Our normal posting has been disrupted by an asteroid

Back in August, when I met up with Nupur of One Hot Stove to chat, introduce our little ones, and swap some food, she and I were both adjusting to [what I thought would be] a temporary stint as SAHMs.  Nupur made some comment to the effect that, contrary to what those who have not been in the role might believe, we weren’t sitting on the couch and eating bonbons all day.

Unfortunately, Sir’s current stage — clingy/fussy/teething/crazy/strong-willed hot mess of toddler — leaves me with little energy to do much more than collapse on the couch come nap time or bedtime, regardless of whether or not there are any bonbons in reach.  To paraphrase a quote from the movie Armageddon, it recently feels like I spend my days with a “vicious, life-sucking bitch little dude, from which there is no escape.”

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No energy for the extras, like blogging or prepping baked oatmeal in the evening so it’s ready to pop in the oven in the morning.  I’ve been wanting baked oatmeal for about forever now but have been stuck with stove-top oats, which, when I really want to get the day off to a special start, I turn up too high and neglect for just long enough to have a mess of sticky, cooked-on oatmeal goo all over the outside of the pan and top of the stove.

I know (or I hope?) that this is only a phase, and eventually things will get a bit easier, but at the moment, it’s difficult to get post ideas out of my head and onto the blog.

I have a number of food-related posts in the works, including our carrot taste-test and resulting recommendations of good carrots to grow (at least for our local growing conditions); a lentil [meat]ball recipe that is still a work in progress, but quite good in its current rendition, especially when served the pasta alternative that I stumbled upon at lunch today; and my favorite easy way to cook our [really huge] garden sweet potatoes.  Meanwhile, Matthew is working on a couple of garden-related how-to posts, since spring is right around the corner.

Thanks for staying with me through this slow posting period!

Commence the heavy drinking

So, over the weekend, I started having symptoms indicative of a UTI.  I know you’re on the edge of your seat, wanting to hear more, but first, a bit of background.

My last doctor visit for a UTI occurred a bit over three years ago, just before a girls’ weekend trip to Kansas City with my mom and sisters.  After making sure that I didn’t get the antibiotic associated with tendon ruptures, I filled the prescription and dutifully started the course, taking it as prescribed with plenty of water.

Later that day, I hopped on the bus to Kansas City, looking forward to quality time with my family, which would include some fun Kansas City restaurants.  By the time our much anticipated Saturday lunch at Eden Alley rolled around, I was feeling a little off — not sick, exactly, but just uncomfortable.

As the day progressed, I realized the problem — constipation, an effect of whatever antibiotic I was taking.  By the time my mom dropped me off for the five hour return bus ride on Sunday morning, I hadn’t pooped in over twenty-four hours (NOT normal for me), and I felt completely disgusting.

Given my tendency toward motion sickness, buses are an iffy proposition for me at the best of times.  Bus ride plus constipation?  REALLY bad combination.  I had no interest whatsoever in eating the nice wrap I bought at a deli, and I barely held it together as we made our way east on I-70.  Still, I thought I would make it, but then we left the interstate and started making our way through downtown St. Louis.  The stop-and-start was just too much for me — the bus stop was so close, yet so far away.

As we sat at a stoplight within two walking blocks of Union Station,  I knew the bus would go around the block, making it more like five interminable blocks until we arrived.  Things were about to get ugly, so I grabbed my purse, abandoning the rest of my stuff in the seat, went to the front, and begged the driver to let me get off and walk the rest of the way.

The fresh, cool air and lack of bus movement nausea arrived just in time to prevent vomiting, thought I may have felt better, sooner, if  I hadn’t fought it.

Within a few days, I finished the course of antibiotics and returned to my usual, very regularly pooping self, but with a heightened wariness of antibiotics.  In the following weeks, I had a couple more [undiagnosed] UTIs (usually a rare occurrence for me, thankfully) that cleared with my home treatment of flushing things out by drinking lots and lots of water, and maybe some tea, but you really don’t need to drink anything special.

So, when the frequent, painful urination started this time around, I turned to the tap.  In the past few days, I’ve gulped gallons of water, with a bit of green tea here and there.  I found a few cranberry extract pills from three years ago (you know, only two years expired), so I’ve tossed those into the mix as well, though I’m not sure that they really do much.

Every treatment has its unwanted effects, and the downside to drinking lots of water is frequent bathroom visits, but that’s kind of the point.  While not a big deal during the day, it’s not so great for sleeping.  In any case, I think my heavy drinking is doing the trick, though I don’t think I’m in the clear yet.  I’ll give it a few more days, but I may be headed to the doctor after all.  If that happens, please remind me to avoid any bus trips.

Ghost of Christmas past

So Christmas is old news, seeing as how we’ve already rung in the New Year, but better late than never.  Unless you’re having any VERY belated holiday celebrations, you probably don’t need my fun green gift wrapping break through, so I’ll tuck that idea away for next year.

As expected, Sir did not lack for Christmas gifts.  The highlights included a pony from his great grandparents . .  .

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Of course, everyone knows that it’s best to ride bareback . . .

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. . . while holding a hairbrush.

Speaking of riding, one week before Christmas, I found a Balance Bike on Craigslist.  We’d debated Balance Bike versus regular bike with pedals and cranks removed, but the good deal, combined with the timing and the fact that we hadn’t done much in terms of Christmas shopping, sealed the deal.

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He’s not quite ready for it, but he’s very interested, and all signs indicate that he’ll be ready to cruise come spring.

I’m happy to report that all of his Christmas gifts (from Matthew and me) are of the new-to-us variety, though I did find out the hard way (almost empty toy shelves at the SVdP thrift store) that I am not the only parent to buy secondhand for Christmas — must plan ahead for that in future years.

I particularly delighted in the gift my sister gave us — beautiful homemade stockings.  I knew I wanted something special, and liked the idea of making them myself, but I lacked the equipment/skill/time to do so.

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Aunt Mollie to the rescue!  It’s so fun to know that we’ll be hanging these stockings for many years to come.

Here’s hoping that 2013 is off to a good start for all of you!

Mouse in the house

‘Twas some days before Christmas
And all through the flat
A small creature was moving
And it was named That . . .

Monday morning, as I grabbed something or other from our pantry, I encountered what looked suspiciously like mouse droppings.  My first response was denial, but, although I’m no mouse-poop expert, I admitted with a sinking heart that we probably had an uninvited visitor.  As additional evidence, I’d thought maybe I’d heard some sounds under/behind the oven over the weekend.

Still, Monday was a full day, and I didn’t think much more of it until that night.  We put Gabriel into bed and settled on the couch to read and relax for a bit, when a distinct squeaking noise came from the kitchen.  My biggest initial fear was that I would encounter it unexpectedly and scream while Gabriel was sleeping.  With plans to get some traps the next day, I managed to sleep that night, with earplugs to cover any little scratching or squeaking.

On Tuesday morning, we found a few more droppings.  And then, that afternoon, as I was sitting on the couch, nursing Gabriel after his nap, I looked over and saw the mouse, coming out from under the piano, scurrying around the dining room, focusing on the area underneath Gabriel’s chair.

I did not scream.  In fact, I remained quite calm so as not to disturb Gabriel, though I shifted my feet off the floor.  It continued to move about, a bit skittish if I made any sound, but it was still doing its thing when Gabriel finished nursing, so I quietly turned him toward the dining room and pointed.

After a few seconds, he noticed our visitor, and excitedly proclaimed, “That!” and so our mouse had a name.

That was really rather cute and kind-of fun to watch (from the safety of the couch).  Still, I didn’t want That in the house, so I looked around for ways to do That in, thinking it would be easier to just be done with it and not bother with traps and uncertainty.  By the time I manged to get the broom and the camera (debating between shooting it and whacking it), That decided to hide for several hours.

Matthew arrived home with two spring traps, and after Gabriel went to bed, we baited one with cheese and the other with almond butter.  We put the cheese trap in the kitchen and the nut butter trap in the dining room.

Twenty minutes later, I went into the kitchen to grab something and saw That dash across the counter between the stove and the fridge.  I called Matthew and suggested we move the trap from the floor to the counter, since it seemed to be a path That frequented.  Matthew picked up the unsprung trap and did a double take.  No cheese.  Yep, it took That less then thirty minutes to discover and rob our trap.

I remembered noticing earlier that it looked like That’s tail had a bit of a kink, perhaps indicating an earlier run-in with a mouse trap.  That was no novice.  Thinking that sticky nut butter might be a better option, we rebated the kitchen trap with nut butter, and pushed a piece of cheese into the nut butter on the dining room trap.

Awhile later, Matthew saw That running across the dining room floor.  He investigated, and we were down another piece of cheese.  That: 2, Us: 0.

I wasn’t too worried about That damaging our food.  Our general storage practices are relatively pest-proof: beans and grains sealed in glass jars with metal lids; nuts, flour, bread, and other baked goods in the freezer.  However, Matthew discovered that That had made a mess behind the fridge, shredding some paper and such.  (He also found out from our downstairs neighbors that they had no less than four mice last winter.)

After a bit of moving things around to try to flush it out from under the piano, we finally decided to call it a night.  In a last-ditch attempt, I took a small bit of almond butter and rolled it in a container of seeds (leftover from those crackers that have mixed seeds on top), and we rebaited the dining room trap with my creation.  My theory was that mice like to eat little seeds and things, and the tiny seeds would be much harder to remove than a chunk of cheese, increasing the chances that That would spring the trap.

The mess, threat of damage to non-food goods, and chance of That discovering our produce stores in the basement, along with the whole mice carrying diseases thing, combined to seal That’s eviction notice.  Still, I didn’t hold much hope for the spring traps that he seemed to thumb his nose at.  We went to bed, debating other types of traps to try.

We woke this morning, and Matthew went to pick up the traps before Gabriel discovered the one on the floor.  Given my very low expectations, Matthew’s, “Um, we caught something,” definitely took me by surprise.  Against all odds, my seed-coated nut butter blob did the trick.

R.I.P.
That the Mouse

I did a ton of cleaning this morning, pulling out both the stove and the fridge, vacuuming poop, and wiping down counter tops.  There’s a chance that That was acting alone, but I’ll be watching for signs for a few days.  Given the history of mice in the this building, I’m afraid we may yet see some of That’s relatives.  At least I know how to bait the trap . . . .

Wanderings

Gabriel loves the outdoors, and while we have a great park within easy biking distance, and another smaller park and playground just over a block away, there’s nothing quite as simple as heading outside for a stroll.

Stick (or rock, or acorn) in hand, he’s ready to go.  Sometimes we spend thirty minutes investigating the area within four houses of our apartment.  Other times we make it all the way around the block.  I enjoy the lazy pace of our strolls — pausing, reversing course, stopping to eat smell flowers.

What you notice and take in depends so much on your mode of transportation.  In a car, houses, trees, and entire blocks fly by — gone in a blink, even at relatively low speeds.  On a bike, you’re much more aware of your surroundings, but even then, you roll by, sure to miss some details.  On our wanderings, we’re really part of the fabric of the street, experiencing everything at human speed.

It’s a guaranteed way to shrug off the grumps, and I have a feeling that someone’s smile (and adorable fuzzy coat) has that effect on most everyone we pass.

Find a pile of leaves at the base of a nice tree, sit down with the sun on your face, and settle in to your little nest.  Sometimes its good to have nowhere to go.