May 28, 2026

Busy Days With Nothing To Write About

Nothing especially noteworthy is going on, just a bunch of events and circumstances piled on top of one another. 

The garden. Food first. You all know the drill: bed prep, planting, keeping up with the weeds, especially with all the rain we've been getting. Mulching, picking, and preservation take up at least half of every day.

Milk is still abundant, although not like before. But still enough so that every other day requires cheese making. I've finished with my hard cheeses and I've got my feta done. I'll start on halloumi next and then mozzarella. We have plenty of kefir, cottage cheese, ricotta, and fresh cheese to enjoy as well. 

The pantry. The cheese cave adventure got me started on re-doing the pantry. I needed to wash dusty jars, check seals and dates, and rotate as needed anyway. Clearing out the space for the now-gone cheese cave helped me figure out how to add new shelving, which has meant some a lot of re-arranging. So everything is getting reorganized, which I needed to do anyway. I should be able to store empty jars in the pantry now too, along with kitchen equipment, so this is a welcome project. I'm figuring out how to make better use of the space. I just get stumped on where to put things now with the new shelving. I have an opportunity to organize better, but it's been slow.

My step-mother's passing. It was unexpected but considering her age not surprising. It's meant dismantling her and my dad's home in preparation for selling the house. I've inherited family furniture that belonged to my great-grandparents, some of my dad's books (which I showed you in this blog post), my stepmother's sewing and crafting supplies, and several big boxes of old family photos and records, plus the genealogical research my dad had done. Those are especially interesting as I've begun to go through and sort them. 

Replacing appliances. I'm in the process of replacing my old fridge and washing machine. The fridge is about 15 years old and all the plastic is either broken or cracked. And it leaks. Every other day I have to take out the crisper drawers to mop up the water before it leaks out onto the floor. Dan has tried a number of repairs and parts replacement, but it still leaks. I researched durability and repair frequency and ended up getting another top-freezer model. This one by LG which had top marks in those categories by both consumers and repairmen. Cleaning out the old one was another big project, but I was glad to do it and especially clean the walls and floor behind the fridge. They needed it.

Replacing the washing machine is also on the list. My old one is 40 years old! It's only still running because of Dan's mechanical ministrations. Now, though, it only fills a little over halfway and I must fill the rest with a bucket. Plus it does a terrible job cleaning. My choice for a new one is a Speed Queen. Yes, they are expensive, but with a documented service life of 20 to 25 years, it's worth it. Plus, I could get one entirely mechanical - not "smart!" I didn't even opt for the digital controls. The problem is that there is a long waiting list for these. I asked the salesman if the economy is doing so badly, then why are people buying expensive washing machines? He said folks are tired of stuff that breaks down after only a couple of years. Me too!  

The front room is still a work in progress! It's kind of taken a back seat due to all of the above, but I'm getting a project on the loom, which gives me a creative break every day. I still have some boxes to find homes for and want to put pictures on the walls, but otherwise it's mostly functional.

The sewing room is our temporary storage room. Between everything moved in there from the front room, plus the boxes from my stepmom's, it's another space that needs to be sorted and put back to it's former usefulness. 

So I have a very long to-do list. All necessary but nothing terribly interesting. Eventually I'll have some before-and-after pics to show you, but it won't be any time soon. 

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