It's Thanksgiving already! October and November have flown by, but here's a little snapshot for you:
** Black Swallowtail caterpillars on the fennel at The Woodlands Community Garden **
** Tree delivery at dawn, followed by many many volunteer tree planting events for work **
** A trip to the Philadelphia Zoo (the oldest zoo in the country) with some new friends **
** Lots of baking! **
I'm continuing my quest to perfect my apple pie recipe this fall, along with tweaking my presentation (see how I made it look like an apple when you cut it in half? clever clever me).
** Sukkah! **
We built a temporary structure called a sukkah on our porch this year in honor of the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. The holiday is a celebration of the harvest (and other religious and historical events) - the sukkah is open to the stars on top and filled with plant materials. Ours was decorated with paper chains, gourds, fruit, chestnuts, mums, fabric and drying bunches of herbs.
After we built and decorated it, we invited all of our friends to eat with us under the sukkah. Even though it rained during most of the week long holiday, we shared two fabulous dinners with friends and family. And it only took us two extra weeks to take it down!
That's all for now, I hope to post more frequently once I get a new laptop. This little setup that I have right now is driving me crazy, and I think it's time for a new computer, don't you?
** Black Swallowtail caterpillars on the fennel at The Woodlands Community Garden **
** Tree delivery at dawn, followed by many many volunteer tree planting events for work **
** A trip to the Philadelphia Zoo (the oldest zoo in the country) with some new friends **
** Lots of baking! **
I'm continuing my quest to perfect my apple pie recipe this fall, along with tweaking my presentation (see how I made it look like an apple when you cut it in half? clever clever me).
** Sukkah! **
We built a temporary structure called a sukkah on our porch this year in honor of the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. The holiday is a celebration of the harvest (and other religious and historical events) - the sukkah is open to the stars on top and filled with plant materials. Ours was decorated with paper chains, gourds, fruit, chestnuts, mums, fabric and drying bunches of herbs.
After we built and decorated it, we invited all of our friends to eat with us under the sukkah. Even though it rained during most of the week long holiday, we shared two fabulous dinners with friends and family. And it only took us two extra weeks to take it down!
That's all for now, I hope to post more frequently once I get a new laptop. This little setup that I have right now is driving me crazy, and I think it's time for a new computer, don't you?
1 comment:
oh, I love your sukkah--that looks like great fun! And of course from tree planting to baking looks so good too! I've been baking much lately too. Did I mention to you that I got a part time job baking? It's a lot of fun! Happy December!
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