Sunday, December 23, 2018

Merry Christmas one and all!


Holiday Greetings from Texas!


We hope this finds you well and enjoying the holiday season! The antique snowmen on our garland are the closest we've gotten to snow so far, so it's a typical Texas Christmas

This was an unusual year for us - no traveling for us this past summer! It seemed a little strange, but we were so busy we adjusted fairly quickly. We had already decided to stay closer to home this summer so we could be here for Raylan’s fourth birthday in July, but Kendra’s on-going battle with chronic Lyme disease curtailed her ability to drive, so we’ve been filling in as often as needed for appointments, picking the boys up after school, etc. She’s getting good medical care, but it’s a long battle.

Summer was busy – We doubled the size of the garden and had a couple of small construction projects around the place. Steve’s mom came for a month so she’d be here for Raylan’s July birthday, as well as for a reunion with her brother and sisters. Visitors from Arizona, and several overnighters with the boys kept us entertained. There are always construction projects, small and large, cooking and gardening projects, and lots of playing in the sand when the boys are here. We enjoy every minute we spend with them!

Friends from Nevada visited in October, and then the anxiously awaited Halloween celebration! I stayed here for the event and was able to see the boys enjoy their costumes and the fun at the Bastrop holiday party.



While we were celebrating Halloween, Steve went to CA for his mom’s 90th birthday celebration. She’s doing really well, and we’re so grateful that she’s able to travel here so often so the great-grandsons can get to know her.

She was able to join us again this year for Thanksgiving and for Jax’s birthday in early December. It’s hard to believe he’s seven already! Time seems to move faster every day.

So that’s our 2018 in a nutshell. We want to wish you a very Merry Christmas and a healthy and Happy New Year! 

The Worshams


Sunday, October 7, 2018

Autumn in Texas


Yeah! College football is back!  Gooooooo Ducks!



After a long, hot, very dry summer we're finally moving into fall, and boy are we enjoying it! The daily temperatures have been hovering in the low 90's to high 80's. The garden is loving it too! It has exploded!



The tomatoes and squash vines we babied through the summer drought took the first real rain to heart and The tomatoes and squash vines we babied through the summer drought took the first real rain to heart and grew so fast they nearly knocked me over!


I planted pole beans for the third time and they finally came up  (the seed won't sprout if it's too hot, and it was) In two weeks they'd reached the top of the poles.


The pepper plant production is back on line too. We dried a bunch of them and Steve smoked some, then we ground both into flakes for seasoning. 'Can't wait to try the smoked chili powder in soup or chili! 


We've spent the lasts few evenings out on the porch, looking at the stars, listening to the crickets and the acorns plunking on the metal roof as they fall, and admiring the fireflies. . . Yes, fireflies!

They are usually a spring phenomenon, but this is an unusual fall. We've had a lot of rain recently. We're approaching a record as far as monthly totals for September go, and the effects are showing up in unexpected ways. The resurgence of fireflies is one of them - chiggers too! They aren't such favorites around here.

A lot of other creatures that are usually spring visitors have shown up too - walking sticks, praying mantis, and this little Carolina anole.


The most fascinating thing, however, was that we seem to have been announced as an official stop on this year's hummingbird migration route.

For several weeks we had so many little visitors that though I filled our three feeders twice a day we could barely keep keep up with the demand. Then suddenly, about the time the rain started and the nights got cooler, we were down to about three birds, probably original residents.

I knew they migrated, but I've never seen so many in one place. It's interesting because they supposedly travel to their winter home individually, not in a flock the way geese and ducks do.

Our major accomplishment of the month is the completion of the guest bath remodel. Steve does a great job of finding parts (mobile homes are hard to fit) and finding solutions to the inevitable problems that crop up in the process of what was supposed to be a simple job.

It's amazing how much time and energy goes into such a little room. It's funny how the room seems to get smaller when you need to get something, like a new tub, into or out of it, and much bigger when you are painting it!

I've been keeping an album of the various home improvement projects around here ever since 2009, when we were getting ready to move.

The first version of remodeling was largely paint, this time we had to replace a leaky tub, which was much more complicated. It's fun to look back and see the changes.

If anyone is interested in the possibilities of remodeling in an older manufactured home, here's a peak at this room's evolution.

The grandsons are both doing well and settling into the school year, and very much enjoying the nice weather. It's a perfect time of year for building sand castles and hunting bugs!

Our daughter Kendra and her family continue their battle with chronic Lyme Disease. We spend a lot of our time on the road, transporting the boys, and otherwise helping out where we can.

She has started a Gofundme page, which has a description of their situation, and where she posts updates as to progress in their treatment. Here's the link for anyone who would like to help them with expenses, which are overwhelming to say the least. There are several lawsuits against the CDC and insurers because of the way this disease is being diagnosed and treated. This link has a summary of the one initiated in Texas. There are many websites with good information on Lyme disease, as well as many that aren't all that useful. If you'd like to know more, this is a good place to start..... Lyme Disease Association.

The Autumn album has a few more photos of the wildlife, the garden and the kids.


Friday, September 7, 2018

What happened to the first 6 months of 2018

Rain! Hallelujah! After the long, hot and VERY dry summer it's a very welcome event. Our rain capture system was much in need of replenishing, as well as the ground itself. I was beginning to fear one of the dogs might fall into one of the ever widening cracks that were starting to appear around the yard! So far we've received just about an inch of water, and some of the smaller cracks are fading away, but the larger ones, along with all the rocks that have popped up, are still in evidence.

What happened to the first 6 months of 2018??????  Time sure flies doesn't it? And the business of day-to day activities meant the blog updates sort of went to the back burner, so there's a lot to catch up on. 

In January we started off 2018 with Larry "Steve" having a heart attack.  After treatment he left the hospital with three stents and a new outlook on life both mentally and physically.  After cardio-physical therapy and an array of drugs  he has lost over 50 lbs., has diabetes under control, and feels better than  he has in a long time. There are on-going changes to diet and exercise to keep him in good health, and he's doing all he can to follow "doctor's orders".

The boys try out a replica "That's All Brother" cockpit 
February was an eventful month. Skot started his new job with the Texas Workforce agency, in Austin. He's working with several folks he knew at the previous company, which closed it doors in December.

All little boys like airplanes, so we took the boys to the Commemorative Air Force museum here at the San Marcos airport.

The pride and joy of the collection is the C-47 called "That's All Brother" that led the D-Day assault over Normandy.
After examining all the historic aircraft and the many models in the visitor center they deemed it "The Best Day Ever!" So Mamaw and Papaw scored a few points on that one!

In March Daph went to Oregon for the annual Feathered Friends retreat at the coast.

There were only four of us this year, so we
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rented a smaller place than we have in the past. Our home for the event was a quaint little place right on the beach, on a cliff overlooking the ocean, and as usual we had a wonderful time catching up, walking on the beach and exploring the area.

We've lost track, but it seems we've been holding these gatherings annually for about 12 or 13 years. It's something we all look forward too. This year I gifted the ladies with t-shirts (from Kendra's business The Dabbling Domestic) so while we were enjoying an afternoon out at the Sea Hag in Depot Bay we took the opportunity to show them off.


In April Daph's sisters and niece visited and were here for the big Easter egg hunt.  Everyone jumped in and played Easter Bunny.
In fact, they hid the eggs so well we finally found the last of them this summer! Fortunately these were all plastic, and not the real eggs my parents used to hide.


In early spring we decided to double the size of the garden. The new soil we brought in was of pretty good quality, and we had a great early harvest of root crops. Raylan helped Papaw move some of that soil around with the tractor. He likes riding on the tractor but he gets so busy admiring the scenery that I'm glad he's not tall enough yet to drive it!


Thanks to the new soil the beets and radishes were especially nice! The boys had fun helping with the beet harvest, but they weren't too keen on tasting the ones we cooked up later.

We've been enjoying peppers and tomatoes all season, but as the heat increased, they decreased in size. Poor struggling little things. The plants certainly perked up when the rain started!

We made the decision last year to suspend traveling for the summer so we could be here for grandson Raylan's fourth birthday. We had missed his second and third birthdays, and really wanted to be here for this one.
His birthday is in mid-July, and G-Ma (Steve's mother) flew out for the big event.

He's a typical little boy, and this year's fixation is tanks.... remote control preferably! That was the theme of his party. Among his other gifts he received a set of two RC tanks, and he and Jax have been happily battling each other ever since.

G-ma was here for about a month, so we had lots of time for her to visit with the family and for her to get reacquainted with the Texas summer weather. She's a Texas girl herself, but after all these years in Southern California she's gotten used to a milder climate.

An anticipated camping trip right after school was out didn't happen due to the weather. When the pavement is too hot for the dogs to walk on and it's too hot to play outside there isn't much purpose for camping. Spending the days cooped up in a trailer with two large dogs and two very ambitious little boys isn't anyone's idea of a good time.

So we did other things instead. . . including lots of squirt gun battles on the porch and crafty projects in the house. We build bird nest boxes, assembled legos, and made scrap craft projects. We even tucked in a few science experiments, and a lot of nature studies.

We had prepared for the trip by purchasing a set of "bunk cots" for the boys that would fit in the trailer - more peaceful that two little guys trying to share a bed. They helped assemble the cots, and decided to try them out in the house. They liked them so well they've become the regular sleep-over beds.

In early August Kendra gifted us with passes to  Wonder World Park, here in town, so we loaded up the boys with a nice, cool!, underground activity.

The park features a cave and an animal park. The cave isn't the "wet" type, with stalactites and other drip formations. This cave was formed by an earthquake, and features some very interesting geologic forms, fossils, and human history. The original owner once held card games and bar (during Prohibition) in the cave, until his wife squealed to the Sheriff. That didn't turn out the way she'd planned though. The Sheriff was soon joining in the card games on a regular basis!

The animal park, accessed via a small "train" that the boys enjoyed riding. They have quite a variety of animals, and the emu's are the tamest. They love to eat the grain purchased in the gift shop, and are rather rude about waiting in line for their handful.

School started for the boys in mid-August. Raylan is in Pre-Kindergarten at Jax's school this year, which simplifies the transportation issues a bit. Jax is in first grade. They're both off to a good start!

Kendra's on-going battle with chronic Lyme has led to some additional very serious health problems, and our help with transportation and other supports was needed over the summer to get through those issues.  She's doing much better now and we hope that trend continues.

We also had a really long "to do"list that we just hadn't been able to work through when we were only home for half of the year. With all that new energy, and in spite of the summer heat, Steve's working his way down the "to do" list.
Showing off our robot carpentry projects
on the new back porch

We had a new back porch built, and are in the process of remodeling the guest bath. He's puttering more in the shop, and has added a few accessories to accommodate his college football passion..... it's now a "sports shop" (similar to a sports bar, only without the beer tap!)

Of course, there's plenty to do with the ongoing maintenance of the garden/property, and keeping up with watering due to the long heat wave we are experiencing.  Other projects are in the works.

We have missed our usual travels but sometimes a little change in routine is a good thing. We haven't hung up the keys but for now plans are set in the proverbial "Jello"!

 A possible trip to So. Cal for Moms 90th birthday in November is on the list.  We have identified some other things in the state we would like to see but the 100 degree heat has slowed down even our local travels. We hoping we can fit more in this fall and winter. Stay tuned!

Check out the album for a few more photos