The
first fire of the season burns in the fireplace. A breezy Saturday afternoon
turned into a ferocious windstorm last night. It removed my artificial decorative
flowers from their pots on the woodshed, blew limbs from trees, and rearranged
the furniture on the front porch. It also rained. This afternoon we have more
of the same. I came with two loads of dirty laundry; I’ll return to town with
three loads.
The
good news is that the raspberry canes we planted yesterday stayed in the
ground. I regretted not having better prepared the ground and that we had to
plant in the rain but a friend gave us eight canes that needed to be set. Well –
they’re getting plenty of moisture.
I
regret now having put off some chores, thinking they could be done on warm
October afternoons. I might be working in the cold to plant spring bulbs.
The
garbanzos I initially picked – two one-gallon containers – resulted in 5 ½ cups
of dry beans. It was a fairly labor-intensive project for what I got, but I did
enjoy doing it. I cooked a cup yesterday and used them in baked ziti for supper.
Very good! But this afternoon Farmer Kyle began to plow the fields, so that’s
that with the gleaning. Kyle says he got good yield from the garbs, and he’ll
plant the wheat as soon as he can.
Sometimes
things just get out of hand – too many books and magazines, too many boxes, too
many jars, too much fabric, etc., etc., for the available storage space. I mulled
this over for several years before I suddenly saw solutions in the form of DIY
cabinets. We assembled three at the town house, and last month Mike assembled
one in Hallie’s room at the farmhouse.
The
cabinet in Hallie’s room stores the clothing that she and Nick leave here as
well as extra bedding, quilts, my sewing overflow, and a few over-sized books. I
had to think about this unit for a while because it’s not great furniture, but
it is reversible should another option come along. I guess I didn’t do it
sooner because I liked the old table and the bentwood rocker that sat in this
space. Well, the old table went to the vintage sewing room where it serves as
an extension for my sewing table, and the bentwood rocker still looks cozy in
the corner of Hallie’s room.
On
the sun porch, Mike assembled a smaller ClosetMaid unit to meet the storage
need for items cluttering the utility room. Canning supplies, disposable
containers, odd jars, and my gardening gloves and pruners now have a home.
It’s amazing how months of just kind of agonizing over these problems suddenly
smoothed into solutions. KW
Tell me more about the closet units--how much they cost, how deep are they, where do you get them, etc.
ReplyDeleteThey look good. Too bad about the gleaning being over and the storm damage.
You will probably get more nice weather in October.
Hi Chuck!
ReplyDeleteThe brand name on the cabinet units is ClosetMaid. The units like the one in Hallie's room are 3' wide, 18" deep, and about 6 feet tall. These units cost about $175 and we get them at Home Depot. I'm careful about the weight I place on the shelves, but they have been adequate for what I want to store.
The one on the sun porch is about 24" wide and 14" deep and stands about 6' tall. I don't remember what it cost. I think it was about $90.
These are not great furniture, but they have met my need for additional storage.
It's a stormy afternoon at 48 degrees. Kyle quit plowing and left. If I wanted to brave the wind, the rain, and the cold temp I could pick up more beans, but -- I can also buy them.
Has that loose branch above the woodshed come down yet?
ReplyDeleteI need more storage in my sewing room but I can't decide what to do. As Dan says, "Indecision is the key to flexibility!" Hmmm...
ReplyDeleteI think your cabinets look very nice and certainly do the job.