Sunday, September 28, 2008
My Very Own Booth at the Farmers Market
Last year a scrapbooking company invited Nebo School District teachers to their warehouse to get stuff to use for personal or classroom use. Seeing money signs, I grabbed as much stuff as I could. Now I have boxes of scrapbooking stuff. I found out it It only costs $15 to have a booth at the Farmer's Market. On Saturday I set up a booth with my money savvy neighbor, Amanda Peeler (the same girl I did the yard sale with earlier). I displayed all of my scrapbooking stuff and she sold chocolate covered strawberries, carmeled apples, and "hair blooms." I discovered that the Farmer's Market is NOT a good avenue to sell scrapbooking stuff. Who knew? My visions of getting rich were crushed. I was selling my stuff for dirt cheap and I still didn't sell very much. I only made about $22 after costs. :( I am determined to make some money out of all this so my next attempt will be to advertise on KSL. I'm not too keen on selling stuff on Ebay because I don't want the hassle of mailing everything. Wish me luck!
Date Night
Canning Peaches
This is my second time canning this week. I'm proud to be doing domestic things. It is so rewarding to see all of my jars filled with good food. Somehow it makes me feel more wifely and motherly. :)
See below for the recipe to can spiced peaches:
1 box = 28 pints
syrup:
6 c. hot water
2 c. sugar
1 c. wassil
Wassil:
3/4 c. sugar
1 c. lemon
10 pkgs spiced cider
4 tsp cinnamon
1.5 tsp cloves
2 tsp allspice
1/2 tsp nut meg
1/2 tsp ginger
See the recipe below for a yummy easy peach cobbler using the spiced peaches:
Mix together:
1/2 a yellow or white cake mix
1/2 c. milk
1/2 c. applesauce
Then add:
1 egg
slice peaches from a pint jar and place on top of the batter mixture
sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar to taste
Then add:
1 c. of liquid--use the the juice from the peaches, if there is not enough for one full cup then add enough water to equal a full cup of liquid.
Cook for 35 minutes at 350 degrees
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
PLT Praxis Test
The class was well done and I left feeling a lot less nervous and more prepared.
The test is a timed two hours. There will be 12 essay questions and 24 multiple choice questions. I heard the biggest factor is time. The test is paper based so you have to scribble things out as fast as you can. Essay answers must also demonstrate a knowledge of education theorists and so every answer must reference from a theorist. This will be tricky to do when I don't even remember who the theorists are. This is one area I am going to have to study. The multiple choice will be a beast for me as well because it is about all of the technical things I learned in school 4 years ago. There will be questions about students as learners, instruction and assessment, teacher professionalism, and communication techniques.
Wish me luck!
I know I complain about this but I really do like relearning all this stuff. :) I just don't like paying $165 for a test or the stress that comes with being tested. I guess now I can relate with my students a bit better. :)
Making Salsa
I feel like a pioneer! I bought about 5o pounds of tomatoes for $20 at the farmers market. It was too good of a deal to pass up. Monday, I went to Sherika's right after work. We commenced chopping up all the ingredients. It took a lot of effort. Alicia was also in and out between picking up kids from school. She volunteered to chop the onions, went on a grocery run, and also put all of the tomatoes through the screener. I think she ended up with the worst jobs. We all made a great team! We each made our own batch of salsa. I did a little bit of experimenting adding cilantro-which I love and lime juice. These are the secret ingredients when I make fresh salsa so I figured it would work for canned as well. And it turned out so yummy! Did I mention I love cilantro? At the end of a long days work we each ended up with about 8 cans of salsa. Next time we make it we will have to start earlier and buy more tomatoes so we can have more to show for all of our work. :)
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Moving to Arbon?
I have been stressing over moving to Arbon. I'm having a lot of second thoughts about moving there. I feel like I have finaly ajusted to Provo, I finally made friends, and we have worked so hard to build up our house finishing the basement, decorating, etc, and I have an unheard of teaching dream job, and I have so many things I am looking forward to fixing up our yard, Farmers Market, Witches Night Out, etc. We live across the street from the mountains and basically a private hike, yet enjoy the conveniences of the city. I am really starting to enjoy the city life. It is so nice to be 4 minutes from the gym, and grocery store. We have the best of both worlds living here.
So I was stressing over moving to Arbon. I have been praying for guidance and felt spiritually impressed when reading my scriptures. I felt like the circumstances of Ammon and King Lamoni were similar to us and moving to Arbon.
Alma 27:7-14
7 And Ammon said: I will go and inquire of the Lord, and if he say unto us, go down unto our brethren, will ye go?
8 And the king said unto him: Yea, if the Lord saith unto us go, we will go down unto our brethren, and we will be their slaves until we repair unto them the many murders and sins which we have committed against them.
9 But Ammon said unto him: It is against the law of our brethren, which was established by my father, that there should be any aslaves among them; therefore let us go down and rely upon the mercies of our brethren.
10 But the king said unto him: Inquire of the Lord, and if he saith unto us go, we will go; otherwise we will perish in the land.
11 And it came to pass that Ammon went and inquired of the Lord, and the Lord said unto him:
12 Get this people aout of this land, that they perish not; for Satan has great hold on the hearts of the Amalekites, who do stir up the Lamanites to anger against their brethren to slay them; therefore get thee out of this land; and blessed are this people in this generation, for I will bpreserve them.
13 And now it came to pass that Ammon went and told the king all the words which the Lord had said unto him.
14 And they gathered together all their people, yea, all the people of the Lord, and did gather together all their flocks and herds, and departed out of the land, and came into the wilderness which divided the land of Nephi from the land of Zarahemla, and came over near the borders of the land.
- I truly desire to honor Jacob as head of the house. If he fasts and sincerely prays and feels inspired that we should move to Arbon. I will support him in this and we will move. (Of course, I will fast and pray too.)
- Moving to Arbon will be a major life changing event. It is important we give it the attention it deserves as well as, include our Heavenly Father with such a big decision.
Thursday, September 11, 2008
My Name
Middle Name: Ruby
Mythology and Lore: Ruby is from the Latin word “ruber” or “rubrum” meaning red. Ruby and sapphire are among the oldest gems known to man, dating back many thousands of years. They were both held in very high regard, especially the ruby. The ancient Sanskrit name for ruby translate as king of precious stones or leader of precious stones.
Throughout history ruby has been said to preserve health and give invulnerability from wounds, and to guarantee that one’s status and possessions would never be taken. The wearing of a ruby was said to signify manhood, nobility & valour in a man, and pride & passion in a woman.
Ruby may be given on the 15th and 40th wedding anniversary. It has been said that the ruby’s red glow comes from an internal flame that cannot be extinguished, making a gift of this stone symbolic of everlasting love. Ruby is also associated with the zodiac sign of Aires.
Story of the Timur Ruby
Timur Ruby |
The famous Timur Ruby is in fact not a ruby; rather it is a spinel. It weighs over 352 carats and until 1851 was widely regarded as the largest known ruby in the world. Presented to Queen V
ictoria by the East India Company in October 1851
, and remaining amongst the collection of the British Royal family ever since, it has a long and colorful history.
Timur was a Tartar conqueror who is believed to have acquired the ruby when he sacked Delhi in 1398. He stayed in India for little over a year, before returning to Samarkand with the ruby among his spoils of war. The ruby was inherited by his son, Mir Shah Rukh, and later his grandson, Mirza Ulugli Beg.
During his rule there were many wars with the Pe
rsians and after one these, the ruby fell into the hands of Shah Abbas I of Persia, who in 1612 gave the ruby as a gift to his close friend, Jahangir, the Mughal Emperor of India. Jahangir had his name engraved on the ruby, as well as that of his father, Akbar. Legend has it that when his favorite wife rebuked him for defacing such a magnificent gem, he replied: "This jewel will more certainly hand down my name to posterity than any written history. The House of Timur may fall, but as long as there is a King, this jewel will be his."
Successive owners of the jewel continued to inscribe their names until Mahomed Farukh Siyar. The successor of this last of the Delhi emperors to in
scribe his name upon the gem was Nadir Shah, who sacked Delhi in 1739 and carried off the Timur Ruby among many other famous jewels to Isfahan.
He engraved the stone as follows:
Timur Ruby Necklace |
This (is) the ruby from among the 25,000 genuine jewels of the King of Kings, the Sultan Sahib Qiran [Timur], which in the year 1153 [1740 AD] from the (collection of) jewels of Hindustan reached this place [I
sfahan].
The last inscription on the Timur Ruby was made by Ahmad Shah, who was the commander of Nadir Shah's army at the time of his assassination in 1747. He attempted to seize the throne, but managed only to grab a large amount of
booty, which he took with him to help found the kingdom of Afghanistan.
However, the stone once again returned to India when the ruby eventually passed to his grandson Shah Suja. Expelled from his homeland, he took refuge in the Punjab, where Ranjit Singh, Lion of the Punjab, forced him to surr
ender the jewel.
And, like so many of the famous gems of the Orient, the Timur Ruby traveled to England amongst a collection of Indian jewelry taken from the Lahore Treasury in 1849 when Britain annexed the Punjab to its Empire.
Queen Victoria was well pleased by her gift - she particularly admired what she termed the wonderful rubies, and on 23 October 1851 wrote in her journal: They are cabochons, uncut, unset, but pierced. The one is the largest in the world, therefore even more remarkable than the Koh-i-noor!
In April 1853 Garrards set four of these so-called 'rubies' in a new diamond-encrusted gold and enamel necklace 'of Oriental design,' with four diamond pendants also from Lahore. At the center of the necklace came the huge rose-pink stone of 352 carats that Queen Victoria had especially noted. Two months later, Garrards adjusted the necklace to allow this stone to be detached for use as a brooch and to alternate with the recently recut
Koh-i-noor diamond.
Story of The Black Prince's Ruby
Saturday, September 6, 2008
Happy 3 Year Anniversary!
Jake and I celebrated our 3-Year anniversary! I surprised Jacob by hanging up hearts all around the house. I had written different things I love about Jacob on each heart. This was so fun for me to do. I finished at about 3 am and I was so giddy anticipating his reaction that I had a hard time falling asleep. Boy, do I ever love this kid. I was also deeply touched recalling all of the things he does for me and the kindness he has shown me.
Friday, September 5, 2008
Dance Recital
I am taking a Middle Eastern Dance class. It is so fun. I just love it. The instructor is such a builder and she is half Armenian so she feels deeply about dance and strives to create a strong sisterhood. We performed in a recital outside in a park. The audience sat on blankets on the side of a hill opposite the "stage". This seemed like the perfect setting for such a traditional dance. Throughout time dancing has been a way for women to bond. Women used to dance for one another as well as men. I love the sisterhood that is found in Middle Easter Dance. It is also an extremely technical dance form. I enjoy the challenge of mastering it and believe me that is a struggle. I feel like the most clumsy one in the entire class.
Our beginner class only had 4 people. It was a cozy environment. I made friends with a girl, Lizzie, who is 23-years old. She thought I was around her same age and wanted to set me up with her brother-in-law who recently returned from a mission. :) I am starting to notice some signs of aging so this made me feel particularly good.
Now I am taking an intermediate class and it has a lot more students. Jenny Stanger is also taking the class with me.
I am enjoying this time to learn and grow before our family starts. :)
Mosiah 20:1-5
1 Now there was a place in aShemlon where the daughters of the Lamanites did gather themselves together to sing, and to bdance, and to make themselves merry.
Errands Galore
This was my errand list: (As you can see, I had 11 different places to go. The list is in order of when I went to each place.)
- Sams Club: Gas and groceries
- Chase Bank
- Dollar Store for a pill box--for all of the infertility medicine and the prenatal pills, and aspirin. Some days I'm taking 7 different pills. I am too young to have a pill box. Alas.
- Copy at Staples
- Mail letters
- Take stuff back to Albertson's
- Macey's deposit money
- DI-dropped stuff left over from garage sale
- Take back stuff from Michaels
- Return library books
- Pick up prescriptions at Allens
Monday, September 1, 2008
Boys Weekend
Lynn loves Johnny B's restaurant. It's a good thing everybody had previously been to Johnny B's many times because after the service they recieved today, none of them would ever go back.
Bad Service at Johnny B's
1. bad water brought out.
2. guy w/ bloody bandaged hand
* Sundae with a dry brown spot, could be blood, could be old chocolate
3. new water brought out John and Joe saw the waitress scoop something out of the picture of water she put on the table for them to drink.
I felt good because Jake called me on his cell phone as soon as he had reception. (Cell phones do not work in Arbon. This is an acute sign of remoteness. I'm telling you it's in the middle of nowhere.) Anyhow, Jake called me and I was so happy when he told me the he missed me. I could tell by his voice that he really meant it. He also said that he was homesick for me and kept thinking about me and coming home. Boy do I love this kid!