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Cora

Bee Birthday and Easy Mason Jar Drink Lids (with Tutorial)

This weekend we celebrated Cora’s first birthday.  I ordered cupcakes from a wonderful, local, all- organic bakery that makes a to-die-for flavor called “Bee-titude.”  It’s a lavender cupcake with honey-lemon butter cream frosting, and it was the inspiration for Cora’s party theme: honey bee.  The party colors were yellow and lavender, and it turns out that this was a really fun theme to put together.

I also made a few discoveries for decorating this party that eased the green-guilt that sometimes comes along with me decorating.  I found spools of colored tulle at the craft store that I can easily roll up and reuse for another occasion instead of the crêpe paper streamers I usually use.  And I bought two yards of inexpensive broadcloth for the table-cloth that would match the party theme.

I used various glass plates and jars to decorate and filled a vase with lavender and chamomile flowers.

I have a gorgeous bee skep-shaped drink dispenser that my mom bought me for Christmas last year and I filled it with honey-lavender lemonade.  I was surprised that the lavender flowers turned the lemonade pink!

And I used my canning jars as glasses.  Pints for the adults with ribbons and tags to write names on, and half-pints with lids for the kids.  And here was my eureka moment.  Ball jelly jars are durable and their lids don’t leak.  And I used a HOLE-PUNCH to make them into drink lids.

Here’s how:

First I traced old jar lids onto patterned paper and then cut out the circles.

I used double-sided tape to stick the paper to the top of the lid.

Then I used a regular old hole-punch to punch holes in the tops of the lids.  This was surprisingly easy.  I did it with one hand and minimal effort.  The punch still worked great on about twenty paper tags after punching six lids.

I used a cheapy plastic straws with about an inch cut off the end to make the kids’ tumblers complete.

Not a single jar got broken between six, three- to seven-year-olds.  They even took them outside.  I wrote each kiddo’s name on the top of their jar, so there were no mix-ups.  It was really easy and completely free, since I had all these supplies lying around the house.  Henry even helped cut out the circles.

I plan to just swap out the paper circles and straws for the next party.

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Categories: Cora, DIY, Simple Living, Thrift | Tags: , , , , , , | 13 Comments

Easter in Taos

This year we got to spend Easter with my sister in Taos.  We had a great time.  Before we left, we used silk ties to dye Easter eggs.  The kids’ Granny and Mano came over and we had a great time watching Emmett and Henry blow out the eggs before we dyed them.

We arrived in Taos on Thursday night.  We were lucky to be able to stay in an beautiful adobe home at the base of the mountain outside of Arroyo Seco.  There is a church there and we heard the people singing all through the night as they made their Easter pilgrimage.  On Friday, we had a great time touring the Plaza in downtown Taos, eating at Orlando’s and checking out the village of Arroyo Seco.  My sister and I went to our friend Michelle’s store and I tried on lots of clothes and we had a great time visiting.

Saturday we went for a picnic on the Rio Grande.  We saw the gorge, which was amazing.  The land seems flat and endless, but all of the sudden you are at the edge of an immense canyon that you didn’t even know was there.  The boys waded and we soaked up the sunshine. We went back to the house to try a little yak’s meat for dinner and dye more eggs for the boys to find in the morning. We enjoyed a fire on the patio and got to hear the coyotes calling each other.

Easter morning, the boys were up early and we watched them hunt eggs at sunrise.  Overall the trip was amazing and I’m excited for my sister who is moving there in May.  The pace of Taos is peaceful and the people were so warm.  What a beautiful, amazing trip!

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Categories: Cora, Emmett, Henry, what not | 1 Comment

How I Do it All

A lot of people ask me all kinds of questions about what we do around here on the Schell Urban Homestead.  The question I get asked the most though is, hands down, “With three kids, how in the world do you do it all?”  The answer is pretty simple… I have a strong partner:

Happy Anniversary, Rick.  Nine years seems like a great start.

Categories: Cora, Emmett, Henry, Hunting, what not | Tags: , , , , | 10 Comments

20 Weeks: The Last Junk Drawer

Last summer, during my 20 Weeks of Organizing project, I organized two of my three junk drawers, with the promise to organize the third one the following week.  But the next week I had my hands full with this:

And it’s taken me a while to get the last few items crossed off of that original list.  But last weekend, I tackled the last and worst of the junk drawers in my house.  The one in the kitchen.  It’s a big drawer, 26.25″ x 16.5″.  Too big really.  It collected all kinds of things.  Things we needed, things we didn’t, useful stuff and… junk.

Something had to be done.  But it was overwhelming and one of the projects I put off the longest.  There was way too much in there.  The bottom of the drawer kept slipping out of its slots.  It nearly broke one day, so I finally took care of the problem.

First I took the drawer out and emptied and sorted its contents.

There were FOUR broken watches in there.  Four, people.  A dead cell phone.  Two empty calling cards.  A recorder flute and a bird whistle.  I’m not kidding.

And YES that little blue thing really is a bird whistle.  You put water inside of it and blow through the little spout and it makes a sound like a bird singing.  I know what it looks like, but it’s not that.  My mom always kept it in the junk drawer of our house when I was growing up and I loved it, so she passed it on to me (and my junk drawer).  Unfortunately it’s gotten a little chipped in the years of getting tossed around with all the junk in the drawer.  But it still works and I still love it.  

Anyway.

There was a lot of stuff in the drawer that didn’t belong in there.  And I wasn’t sure what to do with it either.  I emptied the drawer, and I grabbed some wood glue and started fixing the drawer.  I enlisted Rick’s help to reinforce its huge bottom, which he did with a scrap of wood from the garage.

And then I bought a drawer organizer – the biggest one that I could find that would fit inside.  It was $20 bucks.  And totally worth every penny.  I also used three little wooden baskets from the kids’ wooden play food set.

And I put the stuff we use back into the drawer.

The empty space is for Rick’s things, like his wallet.  Since the garage door-opener is in this drawer, it’s the last stop before leaving the house and the first stop when coming home.

Yes, I know there are still things in there that some people would not hang onto.  The flute is in the way back and the whistle is still in there.  And you never know when you’ll need a puzzle ball.  But it is mostly organized, and I’m really happy with it.  What I really need now is some of that non-slip stuff to keep the organizer thing from sliding around.

I still don’t know what the heck to do with the watches.  Do I just throw them out (not the guitar one)?  Can they be repaired?

There are only two items left on my 20 Weeks list.  I’m loving that this challenge is almost over, no matter how long it took me. Are you organizing anything in your life/home?

Categories: 20 Weeks of Organizing, Cora | Tags: , , | 3 Comments

Merry Christmas from the Schell Urban Homestead!

It takes a few minutes to load, but if you can be patient, it’s fun. Turn on your speakers…  :)

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Categories: Cora, Emmett, Henry, what not | Tags: | 3 Comments

Christmas Tree Cutting 2011

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Categories: Cora, Emmett, Henry, what not | Tags: | 2 Comments

Henry’s 5th Birthday & Halloween: aka Cute Photos of My Kids!

I’m a bit late getting this post up, but Henry’s birthday weekend was a blast as usual!  His birthday landed smack-dab in the middle of hunting season this year, so we planned his hunting themed birthday party (a convenient coincidence on theme choice, yay!) to be held at the cabin and we invited the crew to join us up there for the second weekend of the hunting season.

We planned lunch, dinner, breakfast and lunch for 13 people where we had to bring all our own food and supplies in.  I ordered cupcakes, and as I started panicking last minute about feeding so many people for so many meals, my mom and my mother-in-law came to the rescue, bringing up a fair part of the groceries for the weekend.  It was a ton of work, but everyone agreed that it was one of the funnest family birthday parties, we’ve had.  Henry even got to go hunting with his daddy and Uncle Randy.  They saw two moose, but nothing they could shoot at, except an old can.  Turns out, with Dad’s help, Henry’s a pretty good shot!

Also – the big gift this year, a violin rental and violin lessons.  He’s been asking for more than a year (since we went to Nashville) to learn the fiddle.  And he’s been practicing every day!

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We spent Halloween with my sister, as is tradition for us, and she got cupcakes from Annie Cakes for Henry again.  She makes the best (if you’re local: anniecakesandcookies.com).  Henry was a pterodactyl, Emmett, a pirate, and Cora was a pea in the pod.  I, of course, was their mummy.

Categories: Cora, Emmett, Henry | 1 Comment

Peach Picking 2011

I finally got some of our peach pictures sorted through.  We had such a fun time picking this year.

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We’re quite lucky the Bracken’s don’t weigh us before and after leaving the orchard… I think Emmett ate his weight in peaches!

Categories: Cora, Emmett, Food, Henry, Simple Living | Tags: , , | 2 Comments

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