
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Music

Reusable Bottles
I like these. I saw them all over Europe (they are made in Switzerland) and surprisingly found one for 1Euro in the Second Hand store in Zutphen. I washed it! and it is as good as new. (Once you've been to Africa, you are forever ruined on stuff like that.) We all need to be good stewards and not use excess plastic water bottles and certainly need to purchase something that we can refill and use often. I like this one in particular because it is aluminium, seals tightly, is very light weight and keeps cool water cool. Mine has a screw cap like the one below. It is surprisingly handy for carrying because you can slip your finger through it. Odd I know, I just always seem to have my arms full? http://www.sigg.com/ or http://www.rei.com/
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Weekend Getaway
They are actually quite fun. I have not been to Napa, but did tour a few wineries in the Willamette Valley of Oregon and can assure you that it does not hold a candle. However, they are an hour north of Atlanta and I will take what I can get. Plus, there are Outlet Malls on the way there. Three of my favorites include:Wolf Mountain was one of the original wineries built in Dahlonega. They offer a Sunday Brunch and have a Cafe on site. Tastings are $10.00. Frogtown Cellars offers tastings, special dinners about once a month and have a Panini Bar open on the weekends. Three Sisters is a must visit because of the views at sunset and their white wines are not bad at all. Search their websites for Special Events and Directions.

I have yet to find a great place to stay, but will make it a priority on my next visit. http://www.wolfmountainvineyards.com/ http://www.threesistersvineyards.com/ http://www.frogtownwine.com/
Friday, October 24, 2008
Shoes- Comfort
They are made in Germany by StegmannEstablished in 1888 by Karl Stegmann, the company is now in its fourth and fifth generation respectively of family ownership. Today Stegmann is one of the few remaining manufacturers of felt and kindred articles in Germany. Stegmann's wool products are distributed in USA, Canada, Austria, Italy, Norway, Finland, Japan and Switzerland.
The all natural materials reduce stress and provide more comfort.
The Woolflex Clog stays cool in the summer and warm in the winter due to the natural felt upper.
The Woolflex presents an anatomically correct contoured polyurethane, which absorbs shock and provides support to the foot for comfort fit.
The seamless 100% pure wool felt upper wicks moisture from the foot.

You can find them here: http://www.vermontgear.com/
Kids Toys


http://www.one2believe.com/ has a whole line of "Faith Inspired" Toys for Kids. I found this one at Marshalls for 25% off of the $3.00 Clearance price! They are wonderful learning tools and a good alternative to some of the scarry boy toys out there. Their lines can also be found at Target and Wal-Mart. And Samson's kinda hot.
Friday, October 17, 2008
Books- Story of the World
Nomads, Moses, Jesus, Caesar, Ancient Rome, Ancient China, I can barely keep up with this day, much less this century, and certainly not centuries before our own! My sister, Carla, introduced me to this amazing series of books. She uses them as part of her history curriculum in homeschooling her lovely children. It is a series of books entitled, Story of the World- in four volumes. The author writes in a very narrative format that is easy for all ages to understand and is very factual and entertaining. I want to read them all, as all those years of history class now seem to run together and the time table of events becomes more and more blurry. "Told in the straightforward, engaging style that has become Susan Wise Bauer's trademark, The Story of the World covers the sweep of human history from ancient times until the present. Africa, China, Europe, the Americas — find out what happened around the world in the centuries before our own. This read-aloud series is designed for parents to share with elementary-school children, or for older readers to enjoy alone. Introduce your child to the marvelous story of the world's civilizations". Susan's most recent book for Norton, The History of the Ancient World: From the Earliest Accounts to the Fall of Rome (2007) is the first in a four-volume series providing a narrative world history. Her previous book, The Well-Educated Mind: A Guide to the Classical Education You Never Had (2003), is a guide to rea
ding the classic works of fiction, poetry, history, autobiography, and drama. Norton also published The Well-Trained Mind: A Guide to Classical Education at Home (with co-author Jessie Wise); originally published in 1999, this bestselling guide to education in the classical tradition was revised and updated in 2004. Susan has written a four-volume world history series for children, The Story of the World, for Peace Hill Press. Volume 1, Ancient Times, was published in 2002 (revised edition 2006); Volume 2, The Middle Ages, in 2003 (revised edition 2007); and Volume 3, Early Modern Times, in 2004. The final volume, The Modern Age, was published in 2006. Susan is also a contributing editor to Books & Culture and a frequent contributor to Christianity Today.Education
Susan's parents taught her at home for most of elementary and middle school, and all of high school; she entered college at seventeen as a Presidential Scholar and National Merit finalist, and finished her B.A. in five semesters with a major in English, a minor in Greek and a summer spent studying twentieth century theology as a Visiting Student at Oxford. She went on to earn a Master of Divinity from Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, where she added Hebrew and Aramaic to her languages. In 1994, she also completed the M.A. in English language and literature at the College of William and Mary in Virginia; her concentrations were in translation theory, seventeenth-century devotional poetry, and Psalm paraphrase in the Tudor period. Since 1994, Susan has taught writing and American literature at William & Mary, where she also received her Ph.D. in American Studies, with a major field in the history of American religion.
Personal
Susan was born in 1968, grew up in Virginia, and was educated at home by pioneering parents, back when home education was still unheard of. She learned Latin at age ten, worked as a professional musician while still in high school, and wrote three (unpublished!) novels before she turned sixteen. Since then, she has toured with a travelling drama group; galloped racehorses at a Virginia racetrack for spending money; taught horseback riding; worked in ghostwriting and newspaper ad sales; learned enough Korean to teach a Korean four-year-old Sunday school; and served as librarian and reading tutor for the Rita Welsh Adult Literacy Center in Williamsburg. Susan and her husband now live in rural Virginia, where Peter serves as the minister of a nondenominational church. They have three sons and a daughter.
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Facial Products

Food- Tuna
It is also really good with a tiny covering (like 1/2 a tbsp) of Wasabi Mayonnaise from Trader Joe's. The 1/2 a tbsp is not because of the hot wasabi, it is because it has 12 grams of fat in a tbsp. And as most things are, it's great between two slices of multi grain bread- toasted.
Friday, October 10, 2008
The Pioneer Woman

Thank you Angelique!!!! This site is amazing! I love it! When you see it, you will quit coming to my site and spend all day on here...It has recipes, really good practical photography tips, short stories and a home and garden section that is set up similar to my "favorite things". The photo tips are very useful and will help you get the most out of your camera, no matter what kind you have, and those features you never use. This woman, Dee, writes about her life and you can go back and read from Chapter 1, telling all about how she met met her "Marlboro Man", (total disclaimer here on what you might read, I hear it's pretty juicy) but here is an excerpt from the first chapter:
As our eleventh anniversary approaches, I find myself reflecting on the circumstances that brought Marlboro Man and me together. So grab a Diet Dr. Pepper, hang on to your hat, and come along for the ride!
Forget this, I thought, as I lay sprawled on the bed in which I grew up. Home from L.A. on a self-imposed pit stop, I was drowning in a papery sea of LSAT study guides, marked-up drafts of my resume, printouts of available Chicago apartments, and a JCrew catalog, from which I’d just ordered a $495 wool gabardine winter coat in olive, not chocolate, because I’m a redhead. And, fuzzy wool gloves and a matching scarf in charcoal, just to mix things up and because Chicago, in all its big-city splendor, is butt-cold in the wintertime. I’d been at it all week—studying, searching, editing, shopping and ordering—and I was worn smooth out, my eyes watery from reading, my middle finger pruney from licking and flipping through pages, my socks dingy and rank from being on my feet for two days straight. I needed a break.
So now I know you are just dying to read it! Me too! She makes me want to sit down and write volumes about my own life...just another reason why I need to quit taking change from "my new apple macbook pro so I no longer have to use the ancient State of Georgia work only laptop" mason jar. But with $1,876.83 to go, it just seems so far from ever becoming reality. Hmmm. And to find out why the Basset hound...you will just have to go there and read about him, his name is Charlie. The blog style stories are really an inspiration and I can't wait to get creative and see what happens. You will spend all day here! She pretty much has put her whole life up here with photos and audio clips and everything you could ever want to know...or see...or hear. But it is all such a great idea!!
http://www.thepioneerwoman.com/
Here she tells a little of her story...
I’m a thirty-something ranch wife, mother of four, moderately-agoraphobic middle child who grew up on a golf course in the city. I attended college in Los Angeles and wore black pumps to work every day. I ate sushi and treated myself to pedicures on a semi-regular basis. I even kissed James Garner in an elevator once. Then, on a brief trip to my hometown, I met and fell in love with a rugged cattle rancher. Now I live in the middle of nowhere on a working cattle ranch. My days are spent wrangling children, chipping dried manure from boots, washing jeans, and frying calf nuts. I have no idea how I got here…but you know what? I love it. Don’t tell anyone.
I hope you enjoy my website, ThePioneerWoman.com. Here, I write about my decade-long transition from spoiled city girl to domestic country wife. I post photos of cows, horses, and my four weird children, and frequently include shots of cowboys wearing chaps. In my Photography section, I include Photography and Photoshop tutorials. In my Cooking section, I post step-by-step photos of all the cowboy-friendly dishes I’ve taught myself to cook through the years, and in Home & Garden, I chronicle the start-to-finish remodeling project of an old guest house on our ranch.
I post frequent audio clips of my children mispronouncing simple words and of me doing Ethel Merman impersonations. I also share delightful audio clips of different styles of burps as well as photos of my son picking his nose.
So I am completely inspired and would love to do something like this. I promise no nose picking photos or belching...no wait, I can't promise no belching...but no snot...it makes me gag. Seriously, I can't do that baby snot sucker upper thingy on a baby without gagging. But this is not about me...it's about The Pioneer Woman. So go check this out. Thanks again Angelique. I love it!
Digital Photography- Editing


Here I added text, brightened the sky, and added a little glow to Gracies cheeks.
I really prefer the Photoshop site a little better, because it is just more user friendly and seems to work better with my ancient "work only" laptop. http://www.photoshop.com/ It is quicker and gives you a preview of each editing technique as applied to your selected photo, even before you chose it. So you don't spend all day waiting on the pictures to upload or clicking on a random feature just to see what it will look like, it gives you a preview beforehand. You can't do a whole lot with the photoshop site, but you can play around with color and saturation.Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Bedding

Sunday, October 5, 2008
Cocktails in Inman Park

Friday, October 3, 2008
Handmade Gifts-Etsy
I can't believe I have not remembered to post this one. It is one of my favorite sites for handmade gifts. Whether you just want an idea or are in need of a unique gift, Etsy is the place to go. Sellers from around the world post their handmade items for you to purchase directly from them. They have just about anything you can think of, pottery, jewelry, notecards, baby blankets and onesies, comfy sweaters and scarves, handbags and glass, just to name a few. You can find lots of vintage items too. It is a great place to find an idea and make it yourself. And because they are posted by the artists themselves you can often get a great price. You even have the option to "shop local" if supporting local artisans is important to you. I love getting items from local artists for my faraway friends who want a piece of Georgia to cherish. And who wouldn't? http://www.etsy.com/

Ivory Acrylic Rose Necklace ($31)

Italian Wool Scarf ($50)
Earrings ($17)

Thursday, October 2, 2008
Oatmeal Cookie Pancakes

Hailey & Owen
Ingredients
1 cup old fashioned oats
1 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup brown sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2 ounces, 1/4 cup, chopped walnuts
3/4 cup sour cream
3/4 cup whole milk
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 really ripe bananas, mashed up
3/4 cup raisins
1/2 stick butter, 1/4 cup, melted, plus additional for buttering skillet
Maple syrup or honey, for drizzling
Directions
Here's a great tip: if you cannot find really ripe bananas, just nuke them in the microwave for about 15 seconds and they will become super soft for mashing.
Mix dry ingredients, the first 7, in a bowl. In a another bowl, mix the wet ingredients, the next 4. Whisk the wet ingredients into the dry until just combined, then fold in the mashed up bananas and the raisins. Stir in the melted butter.
Heat a griddle over medium heat and brush with additional melted butter. Cook pancakes, each about 1/3 cup, until bubbles form on the top, then turn. Cakes will cook in about 2 minutes on each side. Keep pancakes tented with foil as they come off the griddle to keep them hot. Serve with drizzled honey or maple syrup over the top. - Food Network, Rachael Ray http://www.foodnetwork.com/



