A Moment's Reflection

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

FL Fun

Most everything we own is still in boxes...


But we've been busy making the most of our time together.
and crocheting time...
J starts fire school at the end of August, so we're taking advantage of family time while we can!

K needs to learn the art of basketball, afterall... (art? hmm)


I was spoiled by the amazing playgrounds in SC. This one isn't anything special, but it is super-close, so we usually walk or bike. K doesn't seem to mind though. She sticks to the swings most of the time, and then the slides...
We try and get to the park every day, but it has been SO hot that we usually go in the evenings (when the skeeters are out! ugh) Going early in the morning is also an options, but we're still waking up when it's early enough that the slides don't burn ya!

K has a sweet new ride too!

We LOVE the bike trailer! She gets so excited when we tell her we are going for a ride. We're still working on getting a bike for dad. Usually, I ride & he runs - gotta get him ready for fire school! :)

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Sugar & Spice, and Everything Nice...

... or Bluebirds & Flowers, and Two-Story Playhouse Beds?


Just ran across the photo of the gorgeous bed (handmade by the dad and grandpa) that I had the pleasure to decorate for two sweet girls. The girls "babysat" K while I painted...
Doesn't it just make you want to be little again??!




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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

The Healthiest Foods On Earth

The answer in short: whole food! REAL food...


I just saw this article, so I thought I'd share it with you. It goes hand-in-hand with the book I am currently reading, In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto by Michael Pollan.


Ok, I feel the need to admit that I'm not technically "reading" the book... since I found it on CDs at the library - woohoo!! You should check it out... "reading" this way while doing some other fill-in-the-blank job at home is a great way to feel productive!


Alright, on with the article...



The Healthiest Foods On Earth Jonny Bowden, 07.07.09, 4:00 PM ET
What is the best diet for human beings?
Vegetarian? Vegan? High-protein? Low-fat? Dairy-Free?
Hold on to your shopping carts: There is no perfect diet for human beings. At least not one that's based on how much protein, fat or carbohydrates you eat.
People have lived and thrived on high-protein, high-fat diets (the Inuit of Greenland); on low-protein, high-carb diets (the indigenous peoples of southern Africa); on diets high in raw milk and cream (the people of the Loetschental Valley in Switzerland); diets high in saturated fat (the Trobriand Islanders) and even on diets in which animal blood is considered a staple (the Massai of Kenya and Tanzania). And folks have thrived on these diets without the ravages of degenerative diseases that are so epidemic in modern life--heart disease, diabetes, obesity, neurodegenerative diseases, osteoporosis and cancer.
In Depth: The Healthiest Foods On Earth
The only thing these diets have in common is that they're all based on whole foods with minimum processing. Nuts, berries, beans, raw milk, grass-fed meat. Whole, real, unprocessed food is almost always healthy, regardless of how many grams of carbs, protein or fat it contains.
All these healthy diets have in common the fact that they are absent foods with bar codes. They are also extremely low in sugar. In fact, the number of modern or ancient societies known for health and longevity that have consumed a diet high in sugar would be ... let's see ... zero.
Truth be told, what you eat probably matters less than how much processing it's undergone. Real food--whole food with minimal processing--contains a virtual pharmacy of nutrients, phytochemicals, enzymes, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, anti-inflammatories and healthful fats, and can easily keep you alive and thriving into your 10th decade.
Berries, for example, are phenomenally low in calories, high in fiber and loaded with plant compounds that improve memory and help fight cancer. Studies have consistently shown that nut-eaters have lower rates of heart disease. Beans are notorious for their high fiber content and are a part of the diet of people--from almost every corner of the globe--who live long and well.
Protein--the word comes from a Greek word meaning "of prime importance"--is a feature of every healthy diet ever studied. Meat , contrary to its terrible reputation, can be a health food if--and this is a big if--the meat comes from animals that have been raised on pasture land, have never seen the inside of a feedlot farm and have never been shot full of antibiotics and hormones.
Ditto for raw milk, generally believed to be one of the healthiest beverages on the planet by countless devotees who often go to great expense and inconvenience to obtain it from small, sustainable farms. Wild salmon, whose omega-3 content is consistently higher than its less-fortunate farm-raised brethren, gets its red color from a powerful antioxidant called astaxathin. The combination of protein, omega-3s and antioxidants makes wild salmon a contender for anyone's list of great foods.
Another great food: eggs--one of nature's most perfect creations, especially if you don't throw out the all-important yolk. (Remember "whole" foods means exactly that--foods in their original form. Our robust ancestors did not eat "low-fat" caribou; we don't need to eat "egg-white" omelets.)
There are really no "bad" vegetables, but some of them are superstars. Any vegetable from the Brassica genus--broccoli, cabbage, brussels sprouts, kale--is loaded with plant chemicals called indoles, which help reduce the risk of cancer.
In the fruit kingdom, apples totally deserve their reputation as doctor-repellants: they're loaded with fiber, minerals (like bone-building boron) and phytochemicals (like quercetin, which is known to be a powerful anti-inflammatory and to have anti-cancer properties). Some exciting new research suggests that pomegranate juice slows the progression of certain cancers. Other research shows it lowers blood pressure and may even act as a "natural Viagra."
Tea deserves special mention on any list of the world's healthiest foods. The second most widely consumed beverage in the world (after water), all forms of tea (black, oolong, white, green and the newer Yerba Matte) are loaded with antioxidants and anti-inflammatories. Some types (green tea, for example) contain plant chemicals called catechins which have decided anti-cancer activity
Finally, let's not forget members of the Alliaceae family of plants--onions, garlic and shallots. Garlic has been used for thousands of years for its medicinal properties; hundreds of published studies support its antimicrobial effects as well as its ability to lower the risk of heart disease. A number of studies have shown an inverse relationship between onion consumption and certain types of cancer.
A healthy diet doesn't have to contain every one of the "healthiest foods on earth," but you can't go wrong putting as many of the above mentioned foods in heavy rotation on your personal eating plan.
Jonny Bowden, Ph.D., CNS, is a board-certified nutritionist and the author of seven books on health and nutrition, including The 150 Most Effective Ways to Boost Your Energy and The 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth.




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Christmas in July

Chemoyo & her son with K's Christmas goat
The gift that keeps on giving...
K received a wonderful gift this past Christmas (from my sister & her family): a GOAT!
The goat is gifted to a poor family in Kenya in her honor.
She received the gift certificate and card on Christmas day showing a photo of a goat - with a promise that she would receive the the actual photo of her goat with it's new family as soon as it was gifted. We received word from them a couple times letting us know that they were having some problems with the purchasing and donating of the animals due to problems in Kenya... so we patiently waited, until today when we received the photo!
I'm amazed at how useful this one goat will be to the family that received it. There is severe drought right now in Kenya, so the goat is ideal for these struggling areas.
Apparently, goats can thrive in extreme climates. Unlike cows, goats that are not lactating do well on poor, dry land by eating woody brush, leaves and weeds and in extremes of weather. Even when lactating, they can be healthy with a diet of weeds, but the taste of the milk becomes much stronger than when goats have grass. They also need less space than cows and goats' milk is highly nutritious, so it goes a long way to reducing malnutrition. The gift of a dairy goat can supply a family with up to several quarts of nutritious milk a day - a ton of milk a year. Extra milk can be sold or used to make cheese, butter or yogurt. When they aren't producing milk, some of the goat's blood can even be taken and drank to prevent dehydration/starvation.
Besides the milk they produce, goats do work that is essential to farming, work that is very costly to take care of by machine. They clear brush and all the woody weeds that no other animal will touch, like Canadian thistle, multiflora rose, poison ivy/oak. Unlike sheep, they will not eat grass; they prefer vegetation that is off the ground, which is perfect for clearing land and transforming scrub land into farm land. Goats get the land ready for the sheep to come in and finish the weeding by eating the ground vegetation down to just a couple of inches. And of course, goats fertilize the land, eventually transforming unproductive land into highly fertile, arable farm land.
Goats also have 2 or 3 kids a year, so the family can easily sell, or pass on a goat to someone else in need. And yes, when the goat has given everything else, it gives its meat to nourish the family. *sigh* Bittersweet... like The Giving Tree.
Makes me want a goat. Maybe some day.... right after my chickens?!
For now, we'll print the photo out so K can see her goat it it's new home anytime she wants!

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Tuesday, July 7, 2009

More Henna

So, I've been playing in the "mud" again!
Thought I'd share some pics from the last couple months in SC.
(Just wish I'd remember to bring my camera with me more!)

Hands,

feet
arms...
The little people got some too...

And my favorite people to decorate... pregnant mommas!


I just got word that this last momma birthed her 10+ lb baby boy last night!!

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Monday, July 6, 2009

Strawberry Picking in SC


We decided to make a trip over to Happy Cow Creamery where they have u-pick strawberries grown organically. Ideally, we should have gone picking about a month before, since we were at the very end of strawberry season. It was still a great time, though. Since there was no longer an abundance of strawberries, it was reminiscent of searching for eggs on Easter morning. And it was like getting your brightly colored egg and candy all at once when you bit into the super-sweet berry warm from the sun.... Mmmm, wish I still had some! The grocery store variety is just NOT the same! Anyway, here's some photos from our fun day...

picking


inspecting


tasting


& more tasting of course

enjoying the scenery


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Back in FL!



If you've noticed, it's been a while since I've updated. We've been moving - back to FL!
Just wanted to let everyone know that while I've been slacking on updating & posting photos, I have been packing and moving and all the fun that comes along with that.

Now, I will try and get some old photos posted and just *maybe* I'll keep up with my life from now on and let you know what is going on ;)