on, humiliating oneself through security shoe-less lines and specious x-rays, enduring cattle-call cramps and white-knuckle turbulence – well, I’d rather jump in my car and drive the lovely 101 along the Pacific, at a moment’s notice if I so chose.

It isn’t the same.  Today we’re both (T.M. and I) feeling sad and bereft and a bit awakened to reality. Not that we’re rescinding on our choice or our journey, but the truth and the breathe of the divide is clear and wide.

We talked on Christmas Day by phone to Sean, our number one grandson, who announced that after graduating from Sonoma State next spring, he will be going to South Korea or possibly Viet Nam to teach English for a year.  Before applying to law school.  Just yesterday we were reading Harry Potter. Weren’t we?  And Sam is in college in Iowa embarked on creative, eclectic adventures.  And Cassidy Rose is beautifully emerging out of childhood, and Haley Marie, my fashionista, will be following – too soon.

To have seven children and four grandchildren a long flight away, is poignant.

Cassidy Rose, Sean and Haley Marie - this Christmas

Sam - this Christmas

Kevin, Tony and Sean

Steve, Sean, Tony - (Missing Sheila!)

Jenny, Tony and the Divas

 

******************************

I’ve been keeping watch on my snow geese pair, the two who have stayed behind with the thousands of Canada Geese in the bends of the Ottertail River.  After some initial positioning and coyness they did indeed, form a partnership and for days they swam together and nibbled by the bank and seemed quite content to be the standouts in the sea of brown.  Every day I made it a point to check on their progress and well-being. Every day they were there.  Until yesterday.

My Snow Goose couple

The very day we took Noelle to the airport for her flight back south (actually southwest) the snow geese were gone.  Gone south, I’m sure.  And I will hold the thought and the wish that all three will be back next spring.

And bringing the rest along!

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THE MAGIC OF NOELLE

 

When my daughter, Noelle, prepared to visit us in Minnesota this year, she looked forward to her first white Christmas.  First on her ordering agenda – snow boots!  Followed by long undies, cushy socks, gloves, and a wool kitty cap.   So it was with great regret that I had to tell her about the “brown Christmas” we would be having.   All the weathermen had been predicting it for weeks and as the holiday neared it seemed to be an apt pronouncement.  She arrived at the Fargo Airport anyway, pluckily garbed with boots and kitty ears. She wasn’t going to give up easily on her new northern outfit.

It’s been lovely to have her here.   We went mother/daughter shopping just like the old days.  We made meat balls, laughing over the unseen presence of my mom, who would have been tasting the mixture for salt content, and fussing over the thickness of the gravy. We listened to and heeded her “voice” through every step.  Today we’re decorating the table and rummaging through the dress-up clothes to pick out our holiday outfits.

It’s all been magic.  But yesterday the first real omen appeared. After all the dire predictions and assurances, we awoke to the whiteness of snow!

 

Things are very different this year.  We’ve left four children and four grandchildren behind in California and this will be our first holiday without them.  That’s extremely poignant.

The Divas - Cassidy and Haley last Christmas

And Kevin (my first born) and my mother are now gone and Harriet was the ultimate Christmas angel, propelling all the traditions and reveling in every aspect of the celebration.  While I was decorating the tree (with her prized ornaments) I could hear Harriet saying – “See that spot there to the right? No, further down” – and I hung each bright bulb and fanciful treasure with gratitude.

Yes, so much is different and so much the same. Since it is just the three of us we decided to buck some traditions and make it a five day Christmas! On the first day we had ham and apple cranberry crisp with Aunt Lil, cousins Debbie and Rick.  Last night we had the meat balls and lefsa  instead of on Christmas Eve. Tonight we’re invited to Valerie and Anders’ for a proper holiday lutefisk (and we’re hoping that Anders will bring out his fiddle).  On Christmas day we’re sharing our roast and pickled herring with friends Florence and Sandy.

Noelle and I agreed some time ago that her flight would be our “present” and there would be no exchanging of gifts.  But more magic occurred last night.

Santa made a surprise visit.

 

 

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GOD YUL!

For those who didn’t receive my Christmas message by snail mail –

GREETINGS FROM MT. FAITH!

I wish I could send out magic carpets to one and all for a holiday trip to Fergus Falls.  We so want to “show and tell” all the done and soon-to-be-done remodel, and share the sights and vastness of the Minnesota prairie and farmlands, and let it be known that, no, we weren’t crazy, regardless of what many suspected.

We’re still waiting to be tested through blizzard and ice, but when the thermometer registered 10 this morning we zipped into our down jackets and felt, yes, invigorated.  We’ve been through tornado warnings; amazing humidity; the scourge of the state bird – the mosquito; violent, tree splitting lightning bolts; and also the most wondrous skies on this planet.

This old house, built in 1882 upon a hill and across from the Otter Tail River, truly feels like home now.  It’s taken a while and tons of paint swatches and decorating debate and renegotiated plans.  The grounds are heavenly without lifting an inch of sod.  It’s the first time in all our gypsy lives when I haven’t felt the need to immediately shift into horticultural madness.  It’s perfect just as it is.   And – we have a croquet court!

I’ve kept up a journal online and I wish it would read properly, from start to finish.  But if you don’t mind a back-ward timeline, you’ll see much of our progress and lots about prairie places and “Minnesota Nice”, and photos to tell our tale.  Just google snowbirdredux.com and it’s all there.

The guest room is ready!  Please visit.

GOD YUL!

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THE INHERITORS

Last weekend my cousin Debbie and I got a lefsa lesson from Aunt Lil.  It may be hard to fathom for those not of Norwegian descent, but lefsa is highly prized and desirable as part of the Scandinavian cuisine.  It’s the Norski Top Chef gold standard.  At a recent Habitat for Humanity charity dinner in Minnesota, we were surprised to see among the silent auction items (oil paintings, antique buggies, wood carvings), three small zip-lock bags with bids of $7 to $10 each!  It appeared that each parcel contained maybe four pieces of lefsa.  At first we imagined that each “sampling” represented what the winner would receive with the actual amount many times greater – certainly enough to cover the entire Christmas season and feed a multitude.  But no.  Each bid winner would receive only that very small packet.  And glad to get it too.

Lefsa is similar to a flour tortilla but made primarily with mashed potatoes.  It is eaten “as is” with dinner, rolled up with butter and brown sugar, or filled with anything of your choosing.  A cold meat ball is divine.

How could something so tricky to mix, roll and grill have been mastered in log cabins and on wood burning cook stoves all over the upper Midwest?  I can handle a pie crust with aplomb and occasional kudos, but lefsa has brought me to my knees.  My first experience was thanks to my friend, Florence, who kindly gave me carte blanch to her kitchen, handed me the mixture and rolling material, turned on the griddle, and let me fly.  What mostly flew was the flour, which ended up in drifts on the table, the floor and myself.  The mixture mostly stuck to the rolling pin, the board, and the grill. The resulting lefsa  (what I was able to salvage) was thick, tough, and frankly, embarrassing, but Florence graciously  accepted her “half share”.

FIRST TRY - OOPS!

Last week I tried again.  My cousin, Debbie, and I struggled through a day of lefsa boot camp and it was humbling, hilarious and ultimately, not so bad.  We followed Aunt Lil’s guidelines assiduously and with a bit more practice we might even eventually graduate.

In the meantime, we did master the arts of Mixture Sticking To Board and Pin, Screaming, and Flour Throwing (definitely a no-no in Aunt Lil’s kitchen!).  We vowed however, to continue, because some day it will be our job to pass it on to Noelle and Aspen.

DEBBIE ROLLS FIRST

- AND GRILLS

MY TURN. TEACHER LOOKS WORRIED!

And – should you dare to try –

AUNT LIL’S RECIPE AND INSTRUCTIONS

The night before: Boil 5 lbs. white potatoes (not russets or red), enough to make 8 cups riced or mashed.  Add ¼ lb. butter, ½ cup  cream, 1 T. salt, 1 T. sugar.   – Refrigerate overnight.

Measure out 3 cups of mashed potatoes at a time and add 1 cup flour to each batch.   Mash together well. (you can’t overmix, she said!)  Roll it out with your hands into a log, making sure it is very solid with no gaps.  Cut roll into 10 pieces.

On a lightly floured board, or better yet, a round cloth rolling board with diameters pre-drawn, roll each piece out gently with grooved lefsa pin, “letting the roller do the work.” The pin can be covered with a rolling pin “sock” which, when lightly floured, will aid against sticking. (Yeah right!)  At approximately 6 inches, lift roll carefully with wooden thin stick (lefsa stick)  or spatula and sprinkle additional flour (Not Too Much!) underneath before turning over.  Roll your pin on board to catch up extra flour. Continue rolling other side.  Fourteen inches is good.  Twelve will do.

With lefsa stick, carefully lift through center and roll out onto griddle set at 500 degrees.  Turn when bubbles start to form, and continue on other side until you see brown “freckles”.    Place each lefsa between towels and build a small stack.  Transfer to other towels as you go and gradually spread them out, leaving them covered as they cool.  When cool they can be folded in fourths and placed in zip lock bags to freeze – or spread immediately with butter and brown sugar.  YUM!

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ADAPTABILITY

“Ozzie McBeth was born in Southern California.  For most of his teenage lifespan he was a geek and a computer nerd.  For all we know, he still is.  Ozzie currently lives in Sonora, California where he is raised by his parents.”

This is a first for Snowbird.  A GUEST BLOGGER!

My friend, Mickey,  recently shared his son’s essay after reading my entry “Comestibles” and after following my  past year’s protestations, ruminations and deliberations as I tried repeatedly to explore the mystique of change.

Kudos to Ozzie.  I suspect he is also “raising” his parents.

Personal Narrative: English 2 Honors, period 3A, Mrs. Hallinan

ADAPTABILITY

“The human body contains the same percentage of water and solids that makes up the earth.  Our blood even has the same elements, in the same proportions, as sea water.  As humans mirror the earth, so can they mirror the environment that they were raised in.  I have learned that a certain skill set and personality will be more prolific in a certain sociological and geographic region.

As a place needs a certain skill set, so can a social environment.  An area with more rural needs, such as our own, will produce a person much unsuited for a sales position at a used car firm.  For example, my father, who grew up in one of the most urbanized areas of the States, has trouble driving in this area.  This is because all the turns look exactly the same to him, because he has learned to recognize roads based on what buildings are nearest to the road.  A specific skill set that becomes acclimatized to a certain area is inclined to remain in that area.  He does not like living here.

Someone who has learned a specific skill set as dictated by where they live can have a hard time readjusting to a new area.  Readjustment of a person to a place can be a difficult process for them.  I have had to adjust from living in southern California, a place where a specialty store exists for every profession and object ever created.  When I moved up here, I had to get used to having to order everything I want online, because the things you can buy here are horse feed and barbequed pork.  Readjustment is something that all people will have to go through in their lives, to some degree or another.

In some cases, such as my own, a person will be young enough to adapt to the new conditions of his or her surroundings.  In others, like my father’s, the mind is set in it’s ways and cannot readily adapt.  A person too old to change is disturbed when their routine changes, a person my age can somewhat quickly adapt, but a younger child has almost no idea what is happening.  Through ignorance, some children are the ultimately adaptable person.

Children learn by mimicking the characteristics of the members of the community in which they grow up.  If children can learn from the example of their community how then can we make our children better people?  We have to lead by example which would take far too long if we were to educate adults in this way.  However, the child, who has no preconceived notions, can be taught to a high degree of intellectual and moral standards by example.

The biosphere that is populated by members of our race can influence us through a staggering number of variables, in merely physiological effects, like body design and chemistry, to social mannerisms and how we form relationships.  Certain skill sets and personalities will be prolific in areas that require those skills.  It can be difficult for people to readjust after they have learned an area’s necessary skill set.  Age is a somewhat reliable measure of adaptability, with the middle range being the most resilient.  Too young, or too old, and the person will be either frightened of the unknown, or simply unwilling to change.  Like waves on a beach, smoothing rocks, so can people change with their environment.  Recognizing this is how we ourselves change and learn.”

BRAVO!    I know that I will be carefully monitoring my skill sets from this day forward!

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COMESTIBLES

It isn’t just the weather.  It isn’t just the terrain. It might encompass to a degree the indigenous cultures, but there definitely is a world of difference in what we have and have-not at our Fergus Falls Grocery venue.  It’s taking getting “used to” and there are plusses and minuses, delights and frustrations.

Certainly it is true that the West Coast is more cosmopolitan, more of a “melting-pot” society and consequently the products fill the demand.  While living there, we found that  lychee nuts were do-able,  chutney – on the shelf in a variety of brands, Mexican cocoa powder – no problem. And all of this readily available in the local California supermarket, not merely from the trendy specialty grocer.  Not so in Fergus Falls .  And where is the turbinado?  How else can you make that sweet-crunch on the top of your pie crust?  Or peach cobbler?  Or sugar cookies?  Or simply enhance your bowl of oatmeal?

Here in Fergus Falls it is difficult to find a proper English orange marmalade, for instance.  And I not only prefer it on my toast, I require it for the basis of my best salad dressing. (Note: Mash together equal amounts of marmalade and  Dijon mustard. Drizzle and beat in olive oil and white wine vinegar until perfect and sweet/tangy.)

My personal chef is particularly at odds with the local pricing of fresh fruits and vegetables, which would send Alice Waters to the poorhouse and has seriously hampered our own culinary practices. I must admit that in the past I have always tended  to go to the grocery store and purchase whatever I needed, willy-nilly,  while  T.M. price-compares and reads labels and makes intelligent shopping choices.  Thank goodness.  And so he is quick to point out that here the leeks are $4.49 a bunch!  As is one measly head of butter lettuce.  A small package of carrots – $4.19.  One  bell pepper – $2.18.  Chilis – $4.00 a pound.  A small half carton of blueberries or raspberries – $4.99.  One pineapple – $4.69.  Uff Da!

To be fair, this is a long way and many time zones from all-season gardening.  No more sage and parsley and oregano to pick from my personal herb box for Christmas dinner. The expense of shipping clear across the continent and not just deposited the minimal miles from coastal harbors, most likely adds to the overall cost of goods.  The local produce stands were long gone here with the coming of fall.  It’s a different world.

Having said that, there are bravos to spread around too.    This is the land of wild rice, for instance, and I have only begun to explore those culinary possibilities.  And Corn is king.  Some of my best memories have to do with going with Uncle Lawrence out to cousin Gayle’s farm to pick field corn and hurry it home to plunge into boiling water and dredge with butter.  Lots of butter.

And there are local purveyors like Gretchen and Pat Boyum who not only show up at the local Concert in the Summer Park with their fresh, organic wares (mushrooms and radishes extraordinaire in particular memory) but call us personally about eggs from “their girls” and “gift us” with their homemade chevre.

Then there is the Falls Bakery and the Premiere Meat Co. (of previous huzzahs) which both eclipse to the max, any similar venue of their ilk in the whole of our California experience. And in the coming year we can sign up with Bluebird Gardens, a CSA farm (Community Supported Agriculture) to receive our weekly bushel box of  assorted produce, and even choose to personally participate in the harvest and walk among the many bluebird houses and have a picnic in their woods.

Lately we have noticed that local restaurants such as the  Viking Café are  advertising  LUTEFISK!  Also, certain Lutheran Churches are having lutefisk and/or meatball dinners pre-holiday. You certainly couldn’t get that in L.A.  Lutefisk (for non-Scandanavian epicures) is a type of cod, processed in lye and boiled and served with lots of butter. I know.  I’m not going to go the way of the lutefisk jokes!  However, it’s availability does put it clearly in the “plus” category.  For some.

The biggest plus to my mind, however,  is that every local market, big or small, features lefsa – that potato-base, grilled “tortilla-esque” delicacy that can be filled with cheese, or cold meatballs, or (like my mother preferred) rolled up around butter and brown sugar, or anything your heart desires.  I tried to make lefsa recently and wound up with flour everywhere –  table, floor, my front and somehow, my back!  And I didn’t get them thin enough and I now have a deeper-than-the-ocean respect for the ladies at Our Savior”s  Lutheran Church who kept us supplied each holiday season.  Bless their hearts. I’m going to try again under the guidance of Aunt Lil and if all else fails my cousin Maryanne and I like Freddy’s, a commercial version which is the next best thing.

A local big box store (which shall be nameless) actually used their Sara Lee case just for lefsa this past week – another small local version called “Laura’s Lefsa”.

But then they ruined it all with the following display:

I’m not going to blame this one on Minnesota, but I’m definitely not going to say “Takk for Maten” to that!

Posted in favorite things, food, introspection, minnesota life, MOVING | 1 Comment