Thursday, July 17, 2008
SHE'S HERE!!!
After 9 months and about a week and a half the newest edition to the family has arrived- Farren Emily Camp, 9lbs and beautiful!!! Mom and baby are both doing well- more details to come later...YEEEAAAHHHHH!!!! CONGRATS MICHELLE & JOHN!!!!!!
UPDATE: More pictures...
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
SHE'S ON HER WAY!!!
Michelle's water broke around 4:30am this morning and she and John headed off to the hospital!!! There are apparently a lot of woman giving birth today though since Michelle hasn't been given a room yet- well to be fair her contractions are still very mild and there are woman coming in who are much further along. They have mostly been hanging in a triage area but at one point even the triage area was so busy that they got booted out of that bed. But no worries, they went to a comfy spot and watched an episode of "The Office" on John's laptop! They are back in triage now and just chill'in. If the baby is born today Michelle will get to bring her home on Thursday which is Michelle's birthday- I can't think of a better present!!!
I'll update this when there is more news!!!
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Make (a) room for baby!!!
I went up to San Francisco the last weekend in April to visit with my brother John, my sister-in-law Michelle, and my (very) little niece growing in Michelle's tummy! The 1st picture is my niece at about 19 weeks and the next 2 are pictures I took of John & Michelle that weekend (only 9 weeks to go at that point!).
It was great timing because I was able to coordinate my trip up there with my mom's visit from Maine. It was the first time the 4 of us had been together in a year! We all had a really great time but fun and frivolities were not the only reason for our visit, we had real work to do getting the baby's room together. My mom and I spent many long hours scraping paint and repairing cracks in the plaster walls but years of paint and wallpaper (paint on wallpaper on paint on wallpaper on paint) turned out to be hiding some pretty big damage.
You can see the room's original paint (the building is a turn of the 20th century Edwardian)- it's the red toned paint in the video but there is also another early paint visible, a tan color that is probably milk based. The red was gorgeous! That hole ended up being this big:
We were hoping to get the room to the point where it was ready to receive a fresh coat of paint but unfortunately there was too much to fix so we will be returning for at least one more working vacation.
There was time for some frivolity- John just got his pilot's license a few weeks ago and he took my up for an early morning bay tour.
THE ROCK!
And here is our landing...so smooth!
John waited, of course, until after we were back on the ground to tell me that I was the first passenger he had taken up without an instructor in the plane. Thanks John...
It was great timing because I was able to coordinate my trip up there with my mom's visit from Maine. It was the first time the 4 of us had been together in a year! We all had a really great time but fun and frivolities were not the only reason for our visit, we had real work to do getting the baby's room together. My mom and I spent many long hours scraping paint and repairing cracks in the plaster walls but years of paint and wallpaper (paint on wallpaper on paint on wallpaper on paint) turned out to be hiding some pretty big damage.
You can see the room's original paint (the building is a turn of the 20th century Edwardian)- it's the red toned paint in the video but there is also another early paint visible, a tan color that is probably milk based. The red was gorgeous! That hole ended up being this big:
We were hoping to get the room to the point where it was ready to receive a fresh coat of paint but unfortunately there was too much to fix so we will be returning for at least one more working vacation.
There was time for some frivolity- John just got his pilot's license a few weeks ago and he took my up for an early morning bay tour.
THE ROCK!
And here is our landing...so smooth!
John waited, of course, until after we were back on the ground to tell me that I was the first passenger he had taken up without an instructor in the plane. Thanks John...
Monday, May 5, 2008
GREAT JUPITER'S BEARD!!!
After a little detective work using the books on display at Anawalt this weekend I have discovered the identity of the mystery plant from the last post. It is a Mediterranean native called Jupiter's Beard. Apparently it self sows so readily that everyone in books and on the web recommends dead heading the spent flowers- I guess while beautiful it has become a bit of an invasive weed here in So Cal. But on the bright side, dead heading is also said to cause it to continue to flower spring to fall (maybe even a little longer in this region since our winter is like everyone else's spring).
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
BURGUNDY ICEBERG?!
So this entry, like others that will inevitably come in the future, is purely for this page. The general Casa audience might find it, well, snooze worthy but it's something that excited me, moving on...
I popped into Anawalt Lumber the other day (Highland location) to see if they had this one flower/plant I keep seeing all around and am in love with but have no idea what it is or what it's called- its the flower in the foreground of this shot (from our recent trip to Santa Barbara County wine country, thanks to Tracy for the picture). I think it might be a wildflower but if you know what it is please leave me a comment.
So they didn't have that but what I did find was pretty exciting, well at least to me. Most people are familiar with or at least have seen the iceberg rose. It is that extremely popular white rose you see in gardens all over the country. People grow it because it is very low maintenance, disease resistant, and it's covered in white double blossoms virtually all summer long. This is not your hoity toity formal rose, it is a great all around garden work horse. So over the years (white iceberg was first bred in the 1950's) they have developed other varieties of iceberg roses in an array of colors but with the same great growing habits- there are 2 different pinks as well as a red and a yellow (though I'm not 100% sure that the roses that call themselves iceberg under those last 2 colors technically are) . There is also a climbing version of the white rose. And now (well it actually came out last year but is now widely available) they have a burgundy iceberg and it is BEAUTIFUL and Anawalt has it!!! I don't have any roses in my garden but this is one I would consider getting!!!
The picture on the left is an official photo from a site that sells it and the one on the bottom is the actual plant at Anawalt Lumber.
I think the actual plant is more interesting & beautiful than the supposed beauty shot. The catalog picture makes the rose out to be purple, which it isn't. There is this ongoing quest in the rose industry for a true blue rose and so I think growers are always skewing their photos of roses that are in the purplish range towards that blue ideal which P.S. cannot exist naturally. It has to do with the chemicals/enzymes that exist (or don't exist) in a rose's cellular organs but there are geneticists (REALLY!) trying to splice in cellular enzymes and pieces from other flowers to try to make it happen. For more info on that craziness you should read Flower Confidential by Amy Stewart (no relation to Martha).
You can see in my image that the older flowers have faded to pink while the new ones are a darker burgundy. While it is nice to have a flower hold it's color, especially when you are tying to create a more formal monochromatic feel in a garden, a plant like this has it's place too. In the informal, cottage garden (where iceberg roses are typically found anyway) you get one plant that gives you the color and effect of 2 or 3. In my garden with it's pinks and purples, this rose would fit right in!
I popped into Anawalt Lumber the other day (Highland location) to see if they had this one flower/plant I keep seeing all around and am in love with but have no idea what it is or what it's called- its the flower in the foreground of this shot (from our recent trip to Santa Barbara County wine country, thanks to Tracy for the picture). I think it might be a wildflower but if you know what it is please leave me a comment.
So they didn't have that but what I did find was pretty exciting, well at least to me. Most people are familiar with or at least have seen the iceberg rose. It is that extremely popular white rose you see in gardens all over the country. People grow it because it is very low maintenance, disease resistant, and it's covered in white double blossoms virtually all summer long. This is not your hoity toity formal rose, it is a great all around garden work horse. So over the years (white iceberg was first bred in the 1950's) they have developed other varieties of iceberg roses in an array of colors but with the same great growing habits- there are 2 different pinks as well as a red and a yellow (though I'm not 100% sure that the roses that call themselves iceberg under those last 2 colors technically are) . There is also a climbing version of the white rose. And now (well it actually came out last year but is now widely available) they have a burgundy iceberg and it is BEAUTIFUL and Anawalt has it!!! I don't have any roses in my garden but this is one I would consider getting!!!
The picture on the left is an official photo from a site that sells it and the one on the bottom is the actual plant at Anawalt Lumber.
I think the actual plant is more interesting & beautiful than the supposed beauty shot. The catalog picture makes the rose out to be purple, which it isn't. There is this ongoing quest in the rose industry for a true blue rose and so I think growers are always skewing their photos of roses that are in the purplish range towards that blue ideal which P.S. cannot exist naturally. It has to do with the chemicals/enzymes that exist (or don't exist) in a rose's cellular organs but there are geneticists (REALLY!) trying to splice in cellular enzymes and pieces from other flowers to try to make it happen. For more info on that craziness you should read Flower Confidential by Amy Stewart (no relation to Martha).
You can see in my image that the older flowers have faded to pink while the new ones are a darker burgundy. While it is nice to have a flower hold it's color, especially when you are tying to create a more formal monochromatic feel in a garden, a plant like this has it's place too. In the informal, cottage garden (where iceberg roses are typically found anyway) you get one plant that gives you the color and effect of 2 or 3. In my garden with it's pinks and purples, this rose would fit right in!
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
COMING SOON!!!
So, I'm going to attempt to blog with some regularity and make this my home & garden blog. Never fear Casa Blog enthusiasts! I will post duplicates of any entries that would be interesting for our general Casa Blog audience but the more, shall we say, technical posts will only appear here- after all, I don't want to put Craig to sleep every time he visits casaogden!
Check back soon for the first official post!
-Liz
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