After four kids, ten moves and nearly two decades, we are still blissfully in love (most of the time) and I found myself back in the state I was born and raised in. It has definitely been a journey. In fact, on our 18th anniversary we pulled the last of our stuff up over the pass and into Montana, leaving our surprise love, Idaho, behind. But Montana is a great place. The last best place according to some. And we fully intend to explore as much of it as we can! Join us on our continued adventure through life, love and other stuff that comes with it.

Monday, April 9, 2012

DUCKS! Day 15

Guest blogger Grace, age 8, with a little update on her effort to hatch duck eggs.
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Today is day 15.  On day 12 we candled the four new eggs.  This is what we found.

This is egg #7.  We think it probaby was not fertile.


We think this one started to grow and then stopped. 


Egg #8 is definitely growing.  We saw veins in it the first time we candled it and yesterday on day 14 we saw it moving when we candled it.  This is the only egg out of all eight that is doing that.  There is a baby duck growing in this one. 

I don't think any of the other eggs are going to hatch.  This one has 18 more days to grow into a duckling and hatch.  I think it will hatch, but I am to sure because a lot can happen between now and then.

Forever is not a long time for a six-year-old

A couple weeks ago I told the husband that I am thankful for the house we live in, that I will continue to be thankful that we have a place to live, and I will not complain too much.  But, I said, when the time comes that we get our own house again, I will be moving with glee. 

Let me remind you that last summer we lived in our fifth wheel camper for six weeks.  Then a couple from church offered us the opportunity to rent a really super clean and nice double wide that came available so our kids could start school.  Now we live here, in another double wide on 20 acres.  It is not *ideal* by any means, but we are making it work. 

If you have never lived in a manufactured home and have not also lived in a stick-built home, let me enlighten you with a little story.  A true story. 

Before we moved into our camper last summer we lived in an old farm house on five acres surrounded by potato and grain fields.  The house was old, but full of character and we planned to buy it eventually and make it what we knew it could be--a beautiful, big, clean, well-kept home for our family.

Before that we lived in a house in town, and before that we lived in a different house in a different town.  And before that we lived in what we thought was our forever home on top of a hill overlooking Mt. St. Helens.  It was a beautiful home and the setting was perfect.  The carpet was new, the walls were painted.  I had spent quite a lot of time and energy making it nice and put-together.  It wasn't a museum by any means, but it was comfortable and I thought it was beautiful.

Fast forward over three years to yesterday.  We had been invited to spend Easter with a really nice family from church.  They have a couple of really great kids about our kids' ages and since none of us have family around, they invited us over for Easter dinner.  I brought a salad and dessert.  After church we followed them to their home.

Their house is in a nice subdivision out of town a little way.  He works in construction and she works at the local hospital.  They have a beautiful home that is tastefully decorated and child friendly.  They have a paved driveway and a play structure in the fenced back yard.  Their son has a blue room and their daughter has a lavender room.  Everything has a place, though most things of the children's things look just as comfortable out of place as they do in place.  We adults sat in the living room after a yummy dinner with a glass of wine and visited about kids and jobs and family and burping at the table and other things that happen when you have kids and families and jobs and all that.  Violet found a harmonica and kept bringing it in and playing it for us.  So lovely.  The rest of the kids, including Mr. C., ran around in the back yard and rode the scooters and bikes around on the paved driveway.  They ate too much Easter candy and the chocolate covered strawberries I had brought for dessert. It was a perfect day--and really the first perfect spring day we've had.

Then Calla emerged.  She just turned six.  She was three when we moved the first time.  Yesterday she ran into the the living room at our new friends' house and announced that she really liked this place and wanted to have her next birthday party here. 

We smiled an nodded.  She ran away happily.  I got a little sad.

I will not live in a manufactured home forever.  My children will grow up in a nice, clean, large, well decorated house that we call home and we are proud to have people over to.  And yes, she can have her birthday party there.  We will not live like this forever.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

DUCKS!!! Day 10

Guest blogger Grace is blogging about her attempt to hatch what has turned into eight duck eggs since we have acquired four more this last week. 

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A couple nights ago I candled my duck eggs 1 2 3 and 4. Eggs 1 2 and 3 were bright inside, but egg 4 was dark on one side and I don't know why. I think is was a duckling starting to form on one side of the egg.  Number 1 2 and 3 are probably not growing.  We will candle the other four in a couple days and try to take some pictures.


When I was in preschool I hatched in our class baby chickens and when they hatched they pooped all over the carpet, but didn't poop on me or my class I think.

The box of baby chicks that started it all.
A chick from the batch that pooped on the rug in the preschool class.

These are pictures of our neighbor's ducks. She keeps them in her chicken coop. The white duck is the one who laid the duck eggs that I have in the incubator.  The black one is the drake, or male duck.  Females are called ducks or hens. A female goose is called a goose and a male goose is called a gander.



Tuesday, March 27, 2012

DUCKS! Day 3

Guest blogger Grace is blogging about her attempt to hatch four duck eggs as her 4-H project.

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On Sunday we put the 4 eggs in the incubator.


The eggs will take 28 days to hatch into ducks. I have to turn the eggs at least 3 times a day. My mom made me a duck egg turning chart. I put what time I turn them on diferant days. It doesn't matter when I turn my duck eggs. It  does matter that I turn them at least 3 times a day.



The temperature is suppose to be between 99 and 100 degrees F. If the eggs are cooler or hotter than that they won't hatch. I think it will be hard to hatch the eggs. I am glad I am not a mother duck so I don't have to sit on them!  

Saturday, March 24, 2012

DUCKS!

Over the next few weeks I'm super pleased to have Grace join me as a guest blogger.  She is signed up for 4-H and is very excited to get some ducks for her poultry project.  We're also using it as a home school project.  I'll let her tell you all about it!

--Heidi

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This morning we got four duck eggs from our neighbor and got our incubatur set up. I don't know how many ducks I am going to have though, because never count your chickens (or ducks) before they hatch!

When we got them they were really dirty and we weren't supposed to wash them but we washed them anyway because they were very very very dirty.  I used a pencil to put a X on one side and an O on the other side of each egg. I am supposed to turn them at least 4 times a day and the X and O help me keep track of turning them.

Super dirty eggs

Cleaner eggs.  Marked and with a chicken egg for comparison.

Monday, March 19, 2012

A sign from God

Tonight on the way home from town I happened to glance into the heavens.


Today, the heavens are smiling on me.  And it totally makes me smile. 


Friday, March 9, 2012

Sure sign of spring

Today it was sunny and 55, the kind of weather that draws my kids outside.







Grace came in yesterday and announced that there were 12 days until spring.  Based on the events of the last hour, I think I probably could have figured that out even if she wasn't quite as on top of it as she is. 

Daddy is taking them all to town tomorrow to make sure everyone has proper muck boots.  I think that's a good idea.