7-22-08

When I was looking through past entries to get the links at the bottom of this page (yes, I do them by hand every day), I came across this entry from six years ago. It’s about the day I was vacuuming the house and came across a great big fat meaty frog in the study … Continue reading “7-22-08”

When I was looking through past entries to get the links at the bottom of this page (yes, I do them by hand every day), I came across this entry from six years ago. It’s about the day I was vacuuming the house and came across a great big fat meaty frog in the study and I freaked out and shut the door, and if you want to know more, go read the entry. At the time, I belonged to a mailing list and people were emailing back and forth about how funny it was.

And this one woman, someone who annoyed the everloving shit out of me every time she sent an email to the list, said “I don’t see what the big deal is, it was just a frog, I have no problems handling frogs. ::shrug::”

That only confirmed my belief that she was a humorless douchebag and what annoys the shit out of me lo these many years later is that every time I see that entry, I always think of her and get annoyed all over again.

(No, it isn’t you. It’s someone who never read me, who always annoyed me, and may or may not still have some kind of online presence. I don’t know and I wouldn’t read her if I did.)

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Yesterday morning, the phone rang.

“It’s going to be really, really hot today,” Fred informed me. “The temperature’s going to be up around 100, and with the heat index it’s supposed to be close to 110. The pigs have mud in their wallow, but it’s only filled about halfway. Would you go out and run the hose to the hole and let the water run for five minutes or so, so it’s got water in there too, and they can really sink down in it?”

Pigs, for the record, wallow in mud because they have no sweat glands and covering themselves in mud keeps them cool and protects their skin from sunburn as well.

I went out to the pig yard and at first I didn’t see them anywhere and I worried for a moment that maybe they’d sprouted wings and flown over the fence or were piled up in their shelter (I can’t imagine anything less comfortable on a hot hot summer morning than a pile of hay (straw? One or the other) in an unventilated shelter, but then I realized they’d camouflaged themselves. They’re wily ones, those pigs.

I took the end off the hose and opened the gate, sure that the pigs would hear me and come running for their treat. (And I wished I’d thought to bring them a few treats while I was at it.)

They didn’t move.

I walked across the pig yard toward the wallow, sure that they’d turn and grunt at me at any moment.

They didn’t move.

I was about two feet away from the hole where they were sound asleep before the big pig heard me, and he turned his head and was startled by my presence, which in turn startled the little pig, which in turn startled me and all three of us kind of ran in place for a moment. They both stood up out of the mud, accompanied by a loud sucking sound, and they climbed out of the hole and blinked sleepily at me.

I put the end of the hose in the wallow, then went to the spigot and turned it on. The pigs checked their troughs, ate some pig chow, and grunted sleepily at each other.

While I was waiting for the wallow to fill, I wandered off and filled the bird feeders and gave the chickens some bird feed and talked to Maxi and Newt, who were hanging out on the driveway. By the time I got back to the pig yard, about ten minutes had lapsed, and as I got closer, I could see the pigs, happily back in their wallow.

It was filled almost all the way, and they were happily blowing bubbles and telling secrets.

Then I came inside and made a batch of cookies for them. This time, along with the raisins, I tossed in a handful of chocolate chips and a sprinkle of cinnamon on top.

I call them Piggerdoodles.

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We sure have a lot of chickens. And we’re due to have a bunch more – we have 4 broody chickens sitting on 17 eggs right now. Also, we apparently have at least a few roosters from the batch of eggs we hatched ourselves. I haven’t seen it myself, but apparently the little roosters are trying to get some hen lovin’, and McLovin’ isn’t taking it well.

He thinks they’re HIS wimmin, y’know.

When I went outside yesterday at 1:00 to get a bowl of Sungold tomatoes off the plant in the back yard for my lunch, there wasn’t a chicken to be seen in the chicken yard. When I leaned down and looked, I could see them all under the chicken coop, trying to stay cool. I hate seeing them walk around with their beaks open, trying to cool down.

I think they need a window air conditioning unit in the coop.

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Food I have made recently:

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Stuffed Pattypan Squash.

One day last week Fred mentioned that he’d read somewhere that people would hollow out Pattypan Squash and stuff and bake them. Since pattypan is a pain in the ass to slice for oven-fried squash, I decided to give it a try. After looking around online for recipes, I ended up coming up with my own. I boiled the pattypan to soften it up, scooped out the seeds, and made a filling of browned ground beef (which Fred got from his coworker who raises his own cattle and gave us several pounds of ground beef), chopped onion (from our garden), brown rice, and spaghetti sauce. I stuffed the squash, sprinkled cheese on top, and baked it for 15 minutes.

That recipe was definitely a keeper – and it’s here, in case you want it for future reference. I find that I have a whole new appreciation for Pattypan! I made four Stuffed Pattypans, and we each ate one, and had the leftovers for dinner last night. I ended up with leftover filling, which I’ll use in a green pepper for Fred for dinner tomorrow night. Can’t let it go to waste!

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Last Friday I made Chocolate-Peanut Butter Cupcakes. These were chocolate cupcakes made from a mix, with a peanut butter center and buttercream frosting. They weren’t bad, but I bet that if the cake had been made from scratch and the frosting had been peanut butter frosting instead of buttercream, it would have been killer.

We knew we wouldn’t eat 24 cupcakes (or even 12), so we gave the pigs the batter that was left over after I made a dozen cupcakes, and then we ended up giving them several of the 12 that I made and frosted.

The pigs really like Fridays, as you can imagine, because they always get our leftovers from whatever sweet treat I made for us. It’s a rough life, but someone’s gotta live it.

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Kitten, mid-jump.


Getting some time away from the kittens.


“What?”

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Newt, flopped out on the patio and sleeping like the dead.

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Previously
2007: No entry.
2006: Maine facts.
2005: No entry.
2004: No entry.
2003: “Okay, first of all she wasn’t married to Frank Gifford, that was Kathie Lee, and secondly FRANK GIFFORD ISN’T DEAD!”
2002: “Hallo, Clarice,” he said.
2001: No entry.
2000: No entry.

21 thoughts on “7-22-08”

  1. At fist glance I thought that pattypan squash thing was some sort of muffin-like pizza dish and I got all excited, but then I read what it was and yea, the excitment was lost. Oh well, it still looks nice.

  2. That “Hallo, Clarice” entry is hilarious.

    Ok, if pigs don’t have sweat glands then how does one “sweat like a pig?”

  3. Awww, Tubby. He was my favorite of your “first batch” of cats (the ones you had when I started reading you). Those pigs are sure getting big! They’re probably the luckiest pigs on earth – at least for now…:)

  4. Stop talking about the patty pan. I can’t find it anywhere near my and I LOVE patty pan squash. My mom used to slice it and then dip it in an egg mixture, then cornmeal. Fried patty pan squash. :drool:

  5. I hate squash SO MUCH (as in it makes me GAG), but that patty pan stuff kind of looks good. Can you get it in grocery stores?

  6. The “little” pig?

    Little?

    Robyn, there is no longer any “little” pig. They’re both HUGE!

  7. Holy Cats, those pigs are huge. I mean, I knew they were going to be, but DAMN! DO your cats ever just flop down in such a manner that you have to go and nudge them, to make sure they haven’t had a stroke or something? My mom’s cat does that. Walking across the room, and BAM, on the floor.

    Oh and only because I recently had this clarified for me, hay is for eatin’, straw is for sleepin’. My in-laws have sheep and I have always, for the last 20 or so years, confused the two. Steve recently explained to me the difference, straw is usually left over wheat or whatever, that has had it’s nutritional stuff sheared off, so it’s basically just wheat stalks, and hay is grown specifically for nutritional value.

    I didn’t really care, either way, but got annoyed by the correction, at least once a month, for 20 years. Yes, I’m a slow learner. You’d think he’d have maybe thought to explain this to me before, instead of just grunting the opposite of whatever I’ve said.

  8. I told ya you wouldn’t be keeping those pigs for a year, lol 🙂

    You all can have the heat! It’s 65 degrees right now at 8:30 am….ahhhh. (You can laugh when it’s -50F this winter.)

  9. What cute pics of the pigs, Robyn! Their little faces are adorable! How thoughtful of Fred to call you about the pigs’ comfort. And equally thoughtful of you to attend to their needs. No, I can’t see you eating those cute little guys :/

    At least, I know I couldn’t.

  10. Piggerdoodles… that made my morning.

    Those pigs are gettin’ big, aren’t they? Do you remember Cartman (from Southpark,) when he was looking at the baby cows and said “That one looks delicious!”? I’ll take the one on the right. :o)

  11. Awww… those pigs look so happy after you put water in their wallow! I love your humane approach to raising animals for food. Sure they’re food, but you treat them well while they are alive! Thanks for that. I can’t stand people who think animals have no feelings.

  12. Those pigs are no longer cute lil piggies; they richly deserve the name “Hogs.” I bet they will be extremely delicious. Would you consider shipping some bacon??? 😉

  13. “Hallo, Clarice”, ruins me every single time I read it. I almost aspirated this time. It sneaks up on me, that one line. “Piggerdoodles”= slayed Von. I need to go lie down now.

  14. Your pigs are so cute!! I think it is absolutely wonderful how you and Fred are raising your own meat. Those pigs have it made. It would be great to end factory farming once and for all. You guys are doing your part, that’s for sure.
    A webcam on crooked acres’ farm would be most entertaining!!!

  15. Will you butcher the pigs at the same time? If you don’t, will the remaining piggy be lonely without his friend to whisper secrets to?

  16. I am terrified of frogs, like almost to phobia level. Had there been a frog in MY study, I would have evacuated the entire damn house and stayed at a hotel until, like, the CDC or FBI or UN gave the all-clear because (1) however ONE frog got in, TWO or EIGHT BILLION frogs might have gotten in, and (2) what if it figured out a way to get out of the room it was in, or worse yet, got somewhere in the room where I couldn’t find it and I assumed it had gotten back out (or I’d just imagined it) and then it turned up later in my bed or bath or kitchen?

    HAAAAAAAAAAATE frogs. Care to guess what my ex-husband gave my son for his 6th (or 5th or 7th, somewhere around there) birthday?

  17. the cupcakes look good. wouldn’t it be easier to just put a mini reeses peanut butter cup in the middle and then make the peanut butter frosting?
    (aside from the pain in the ass of unwrapping the peanut butter cups, that is. LOL)

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