Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Around here...

Spring has finally sprung and we are enjoying every minute of it!
We rarely came indoors all weekend - and it was refreshing for mind, body and soul.  Saturday was lovely - we spent hours in our backyard.
Daddy was sorting out the garden,

Mommy was knitting in the sun,

Big Kids were running through the sprinkler

 and Iris Jane was taking it all in from her swing

There were naps in the hammock, time sliding on the slip-n-slide, a bike-ride on the greenbelt and lots of eating outdoors!
I can't get enough of the fresh air coming in our windows and I do hope this year brings summer swiftly.


Monday, April 16, 2012

Where does your food come from?

Food is a basic need - it sustains life - it can heal, nourish, energize and bring us together.  It can also cause disease, dysfunction and death.  The production of food can be beautiful, healthy and craft - but it can also be heartless, disgusting and short-sighted.  There are many issues at stake, when we speak about food, but overall I think it's important for us to demand the best.  In regard to taste, nutrition, ecological practices, ethical practices and common sense we must demand more.

To dial in my point, let's look at tomatoes.  Buy a beautiful spherical almost-pink tomato from your local grocery.  After slicing it, take a bite - what does it taste like?  Well, honestly, they don't  taste like anything.  Sort of bland and fruity, but no real flavor profile to speak of.  It looks like a tomato and acts like a tomato... but why doesn't it have any flavor?  Most grocery store tomatoes are picked before they've ripened - some producers pick them while they're green and spray them with ethylene gas to speed up their 'ripening' in transit to your grocer.  So, the tomato you're buying doesn't taste like a tomato, simply because it wasn't ready to be a tomato.  Have you ever eaten a warm, sun-ripened tomato straight from the vine, in August?  It's one of the most delicious things I can imagine.  So, as far as taste is concerned there is simply no contest between a backyard tomato and an average store-bought tomato.
Now, remember your grocery tomato?  It was so pretty and spherical! But this sun-ripened tomato has lost it's perfect shape and looks a bit oblong and some varieties are a bit lumpy - and that's how they grow, naturally.  So, why is that one perfect? Because it was picked before it could fully grow!  We've grown dozens of varieties of tomatoes over the years and when they first start to grow, they are all round and perfect.  Do you think that grocery tomato, which has been artificially ripened has the same nutrient value as my homegrown imperfectly shaped tomato?  Studies have been done for decades about this very thing - and especially in regard to Vitamin C vine-ripening produces a superior result. If we're still taking score, the homegrown tomato may be ugly, but it's extra time ripening has given it a boost in nutrients - I, obviously, don't care about aesthetic symmetry in regard to food, so on my score card, the homegrown tomato is still winning.
With a fruit, grown in your yard, you know what care has been taken and you know where that tomato has been. With a grocery tomato, it gets a bit tricky.  A LOT of fruit is grown in South America, which is so far from here.  So, at the very least you know it's traveled by plane, boat, train or truck to arrive at your grocer.  Transportation costs money and uses fuels - the farther that produce travels the more cost financially and ecologically.  But do you know what was sprayed on that tomato? Pesticides, herbicides or fertilizers?  If I walked into your backyard and sprayed your tomatoes with those chemicals or waste, would you eat them?  With fertilizer alone, would it bother you to know the largest source of nitrates in water supplies is agricultural fertilizers?  Or that the levels of nitrates in water supplies contaminates the ecosystems associated with those waterways? From microbes to humans, we're all affected.  *agricultural pollution info  Some grocery tomatoes are grown organically, but not usually locally, so you have to think these tomatoes are still ripening off the vine, in transit to you.  There are also 'hothouse' tomatoes, which are usually beautiful, and some are still attached to their vine, but that doesn't mean they're grown organically nor are greenhouses energy efficient.  Here, I think of ecological and ethical practices in the same category.  I can eat a tomato grown in my backyard with a clear conscience, but not a agro-factory-grown grocery tomato.  As you can see there is a bit of a spectrum, homegrown, locally organically grown, locally grown, hothouses, grown in our country, grown in another country or grown in another continent.  Ecologically, my backyard tomato wins big points.
Unfortunately, I can only grow tomatoes in my yard, once a year.  My solution : can as many of my own tomatoes as possible and use them through winter.  Even with all the canning I did last year, with 6 tomato varieties, I will still run out of tomatoes before summer.  And that's ok - tomatoes grow in a season.  Does that mean I'll buy tomatoes for the next few months? Not unless I can find a trusted source close to home.  And why would I bother purchasing an average grocery tomato, which doesn't even taste like a tomato?
There are many foods, other than tomatoes - and each one has the same concerns.  It's worth becoming informed about.  There are plenty of excellent films about our food supply, which are enlightening and strengthen my resolve to choose BETTER, whenever I can.  Food, Inc., Broken Limbs, King Corn, Dirt!, Fresh, and The Future of Food.  Our health and the health of our planet is worth a second thought at the grocery store.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Explore

This past weekend the Schram Fam had so much fun! Please excuse this photo-heavy post.

Saturday: Mommy had a letterpress class at Idaho Poster & Letterpress . That meant Daddy spent most of the day home with all the kids!  Iris learned how to mow the yard riding in the backpack.  All the kids spent time crafting and listening to music, with all the windows open and the warm air filling the house.
I had so much fun taking a class, in Boise, by myself! It was so strange to drive the car, without any carseats in it.  I stopped and grabbed a coffee before my class started and I just sat downtown, listening to the sound of NOTHING.  My class was really interesting, and the history and equipment were right up my alley.  I could have spent days looking through the drawers of type.







Here are my projects - Live Life, is made with woodtype - So, it has come to this, is made with lead type. I used two different presses, and it was all really cool. I'll definitely go back and try my hand at new designs.



When I got home from my class, everyone was anxious to get out, so we had dinner and then ended up at Camel's Back Park (Schramlets call it Camel Back Mountain).  Daddy and the kiddos climbed the hill twice, while Iris squealed with delight on the swings!
Yes, he did wear that skeleton outfit, with the cape, all day long. The highlight was when he was running across the park and some 'big kids' (teenagers) stopped to say 'cool cape, man!'.



Sunday morning, we woke up early, and Dave made Apple Fritters (Ella calls them Apple Fruiters) - then we packed a lunch and headed to Celebration Park  .  We hiked and explored the petroglyphs.  This archeological park, is pretty great. The kids had fun trying to decipher the messages.



We saw some real live lizards too, not just these rock carvings.

One, two, three  "PICKLES!"

 Irie spent a lot of the hike, asleep curled up in the backpack! The older kids asked a couple times if we would carry them, when it got hot and they got tired.  Ella opted for sunning herself on this rock.
Happy kids and happy parents.
It really was the most beautiful weekend we've had this year.  We spent Sunday evening making pizzas in the brick oven, and enjoying the sun in our backyard.  Then we all slept like champs!
Here's to another fantastic weekend.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Friday, April 6, 2012

Around Here...

Back from spring break and back to our 'normal routine'.  The thing with normal is ... it's never really the same.  In one single week, we've had two visits from the Tooth Fairy, a visit from the Haircut Fairy and a 10 month old who has learned to crawl!  Add crazy springtime weather, new hobbies and a babe cutting front teeth... and well, I guess that's normal, right now.

While, I'm sure Iris enjoyed her week of all the attention from Mommy and Daddy, with the big kids at Grandma's for the week - she has been eating up all their affection since they've been home.  She actually lets out a squeal when one of them leaves the room, as if they should be doting on her every waking hour.  Let's hope, they don't let her get away with that for much longer.  She has finally mastered crawling, and is quite mobile.  Which leads to the 'frustrated baby' phase - because Mommy won't let you crawl at the grocery store, in the car, in the mud, on my bed, in the wet grass, while getting your diaper changed nor on the stairs.  This phase leads to 'frustrated mommy' phase - because frustrated baby makes a horrendous fuss/twist/back-arch/squeal when Mommy won't allow said crawling.  Her swollen gums are most certainly adding to her frustration - poor kid!  Don't let me fool you, I do not have it so rough... she still sleeps 11 hours through the night, takes naps without complaint, eats anything I put in front of her and is generally quite a happy girl.

Ella has been busy accessorizing.  Each day her outfits are becoming more intricate.  And don't forget the hair clips, bracelets, necklaces and layers. I can't keep up with her fashions, but I am learning how important it is to let her be herself.  As we walked into her preschool this week, a schoolmate asked the teacher, 'Does my hair look pretty?!' - her response: "Do you think it looks pretty? That's all that matters." *Have I mentioned how much I adore her teacher?*  Fortunately, with Ella, I don't think she has an issue with self-image, right now.  She knows how cute she is.

Peter lost two front teeth this week - and he's learning to speak around those new holes in his mouth.  He has mentioned that his F's and S's aren't quite sounding right, but he's working on them.  He was so worried about pulling his teeth - he wanted to just let them fall out of his head, on their own.  Anytime I mentioned how loose they were, he would burst into tears... he was even afraid one might fall out while he slept.  So, I bribed him with donut club, I told him, that top tooth would have to come out  - he could choose who pulled it, but it had to go.  In the end, he opted for mom's tooth pulling expertise, and it came out effortlessly.  The next morning, while eating an apple, his other tooth stuck in the apple and came right out! So, now he's a couple dollars richer and has a holey grin.
Gracie asked for a Chess set for her birthday - now she's been taking turns teaching the littles to play with her.  Gracie is counting down to the end of school, already.  She likes school, but she LOVES summer.  She has been painting and crafting - daydreaming and reading books.  They were allowed a free-dress day at school (no uniforms) and they had the option of dressing like something from space.  She had taken the time to create a costume, so she could be an alien.  While getting ready for school, she came to me in tears - she didn't want to dress-up like an alien. She was so relieved to hear that I wouldn't have dressed like an alien either.  I would have cried, too!  Sometimes when I see my personality in my kids, I am comforted and other times I just hope I can give them coping skills to overcome our shared weaknesses.

I've been working on some projects around here, in between chasing a crawling Iris and delivering and receiving children to and from their schools.  This weekend I get to take an Intro to Letterpress class - and I am SO excited! I don't think I've ever been away from Iris for 6 hours - so here's to a chilled out creative Saturday afternoon.