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Monthly Archives: June 2009
MAKING JELLY FOR THE JAM WE’RE IN – CANNING -FREEZING – GARDENING, Plus One Ripe TOMATO (Issue 228)
Today, I made six jars of Plum Jelly Sauce from a batch of plums my grandchildren picked from their tree.
Yesterday, my four year old Prince William came and picked his first ripe tomato. Then two small yellow squash, he bagged and took home for dinner. His mom called last night and said he ate both for his dinner. He got on the phone so excited about eating something for dinner that he had planted, watered and nutured from a seed.
I absolutely love canning, freezing and preserving food. Theres a knack to doing it, and a lot of work involved. When canning anything, one must be so careful to have everything sterilized. Jars, lids, rings, and all utensils. But making your own pickles, relish, jams and jellies is so rewarding and tasty. I make watermelon rind pickles and green tomato pickles. I have a neighbor who grows figs, and I buy them from her to make fig preserves.
Now that summer is here and many have gardens or access to a farmers market, it’s a good time to consider canning. One can can most vegetables, but actually need a pressure cooker, to reach the degree of heat necessary to prevent botulism. The one vegetable not necessary to cook in pressure canner is tomatoes. So long as everything is completely sterilized.
Aside from canning, one can prepare food for their freezer. But keep in mind most everything must be precooked and cooled before bagging for the freezer. Just make sure you squeeze out all the air from your freezer bags.
The one drawback with freezing is, if the eletricity goes off for any length of time, you might lose your harvest. I recall one year having my freezer on a screened-in porch, and there was an electrical shortage. I was unaware until everything had defrosted and ruined.
As most of my readers know, I grew up in the Great Depression, watching my mother can and preserve food. Back then, she would use large sheets of tin, to place the slices of peaches and apples on to dry in the sun. Once dried they were placed in cotton bags for storage. No zip-lock bags back then.
I thought my mother could do any and everything. She knew how to make some use from just about everything. She took newspapers and cut out her own patterns for making clothes. Then took old clothes and cut up to sew together for quilts. The lining of the quilts were made from unbleached muslin, obtained from local cotton mills, and dyed with red clay or black walnut hulls.
Years later when I visited her she was as frugal and creative as ever. She and my father had moved to a little town called Flowery Branch. There was an old abandoned well in the rear of the property, she dumped garbage in along with lime on top. Some things she burned in the rear property. Never paid for garbage pick-up.
She was into her seventies working at a local hospital. One day I visited her and saw this contraption rigged up in a shade tree in the back of the house. The tree was filled with hanging baskets of beautiful flowers. I examined more closely and realized she had taken the disposable intravenous bags from the hospital, washed them and hung them in the shade tree, with the plastic tube inserted into the hanging baskets, so the water slowly dripped into the plants, keeping them moist and healthy.
I told her the University of Georgia should send their enviromental students to visit her to learn ways to preserve the enviroment, re-cycle, with little or no cost.
Many stories have been written about the ways and means of frugality, used by those living in the Great Depression. Every nail, piece of string, newspaper, scrap metal, and wood was used for something. Much I learned from those days was by observation and listening. I was not allowed to cook, for fear I might waste something. Not allowed to wash dishes for fear I might break something. But I did have chores, like drawing water and bringing wood in for the fireplace, or gathering clothes from the clothes line. I learned how to cook and can food simply from watching my mother.
I wanted to learn how to milk a cow and tried it once. The cow swished her tail across my face and I ran to the house screaming and never tried it again. It was later on during the sixties, after moving to the country, with a determination to learn how to be self-sufficient to survive, I learned how to garden, cook, can, freeze food, gather wood, make a living and survive. It’s a trusim, “Necessity is the mother of invention.” In retrospect, I’m very grateful for the life and experiences growing up on a farm in the Great Depression.
Not to mention the added joy I experience today, showing these things to my grandchildren. When Prince William called last night, so happy eating the squash and tomato he helped grow, I thought to myself,–It doesn’t get any better than this!
Living during a time when almost daily we hear stories on the news about young children beating each other up, on drugs, exposing their bodies on the internet, and stealing, one must ask how does this happen? Obviously, much blame can be placed on latch-key lifestyles, where there’s little adult supervision. Parents not providing things of interest to do, nor providing directional ideas of creativity to occupy young minds. Therefore many wind up in institutions for rehabilitation. To be taught self-responsibility and self-control. I personally feel a great deal of empathy for this generation of children. Things can and should be so different for them.
Confucious says, “If your plans are for one year, plant rice. If your plans are for ten years, plant trees. If your plans are for 100 years, educate.” And what is education? Simply an acquisition of knowledge, no matter where you receive it.
LET FREEDOM RING
Just ME
AC
E-mail: annecleveland@bellsouth.net
Posted in Anne's Journey, Freedom, history Tagged gardening, life during the great depression, preserving food, self-sufficent Leave a comment
POLITICIANS – A MERRY-GO-ROUND OF DENIAL IN A THREE-ACT PLAY (Issue 227)
We are seeing on the news, a resurgence of protestors in Iran. The Citizenry there want a change in their centralized government. No one knows what the outcome will be, however, if there is any truth in news reports, the new leader they want in power, over their lives, is not so different from Ahmadinejad, their current leader.
Here in this country, there is increasing unrest relative to the forces that be in the centralized government we have. There are so many varying degrees of what it is individuals really want. Most label themselves Liberals, Conservatives, Democrats, Republicans, Right Wingers, Left Wingers, Libertarians, Independents, Anarchists, and on and on with labeling. Nothing is set in concrete with reference to any standardized meaning of any of these political labels, resulting in confusion.
Posted in Current Events, Freedom, history, Politics Tagged American Revolution, political power, politicans, truth, voters 1 Comment
PALIN & LETTERMAN: YOU DO NOT OWN YOUR REPUTATION (Issue 226)
“ALL THE WORLD IS WRONG BUT ME AND THEE AND SOMETIMES I HAVE MY DOUBTS ABOUT THEE”
The past few days the main news media has been dominated by the Palin-Letterman controversy. Sarah Palin being the governor of Alaska, and former vice presidential candidate. Dave Letterman being a long-time late night television host.
Listening to Sarah Palin making speeches on the campaign trail last year, she’s the only candidate I heard using the word “Freedom.” It seemed to be taboo for the others to mention the word. As politicians go, she seemed to me to be a cut above the crowd when it comes to core American values, expression of family values, and caring about individual Freedom.
I have rarely watched David Letterman. The few times I have, he came across to me as a very sarcastic, below-the-belt joke teller. Unlike Jay Leno and Johnny Carson, who could tell jokes with an air of common-decency coming across, not hateful and sardonic.
The news storm erupted when Letterman stood on stage before millions, trying to make something funny about a New York ball-player “knocking up” Sara Palin’s teenage daughter. Now anyone with one eye and half sense knows that’s crossing the line of common decency. And Letterman being a long-time pro of poking fun at others very well knew it when he did it. He deliberately picked this fight with a loving mother over her children. Hitting below the belt. That was out of the ballpark nastiness.
Obviously Letterman is quite leftist and Liberal. His group won the election, so what was his pay-off for such hurtful, mean-spirited verbiage? Apparently for ratings and hammering away at her popularity with talk of 2012 elections. He knew he would get a rise out of Palin, and publicity. Having instigated this, he then gave some babbling nonsensical retort to her objections. Generating more attention from his backhanded remarks. Adding insult to injury by inviting her on his show.
A sort of, “walk into my parlor said the spider to the fly” mentality. A come-closer-so-I can-heap-more-abuse-on-you game play.
Then Sara Palin shot back stronger objections over his verbiage and attitude, and should have. Things got so hot and heavy, I did stay up late to hear what happened next in the cooked-up war of words. Groups organized, calling for Letterman to be fired.
When the blows reached a pitch, nipping at his paycheck, he probably recalled what happened to Imus. Consequently he immediately went from a stand-up, sarcastic, mean-spirited comic, to a sit-down crawler. He abjectly humbled himself and groveled with an apology. Palin graciously accepted.
David Letterman is a professional talk show host. He’s been doing this a very long time. And my opinion, the route all this took was probably projected from the outset. Words are power and the damage was done. An apology, but what amends were made? Was this shock and awe? Was there collateral damage to these young children? Did these children cry themselves to sleep after hearing this verbal abuse?
I personally only understand Right and Wrong, from two things - thievery and violation of Natural Law.
This is a situation of hurtful damage, but no thievery involved, because none of us “own” our reputation. Our reputation is what others think and say about us. It has no boundaries, therefore we do not own, nor control. However there is an area of morality as expressed in such great moral guides as the Ten Commandments, which says, “thou shalt not bear false witness.”
Because the Letterman show is probably scripted, his remarks were deliberately casting aspersions on innocent children. No excuse for his behavior, and no apology can fix it. Despite the fact it was directed to others, it winds up being a blight on who he is, as a man, and a father, and a public spokesman.
Admittedly, I stayed up and tuned in to his show two nights in a row; I have no plans to continue watching his show. And the American people can express their objection to his distasteful rhetoric by tuning him out via a flip of the switch.
One of my very favorite writers, Frederic Bastiat, wrote: “Society is composed of men, and every man is a free agent. Since man is free, he can choose, he can err, he can suffer. I go further: He must err, and he must suffer: for his starting point is ignorance, and in his ignorance he sees before him an infinite number of unknown roads, all of which save one lead to error.”
LET FREEDOM RING
JUST ME
AC
email: annecleveland@bellsouth.net
Posted in Current Events, Freedom, Politics Tagged insults, Letterman, Palin, publicity, television Leave a comment
I’ve Been Featured on “Story of My Life” Regarding My Discovery of Freedom Plus Battles with Schools
Many interesting things have happened since I began writing stories on the
internet about a year and half ago. A number of stories have been published about me in newspaper articles in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Gainesville Times, Gwinnett Daily Post, DGC Magazine and two days ago, a very lengthy post on Story of My Life.
Additionally, I’ve been interviewed to be on “The Tonight Show” with Jay Leno, contacted to participate in a documentary about The Great Depression, plus have been mentioned in several other blogger articles. One of the latest being discussion group comments about my writings in Alberta, Canada, CR4.
The DGC Magazine article in the May issue, which can be downloaded here, included a reprint of one of my articles titled, “All That’s Past is Prologue. Do you Want to Know what is Happening to You in this Country?” This article included a very complimentary introduction by editor Mark Herpel.
The feature story that appeared two days ago on “Story of My Life,” is a lengthy article with a number of photographs and a chronicle of events spanning a time from childhood, which led me on my journey to understand Freedom. It also includes a couple of stories of the battles I waged relative to experiences with the public school system in this country and facing arrest in my defiance of the compulsory school laws.
I tell these stories to emphasize that Freedom is “Eternal Vigilance” and we must use it to combat those forces at work to destroy it. And to point out that so much of the loss of individual Freedom has come about as a result of the socialist school system, indoctrinating young minds into the Philosophy of Socialism — a belief each parent must be ever mindful of what is being taught to their children.
A large part of my story is about the steps I took to ensure my children grew up with a basic understanding of the meaning of Freedom to pass on to their children, as ingrained in me by my parents growing up in a period of The Great Depression.
Accordingly, it is in this vein of thinking and belief in individual freedom, I express my heartfelt gratitude to those who write about me and my journey of experiences, learning about the true meaning of Freedom. In the hopes it might inspire others to stop and think, and consider why we have lost a considerable amount of our freedoms. To realize it is sustained by “Eternal Vigilance.”
Let Freedom Ring!
JUST ME,
AC
Posted in Anne's Journey, Freedom Tagged Freedom, philosophy of freedom, public school system, The Great Depression 2 Comments