Wednesday, November 29, 2006

A new place to play


I have found a new place to play! Check out this website! http://snowflakes.lookandfeel.com/
You can cut snowflakes, share them in the gallery and download them to your computer. Note the fact you can review and undo your flakes, this made my flake making much easier.
I though with all the teachers, librarians, mothers and twiddlers I have visiting my blog all of you would enjoy playing with this.











Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Not a pretty picture

Nothing new, except my face is now red and swollen ~ apparently a result of the sinus infection. I hope it goes away soon.

*****Edited, I removed the face photo. Too ugly for words*****

Monday, November 27, 2006

Sinus infection

Face hurts.
Head hurts.
Chills.
Disgusting booger nose.
Story due at 5 p.m.
DH working late tonight.
I want someone to take care of me now. :(

Saturday, November 25, 2006

How much is that doggy in the window?

We took Ginger in to get her hernia operation today and spent two hours killing time driving around Bountiful, UT because we didn’t want to make the trip twice. Since we had pets on our mind we visited a couple of pet stores.
It was fun, fascinating and a little surreal all at the same time.
First we stopped at Petco where we found all kinds of pricy pets and toys, mostly toys. We could have bought our cat a collar with a LED light attached to it for hours of play time. DS-12 really wanted it and carried it around the store, but we ditched it at the door because it cost $10.
The store had all kinds of fun animals; DS-12 liked the ferrets and the fish. But the most interesting to me was the chinchilla. All I know about chinchillas is the have soft fur … very desirable in coat making. When I saw it I couldn’t figure out what it was. It looked rather like a cross between a rat and a bunny. It was soft and bunny like, but it had a long tail. One of the employees told me the details.
Apparently chinchilla are not particularly friendly pets, but they will warm up with enough handling.
Of course if you buy the coat, you don’t have to spend the extra time to make it friendly.
Whoops, was that politically incorrect of me?
We also stopped in at “Bird World” where they were advertising a “Giant Puppy Sale.” Since we wanted to see what a Giant puppy looked like, we parked the car and checked it out.
Apparently the puppies were not giant, but the sale was.
Puppies were now priced as low as $499.00 for a non-registered poodle mix.
Yikes!
Still, I do like poodles. An acquaintance of mine several years ago had a standard poodle and he was really cool. Later a friend had a pet poodle that DH and I babysat shortly after our wedding. She was funny as all get out.
But I just don’t see myself paying $500 for a dog. It was a swallow hard moment when we had to pay for Ginger, and the price included the cost of getting her spayed and microchipped. Camelot pet spa and resort doesn’t let you have a pet unless it has been altered.
Meanwhile …. Back at the ranch moment

When I grew up dogs and cats were free to good homes as advertised in the local newspaper. The first dog I remember, Annie, named after Little Orphan Annie because she just showed up one day, was ~ I believe ~ part golden retriever ~ and she was a great dog. She regularly had puppies under the bunkhouse and as soon as the puppies were old enough to debut, Dad crawled into her den and pulled them out one-by-one for us all to inspect.
I don’t recall having any trouble giving the pups away, but at some point we did have Annie spayed.
She had a puppy named Goofy that well lived up to his name.
Annie had one run-in with a porcupine and came home with a snoot full of quills. I remember how she howled as Dad pulled those quills out with a pair of pliers. Thereafter Annie kept far away from the wildlife. Goofy, on the other hand, regularly returned from his jaunts with his nose bristling like a pin cushion. He never learned to leave porcupines alone.
Later we had a dog we named “Hopi” as in “Hopi doesn’t get hit by a car,” “Hopi’s a good cattle dog,” “Hopi’s good with the kids.” Alas, Hopi did get hit by a car.
So did my first Siamese cat, Ming. I got her from a dear friend and loved her dearly, madly, deeply.
She was a great mouser and a good mother. Mom had her bred with a Siamese male to get her first batch of kittens, which were born under the dining room table in our ranch house. We all gathered around the box to watch the big event, and her first kitten came out tail first. It was once a common abnormality for Siamese cats to have kinks in their tails, and this kitten’s tail was like a corkscrew. When mom saw that odd looking tail being born she got on the phone with the vet in a panic, but squiggles was born perfectly normal except for the strange tail.
After Ming I got another Siamese kitten, Pepsi, who gave birth to Spock. Eventually Mom changed their names to Pesky and Squawk to better match their personalities.
Squawk disappeared on the ranch; we believe he became food to some other animal. Pepsi live a long life and was eventually put down at the vet.
Mom and Dad also had BoJo, a beautiful golden retriever they inherited from on of my brother’s friends. BoJo proved to be a good companion for both of them. On the day my father died he started to feel sick while taking his last walk with BoJo. This dear dog kept mom company after my father’s death.
We have had numerous other pets in our life. The white cat Vicki so named because of the grey V shaped marking on top of her head; my cat Beau, a friend when I need one in my single world in Montpelier, Idaho. Elvira and Sulu my brother’s cats, Elvira met with a most untimely death and Sulu keep Little Bro company through his bachelorhood. He was recently given a vet assisted death because he was so old and sick.
I come from pet people.
(Well, there is one niece who dislikes cats and her children are terrified of them)
I, like my niece, am in peril of becoming the crazy cat lady. I truly wanted to take the owl finches, the poodle puppy and the rest of Ginger’s litter home with me. (By the way, apparently Cinnamon, the cat we decided not to adopt because she clawed DS-12, is in fact a male. The pet spa discovered this when they checked her/him for spaying/neutering.)
Good thing my DH stands as the voice of reason.

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Don't look ... it's gaining on you

Just a reminder for family members so we are all on the same page:
Little Bro. put the Christmas list in his calendar, but for those of you who can’t find yours, here is the list:
R&LD have the Bs
G&RB have the Ls
L &JS have the Ds
D&AL have the Little Bros
R&TS have the Hillybilly sis
Ready or not Christmas is on it’s way!

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

A low key Thanksgiving

DS-7 came home from school with this headband today. It is made like gum rapper chains but with larger strips of paper. I’ve been trying to figure out how to make gum rapper chains (you guessed it, scrapbook related) so I had him show me the trick.
He was very proud of himself.
We will be having a low-key Thanksgiving this year. DH has to work on Thursday, he had the choice to work Thanksgiving or Christmas and he chose to work on Thanksgiving.
I have rolls rising and have finished baking a pumpkin pie. We will be having a ham dinner tonight in honor of the event. I might even get fancy and put a tablecloth and candles on the table.
I’m currently suffering from some kind of stuffy nose, sore throat, achy body ailment that makes every movement uncomfortable. I hurt in odd places, like on the bridge of my nose and along the jaw line. I’m not sure what’s up, but I do look forward to a few days of not getting up at 7 a.m. to get the children to school.
Ginger is feeling a little under the weather, too. I took her to the Vet Monday to have her stitches taken out from being spayed and was told the bulge on her belly (from the spaying) is in fact a hernia. We have an appointment set for Saturday to have the same people who gave her the hernia fix it. DH isn’t working on Saturday, so we will probably make a day of the trip into Bountiful.
To add injury on top of injury, this morning she was running around and had the front door shut on her hind leg. Now she’s crying and limping. I took her to the Vet again today and the leg isn’t broken.
We have a great Vet; he hasn’t charged us yet for the stitches removal, clipping her claws (yeah!) or checking her leg for a break. We buy our pet food from him, so he does get our business.
I hope all the friends and family out there in blogworld are having, have had a great Thanksgiving.
I’m sending a special shout out to Holland, I hope they find out what’s going on with you. Love you girl!
And the BowlDoggs, have a grand holiday, I wish I could have been there for the wedding.

This is a photo of our next door neighbor putting up the Christmas lights. It was a cold and windy day, and she was perched up there like some kind of bird. It entertained me, so I snapped the shot. Ahh to be young and bulletproof again.

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Say whaaaaa...?

I am feeling out of focus and out of control. Now this is not exactly new, but it has been intensified lately with DH working two jobs.
It seems like much of my life is at the whim of forces around me. I never know from one week to the next what DH schedule will be, what work I will be doing for the newspaper and what I should be doing for my children or my church job.
This is not a good season to be feeling so fuzzy. I have stacks and stacks of work to do, as does anyone in charge of the holiday for their family.
As an example:
My boss called Friday after more than a week of no contact and gave me a list of four stories to write this week. He wants two of them tomorrow.
Logan had a talk to write for church today.
We desperately needed haircuts for the boys, and DH had to go to work, so I needed to make sure he had a clean shirt.
At about 5 p.m. last night I threw some chicken in the crock pot to cook it for the enchiladas’ I was going to make for today’s dinner. DH came home after 11 p.m. and asked me what I planned to do with the chicken. Whoops. I can’t smell it cooking, so I forgot it was in there.
While we visited I cleaned out the refrigerator to make room for the crock pot. I put a leftover pork chop in a smaller bowl and talked to DH about his day.
Then I went to bed and left the crock pot full of chicken sitting on the kitchen counter
.
Fortunately DH noticed it and asked me if I wanted to put it in the fridge.
Umm, duh!
Sure I do.
If anyone out there has ideas of how I can keep on task, I truly would appreciate the advice.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

more photos, as requested

Right now the only thing I am photographing is Ginger. I feared this might be a little dull for blog readers, but as my big sister requested more photos, here they are.






Friday, November 17, 2006

The one thing worst than a dentist

Is not having a dentist when you need one.
Poor DS-12 is not having a good weekend. He had two teeth pulled today. They were baby teeth, but the permanent teeth growing in behind them are crooked so they were not disolving the roots of the baby teeth.
Looks like we have braces (and the bills) in his future.
To add insult to injury the tooth pulling meant he had to miss helping with an Eagle Scout project today and a camp-out tonight. Truth to tell, I don't think he's all that upset about missing the camp out.
What's more, he has to give a talk in church on Sunday.
I guess it could be worse. His cousin H spent a few days this week at Primary Children's Hospital getting a cyst removed from her neck.
Sorry Razer and Hollers, we couldn't make it over to visit you because DH had to work and my car is not reliable enough to make the trip.
I hope you are on the mend, my friend.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Cuz I deserve it

You deserve it.
I’ve been hearing that a lot lately, and not in the snide” you done me wrong and now your foot is stuck in a mud puddle, Ha, Ha, Ha!” way.
More in the “I know this is an insane luxury, but I want it so by golly I deserve it” way.
I saw the most glaring example of this while watching “Doctor 90210” (Yep, I watch crap like that) while waiting for DH to come home from work one night.
The featured subject was a woman in her, say, mid 40s, with three daughters, a doting husband, a nice house and a fine figure.
The problem, under her clothing her belly was showing the effects of giving birth to those three daughters and was saggy and baggy. Raise you hand if you managed to reach your mid 40s, rather or not you gave birth to three children, without getting some saggy, baggy going on in the middle region.
I though not.
This woman, however, was not pleased. Understandable, I’m not pleased, either. And had taken herself to Dr. 90210 to have the saggy, baggy removed and ~ as a fun bonus, lift and separate the girls.
While under the knife she also had some work done to get rid of those unfortunate lines, baggy eyes, etc.
This is all fine and good. I don’t suppose there is a mid-40 woman in America who wouldn’t like to be less ~ well 40 looking. While I don’t see myself getting a body overhaul I can’t say as I don’t understand her desire to do so.
What I don’t understand is the doctor’s statement; “You Deserve It!”
Why?
Why does one saggy, baggy woman in California deserve the lift, separate and de-wrinkle treatment more than say a saggy, baggy woman in Utah?
I frankly don’t believe I deserve it. I deserve the saggy, baggy, wrinkled and droopy face and body I currently sport.
I earned it by golly!
There was a time that growing old gracefully meant getting saggy and baggy and not making a big old fuss about it. Now, I guess it is not allowing the saggy and baggy to occur and go kicking and screaming into middle age.
While I can’t say I embrace the changes, I have come to accept them. Graceful or not, that is who I am.

Updating!

I updated my blogger and I'm playing with the results.

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Shane E Pie is getting wed!

I am blogging this from my husband's desktop because that **** cat walked across the keyboard and deleted the toolbar on my internet. Gurrrrrr.


The wedding announcement came in the mail today. I have seen pictures of his bride-to-be on his sister's blog and was stuck by how much she looked like said sister. You can see Shane and Sister, along with my oldest DS who is now 12 in the heart photo.
The thing that struck me most about the wedding photo, however, is how happy Shane looks. It brings tears to my eyes.
Shane is one of the dearest young men you could ever happen to meet, and not just because he reminds me of my father. They had a wonderful relationship and both Shane and I believe my father (Shane's grandpa) is still watching over him.
If this is true, we have to think he's smiling in heaven to see Shane taking such a charming young lady to wife.
Actually, I don't know a whole lot about the bride except she get a glowing recommendation from his sister, who arranged the match.
Bride is young, 20 compared to Shane's 28, and athletic. She has a basketball scholarship and was working as a mechanic at Jiffy Lube when Shane met her.
According to Shane's mom, the bride likes a clean house. Which will no doubt be a novelty in our family. Sister says the bride is uber spiritual.
I am sure she is exceptional, as Shane is an exceptional young man as well. Alas, his shyness had his parents worrying that he would never wed.
This photo is not just a charming photograph of a couple about to start their life together. It is a snapshot of hopes and dreams of many people who love Shane and no doubt will come to love his wife, as well.
By the way, Dogg, if you are reading this. I want more babies in the family at our Easter Egg hunt, A, L and H are officially too old to play now and we have to keep the fun going.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Ohch, get your claws out of me!

Ginger is settling in and we are adjusting. I’m quite sure she thinks her name is “Ahhh, Ouch, NOOOO! Let go!” Due to her tendency to perch on shoulders and climb legs, rather or not they are covered with clothing.
As you can see, she has taken up a rightful place next to the computer so she can keep both eyes on me. I have become her mother, DS-12 a nice companion and DS-7 a large, fun toy.
Augh, I just caught sight of her out of the corner of my eye. She’s circling. Thank goodness I put my blue jeans on this morning.
I must try to sneak away and get a\ho shower (whoops, she walked across the keyboard). 3333333333333333333333333b ngh555555555555555555555
edddddddd
+ - 1 - 1 - 1 -0P
Note to self. Buy a water sprayer and work on teaching her some manners.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Good to know

Last night the phone rang with the dreaded Saturday night call. DS-7 had been assigned a talk in Primary (the LDS Church program for children ages 3-12) and I was blissfully unaware of this assignment.
Now in years past this would be a reason for full-boar panic. But after serving as a member of the Primary Presidency I have developed my own last-minute-talk system.

A) Do not leave the presidency hanging unless your family has been struck with a barfy flu or diarrhea.
B) Invite said child over for a chat. Remind him/her of the talk assignment. Ask what he wishes to use as a talk subject. Some guidance may be necessary here, for example I suggested DS-7 might want to talk about thanks since November is the month of Thanksgiving.
C) Get out a notebook and pen/pencil and ask him some pointed questions. In the case of the Thanksgiving talk I asked what he was thankful for and why.
Write it down, type it up, and let him read in for his talk.
Here is what DS-7 said:

"My talk today will be about giving thanks.
I am thankful for the earth because we live here. It has water and mountains and fresh air.
I am thankful for my new pet cat, Ginger, because she’s fun, she plays a lot and she makes me smile.
I am thankful for Mom, because she helps me and Dad because sometimes he takes me fishing with the uncles.
I am thankful for L----. I like to play split screen on the video games with him.
I am thankful for my teachers in school and Primary. I like to go to school and I like to learn new things.
I am thankful for books,
food,
animals,
trees and my house.
I have so many things to be thankful for, I can’t even name them all.
I think giving thanks is important because it makes me remember how many things I have been given.
I say these things in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen."


I will admit to doing some editing. I dropped the part about how he was not thankful for his brother because he was “mean to me every day” and when he started listing everything he spotted at random “uhhh, the sleeping bag, ummm, paper,” I replaced it with the “I can’t even name them all line.”
The Primary leaders, who have sat through countless badly performed morality tale readings from the Church’s children magazine, find this kind of talk a welcome relief.
The child in question is proud of himself because the leaders offer him sincere complements for his work and the child learns how to write his own talk.
Best of all, I don’t have to thumb a stack of children’s magazines looking for a morality tale for my child to read badly in front of his peers.
Also good to know:
Hair pompadour! If you have baby fine, stick straight hair this is a great way to control the stuff. I was introduced to it several months ago by a hair stylist, or technician or whatever they call themselves now days.
After washing and drying my hair (with a hair dryer, standing on my head and back combing ~ a process us old folks remember as being ratting ) I put a little bit of the hair pompadour on my fingers and slick everything into place. I can make it flip under or up, mold it so the bang’s don’t fall in my face and fluff up the back. It’s great stuff. Try it!

Saturday, November 11, 2006

She's heeeeere!

The much anticipated day is here. Ginger is now a member of the family. And as is true when any new creature joins the family there are adjustments to be made.
DS-12 loves and is annoyed by her. She is cuddly. This is great when one is in the mood to cuddle. Not so much when one want’s mom to get of the computer so one can play some obscure fantasy world game.
She is a charming little thing, very much like her predecessor. Difference I have seen: she likes to claw things. Not your gentle stretching out and easing a claw into the carpet, but bold-faces kneading.
She kneads the floor, the chair and the neck of whoever happens to be holding her. Since DS-12 tends to be the one holding her, he is also the one most likely to be clawed.
She is not above eating people food. While not an outright beggar like our cat sitting friend “Boo” she is not above asking for sliced sandwich meat, and eating it when offered.
Other than that, she seems to be a fine little animal.

Friday, November 10, 2006

As we prepare for Ginger

Our kitty is going to come home tomorrow!

Karen tells me she looks like this. I guess we need to buy the books.




Will she engage in cards, cross-species loving or cuddling the computer mouse?
I'm sure she will be crazy, but that's how we like our cats.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Phase one














Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Part two











I tried to download my step-by-step photos of star making, but blogger wouldn't let me do more than half of them. since I started at the end and worked forward, this is the last 10 steps. Think you can figure it out?

Someone sent me links where instructions can be found on-line.

http://www.d.umn.edu/~cstroupe/archive/3220/process/star/



http://www.highhopes.com/3dstar.html This one sells the paper!

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Go vote!

Just a reminder to go vote. I am not going to tell you how to vote, but I will warn you if you don't chose right the world is going to He$$ in a handbasket.
Just my opinion.

Wyo. Sis, or in this case MOS, DH and I talked about going north for Thanksgiving or south for the reception but I don't think we will be able to make it. DH can work during the break and make some extra Christmas cash, as compared to us spending money by traveling.
Tell S we love him and are proud of him. Are you going to get the invites in the mail soon?

A friend e-mailed this to me.

Just move your mouse around to get some cool effects. Click on the mouse if you want to change colors.

Monday, November 06, 2006

Oh my! Stars!

Older family members may remember the day BIL taught us how to make these Christmas stars. His family made them and sold them at Christmastime for extra spending money.
I think I am the only one of the crew that really took to the craft. I’ve been making them off an on since L taught us how to make them.
These are made from a double-sided scrapbook paper. I made them to help decorate my local scrapbook store (LSS). I have also advised her to make paper chains to decorate the business.
I and the DSs have also been making paper chains this weekend. DS-12 really enjoyed it. DS-7 was happy until he realized DS-12s chain was longer, and then he pouted for about 20 minutes. Ah the joys of sibling rivalry.
I’m thinking about making them to sell at the LSS but I’m not sure how much to charge. I figure it costs about 30 cents to make them and they take at least 15 minutes to make one. So if I pay myself $10 an hour, I would have to charge $3 per star. The question is, would people be willing to pay $3 a star.
I was working on one yesterday in Sunday School and had to leave because of tummy trouble. A few minutes later, one of the ladies who had been sitting behind me in class came up to me (I was sitting in the lobby) and asked how I made the star. Then a second came up with the same question.
I’m going to try to teach one of them how to do it on Friday and see how difficult it is to teach her, she is not at all crafty. If I can get her to figure it out, I can teach it in the LSS for a make and take.
I hope you are impressed with the arty nature of the photos. I spent about 20 minutes on the floor of my living room trying to get everything just right. You would think my house was going to be spectacular this Christmas, if you didn’t see the behind-the-scenes photo.
Yet another reason to love photography, you can always paint your life as being better than it actually is.

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Termite invasion, phase two

The termites are gone, they have been sprayed into oblivion, but for several weeks now I have been living with a largish square hole in the wall of my basement. With the arrival of colder weather, the hole has proved to be quite a disadvantage as we are now heating the ground under the house.
DH has also been leaving the basement bathroom window open about six inches when he showers, too, because we don’t have a fan and we are growing nice mold cultures. In short the basement is cold, moldy and full of holes.
This weekend DSs brothers came to repair the hole.
They came and did the work for free, out of the goodness of their hearts, or because they wanted to leave town for a couple of days or something.
You get what you pay for.
The hole is now covered with drywall. The crown molding has been replaced. By the way, miter cuts are not easy, not easy at all. Now all we have to do is mud and sand, mud and sand, mud and sand for a week or so before we prime, paint and clean sawdust out of everything in the basement.
Did I mention my computer, laundry, and scrap room are in the basement?
I am so over this termite business.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Wanna grow a frog?

It’s catalogue season at our house.
It started right before school with the school supplies, office supplies and paper products. All of which make me very happy.
Then we started getting birthday party catalogues, Oriental Trading Company catalogues themed to everything from crafts to religious paraphernalia.
Long about October the real avalanche hit the house. We have toy catalogues, knick knack catalogues, catalogues dedicated to beads, or paper or books.
They crawl out of our mailbox, cover kitchen counters and stack up in untidy piles in the bathroom, where they make great reading material for all jobs, long or short.
And the sad truth is, I love them.
I grew up in a very small town where catalogue shopping was rather necessary if you wanted any kind of variety in your purchases.
Mom bought Christmas from J.C. Pennys or Sears. Nothing said holidays at our house like the little pink “you have a package” slips in our mailbox.
Back then, packages either came to the catalogue store or the post office. Both were downtown.
Now the goods are delivered via UPS directly to the door. What joy!
Both catalogues and brown paper packages still give me a thrill. Oh, the possibilities.
There is a trick to thumbing through a catalogue, and every member of my family has their own technique.
DS-7 is hard core. He sits down with a marker and after carefully perusing every page, reading the descriptions, asking me and his father to read the descriptions and studying it all once again, he circles his favorite items.
If DS-12 has a technique I have yet to see it, but I suspect it is on the line of DHs style, casually glancing at the pages then putting it down again.
I’m almost as dedicated as DS-7, my Wyoming Sister taught me a game to make the catalogue experience more fulfilling. I study each page and decide what I would buy if I had to buy something from each page. Sometimes I cheat and store up a page or two so I can buy several items from one page. It’s all imaginary money, anyway. So it doesn’t deplete my bank account or clutter up my house.
If I do, perchance, order something from the book I have the added fun of anticipating the arrival and opening the package to see if what I ordered is actually what I wanted. Sometimes it is, often it is not, but the anticipation always remains.
When I worked for Deseret Book my favorite job was unpacking the boxes. It was like finding a little treasure every time I slit the seal and opened the lid. Yes, I might be confronted with 24 copies of “The Work and the Glory,” but then again, the box could contain stuffed toys, or gel pens, or even scrapbook paper. (Yep, I was an addict, even then.)
Since I know I am not the only member of my extended family with a catalogue fetish, I have included a few links. Chances are good you will never order anything from any of the catalogues. But golly, they surely do pass time I might otherwise spend doing something useful and productive, and who wants that?

http://www.magiccabin.com/magiccabin/product.do?section_id=4&bc=1004&pgc=1104&sv=8701&cmvalue=MCD4BOOKS%20DEPARTMENTS87018701-P2

http://www.magiccabin.com/magiccabin/welcome.asp?sc=1004&body_sc=1004&occ=1004&firstEntry=Y

http://www.backtobasicstoys.com/

http://www.backtobasicstoys.com/item/productid/6091

http://www.youngexplorers.com/

Update: I just checked today's mail and found: "Etoys.com," "Gardener's Supply Company," "HP Home & Home office Store" and "Construction Playthings" cataloges. Maybe I'll go eat lunch now.

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Ginger, Cinnamon and Spice

“Ginger” is our new kitten, although we don’t actually have her yet.
She and her litter-mates (she is one of six kittens, three boys and three girls) are currently recovering from a respiratory infection at the Camelot Health Spa. DS-12 digitally cleaned the goop out of her eyes for the photo.


She also had an older brother at the spa. She is about 6-weeks old and her brother is something like four months old and recovering from some unnamed ailment. Apparently her kitty parents (or would that be grand-parents?) have allowed her fur mommy to reproduce freely.
Ginger’s cat mother decided at some point she no longer wanted to be a mother and stopped taking care of her six babies, and the little ones are being fattened up at their new temporary home.
I kind of want to bring them all home. I really love Siamese kittens.
The decision to take Ginger over her sisters Cinnamon and Spice was rather arbitrary. When the Spa caretakers hauled the three kittens out of their pen she gave one to DH, one to DS-12 and held one herself. Cinnamon, the one in DS-12s hands clawed him mercilessly, and I picked her off him rather the way one might pluck a barbed wire fence from a pair of blue jeans.
DS-12 did not like Cinnamon. But she and I managed to get along okay. I cuddled her down and set her to purring. One of Spice’s eyes was glued shut because of her cold, which made her look a little unattractive, but she was a little sweetie.
But Ginger had the good fortune (or perhaps bad fortune, it’s hard to say) of being handed to DH. She and DH dealt very well together so she was our pick.
These kittens are a lot more “Siamese” than Katie was. They are short haired, and have the triangle face, slinky body and big ears of pure breed Siamese. They are also noisy!
Katie wasn’t much of a talker. We didn’t even hear her meow for the first few weeks of her residency.

The list of kitty names continues to grow. DH is now partial to either keeping her “Ginger” name or going with something witchy like Endora, Esamarelda or Sarena.
I still like Mojo.


Swell pens

While we were in Bountiful, we stopped by the Office Max where I picked up some more pens. I’ve discovered a new fab pen, TOL. If you are a pen freak like I am, I believe you will like them.
I also found a Meed Composition Quad / College Ruled notebook.
The top half of the book is graph paper, the bottom is ruled paper. It’s a sewn notebook, like all those composition notebooks from your childhood.
I love it! DH, spotted it first, DS-12 grabbed two, I grabbed two and DS-7 wanted one, just because we did. We ended up buying the whole stack.
If you really want to see it, look here.
http://www.officedepot.com/ddSKU.do?level=SK&id=333648&D=2%20composition%20notebook&No=20&Dx=mode%20matchallpartial&cm_ite=composition_notebook&Nty=1&Ntx=mode%20matchallpartial&Ntt=composition%20notebook&N=100000&cm_pla=Pen_and_Paper-Notebook&uniqueSearchFlag=true&cm_cat=google&cm_ven=360i&Nr=100000&Ntk=all&An=text

I’ll be posting the story of my fun (?) Halloween as soon as I can get Blogger to take the photos.

Picking Ginger