Saturday, December 30, 2017

The Goodness of Gardening



It is the depths of winter and it is time to talk gardening.   


click on the cabbages to enlarge


Since the times the pharaohs ruled ancient Egypt the therapeutic benefits of gardening has been documented.  In the 19th century, Dr. Benjamin Rush - a signer of the Declaration of Independence and Father of American Psychiatry - documented the positive impact gardening had upon individuals with mental illness.   

In the 1940s and 1950s, rehabilitative care of hospitalized war veterans significantly expanded acceptance of the practice.   The 1950s and 1960s brought the first degree in horticultural therapy at Michigan State University.  In 1972, Kansas State University created the first curriculum that provided students with dual training in both psychology and horticulture.  The first graduate degree program was offered by Clemson University in 1973 and in that same year the Council for Therapy and Rehabilitation though Horticulture (NCTRH) was established by a group of horticulture therapy professionals.  In 1988, the organization was renamed:  the American Horticulture Therapy Association (AHTA).   

Nowadays, horticultural therapy is accepted as a beneficial and effective therapeutic modality. It enhances individual cognitive abilities such as memory task initiation, language skills, and socialization.  It also contributes to physical rehabilitation strengthening muscles and improving coordination, balance, and endurance.  In a word gardening is more about raising your own produce and vegetables – it is therapeutic on many different levels.  

Which reminds me – I have to order my seed stock for the 2018 garden. 

Friday, December 29, 2017

Friday Music



Ronald Bertram Aloysius ‘R. B.’ Greaves III was an American singer who had chart success in 1969 with the pop single Take a Letter Maria.   A number two hit on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, this single sold one million copies, and it earned gold record certification from the Recording Industry Association of America.  This tune has a most-definite Latin pedigree - including the mariachi brass in the background....

Thursday, December 28, 2017

Pot Pie








What do you do with leftover Cornish game hens from Christmas dinner?

You repurpose them into pot pies.









Easy peasy - with the following shortcuts.



Canned baby peas

Canned baby carrots

Canned potatoes

Canned chicken gravy

Frozen pie crusts

Salad by The Daughter





Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Road Trip


One of the benefits of crate training your dogs is ease of traveling.

I have to say that our Labs are among the best of travelers - content to while-away the hours, over hundreds of miles, in the back of the truck snug in their crates.

I believe that in their doggie minds this is like time travel - waking up to emerge from their crate in a new location every time.

Southern Cooking





One of the things about southern cooking is the richness of it. 

Dessert the other night featured this.

Talk about rich.

And sweet.






If you want to try it yourself go fetch a frozen pie crust and have at it...

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Snow Bird



 
Seems like it was only yesterday that these birds were passing thru on their way to their breeding grounds in the boreal forests of Canada and as far as the southern fringes of the arctic circle.  Now they're hanging around the feeders and scratching in the snow.  Good-sized flocks of them too.  
The dark-eyed Junco – Junco hyemalis – is a finch-sized bird that we observe usually underneath the feeders.  They a sweet-looking bird that also has a rigid social structure that calls for the dominant birds to boss the meeker birds.  As the days have  grown shorter they're paying us another visit as they return to their wintering grounds further south.  
click on the images for a better look
You can learn more about this song bird here.  And if you want to hear it’s call click here.

Monday, December 25, 2017

Dolly Parton Bridge



General W.K. Wilson Jr. Bridge – Interstate 65 – Creola, Alabama. 

This bridge is a crossing for a parallel concrete and steel viaduct of concrete span carrying four lanes of Interstate 65 across the Mobile-Tensaw River Delta northeast of the U.S. city of Mobile, Alabama.



Built from 1978 to 1980, it spans a distance of 6.08 miles (10 km) over the delta, making it, along with the Jubilee Parkway across Mobile Bay to its south, among the longest bridges in the nation.  It was named in honor of Walter K. Wilson, a Chief of Engineers with the United States Army Corps of Engineers and long-term resident of Mobile.  He was credited with being one of the first people recognizing the need to construct a high-level bridge on Interstate 65 over the Mobile River that would not impede waterway development.   The state of Alabama named the bridge in his honor after completion of construction in 1978. 


click on images to enlarge
 
The bridge has red warning lights atop the parallel support arches which, when combined with the shape of the supporting arches when approached from certain directions, have caused the bridge to gain the nickname "The Dolly Parton Bridge".    -Wikipedia

Merry Christmas

The staff here at The Platz would like to extend their best wishes for a blessed Christmas holiday and may you find another new chew toy in your stocking...
 

Sunday, December 24, 2017

Naughty Christmas Song

In case you've been wondering if I've been naughty or nice I'm feeling just a wee bit irreverent today.  And couldn't resist sharing this little tidbit of holiday humor set to traditional Christmas carols...

Saturday, December 23, 2017

Blue Bird Christmas

Blue birds decked-out their house for the holidays before heading south for the winter.  

They said to tell you they'll see you in early spring...

Santa's Elves

Freshpet does it again - this time with a corny video of dogs and cats in Santa's workshop.

Hope you're getting into the holiday spirit...

Friday, December 22, 2017

Friday Music



Recorded in 1966 and released in January 1967 this song spent three weeks in the number one slot on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart.  This was the song that launched The Doors from relative obscurity to stardom   Front man Jim Morrison – The Lizard King – burned-up like a flaming meteor with his death in Paris at the age of 27.  I’ve visited his apartment and his grave at Père Lachaise cemetery so I suppose you could say I’ve made my pilgrimage.  In case you're wondering - for live performances keyboardist Ray Manzarek played the song's bass line with his left hand on a Fender Rhodes Piano Bass - while performing the other keyboard parts on a Vox Continental using his right hand.   

This song is on my own personal, all-time, top ten list.  Enjoy...

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Christmas is a Sustainable Holiday


The Christmas holiday and recognition of Jesus' birth likely trace their roots and origins to pre-Christian festivals that were celebrated around the winter solstice by pagan populations who were later converted to Christianity.  Any number of the pagan holidays had origins in natural cycles of birth, death and rebirth.   

To Christians it was through Jesus’ death and resurrection that people can be reconciled to God and thereby are offered salvation and the promise of eternal life.  As far as religions go Christianity is eminently sustainable.   

Among our Christmas cards is a self-produced gem from friends on the peninsula…  

'The planter by our front door has geraniums in the summer and a big pumpkin in the fall.    

Each year we dig a little pine tree from our woods to replace them.  

Come spring we transplant the tree.    

From our home to yours we wish you all the joys of the season and he very best for 2018!'  

(on the opposite side is a photo of a pint-sized white spruce decked-out in lights with a covering of freshly-fallen snow)   

Raising a toast to the Christmastide spirit and sustainable forestry...