• Living

    Basement Clothesline …

    The photo is kind of dark, but as they say on NPR’s Pop Culture Happy Hour — this is what’s making me happy this week. It’s a small-ish, 5-line clothesline I put up in the basement. When I first bought this house the whole basement was strung with clothesline — but the lines went the long way — and were in a place that was inconvenient (and they were kind of old and spiderwebby and scary). So when they replaced my water lines a few years ago, I had them cut them down. But as those of you who have…

  • Living

    Ready for winter …

     Fall seems to be upon us — here’s my evening walk the other night — the colors are changing all up and down the valley, it’s getting dark at a reasonable hour again, and there’s a tell-tale snap in the air. It’s actually beautiful today, sunny and warm, but not blazing hot like it’s been all summer. And yet, I’ve  spent the weekend pulling up all the tomatoes, the peppers, transplanting the two “Granpa’s pepper” (a Siberian ornamental with blazing hot fruits), putting up chives and mint in pots, transplanting the geraniums back into their winter windowbox. They say the…

  • Living

    Tilt-a-Whirl

    We’ve had a brutal summer here in Montana — temps consistently in the 90s, not even cooling off that much at night. Until the last week or so. The earth, thank goodness, seems to be starting it’s tilt away from the sun — there was frostbite on the cucumber vines yesterday morning and this morning, I’m sitting at my backyard table, under the dying apple tree (although it’s resurrected itself from suckers so often that I’m not giving up on it) wearing wooly socks, and a Pendelton shirt. I am a happy happy girl. Everything out here seems to be…

  • Living

    New Blog at Tumblr

    Since I’ve mostly been posting on Facebook and Twitter this summer, I thought I’d start playing around with Tumblr. You can follow LivingSmall there at this URL: http://livingsmallblog.tumblr.com/

  • Living

    Summer Update

     Here are the chickens in the perennial bed. Sorry for the long silence — it’s been hot and dry and I’ve been working on a new book. Also, my darling “borrowed” children have been here for the month, so I’ve been teaching Sophie to drive, teaching Lily to make jam, and just rough housing and goofing off with the little kids. Some update photos: While I’m still figuring out the new beds, and the soil needs another couple of years to build itself up, so far Im really thrilled with the new layout. The hoop house along the back is…

  • Living

    Backyard Farm Drama

    This is Miss Delaware (the white one). She’s my alpha hen — a funny, bossy, curious hen. She likes to be right up in everyone’s business. Which is fine, most of the time, but this morning she and my younger dog, Owen, had a little altercation. This is Owen (taken by our friend William Campbell last winter). Owie is the center of Owie’s universe — I’ve spoiled him, mostly because I think he’s hilarious. So, last night, we had a little rib eye on the grill, and this morning I tossed the bone out in the yard for whichever dog…

  • Living

    Row Covers Work

    I don’t have a photo, but the row covers on the pepper plants are working great. They look like they’ve grown 1/2 an inch since last weekend, and many are getting another set of leaves (they were pretty tiny seedlings). This is much better progress than I got last year under plastic, and that they’ve also been getting the benefit of rain is terrific. Ordered a long swath from Johnnys Seeds that just came this morning. I’m going to put the tomatoes out this weekend (well, depending on how true those snow reports look) and put them under Agribon. I…

  • Living

    Experimenting with Row Covers

    I transplanted the pepper plants yesterday — it’s been warm and sunny, and I was losing a few of them in the cold frame because they were in the little 4-packs, and sometimes I forget to water. So, into the new 8 x 3.5 foot bed at the end of the new garden. It’s a sunny spot, and the fence bounces a fair amount of heat, so I’m hoping it will be a good microclime for peppers. Every gardener has his or her obsession, and mine is peppers. This year, I have the usual assortment of oddball herilooms — most…

  • Living

    Creeping Geezerdom …

    Spring means morels, and morels mean the return of hiking. We’d both had sort of an intense week, so when yesterday dawned cool and sort of rainy after a week of unseasonable and unwelcome temps in the high 80s, Himself suggested we go out in the afternoon and look for morels. Now I haven’t quite hit the big half century mark, but I’m getting close enough that one notices certain changes during an afternoon in the woods. For one thing, there’s the vision issue. I’ve gotten into the habit of wearing my bifocals most of the time (since most of…

  • Living

    Montana Springtime, Snow to Flowers in 1000 Feet

    This is what we woke up to at the cabin this morning (that’s the motel building and the shed behind it. If any of you good readers would like to rent this property for a vacation, the listing is here: http://bit.ly/wCoIWE). Anyhow, things got exciting last night. For the first time this season, it looked like we’d be able to build a fire in the firepit and cook outside. And for a while, it was beautiful. Then I went inside to saute the morels, and by the time the sausages were grilled, the wind had picked up and it was spitting…