Archive for the Category » Stayings at home «

January 03rd, 2010 | Author: Eric Hays-Strom

Welcome, my friends, family and others, to the year 2010!

Over the past month, we’ve gotten more snow than I can recall in a very long time!  I do remember more… but I was a kid then!  I think it was the winter of 1970/71.  My cousin and I and some friends were able to dig tunnels in the snow from one side of our house to the other, all through our back yard.  I remember having little rooms off the tunnel.  It was great!

Back in October, the local weather personality predicted that over the course of the winter we’d have something like 30 inches of snow.  Boy, was HE wrong!

Back in October, we had our first snow.  It should have been a warning to us!  That first snow dropped 6 inches on us. I think the forecast was for 2.

Then, in November, nothing.

December started out cold, but dry.  Then, on the 12th, we got our first BIG snow fall… 12 inches in just under 24 hours.  The drifts in our driveway were huge!  And of course, our snowthrower failed to start so we had to dig out by hand.  We did just enough to get the car out so Scott could go to work.  Fortunately, the next day, we were able to get the thrower started and finish off the driveway.  The next two weeks were cold, no melting whatsoever occurred.

As Christmas approached, we were warned that we’d get another big snow.  It began Christmas Eve with driving snow.  It was really beautiful to watch, but both Scott and I had to be out driving in it.  By December 26th, we had received another 12 inches of snow!

So, by the new year, we had accumulated 24 inches of snow in the area. This presents a bit of a problem for the Hays-Strom family.  Much of our driveway is sunken in relationship to the rest of the yard, so snow must be tossed up over then retaining walls.  Not a problem for our snow thrower… in normal years.  But the snow fall this year is not normal.  Having a pile of snow in our front yard that is knee deep, on top of a retaining wall that is from 12 inches to 18 inches high means that the snow from the driveway had to be thrown up… a long way!

The last thing we need now is more snow!  Fortunately, as Saturday dawned the weatherman was telling us we would only have a light dusting of snow overnight.

So, this morning, I awake, look outside and my jaw dropped.  That light dusting of snow amounted to an additional 4 inches!  We didn’t have time to do any shovelling before church this morning, so we resolved to clear the driveway when we got home.

Unfortunately, returning home at 2 p.m. we couldn’t even get to within a block of our house… there was an accident up the street, and the police had our road blocked.  Parking the truck, we trudged through the snow to our driveway… to discover it was blocked.  The accident literally occurred right in front of our house.  A red pickup driving up Harrison with a man, his wife and his child, slowed as a white pickup came SPEEDING down Harrison, and swerved in to the wrong lane to go around a snow plow stuck in front of our house (on the other side of the street) and plowed – at speed – in to the oncoming red truck.  By the time we got home, the woman and the child in the red truck had been taken to the hospital (we’ve been told it was precautionary, that both were ok).  The twerp in the white truck … well, I’ll keep my opinion to myself!

Scott and I spent a couple of hours getting our driveway cleared, with help from the young man across the street who has a bigger snow thrower than us!

And they’re telling us we might be expecting up to 10 more inches of snow in the next several days.

I wanna move.

Someplace warm.

Mercury sounds pretty good, right now.

December 17th, 2009 | Author: Eric Hays-Strom

Scott and I have lived in our home for over 10 years now.  We’ve done a lot of remodeling in that time.  Floors, kitchen, walls.  We never had a house-warming, and we’ve really done very little entertaining.  Just once about 5 years ago, we invited a few friends over.  In the interim, we’ve hosted dinner a few times for people that one or the other of us were working with.  But nothing either of us really consider entertaining.

This is the year that changes.  We have decided to host a Christmas Party for some friends from church.  I decided that I would like to do some baking for this party.  On the menu would be my favorite, rum balls, and Russian tea cakes, and frosted cookies in the shape of stars and trees and bells and the like.

The rum balls were easy to make.  I made the dough on Thanksgiving morning, and that night, Scott and I stood shoulder to shoulder and rolled out the balls, dipped them in powdered sugar and hid them well.

The Russian tea cakes were a little more difficult.  I didn’t let the butter soften at room temperature, so it was a bit of a chore to mix it.  But, eventually that succeeded, and we have 3 dozen delicious cakes… I know: I’ve sampled them!

The cookies proved to be a bit more of a challenge!  Now, those who know me well, know I do not like to cook.  The concepts involved are just far too complex for me!  I can make a main course.  I can prepare a vegetable.  I can heat up biscuits and rolls.  But getting them all to be done at or about the same time is just rocket science when it comes to my abilities!

One of the problems I have with cooking… and it really becomes obvious when I try to make cookies from scratch… is the meanings of terms.  Lightly floured.  Roll until thin.  What’s thin?  Is paper thin too thin?  Is a quarter inch of cookie dough thin?  Or is it too thick?  And what should cookie dough look like to know if I’ve too much flour or too little in it?

Then there’s the preparation.

When we remodeled the kitchen, we put down tiled counter tops.  They’re very nice… but it’s difficult to roll out cookies on tile!  So, we hunted down a sheet of Plexiglas at our local Home Depot.  We wanted one of those old Tupperware pie thingies (that’s the technical term, I think) but can’t find them in the shops we visited.

We have a rolling pin.  So, we didn’t need to buy one of those.  It’s a nice one.  It’s set on an exposed shelf in our kitchen for nearly 10 years looking nice.  It’s never been used until I ground up the vanilla wafers for the rum balls.

Tuesday, the day came.  I gathered all my ingredients together, and started mixing them.  I sifted flour (did you know 3 cups of sifted flour is about the same as 1 and a half cups unsifted?)  Finally, I had a peanut butter consistency dough and put it in to the fridge to chill “for a few hours or overnight”.  By the time Scott got home from work, several hours would pass.  I wanted Scott to supervise the next stage… he knows what he’s doing!  But “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” was on TV and we watched that, first.  Then we watched a saved episode of CSI:Miami.  And then, it was time for bed!

Wednesday, I was gone from before 7 a.m. until nearly 8 p.m.  And I was totally exhausted.  So, no cookie rolling Wednesday.

This morning, I finally squared my shoulders, looked at the dough, and thought “Oh, how hard could this be, for cryin’ out loud!?”  I dusted the Plexiglas with a half cup unsifted flour.  Slick Plexiglas does not dust well!  I grabbed about half of the dough, plopped it down on the mound of flour, grabbed my marble rolling pin and rolled.

And that’s when I discovered that not all rolling pins are equal!  The dough stuck to the pin like peanut butter to the roof of a dog’s mouth!  And it clung there for dear life.  After peeling off the dough in great gooey gobs, I washed the pin, and looked at the dough.  I put my hands in to pull out a mass to try again, but it was like trying to get a handful of peanut butter.  It stuck to my fingers.  But just enough flour had adhered to the dough from the first attempt, I got the idea “Hey, maybe I didn’t put enough flour in the dough!  So I mixed some… a lot of some… flour in to the dough and kneaded it like a 2 year old with his play dough!

Then, I saw the parchment paper for the other item I intend to make, so I tried covering the dough with that and then rolling!  Success!  From there, I pulled out my new cookie cutters, and cut some santas (they came out looking like oh who knows? How does one describe those shapes?) and candy canes… another disaster shape.  I finally  discovered that stars, bells and trees were the easiest to make.  Each batch I rolled out got easier than the last, as each batch had more and more flour added to it.  I think I REALLY under-measured the flour when I made the dough.

Nikki got quite a bit of dough… my disasters ended up in her mouth.  Or mine.

But, I now have sugar cookies.

As I worked, images came to me of making cookies with Mom oh so long ago.  The wooden rolling pin.  The wooden surface she brought out for cookie making.  The consistency of the dough.  The next batch, should I decide to make them, should go so much more easily!

Now.  A question for my gentle reader.  Should I attempt that Buche de Noel?

April 29th, 2009 | Author: Eric Hays-Strom

Scott and I just got back from having dinner with Dad.  It was nice, we ate at Fernandos, a rather 3rd rate Mexican restaurant in West Omaha.  But the waiter was nice and the food wasn’t terrible.  Just too high priced for the quality.  Unfortunately, down in South O there are far better ones that provide much better fare!

I was kind of wondering going in to dinner whether Dad’s interest in Scott’s and my wedding was just one of those things that came up and would soon be forgotten.  But no.  Dad kept asking questions about it.  When were we going to do it?  Are we doing it tomorrow… which in and of itself is quite interesting.  Monday, April 27th was the first day we could apply for a marriage license.  But tomorrow, April 30 is actually the first day we can get married (unless we’d applied for a waiver.)  It was just really interesting that Dad is following all this so closely in the news that he is aware of the timelines.

Next he wanted to know if, after I made Scott my wife, if he’d take my name!  LOL.  Anyhow, I said no, we were going to hyphenate our names… he thought that was pretty good.

Now, that was pretty much the repertoire for Dad.  When are we getting married? What are we going to do about our names?  Oh, and what are we going to wear.  If you know Dad, he has his little repertoire that he almost seems to have prepared in advance.  When we get together, he’ll start in on his questions, and after a couple of minutes, he’ll start over.  So we’ll have variations on the exact same conversation several times for the evening.

In this case it was about Scott and my marriage… a marriage that we’re having primarily because, well, Dad wants to attend it!

In other news on the Dad-front, I got a call this morning from New Cassel.  They wanted to tell me “the whole story” so that if he started in to tell me it, I wouldn’t become concerned… Now that’s a sure fired way to start telling me something guaranteed to get me concerned!

It seems that two gentlement had gone to breakfast this morning, and had just gotten in line when the fire alarm went off.  It was a scheduled fire drill, nothing to be worried about.  After the all clear these two gentlemen returned to the dining room for breakfast, and had to wait in the lobby for the dining room to reopen.  These two gentlemen are a bit slow-moving.  When the doors finally opened, they started their journey towards the door, when Dad, a much faster walking individual came along, and popped in front of them.

One of the gentlemen took umbrage at this tactic of Dad’s, and grabbed Dad’s arm.  A verbal altercation ensued, and the other gentleman shoved Dad.  Dad’s hand was cut and a bit bruised.  But in the process the other gentleman was knocked to the ground (not be Dad but as a result of his own shoving of Dad.)  Dad, being the “wonderful gentleman that he is” (the words of the New Cassel staff) Dad attempted to assist the other man to his feet, but was rebuffed.  Dad was then taken to the health clinic to have his cut cleansed and bandaged.

The staff assured me that in no way did they consider Dad to be at fault.  The other man’s family was called, and they and the man were told in no uncertain terms that the shoving match was not the way to handle conflict.

All in all, it was kind of funny to me… in particular because they weren’t too upset by it either.  In fact the staff person who called me actually kind of chuckled while telling me.

And that is that!

April 27th, 2009 | Author: Eric Hays-Strom

Today started off innocuously enough.  Our typical morning routine: get up, watch the news, watch a little of one of the saved programs, get showered.

Then, we began to deviate from our schedule a bit.  Instead of Scott heading off to work, we drove down to the courthouse and applied for a marriage license!  The press was there, and we were interviewed by several stations and papers.  In the midst of it all, we were called and interviewed by Voice of America.  We met a few old friends we’d not seen in a long while.  The process of applying for the license went quickly, and before we knew it, we were done… only to be interviewed a couple of more times.

After dropping me off at the house, Scott left for work.  I settled in to watch morning news, and web surf… and to begin preparations for tonight’s CLM class at church.

And then it happened.  Screeching tires.  A THUD! Painful yelping.

I ran outside to see what had happened, to see a Rottweiler limping up the drive across from us.  I went over to see if I could help.  The family has about 5 kids.  Mom is off at work.  Dad is home, unable to work or lift anything due to injuries.  The dog was bleeding badly but just the sweetest little boy. (Ha! If a hundred pound Rotty can be said to be little!)

There was no way they were going to be able to get the dog to a vet.  So, I had two of the older boys load the dog into our truck, and with the father’s blessing drove them all up to our vet.  I really expected the worst.  But, doggy is going to have two teeth pulled, it’s tongue stitched up (it bit a huge chunk of it’s tongue off and that’s where all the blood was coming from.) And it may have a broken leg.

The family just isn’t going to be able to afford the costs of this treatment, and CB doesn’t have a place that would give the dog a chance.  So I guaranteed treatment up to a grand.  After taking the boys home, I told the father and he visibly paled.  I told him “Don’t worry about it.  You guys help us out in whatever way you can.  We won’t expect full reimbursement.”

I feel good about what I did.  I told God two things: “No dog is going to suffer on MY watch!” and “Now you BETTER get me that job!”

Category: Eric's Life, Stayings at home  | Comments off
April 13th, 2009 | Author: Eric Hays-Strom

In our “Creating a Life that Matters” class that Scott and I are taking through our church, we have weekly homework.  This class is conducted in three “courses” (“Rediscovering Relationship With the Sacred”, “Rediscovering Relationship With Myself”, and “Rediscovering Relationship With my Passion”)  of 6 sessions each.  We completed the first course a few weeks ago.  Tonight we completed session 1 of the second course, “Rediscovering Relationship With Myself”.  The homework varies from week to week.  The first session had one assignment that involved journaling.  I wrote about that first assignment here.

This week’s assignment also asks us to journal.  We’ve read a piece from Care of the Soul by Thomas Moore.  The following three questions are what we are to write about.

  • Where do I come from?
  • Who am I and who am I not?
  • What might I do to strengthen the connections among the physical, emotional, and spiritual dimensions of myself?

I fear that the reading does not provide much guidance for answering most of these questions.  So, I’m on my own!

Where do I come from?
I think there are several answers to this question; they are not mutually exclusive.  First of all, I come from God.  I believe all of us are, whether or not we choose to acknowledge or believe this. 

And I know it sounds strange, but I come from stardust.  I think we all do.  The stuff of which we are comprised, the basic atoms and molecules have been here since before here was, and will continue after we are no longer here.

I come from Iowa/Nebraska.  I come from Bonnie Yates Strom and Louis Strom.  I am from Swedish, German, English, and a host of other nationalities.

And finally, for this journal anyhow, I come from 50 years of experiences that have created in me pain and ecstasy; happiness and sorrow; hope and at the same time a sense of hopelessness.  “I can do all things in God…” and nothing I ever do will change anything.

Who am I and who am I not?
The questions get harder!  Once upon a time in a land not so far distant from here/now I could have taken a stab at answering that more fully than I can today.  So much water under the bridge of life over the years though has taken it’s toll on my self knowledge.  I wonder these days, just who am I?  And because I do not know who I am, I have even more problems answering who I am not.

I suspect that to some extent my confusion on this matter stems from loss.  Things I’ve lost in life have robbed me of self-identity or more to the point, self-knowledge.

I am no longer employed.  I no longer serve in a leadership role at church, having chosen to rip those roles from myself.  I am no longer involved in the “international” retreat organization which I lead for some years… mainly because I lost to some degree my belief in that.  And the greatest lost, which contributed to much of those things I “am no longer”, is the loss of identity in relationship to God.

When I could put a label on my spirituality, on the way in which I believe in God, I could identify TO God.  In a very real sense, I lost God.

I need to label the compartments of my life.  I just realized that as I was writing the above.  Without labels, I am nothing!  At least can identify with nothing.  And if I can not identify with anything, then I can not know who I am – or who I am not.

I doubt much that anyone ever had any illusions that I “had it all together”, least of all myself.  But now, what togetherness I had is ripped from me.

Yeah, I’m skirting the issue of what it is that I am thinking.  Because, having made the decision to post this in my blog, and knowing who reads my blog, all of a sudden I’m fearful!  There are people who read this blog that matter much to me, and I want to keep the curtain between who I think they perceive me to be and who it is, or what it is, that I’m skirting.  Ahem, you know know who you are.

See, it’s like this.  I have lost my experience of my faith in God.  I don’t know how else to say that.  Once I could label my experience of that faith as Catholic.  I can do so no longer.  Once I could label myself as a “sort of rebellious evangelical type”, but I can do so no longer.  Once I could say comfortably to myself “I know who God is”.  I can do so no longer.  I honestly don’t know who/what God is.  I could blame the author of a book I once read; I could blame a spiritual director at a monastery I visited a few years ago; I could probably blame a bunch of others; but it’s on me.

See, God once upon a time made the Divine Presence known to me.  God made Himself known to me.  In many ways, small and large, I knew God’s Presence.  In the way a breeze caressed me.  In the way the atmosphere changed.  In the way God spoke to me.  But it’s been a very long time since I’ve experienced that.  I’ve tried so many things to recover that sense of God.  I have to content myself in struggling to be faithful and to acquiesce that, with or without experience, God exists.

You see, my life has been so wrapped up in God, and in my faith, and in the experience of that faith, that with it all gone, I don’t know who I am, any longer.  And worse, I don’t know who I’m not.

What might I do to strengthen the connections among the physical, emotional, and spiritual dimensions of myself?
Like the question of who I am and who I am not, this question asks of me something I can not provide.  The soul is utterly unique to each of us.  It arises from, and informs who we are.  It is that point within us at which our unique “usness” meets the Divine.  To paraphrase Thomas Moore’s reading for today, if I don’t know who I am not, I risk filling my soul with that which is bogus. And when that occurs, my soul has no way to present what is ultimately real of me.

So, what CAN I do to strengthen these connections?  I can but continue to strive to sustain the faith I do have; to continue to seek the label-less me, though of course, when I do ultimately find that, it will no longer be label-less.  Muscles unused wither, atrophy.  Faith not exercised also will atrophy.  Muscles are supported by our skeletal structure and our tendons.  The experience of my faith that is now lost was the skeletal structure and the tendons which sustained and supported my faith.  Without it, I don’t know how to sustain this faith.  But, of course, as all analogies must, the whole thing falls apart here for me, because a body without skeleton or tendons becomes a puddle of goo, whereas my faith, without the experience of that faith, can and will remain strong.  Perhaps it is the power of mind which sustains that faith that becomes surrogate skeleton and tendon.

In which case, I’m in deep doo doo!

Category: Ramblings, Spirituality, Stayings at home  | Comments off
April 07th, 2009 | Author: Eric Hays-Strom

First of all, I want to say a hearty and heart-felt THANK YOU to those who took me up on my offer to subscribe to our blog!  I really didn’t think that many of you would take me up on it!  Thanks go out to: Aunt Jeanie, Deb, Kate, Joanne, Fred, Becky, Kevin, Jeremy, Jerry, Karla and Ray!

Also, I’ve changed the font from the tiny one it used to be to a bit larger to assist those of you who might have trouble reading it, especially given it’s a light color on a medium/dark background.

Yesterday, after working on some administrative type stuff here at home… paperwork that needed to get done, improvements to the blog (including the subscriber stuff,) laundry… I took Dad to the dentist.  When I got to his apartment, he was nearly ready to go, but he was upset.  He lost his wallet, and had been searching for it for days.  He had, he said, completely turned the place upside down to no avail.  I immediately began thinking of what would be lost… Identification card, credit card, insurance info.  Actually what bothered me most was his social security card.  I wasn’t worried so much about identity theft, though of course that concerned me, but Dad still carries the original social security card issued to him way back when!

Fortunately, a quick survey of his pants, all neatly hung in his closet unearthed the wallet, and all is good!

As we drove to Council Bluffs for the appointment with Dr. Ronk, Dad and I talked of memories.  Rather we spoke of the memories he no longer has.  It was a poignant talk for me, as I told Dad of all that he had done in life.  He’d served in the Army during WWII.  Yes, he knew that.  He didn’t know if he’d fought in 2 or 3 major campaigns.  I told him he had.  He remembered Okinawa… and that he was wounded there.  And he knew he’d been wounded on the same day that Franklin Delano Roosevelt passed away.  We commented on the coincidence that that day, April 12, was also the day 5 years later that Bob was born.

I asked Dad “Dad, what do you think the most significant thing you’ve ever done was?”  I’m not sure what I expected the answer to be… frankly, I was thinking in terms of his service in WWII.  He said “I don’t know.  Did I do anything significant?”  Then he thought a while.

“I think the most significant thing I ever did was marry my Bonnie.”

Yup, Dad, I think you are so right.

Spending time with Dad, the hardest thing is having conversations.  Dad really can’t converse well anymore.  I’m learning the best thing I can do with Dad is tell stories.  Tales of HIS life.  All the little tales he told me growing up about what he’d done – well, he’s forgotten all that.  To him, everything since the war is just lost in a black fog somewhere.  But taking a few minutes to tell him what he did after the war… that he’d spent several months in an Army hospital on Oahu; or gone to UNO for a degree in Civil Engineering; that he worked for Northern Natural Gas back in the days before it became that evil Enron; that he attended law school, been an attorney in Omaha.  All that, and all that followed it is fodder for anyone talking to him. 

I’m learning to not wait for him to tell me what he’s been doing.  He really hasn’t a clue.  He gets up, goes to breakfast (or not), gets his medicine, cleans his room, and then it begins to trail off, ‘cause he doesn’t really KNOW what he does.  More black fog.  I don’t wait.  I rummage through the dusty attic of my mind and find a story to tell.  Don’t need to remember lots of things.  Over the course of an hour or two, I can tell him the same story 2 or 3 times.  It’s new every time.

And here I didn’t think I had anything to say today!  Good day everone!

Category: Stayings at home  | 2 Comments
April 06th, 2009 | Author: Eric Hays-Strom

Well, my little pay back period last week only lasted a day.  Yay!

The rest of last week, I spent doing… well… stuff.  Wednesday, in spite of feeling better, I kind of loafed most of the day.  That evening, Scott and I had dinner with Dad.  Thursday, I had an interview with the firm I alluded to in my last post.  It’s looking good; I just have to wait to hear one way or the other.  I spent that morning doing research, getting prepped for anticipated questions… that never materialized!

This past weekend it was time for Scott and I to do some work around the house… work that cropped up while we were gone.

First, was the matter of our kitchen.  It had gone in excess of 3 weeks without any attention.  I scrubbed down the counter tops, throwing away trash that Gary hadn’t bothered himself with.  Put the countless empty soda bottles in the recycling bag.  All in all, it didn’t take too long.  Then again, 45 minutes cleaning the counter was pretty unnecessary.

Then after sweeping the floor which had numerous dark spots from unwiped up spills, I began the task of mopping.  I started in the “Pet Feeding Zone”… and area that we’d kind of let go for even longer than the 3 weeks mentioned.  Our kitchen floor is tile… 1 foot by 1 foot square with a quarter inch grout.  I got about 4 of these tiles mopped and realized that they needed a little more attention that a mop.  So I got down on my knees to work on a few spots… and that’s where I spent the rest of the day.  The entire floor needed hand scrubbing.

The tan grout had turned black.  And as each tile was scrubbed, it showed up the tile next to it as overly grimy.  Frankly, I’m not used to that kind of scrubbing.  I’d do about 9 square feet (9 tiles) and have to rest my arms!  By the time we finished that evening, my arms were so sore!  Aspirin didn’t help!  They hurt all day Sunday too!  Yeah, I know… poor baby.  To be honest, I was quite shocked to just how out of shape I’ve become, and even more so at how weak my arms have become!

In the meantime, while I cinderfella’d my way across the floor, Scott was working on the shower.  The hot water faucet has been loose for some time, and in our absence had become even more so.  It was to the point that we could turn on the hot water, but not turn it off!  At least, not without lots of work.  And every time I’d finally think it was off, and released my grip on it, the water would start flowing again.

So, Scott tried to remove the handle, only to discover that the screw holding it on was stripped and wouldn’t come off.  We tried EVERYTHING.  Eventually, after several hours of trying this and that (including those magic tools advertized on TV for removing stripped screws) Scott was able to saw off the handle without damaging the underlying stem.  But that stripped screw was stuck in the stem.  We’re now faced with that old standby fix… the vice-grips on the stem trick!

Since we are planning on ripping out the bathroom, all the way down to the studs and subfloor, we opted not to take out the stem and replace it.  We can get by on our little fix for a few weeks, or months.

Sunday, we went to one of the local casinos for Palm Sunday brunch.  We had a marvelous time with 4 of our friends from church.  And I didn’t gamble $1!

Now a new week dawns.  And I wait… well, KIND of wait.  I need to get going with other job apps while I await word from the latest interview!

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March 30th, 2009 | Author: Eric Hays-Strom

Scott and I arrived home last night about 7:30 p.m., absolutely worn out from the day’s drive.  The first 71 miles, from Limon, CO, to Brush, CO, along CO71 (I think) was not too bad.  Little did we know we were being pushed along by a strong tail-wind!

But once we hit I76 at Brush, we began to feel that wind, as now it was coming from our right, cross-wise to us.  From there until we reached Omaha almost 12 hours later, we fought every inch of the way, except for a few portions of I80 between Lincoln and Omaha.  The wind was so bad that we had to drop our speed from the posted 75 mph to between 55 and 60.  Neither of us could manage more than about an hour behind the wheel at any time.  So, we had more frequent stops. 

Also, for most of the trip across Nebraska, the wind was from the south east, which meant we had a cross-wind AND a head-wind to deal with, so we drank large quantities of gasoline… that meant more stops.

It was good coming home.  We didn’t really want to leave New Mexico.  It was beautiful in every way.  Even the days of dust storms in Alamogordo were beautiful in the eerie quality they bestowed.  I’d have given anything to be able to stay one more day, and one more day, and one more day.  But of course, real life had to intervene and force us home.

But coming home to our little Miss Nicki was a joy.  And sleeping in our own bed was marvelous!  I’d go again, and come home again, just for those experiences.  I do think, though, for our next vacation, Miss Nicki will join us!

Now, the cleaning begins.  Lots of laundry to get caught up on.  A house that seriously needs major work!  Dusting, straightening, sweeping, mopping.  A resume to complete… and oh yes, today’s meeting with the recruiter for a potential new job!  I’m so looking forward to that!  It’ll be my first application, and I know one seldom gets hired on the first application… but it’s a job that would fit me perfectly!

Category: Our Travels, Stayings at home  | Comments off
March 08th, 2009 | Author: Eric Hays-Strom

One of the reasons I created this new blog on our web site was to document our life ON the road… as well as off.

This past week I began preparing for our first (and possibly only) trip of 2009 in our camper.  Thursday, I took the trailer over to Camping World to get it serviced.  We had the bearing repacked and a 45 point service check done.  They found problems with the water heater (a spider had built it’s web over the igniter) and with the pig tail. 

Saturday, we purchased a new camera (a nice little Olympus) and picked up some replacement load balancing pins.  Then it was back to the trailer to clean it out a little, removing some of the things that we didn’t feel we’d need for this coming trip.  Today, it was gathering supplies that we WILL need (like the TV that we keep in the house during winter.)

Saturday, Scott and I will be setting off for New Mexico for two weeks.  The only real prep we still need to do is get the truck serviced, and I need to get caught up on the laundry, as well as buy groceries for Gary before we leave.

I can’t wait to get out on the open road!

Category: Our Travels, Stayings at home  | Comments off
February 19th, 2009 | Author: Eric Hays-Strom

Okay, first of all, let me be honest.  I did NOT invent this, as I said in my previous post.  I modified it.  I woke up yesterday morning and thought “Self, we need to figger out what to do with that chicken… I know, how about something with peppers and mandarin oranges?”  So, I set out to find a recipe.  I modified, slightly, what I found… here goes:

1 lg red pepper sliced into thin stripes
1 lg yellow pepper sliced into thin stripes
1 can mandarin oranges (strain, but keep juice)
1 cup green onions (cut to about 1 “)
2 tbsp fresh minced ginger
1 can strained water chestnuts
soy sauce
1 lb Chicken breast cut in to strips
“a large handful of raisins”
chinese noodles (prepare as package directs)
1 can chicken broth
Olive oil

In a skillet, add a little olive oil, 1 tbsp minced ginger, 2 tbsp soy sauce and the chicken.  Grill chicken until no longer pink.  Remove chicken and set aside.

In the same skillet, add another tbsp of soy sauce, a third of the can of chicken broth, the peppers, onions and chestnuts, and stir fry until veggies are crisp but hot.  Remove from skillet.

In the same skillet, add  a third of the can of chicken broth, the noodles, the mandarins and the raisins.  Stir fry, then add back in the veggies and the chicken, a little more chicken broth, the juice from the mandarins.  Stir together, turn off the heat, and serve.

Category: Stayings at home  | Comments off