Archive for ‘January, 2013’

A messy week

It was a messy week. The weather was messy. My schedule was messy. I had a day of spills on Wednesday including a cup of coffee that jumped out of my hand and I am STILL finding sticky coffee splashes in unexpected places.

But today, Saturday, after a messy start of freezing fog and snow flurries…

The sun came out!

Beautiful. Only 18F, but beautiful…especially in the warm sunroom.

I know. The number of herbs have dwindled…by more than half. And the rosemary and basil are not looking especially good. The parsley looks thin as I’ve been using a lot of it but I think that it and the chives may survive my gardening skills.

Just outside the sunroom…the herb graveyard. I have high hopes that the lavender, spearmint and peppermint will revive in the Spring as I put them out during a week when it was above freezing and told them to go dormant until June 1. We’ll see. I am not surprised, but I am a bit disappointed as the herbs gave the room a nice feeling. But I am not disappointed enough to go buy more and subject them to my not so green thumb. I WILL try again next year :) !!

Bear’s back end as he checks for critters…and a close up is coming in case you’d like to leave now…

I was watching Bear watch the game trail and noticed his legs. They are positioned the same and he is bearing his weight equally on both – hurrah!! No odd angle and the foot on his surgery leg is solid.

The walking conditions have deteriorated this past week and we’ve not been able to do the distances prescribed. But we are out and about and I call him in the house now and again to get him up and walking. All continues to progress well.

Project Management

The last 30 years of my working life has involved taking a project from concept to completion. I have worked on various sizes of projects both alone and as part of a team. I realized years ago that I had learned some concepts from project development that have stood me in good stead in other areas of my life.

A large and/or detailed project can seem overwhelming. The typical approach that both I and the current team utilize is to define the broad scope, divide the project up into modules and proceed. For me, that makes the project doable. I don’t worry too much about the WHOLE thing, but concentrate on one module at a time. It is not quite as clear cut as that, but that is the general idea and it is the part of project development that has helped me in my personal life.

When it became clear that Bear needed the TPLO surgery, I first added up all of the weeks of rehab – the time that our lives would be a bit upside down – AND, there was the possibility that the other leg would need the same surgery. (there still is that possibility but the surgeon was more optomistic after the pre-op exam under sedation so we are thinking positive!!)

That first false start – the surgery I thought was scheduled right away – it actually helped me get my head in a better place. Although I did not like Bear having to wait a month, it was a good month and it allowed us to enjoy some gorgeous weather outside together as well as giving me some thinking time to get the house in good order, supplies in and generally just prepare for the post-op. And I started thinking in small chunks of time vs the WHOLE ENTIRE rehab. The time broke down into surgery day, day 1 & 2 post-op, week 1 & 2 post-op, week 3-4, etc. I stopped looking ahead at a long period of time and concentrated on where we were.

And now, here we are 4.5 weeks post-op. Bear is moving easier and in a more normal way every day: Little things like getting up and lying down, backing up, turning in a circle. All are getting better. We are walking on a short leash now vs the belly support. Our outings are more relaxed and more fun for both of us and getting better each day.

Inside, as I put away the Christmas decorations, I got to thinking that moving one of the chairs back in the sunroom would be ok.

While it was nice to shake up the routine and I always find it interesting when I change where I sit and “Oh!” – that’s a nice view – I did on occasion miss my wing back chair for reading.

One thing led to another…

Bob’s room got a mini-makeover as well.

Bob was more worried about where his food dish was than the fact that he had his furniture back.

And while I was situating the furniture and finding pillows and fleece…can of worms!! I ended up going through every closet, every drawer and having a general whole house clear out, straighten up and re-organization.

I remembered there were some old green sheets in the motorhome. As soon as I got the pillow on the right end of the bed all comfy AND color-coordinated…Bear was happy.

I’m happy. I’m happy Bear is doing so well and I’m happy taking the rehab one day at a time.

We head toward the end of week 5 with a bit more normal back but enjoying each step of the way.

Big Sky

Bear and I returned to the wildfowl regeneration area early this afternoon. It is the perfect walking spot right now as it is level, the footing is good for both of us and there are lots of good smells to interest Bear. We are now walking on a short leash. Bear and I are both pretty happy about that and we continue with increasing walk distances as healing progresses. All continues good.

Thursday’s sun gave way to a full valley inversion yesterday with snow squalls in the afternoon and freezing fog overnight. I held off leaving for town this morning until things had warmed a bit.

Turning on to the lane – this lane is partially a rancher’s “driveway” as well as access to the public area – the sky seemed so dramatic and…no other words for it: Big Sky

Sunshine on a Winter’s Day

There is a sliver of lake visible – to the south – from the parking area of a walk spot that is part of a wildfowl regeneration area. (That is the official name, but it is also open for public hunting…)

The orange band is sun shining through a break in the inversion layer of stratus covering about half of the Flathead Valley.

Looking to the north – northeast, the edge of the inversion opens up to blue sky.

Sunshine to the east…

Sunshine on the on the road home.

Sunshine in my yard…on a Winter’s Day.

Happy New Year…bah humbug!

I know it looks like Bear maybe “tied one on” for New Year’s…but what kept us up was not our own partying, but New Year’s Eve fireworks. Fireworks are legal in Montana for New Year’s Eve and this year was worse than most with everyone getting an early start and ramping up until things finally quieted down about 1:00 a.m. Bleah.

Bear has not been bothered by fireworks or thunder or gunshots before last night but these seemed to have a high pitched whistle and maybe hurt his ears. About 9:30, he moved from his chairs to a spot right in front of the bedroom gate. At 10:00 he rattled the gate. Bear has NEVER touched the gates. I let him in the bedroom and lifted him up on the bed. He settled but had his ears back for a bit before finally putting his head down and relaxing. I kept a DVD playing for some cover noise until all was quiet outside.

We finally all settled and didn’t wake until Bob’s insulin alarm reminder on my phone went off at 7:00 a.m.

So, we survived the night but it looks to be a catch-up napping kind of day for Mr. Bear…

Bob slept fine but he has the munchies, although that is nothing to do with New Year’s…he ALWAYS has the munchies :) !

My eye opener was an eggnog.

Recipe adapted from Neo-Homesteading’s Raw Eggnog recipe.

1 cup milk
1/2 cup cashew cream
1 whole egg and 1 egg yolk
1 tsp vanilla extract
Maple syrup to taste

Whiz all in the blender and grate fresh nutmeg on top. This made a mug and a half. I would probably halve the milk and cream and use 1 whole egg for a more normal single serving. While it is a hefty amount of calories, it packs a huge nutritional punch. I have been using cashew cream in place of heavy whipping cream in everything that calls for heavy cream. (See Cooking with Cashews for cashew cream making)

Below is the nutritional info for 1 Tablespoon of each…kind of interesting! (Dbl click the image to read easily)

Heavy Cream

Cashew Cream

http://nutritiondata.self.com/ is the tool I used for calculating the above.