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Walk 2009

It’s that time of the year again. We’d like to invite you to join us at the 15th Annual Texas Alliance for Life Walk 2009 on June 6 at The Quarries in Austin.  (If you want to walk there are a couple of other dates for the WALK: June 20 at the Seguin Outdoor Learning Center in Seguin, or June 27 in Sun City, Georgetown.)

Our family will be walking with hundreds of Texans from dozens of churches to promote the sanctity of innocent human life and to raise funds for life-saving programs and agencies in our community.

100% of the proceeds will support these programs and agencies, and all donations are tax-deductible. There are also great incentives for walkers who raise more than $200 in sponsorship pledges — and prizes for the top individuals, churches, pastors, and youth groups!

If you can’t walk with us, please sponsor us–we’ll be walking again with Therese and our goal this year is to break $2000. You can register as a walker or pledge to sponsor a walker (Therese Gretencord) online today at www.TexasAllianceforLife.org. If you don’t want to pledge online, you can email us or leave a comment and let us know the amount you’d like to pledge!

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When Daddy’s away…

…we sure do appreciate him more. Adam’s been out of town since Friday but should be arriving back in Austin this afternoon. He took a trip to Indiana and Michigan which I suspect he will fill you in on later.

Have we been counting down the days, hours and minutes?…sometimes. Fulton certainly has because his favorite cars were in time-out until today. Therese has been asking about when he’s coming home just about every morning. Every time we come home to see his car, the kids ask, “Is Daddy home?”  Muffin calls me ‘Daddy’ half the time, but she also did that before he left. ;)

And me…I always miss my beloved. But as I said, when he takes these trips I certainly appreciate his presence and help with the kids in the house and at mass. Trying to keep to our routine, we’ve been to 3 masses since Friday: our usually Saturday morning, Sunday, and then today for Gianna’s name day (Happy Feast of St. Gianna!). Our friends, Lauren and Matthew, helped us at Mass on Saturday and Sunday. I had the kiddos all to myself today. Daily Mass is usually a good Mass for the kids since its short and we can sit right in front. But it was amusing to me today because ALL the kids were all over me since there was no one else to sit on or next to. It was sweet, really. And even though I hold our children to VERY HIGH standards regarding Mass behavior, the people who see us there and have seen our family grow over the last six years always have such nice things to say about our little blessings and the fact that we take them to extra Masses despite some of their behavior sometimes.

I suppose now that Daddy will be back, the kids will resume their usually bath and bed times instead of doing everything an hour early for the sake of my sanity; and I’ll have to make that yummy strawberry ice cream that Adam missed out on Saturday. It’s all worth having him back!

The Joys of Life

Our friends Lauren and Matthew were over today and Lauren made a remark that we haven’t posted anything in a while. So I thought I’d give a little update at the joys of life that have been keeping us busy.

Car Accident: I was in a car accident a week and a half ago. It was really not a big deal except that our hatch and window on the van had to be replace. It was in the Sun Harvest parking lot. No one was injured. God blessed me that the guy with whom this happened was very charitable. I don’t even think his truck incurred any damage. My insurance company was just really great and everyone was really nice in all our conversations. And it turned out that the day it happened, a friend, Kelly, called and she mentioned her husband works for Caliber Collision. So I went with them for the car repairs. I was originally going to get the car fixed at the location on 620 but they wouldn’t see me until May 18, because of all the hail damaged cars. When I told Kelly, she told her husband and he called around the other locations. I ended up taking it to the location on North Lamar and I dropped off the car on Monday and picked it up yesterday. They did a fabulous job and were very timely. If you ever get into a car accident, I would highly recommend them for any repairs.

Gardening: This is probably a no brainer, but if you don’t water your garden, things won’t grow. I somehow always think that Adam should have a green thumb since his dad’s a farmer and all, but that’s not the case. Our gardening experiments in the backyard have been good learning experiences. We have a 2×9 plot based on the Square Foot Gardening. The mix is composed of vermiculite, compost and peat moss which makes for very good drainage…too good. It also means it need more watering than a soil mix, which is what our other two garden plots are. After some extra watering the last week, the seeds are finally sprouting. I ended up transplanting our tomato and pepper plants from the other gardens to this one because they just weren’t growing in the other gardens. I hope they take off. There have been a few days that I sit cursing Adam and Eve! Adam’s grape vines are doing well, but yes, they too require more water. The hops has spouted and my husband is getting all kinds of ideas that I’ll let him tell you about some time.

Homeschooling: Adoremus books had its big Easter sale recently (20% off the order). I like to order our homeschooling materials from there when they have their big sale because I certainly can save a bit if I order all our materials at one time. Of course this means I would have to know what we’re doing next year in terms of our curriculum. So, in a week’s time I had to figure that out else I miss the big sale. I already had some ideas but nothing set in stone. It meant contacting a few friends to see what they’re using and why, and making a trip to Mardel to see some of the stuff they have and be able to actually look inside some of these books. It was also nice to have a serious conversation with Adam about how we want to approach teaching subjects such as history and science. I didn’t choose one curriculum such as Seton or Kolbe. Although I like parts of them, I didn’t like all the materials either offered. In the end, I chose the following:

  • Math: Singapore Math and Family Math
  • Phonics: Phonics Pathways (what we’re using now)
  • English: Seton (for now)
  • Handwriting: Zaner-Bloser
  • Spelling: Phonics Pathways and Zaner-Bloser
  • Religion: Faith and Life
  • History: The Story of the World
  • Science: (oops, I can’t remember…maybe Seton, for now…or was it Science and God’s World?)

Anyway, I got the materials ordered. It looks like I’ll have a nice summer planning before Baby G makes his/her arrival in September.

Other: Our parish had a book sale of old books/movies from the library they are getting rid of. I pick up a few books and a bunch of VHS movies for the kids and us. Now, if there’s a way to convert those to DVD we’re in business.

Our God daughter, Lindsey, accepted a job offer to teach at a middle school as the theater arts teacher in the fall. Yay! She used to work at Dell and was laid off. So this one less unemployed person. She’s going to be great!

Then I mentioned Matthew and Lauren spent the day with us observing famiy life (i.e. playing with the kids). To celebrate the Feast of St. Mark, we made homemade strawberry ice cream. It was SOOOOOO GOOD.

Here’s the recipe:

  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1-1/2 cups heavy whipping cream
  • 2 cups strawberries
  • 1 tsp vanilla

Heat the milk on medium heat until hot. Remove from stove. Beat eggs and sugar. Gradually add hot milk. Return to sauce pan and heat stirring constantly until slightly thick (8 minutes). Allow to cool.

In a blender, puree strawberries in the cream. Add this to cooled custard. Stir and add vanilla. Cool in refridgerator. Then crank it out in your ice cream maker.

Notre Dame Alumni Witholding Contributions

Now we’re talking… or better still, taking action.

Category: Faith  One Comment

Buying in Bulk

I’ve come to find that I really love our standing freezer. It allows me to buy things in bulk and actually feed my family for a reasonable price!

There’s no denying that the cost of food has continued to increase. It seems that income tax break that took effect April 1, in Adam’s paycheck is paying for the increase cost of food! Just this weekend I was frustrated that the least expensive organic milk we can find has gone up 50 cents a gallon (now $5.50). When we have to buy whole milk (for Gianna until age 2) and low fat milk for the family this adds up to a few gallons of milk a month.  And I laughed inside when our pediatrician told us that the new standards for calcium in kids is a quart of milk a DAY! That’s not going to happen here unless we get a cow. Thankfully they like cheese. And we’re going to start giving the kids a multivitamin with extra calcium.

So today I went “shopping around” for milk. I found organic milk for $5 and decided to stock up on the fat free milk. I bought 4 gallons of fat free milk and 1 gallon of whole milk. Low fat content milk tends to freeze very well which is why I bought so many. (You just need to pour some of the milk out before freezing the jug or it will expand beyond its capacity.) Whole milk when it defrosts will taste grainy which is why I tend not to freeze that. Well, it turns out that 4 gallons of milk is a case and it qualifies for a bulk discount. So I saved 10%-a total saving for the 5 gallons of $4.50. That’s just about another gallon of milk! (I do realized if we didn’t buy organic milk, we would save more. But right now, while we can still budget it, we’ll keep buying it. Occasionally when funds are running low at the end of the month, I rotate a gallon of non-organic milk. This is not my favorite thing to do since the kids drink so much of it. My frugal kindred spirit, Misty, reminded me today that I could use powdered milk to cook.)

When you look in our freezer you’ll see a row of oats on the bottom, the door packed with all-purpose, bread, whole wheat and white whole wheat bags of flour (that I found on sale last week), four gallons of milk, plus all the odds and ends of meats and veggies that I picked up extra of when they were on sale (like the ham that was on sale for Easter!). Hopefully in a couple of weeks our next quarter calf will be coming. We found we can go through a little less than a quarter calf in half a year. Not bad.

Category: Budgeting  One Comment

The Easter blessing of friends

Christ is risen! Alleluia!

We had a blessed Easter Sunday yesterday and it was wonderful to share it with so many friends.

Adam had to serve the 9:30 a.m. mass so our friends Lauren and Matthew sat with the kids and I. It was nice to have a couple of extra laps and arms to help with the kids. We actually made through mass without having to leave! Alleluia!

We came home to have some brunch…of course the only part the kids ate was the resurrection rolls we made. It’s been a great and tasty tradition for Easter Sunday. All sixteen rolls were gone in no time.

After our Easter Egg hunt, we had some old and new friends over for Easter dinner and/or dessert. It was great fun to visit and share some of the sugary abundance we had.

The best and most blessed part though was at the end of the evening. After we put the kids to bed, and a few of us cleaned up, and another few taste tested Adam’s first batch of homebrew, and Zvezdana fixed some of knitting mistakes…the eight of us gathered in the living room and prayed the 3rd day of the Divine Mercy Novena. That was awesome. The blessing of sharing prayer with our friends is what my heart will remember of the holy days we celebrate them.

Notre Dame Double Take

I haven’t felt compelled to say anything regarding the Notre Dame/Obama scandal because I believe our bishops have already been doing an excellent job. However Bishop D’Arcy’s latest comments left me scratching my head:

“This is giving a Doctor of Laws to a person whose only experience with laws, in the state legislature and here, has been anti-life laws,” said Bishop D’Arcy in an interview with a local television station. “It’s saying to the young people, ‘Well, it’s okay, it really doesn’t matter.’”

Okay, so far so good…

Bishop D’Arcy added that “he does not believe Notre Dame should suffer a penalty” according to WNDU-TV.

source

Whoa, whoa, whoa! Hold on! Excuse me, Excellency, but didn’t you just implicitly say that it is not okay to tell the young people to carry on like “it really doesn’t matter” yet you believe no penalty should be assigned… as if it doesn’t really matter?

Here’s the problem, folks – the Catholic community can rant and rage and issue statements all they want but until someone does something and acts on their words it will only fall on deaf ears. Alumni need to stop contributing, parents need to stop sending their kids there or even withdraw them, and bishops need to be forthright that they hold the right to the title “Catholic” and be willing to exercise it.

Sticks and stones…

Oats Anyone?

Sun Harvest had a sale last week…59 cents per pounds. So we decide to buy it in bulk. It think 50 lbs will last at least until the next sale! I see lots of shranola (my homemade granola) and oatmeal bread in the future!

Category: Budgeting  2 Comments

Brenham reunion

Last week we had a playdate reunion in Brenham with our friends the Ceys. It was so much fun and the kids really missed their play buddies. (I missed my “play buddy” too.)

Brenham has an amazing park! I haven’t been to a park that nice in Austin. Fireman Park had a covered pavilion with a ton of picnic tables, two play scapes, a merry-go-round and restrooms! Great meeting place for children 5 and under! I’m sure it’s there for all the school trips that go to the Blue Blue creamery.

Unfortunately I learned not to suggest taking a picture right after we got rejected from the merry-go-round.

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Lenten Cross

The first or second Saturday of Lent, I spent the afternoon making our Lenten cross. I got idea from the book, Lent and Easter in the Domestic Church. The Lenten cross is very similar to the Jesse Tree we do for Advent. Each day there is a different reading either from the Old Testament prophesying the death of Christ or a reading from the New Testament about the fulfillment of Christ’s way to the cross.

I didn’t put a picture of it up earlier because it was just anticlimactic with only six squares filled in. I make them all of felt and put them on a stiff white felt background with all the readings written in pen for each square. I velcro-ed the white pieces of the cross together and then each purple square has velcro on the back. The most fun square to do was the cock pictured below. I was inspired by the Rose’s beautiful hens that we had seen earlier that day.

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