Saturday, August 10, 2013

Garrett and His Mom Meet Up

It has always taken me a few months to find friends when I move to a new place. With the exception of Austin, I found dear friends there almost immediately - a fluke. I have several wonderful friends in San Antonio after living here for 3 years, but some of them work, or live far away, etc. So when Garrett started having a more predictable nap schedule, I decided it was time we make some "baby friends" - i.e. time for baby AND adult interaction, and a good excuse to get out of the house. There's a website I had been aware of for a while but had never tried, called meetup.com, where you can join different groups with different interests in your area. Great! Sign me up! But, y'all, there are mommy groups a-plenty. So I joined two: a Christian moms' group in my area (everyone's houses and most of the meet-ups are less than 10 minutes away) and a "crunchy" moms' group (members of this group live all over town, so sometimes we have to drive a bit). We have had the best time! Garrett has made lots of good friends and we have seen parts of San Antonio we might have otherwise missed.

One of my favorite places so far is the Japanese Tea Garden. My crunchy moms' group took a field trip to ride the train at the zoo a few weeks ago. One of the stops that the train makes is at this garden, which from the street doesn't look like much other than a hike up some rock steps (daunting to me since I have 25 extra pounds to tote around on my hip). But when you get to the top ... breathtaking.
Made it to the top! Garrett is appreciating the beauty.
The cool stone pavilion at the top
The gardens are a former quarry, owned by the City of San Antonio Parks & Recreation.
Not sure you can see them in this photo, but there are koi in the water below.
Another group I joined a little more recently is a Christian moms' group headquartered in my neck of the woods. We see this group 2-3 times a week on average as our tradition is to do some kind of activity in the morning before G's first nap. The other moms are really lovely and have welcomed us. We have gone to several play dates at people's houses, lunch out, library baby time, open play at a children's gym (which Garrett LOVED), etc.

Yesterday, the group did something really cool. One of the organizing moms is expecting her second child so we threw her a surprise baby shower! We were able to meet in a room at a local library, and it just so happened to be a book shower! I thought this was just the cutest idea. Each mom brought one of her favorite children's books and a snack to go along with it. I brought the book A Chair for My Mother by Vera B. Williams and, since there's a chocolate cake on the cover, chocolate mini cupcakes. I geeked out a little on the presentation, as Russ so kindly pointed out, and built a mini-chair (that resembled the one in the book, of course) on which to display my cupcakes. I actually held back a little because I really wanted to upholster it properly. But I also love the fabric so I just wrapped it around some boxes and can use for another project in the future.

The chair from the book, for comparison's sake. :)
I loved a few of the other combos as well...
Eight Silly Monkeys with mini bananas, Green Eggs and Ham with ham & pesto sandwiches, and Peter Rabbit's Hello, Peter! with carrots & dip
The Very Hungry Caterpillar with fruit and Barnyard Dance with pigs in a blanket
Blueberries for Sal with blueberry pie and blueberry lemonade
And a couple more shots of the festivities ...
A dozen or so moms and even more kids means the party was pretty much complete pandemonium.
The mom-to-be-again, Candice, and me & Garrett.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

2013 Summer Garden

The following is an exhaustive account of my 2013 summer garden. You have been warned.

One of the things I was SO excited about in moving to a house (vs. an apartment) was being able to have a garden! We're renting, so I am limited on what I can alter in the yard, but I cooked up a plan for a garden that can be reversed when we move out. There's a little wedge of space in our backyard that gets full sunlight all day, right outside the back door and close to the house so I don't have to haul the hose across the yard every time I need to water. Unfortunately the spot was "landscaped" with some dying plants, a couple boulders, and a bunch of gravel. I am probably responsible for the dying plants because, as you can see below (bottom right), they were once thriving.
Source: Zillow.com | circa 2011
A little better view of our backyard and where the garden is.
Anywho, they were dying, ok dead, now ... onward! I hired a couple of boys from down the street to move the rock into a big pile (to be replaced at a later date) because I don't do that kind of manual labor, y'all, I am a delicate flower. All that youthful energy - they had it done in 30 minutes! And then they put out my soil, too! Unfortunately, it being Texas and all, it completely dried out and then we had crazy wind for 3 days so most of it blew out. But I put some more out, a little of which Bernoulli ate. 
Lookin' good ... now for some plants
B after a satisfying meal of compost
My neighbor, Mrs. Sally, knew of a good nursery up the road that she had been wanting to take me to when she found out I "gardened." So we loaded up the little boy and headed to Schertz Nursery. She said it used to be owned by someone else and was much more impressive. I thought it was fine - maybe not the selection I was hoping for but, hey, it wasn't a big box store. I got 2 squash plants (yellow crookneck, per my Granny, and zucchini), 2 organic strawberry plants, a purple beauty bell pepper plant, an okra plant and 2 organic tomato plants (celebrity, also per Granny). I also got seeds for beans and watermelon. I also got a bag of peanuts at the grocery store because I wanted to try to grow them, but folks, it turned out those peanuts were roasted and salted and they did nothing in the soil! 
The okra struggled a little to get started. Here is the first pod it produced. I learned that okra likes it pretty hot and sunny because it has really started to produce later in the summer.
Squash plants just starting out. Yellow crookneck in the foreground, zucchini in the back.
Things were clickin' along pretty good, with the exception of my tomatoes. The first two plants died immediately upon being planted. I went to another nursery where I was advised that my soil may have been too rich (read: fertilized) because I bought the yucky pre-fertilized stuff at Lowe's -- that's all I could find! So I got 4 more plants, another breed, which also promptly died. So 2013 was not the summer for me to grow tomatoes, better luck next time, self. But there was another, more tragic death. Let's start with how WELL the squash were doing. They got big fast and were producing like rock stars, if rock stars produced, which is to say, very well. See here.
And then I went a did something stupid. I was trimming dead and diseased leaves from the zucchini plant, and I'll be darned if I didn't chop that vine right off at the roots. I was almost in tears. It had been nothing but good to me! Russ was sure we could just stick the butt of the vine back in the ground and it would re-root and grow. It did not. The zucchini's good friend, yellow crookneck, was heartbroken and in 2 weeks' time also died, spontaneously.
Going ... going ...
Gone.
Boo hiss. At least I had this guy to keep my spirits up. Very effective, indeed.
Garrett boy
I should also mention that the beans never really took off. Probably didn't like the rich soil either, as they grew fine in their little pots filled with non-fertilized soil, but withered once they got in the big garden. 
The other plants did ok. The strawberry never produced much, although they showed good signs at first, with several offshoots and such. 
And the pepper plant has probably produced six-ish peppers, which turned out to be purple just on the skin - I was hoping they'd be purple all the way through and sweeter like red/orange/yellow ones.
A little later in the season I put the watermelon in the ground. I wasn't sure at first that they'd do much, but after they took off they took OVER. Now my entire garden is a watermelon patch, which I am fine with, because its only roommates are a healthy but no-longer-producing pepper plant and the okra, which doesn't need the sprawl space.
Watermelon, just starting out
The first watermelon rotted on the ground; lesson learned. So Russ wanted to pick the next one early. Too early. We are trying to get this one juuuust right. And the ones on the ground we put plastic plates under to prevent rot.

Thanks for tuning in for the highs and lows of the summer 2013 garden!

Monday, August 5, 2013

Garrett's First Birthday, Part II

Several days after we got back from Boston, we had Garrett's San Antonio party with friends here (and his Grandma Morrison). It was suuuuuper hot, and I have come to the realization that Garrett's Texas birthday parties just need to happen indoors or at night. But it was still fun. Russ grilled hamburgers and hot dogs and I made a "real" strawberry cake to go along with the "ballpark" theme. We also had veggies, fruit, chips, Cracker Jacks, and condiments galore!
Mom and her finished masterpiece
A close-up of the ballpark cake. The stuff around the sides is meant to reflect traditional ballpark foods - soda, Cracker Jacks, pretzels, and bubble gum.
My mom was in town to celebrate with us and, of course, help me prepare for the par-tay. In typical Morrison fashion, there were a lot of unforseen circumstances the night before: (1) Bernoulli ate a good portion of 2 of the 3 layers I had baked for the cake, (2) my mom drank hydrogen peroxide, (3) Russ's self-inking Rx stamp got all over the inside of the dryer making it a big pain to wash the tablecloth for the party (thank goodness for moms and magic erasers), and (4) some other stuff I can't remember...
Bernoulli's handiwork (pawdiwork?)
The party started at 2, just when things were getting really hot. We had a good turn-out, lots of kiddos and babies! I felt really blessed to have such wonderful community and support for raising Garrett.
L to R: Jean & Aaron (friends from Austin), Jodey & Susan (friends from SA), and Sally (neighbor)
Aunt KayLynn helping Garrett cool off. I'm sure he spit it all over her! :/
L to R: Susan, me, and Jodey. Susan is my Bible study leader and a wonderful friend (and sewing buddy).

L to R: Trevon, Samantha, Jenny, and Garrett. No one actually got in the pool - even too hot for swimming!?
L to R: Julie, Matt, and Silas. Julie is a friend from Bible study.

L to R: Ron and Sue (church friends) and Jenny (neighbor/church friend)

Samantha & Trevon (one of G's best baby buddies)

L to R: Trevon, Maddax, and Garrett, baby buddies
L to R: Hong's mom, Maddax, Aaron, and Hong
Everyone was singing "Happy Birthday" to G here; he doesn't quite know what to think.
A super fun ride-on toy from Grandma Morrison. Russ looks scary excited here...