House Dust and Wanderlust
Sunday, January 11, 2026
advice from the beatles
Saturday, January 10, 2026
the first gardening catalog!
Friday, January 9, 2026
the friday feed: mocktail #1
Last weekend while hanging out with my girlfriend of a long, long time, all at once she said, "I want to do dry January. Will you do it with me...help keep me accountable?"
"Sure...why not? It'll be fun to have a challenge," and Dry January started on Saturday.
So far, six days into this, it's been easy. I love water. If I want something other than plain water, I'll brighten my water intake with flavored sparkling water.
Right now mocktails are a thing, especially since it's Dry January. And just for fun, I looked up some mocktail recipes. Many are fruit based. You make a syrup, typically with berries, add sparkling water, and freshly squeezed citrus juice. Garnish it with mint or a slice of citrus or some other ornamentation.
I've been cleaning out my refrigerator and from the family being here for the Christmas holiday I had a lot of leftover blueberries. My little grandsons love blueberries so I purchased a carton for their meals and then my daughter and daughter-in-law brought some from their homes. We had a lot of blueberries and when it was time for people to leave, the kids left them here. Todd and I can eat only so many blueberries, I hate to waste food, so time to make a mocktail. With blueberries.
The recipe called for making a syrup with blueberries, honey and water. Put a couple Tablespoons in a glass, fill it with ice, add some sparkling water and fresh squeezed lime juice. It was tasty, refreshing, I had to figure out the balance between the syrup and lime juice. The first taste was too tart so a touch more blueberry syrup fixed that.
Todd took a taste. He said it was good...but it would be better with vodka!
Today is my dad's birthday, he would have been 92, and to celebrate he would have made a martini. His martinis were gin and vermouth with three olives and a couple ice cubes, and he measured his 'tinis very precisely using a glass baby bottle.
"A man must defend his home, his wife, his children, and his martini."
~ Jackie Gleason
Dad liked Jackie Gleason, too.
Cheers, Dad.
Thursday, January 8, 2026
sunrise @ 7:42
Wednesday, January 7, 2026
wednesday's words and wanderings and wonderings
In 2025 we welcomed two new family members, our granddaughter Hallie and daughter-in-law Kelsey. Keeping with tradition, I made Christmas stockings for them but didn't want to post them before they got the first looks. So without further ado...ta-daaa...here they are! Hallie is 9 months old for her first Christmas. Kelsey's favorite holiday is Halloween so her stocking is Christmas with some touches of Halloween.
Tuesday, January 6, 2026
a winter walk
Monday, January 5, 2026
monday's mulling: heart(attack)breaking events
We've had a couple of bad news events in the last few weeks. On December 18, I was supposed to go see my girl Robin for a haircut and some color for those insistent gray highlights that keep showing up. At 4:00 a.m. my text message noise sounded (I usually turn the sound off when I go to bed but I didn't that night), woke me up, and then I was wide awake. Her 42-year old daughter had a heart attack and was in the hospital in a medically induced coma. This event left her daughter with catastrophic brain damage and she died yesterday afternoon. A parent losing a child...I can't imagine.
Yesterday we drove to Norwalk, Ohio to attend the visitation of a friend's older brother who died a couple days ago from a massive heart attack as he drove home from visiting his mother who is dying of cancer. Her time on this earth isn't much longer and the family will be planning another funeral within the week. Talk about a double gut punch. Wow. Our friend's brother was a husband, father, grandpa, a well-loved high school basketball coach and the neighborhood grandpa - an all around good guy. The funeral home's parking lot was packed and overflow parking went across the street to the Masonic Center. The amount of people at this visitation was a testament to how well-loved this man was.
These two sudden and unexpected events show the fragility and unexpected turns life takes.
"Yesterday is history,
Tomorrow is a mystery,
Today is a gift.
That’s why we call it the present."
Unwrap each daily gift with gratitude.
















