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Emmett

Dare to Compare

One of my biggest pet peeves is when someone says my kids look alike.  Not just alike.  Exactly alike.  I’m not sure why this peeves me.  I mean, they are both cute.  Mainly I think that it’s just not true.  But A LOT of people say it.

So I submit some photos below so you can compare for yourself…  Henry will be on the left, Emmett on the right, click for the best views.  Make sure to take the poll at the end to let me know what you think!

Three months old:

Six months old:

Nine months:

One year old:

Eighteen months:

They ARE brothers – of course they look somewhat alike.   But exactly?  I think not.  What do you think?

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

Wordless Wednesday: Brothers in the Winter Wind

“Sometimes being a brother is even better than being a superhero.”  -Marc Brown

Categories: Emmett, Henry | 1 Comment

Winter Wishes 2010

Well, I’ve been a bit behind on the Christmas cards this year!  But here’s a little something we made to send warm winter wishes your way!  Merry Christmas!

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Categories: Emmett, Henry | 1 Comment

End of October Recap

October really got away from me!  The end of the month kept us very busy with getting ready for Halloween, cleaning up the garden, a hunting trip and Henry’s birthday.  Here’s a little recap of the hunting trip with lots of pictures.

Due to some unfortunate circumstances at Rick’s job, he was unable to take his full vacation for hunting this year.  So he decided to turn in his big game licenses, and we went grouse hunting together for a three-day weekend.  My mom and Manuel joined us up at the cabin and we had a really nice time, even though we didn’t get any meat.

We got up there Friday night and Rick build a fire in the stove.  We then spent the rest of the weekend keeping Emmett from touching it!

We got to get outside a lot and had a nice time hiking while we looked for dusky grouse.  Josie, of course loved it and Henry was very excited as well.

While we were out we ran into another hunter who was amazed to discover Emmett sleeping on Rick’s back as we hiked.  Emmett wasn’t too happy when Rick took off his coat before getting back in the car.

My mom and I made sugar skulls (Henry helped too) for Day of the Dead while we were up there.

We had a camp fire outside on Saturday night and toasted marshmallows and made s’mores.  Mano told Henry fish stories by the fire.

All in all it was a great weekend.  More pics to come this week of Halloween and Henry’s birthday!

Categories: Emmett, Food, Henry, Hunting, Urban Homesteading | 5 Comments

Handmade Halloween – Garden Gnome Tutorial

Last year, we found the funniest costume and we really wanted it for Emmett (who has earned the nickname “Angry Elf”).  But we couldn’t find it in Emmett’s size.  This year, Target is carrying the costume – for $20.

Basically these are brown and plaid, super-thin pajamas with a felt hat, fake beard and felt booties.  TWENTY dollars!?!?

So, I tried my hand at making it myself.  Emmett already had hand-me-down green corduroy overalls and a red plaid shirt from Henry, so that part was easy.  Turns out, the rest was easy too.  Click the pictures for a closer view.

I got four pieces of 9×12″ felt for a dollar at Hobby Lobby.  Make that seventy cents – since it was my lucky day and the felt was 30% off.  And a piece of white craft fur for $2.99.

Step one: using two pieces of felt, trace and cut out hat shape.  Make sure to leave a seam allowance and that the brim will fit your babe’s noggin, plus a little wiggle room since the beard will be sewn into the hat.  I had to sew in little extra felt triangles since Emmett needed just slightly more than 18 inches (pictured later).  Trace a beard shape on the back of the craft fur and cut out.  I suggest making the beard at the bottom of the piece fur so that you won’t accidentally cut the hair that hangs down at the bottom too short.

Step two: Cut two eyebrows from scraps of the craft fur.  Trim them to be a bit shaggy and then pin them to the front of the hat.  Sew eyebrows on.

Step three: If you need to add a bit of felt to make the brim fit your little one’s head, sew triangles to the back piece of the hat.  You can see my little triangles already attached where the beard is pinned.  Cut a six to seven-inch piece of thin elastic (I had some of this left over from a earlier project).  Center, pin and sew the elastic to the inside of the back hat piece.  Pin and sew the beard ends to the ends of the elastic.  Note that I sewed them as shown in the picture, but if I had a do-over, I’d turn the beard ends out before sewing them on so they’d lay more naturally when the hat is worn.  Details, people.  ;)

Step four:  Pin the right sides of the hat together, sew and trim up any threads.  Turn right side out.  Voilà!

For the shoes, trace and cut a sole, a tongue and two sides of a shoe that will fit your kiddo on two pieces of felt (or on one piece and cut both pieces at the same time).  Give the sides a nice curl, so when it’s put together the toes will curl a little.  Cut two 1.5-2-inch pieces of thin elastic.

Sew the backs of the shoe sides together, right sides out/wrong sides together.  The seams should be showing on the outside of the shoe.  Next sew the elastic to the inside, centering with the center of the back of the shoe.  Then sew the sides to the tongue, again, wrong sides together.

You’ve just made the “upper” of a felt elf shoe.  Although, the story books would usually have it happen the other way around… the old shoemaker would be proud.  At any rate, they should now look like sole-less shoes.  Pin the soles to the upper, again, with the seams showing on the outside.  Sew the soles on.

All done.  Little gnome shoes.  Not the best to use in a house with hardwood floors, unless your gnome can’t walk.  But they will do for one night on the streets, begging for candy and creeping out old people.

Finally, dress the Angry Elf as a happy garden gnome.  And laugh all the way back to Target to return that ridiculously over priced costume.  You just made yours for $3.69 plus tax.

Note:  Please feel free to share this tutorial on your own blog, just include a link back here!  Thanks!

Categories: DIY, Emmett, Thrift | Tags: , , , , | 16 Comments

Wordless Wednesday: Pumpkins and Cocoa

Categories: Emmett, Henry | Leave a comment

Wordless Wednesday: Summer Lovin’

A few of life’s best things… fresh corn and watermelon on the (soon to be) backyard patio.

Categories: Emmett, Henry | 3 Comments

Independence Days: Weeks 20 through 22

We’ve been busy this summer and I’ve not had much time to write about it!

I was privileged to go to a friend’s birth at the very end of July – it turned out to be a long birth and it took me a couple days to recover.  I don’t know how those midwives do it!  Also, we’ve been getting lots of yummy produce from the farm and we’ve been trying not to let any go to waste.

Also we have a lot of veggies coming on from the garden.  Pictured are onions, beets, cucumbers and turnips.

I did make cherry preserves a couple weeks ago with the cherries I got to pick.  Unfortunately I didn’t cook it quite long enough, so it was very thin.  We’ve been using it anyway – we just pretend it’s cherry syrup.  ;)

Henry was getting worn out from going to the farm on Tuesday and then school on Wednesdays, making Thursday really hard every week, so we switched his school day to Tuesday while Emmett and I are at the farm.  He seems to be doing much better with that schedule, which we are all happy about.

Last weekend we went to the Adams County Fair.  Our friend, Richard, got us tickets to the truck pull and a parking pass, and my mom and Manuel had food coupons and a parking pass as well, so they joined us.  We had a GREAT time.  Henry loved the truck pull with all the noise and the big trucks (though I was cringing terribly from all the black diesel exhaust I was watching needlessly billow into the air – oy!), and we had a blast riding carnival rides, eating yummy carnival food (like the giant brat Rick got) and playing games.  We stayed until past midnight!  It was a fun treat for everyone.

This weekend I gave the bees their second jar of sugar water.  Originally I wasn’t going to supplement our bees at all, but we started getting a little concerned that they might not get enough honey built up for the winter after their late start this spring.  Not sure if we’ll give them more, but hopefully that will help them get a little extra stored for the winter.

We picked a lot of green grapes from the neighbor this weekend, but I’m not sure what to do with them?  Anyone know of a way to preserve green grapes?  Maybe make raisins?

At any rate, here’s the update:

Plant something – Rick planted beets and spinach in the strip by the driveway.

Harvest something – eggs, turnips, onions, cucumbers, zucchini, beets, tomatoes, green seedless grapes from the neighbor across the alley from us!

Preserve something – cherries into cherry preserves; onions hung up in the crawl space; 4 gallon size bags of corn on the cob and nearly two gallons of beans in the freezer; shredded 35 cups of zucchini: froze 30 cups and made five loaves zucchini bread; dried corn husks for making tamales this fall; made and froze double batches of pizza dough, doughnut dough, potato soup (1.5 gallons).

Waste Not – compost and recycling, scraps to chickens, etc.

Want Not – nothing.

Build Community Food Systems – nothing.

Eat the Food – we’ve been grilling pizzas using farm tomatoes, the last of our sausage, and farm basil.  Otherwise, just been enjoying all the yummy summer bounty!

Categories: Beekeeping, Canning and Food Preservation, Childbirth, Emmett, Food, Garden, Henry, Independence Days | 2 Comments

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