On Sunday I found out that I was hosting a dinner party for another couple and their son. I love to play hostess so got busy making things for the dinner. A quiche, with herbs and flowers, and ground pork, for the main course, hummus for appetizer, and chocolate zucchini cream cheese bread, plus pear compote for dessert. Nothing too involved or fancy.
At 6:45 the Russian-American family arrived - all SIX of them! WHOOPS. Fun surprise, though, and we had plenty of food, plus she brought a lovely caprese salad.
Everyone loved the house, and the kids especially loved the hidden bookcase door from the library into my Victorian suite. Luci was dead tired and slept in until 9:30 the next morning. 😄
I've also been plugging away at creating more items for my daughter's work wardrobe. I went over there today and we did fittings for them. Everything looked great, some are getting minor tweaks(which I actually finished tonight) and we even picked out more fabrics at the store. We finished the day with a trip to the market and made a yummy pizza.
There are a lot of expressions that we hear now and then; most we think we know the origin of, some we don't. For the most part we just don't ponder the origin of commonplace expressions because they are... common. The first thing I discovered when beginning to read this little gem of a book, was not only hadn't I considered where many common sayings come from, but my preconceived idea of their origin was actually wrong! Kinda embarrassing, but guessing I may not be alone in this. I thought it would be of value then to share some tidbits from this book. Audio format is nice, as you can multitask while listening to this. This is my first attempt at recording reading a book, so any constructive criticism is welcome!
There are a lot of expressions that we hear now and then; most we think we know the origin of, some we don't. For the most part we just don't ponder the origin of commonplace expressions because they are... common. The first thing I discovered when beginning to read this little gem of a book, was not only hadn't I considered where many common sayings come from, but my preconceived idea of their origin was actually wrong! Kinda embarrassing, but guessing I may not be alone in this. I thought it would be of value then to share some tidbits from this book. Audio format is nice, as you can multitask while listening to this. This is my first attempt at recording reading a book, so any constructive criticism is welcome!
There are a lot of expressions that we hear now and then; most we think we know the origin of, some we don't. For the most part we just don't ponder the origin of commonplace expressions because they are... common. The first thing I discovered when beginning to read this little gem of a book, was not only hadn't I considered where many common sayings come from, but my preconceived idea of their origin was actually wrong! Kinda embarrassing, but guessing I may not be alone in this. I thought it would be of value then to share some tidbits from this book. Audio format is nice, as you can multitask while listening to this. This is my first attempt at recording reading a book, so any constructive criticism is welcome!
Cool! I've never noticed galls on staghorn sumac. Location: SE NH.
Melaphis rhois on Rhus typhina
https://bygl.osu.edu/node/1112