Faith exercising activity at Lazy T Ranch
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Shower
Monday, September 27, 2010
Old barn
The barn at the corner of Hotchkiss and Mackinaw Roads was falling down when I first enrolled at the community college, ten years ago. Surprisingly, most of the building still stands, though each year it becomes more decrepit. It is Betsy who passes the barn, now, on her way to early morning classes.
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Friday, September 24, 2010
Zoom
f4.0 1/250 55mm |
I add another lens to my camera bag. Betsy told me I need better zoom. She says I get in a rut with my portrait lens.
My friend Bianca, owner of a macro lens, agreed that telephoto lens would be beneficial. So I purchased the EF-S 55-250 mm f/4-5.6 IS lens. It compliments my 18-55mm lens and fit my budget.
And now, Betsy, Bianca and I are all happy.
My friend Bianca, owner of a macro lens, agreed that telephoto lens would be beneficial. So I purchased the EF-S 55-250 mm f/4-5.6 IS lens. It compliments my 18-55mm lens and fit my budget.
And now, Betsy, Bianca and I are all happy.
f4.0 1/200 70mm |
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Water
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Lake excuse
I had an excuse to visit the beach this week. I had a job interview Tuesday afternoon at a high school within walking distance of Lake Huron. So after answering questions about lesson planning and classroom management, I stashed my hose and black pumps in the trunk of the car and joined my Mom and two of my sisters on the shores of one of the Great Lakes.
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Monday, September 20, 2010
Lazy T
Our church gathered at the Lazy T Ranch on Friday and Saturday for our annual camping outing. Along with roasting marshmallows and sharing devotions around the campfire, we painted with light Friday night.
Sunday, September 19, 2010
You know me
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Caseville
Friday, September 17, 2010
ICU, TCU deja vu
We went back to ICU and TCU, Julie, Betsy and I, Wednesday afternoon. We drove the streets, rode the elevators, walked the halls, breathed the disinfectant. We peered through the window in door to the Neuro Trama ICU. "You were in the room across from the nurses' station," I told Betsy. "And Aaron was a couple of rooms down from yours."
Since they were wheeled in on stretchers, when they were in the hospital Julie and Betsy had no sense of direction. I knew it too well--the waiting room with an ice machine, the restroom with a sink with a counter to set your contact solution on while putting your contacts in your eyes, closing time at the cafeteria, the nurses' station where they would give you a blanket at three o'clock in the morning.
Along with the main campus, we also visited TCU, where Julie spent five weeks. The nurses were delighted to see us. We laughed together, remembering the day the shower room flooded during Julie's shower extravaganza. We sat in the dayroom where Julie and I decorated cookies one day after she graduated to a wheelchair, and where I escaped to cry on the days Julie was depressed, and where all the patients gathered one day to watch the crack house across the street burn.
But this time we were at ICU and TCU for just a visit. After a few minutes we walked out together--all three of us--and came home together.
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Blueberry juice
The blueberry farm is closed. The signs are put away; buckets cleaned for storage; books balanced. But there are still a few blueberries on the bushes. A few berries beset with persistent stems, and polluted with squishy, shriveled berries. It would be torture to sort the berries for market. But the berries, stems and all, are suitable for juice.
Monday Julie and I picked bucketsful of blueberries to be made into juice. Last year we bought a steamer juicer. Turning berries into juice allows us to use berries that don't meet market quality standards. We sell the juice, or we add sugar and pectin and turn it into blueberry jelly.
Our juicer has three parts. The bottom section holds water; the middle collects the juice; and the top, colunder-like-container, holds the berries. Steam from boiling water rises through a cone-like passage to the top compartment where it extracts juice from the berries. The juice drips to the middle section where it flows down a flexible tube to a stainless steal pan.
Like fresh berries, blueberry juice is rich in anti-oxidants and vitamins. Our blueberries juice contains only blueberries, with no added sugar. The red-violet juice is full of flavor. As one of our customers said, it will tickle your tonsils.
Monday, September 13, 2010
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Saturday, September 11, 2010
Fishery
Friday, September 10, 2010
Closed doors
July 26th
--Interview at a Junior High School in a rural town an hour away for a position as a remedial English and math teacher.
--Principal called a week later: Don't give up, you'll be a great teacher. We hired someone with more experience.
August 9th
--Interview with a non-profit organization in the city half an hour away for a position teaching alternative education high school math.
--Polite letter: We were impressed with your background, but we've filled the position.
August 24th
--Interview at alternative high school two hours away for a position as English/math teacher.
--Principal called two days later: Lots of competition; we were impressed with your creativity, but we filled the position.
August 27th
--Interview with rural high school twenty minutes away for a position as coordinator/teacher in an adult/alternative education program.
--Polite letter: Hard decision; best of luck, but we filled the position.
Also
--Phone conversation with the principal of a small Christian school in Kansas. Urged me to consider joining the ministry, but curriculum conflicted with my philosophy of education.
--Email and phone communication about tutoring homeschool student on the other side of the world. Someone else volunteered.
--Email and phone communication about tutoring homeschool student on the other side of the world. Someone else volunteered.
I am still looking for the open door.
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Bridge walk
Early morning walkers cross the Mackinac Bridge as the sun rises on Lake Huron. Governor Granholm led the way by running across the five mile bridge. Thousands of participants followed the governor on the bridge that connects Michigan's upper and lower peninsulas. (I took this photo as we drove to the St. Ignace side of the bridge where the walk began.)
Julie and Betsy walked the Big Mac. Every Labor Day part of the Mackinac Bridge is closed to vehicles and open for pedestrians. This spring, when our living room was still jammed with hospital bed and wheelchair, Julie and Betsy set their goal on walking across the five mile bridge.
Monday, seven months, two weeks and five days after the accident, they met that goal.
"Look for the red sweatshirt" Julie told me. Amanda, Kendra and David Byler joined Julie and Betsy in walking the bridge; they are somewhere in the crowd of thousands of people also walking across the bridge.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
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