Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Happy Thanksgiving!

There are many blessings for all of us even though it has been a hard year for many of us. I am thankful for my family and friends. For my home and the garden produce of this year. For the mountain views. For the rain that nourishes the earth. For the fall leaves that were so pretty this year. For work to do and for health when I’m well and healing when I’m sick.







God is still in heaven and he still loves us and sends us blessings each day. Sometimes we are too busy to look for them, but they are there nevertheless. A smile from a friend. A smile from a stranger. Someone who lets you in a long line of traffic. A bird that flies by in a graceful air cutting swoop. The laughter of a child. A late blooming flower. A cat’s antics. A sunset that spreads a sky blue pink knock your eyes out ease your soul experience.


Count your blessings, count them one by one.


What are you thankful for?


So long from Grants Pass Real Estate.

chuck



Friday, October 23, 2009

Fall Treasures














This is a reblooming iris. It blooms in the spring like all the other iris. Then in the fall, Surprise here it comes again--more blooms that last past the first frost.














This is cabbage coming on well with the cool fall weather. This is actually from a few cabbages that we planted last year and they kept growing throughout the winter and hung on through the summer and now are forming heads again. The climate here in Grants Pass Real Estate is mild enough that cabbage and kale will go through the winter. Also you can plant spinach in the fall and when it gets a little warm in February, sometimes in January, the spinach starts growing again and you get the earliest, tenderest, tastiest spinach ever. Please eat it raw so that it tastes great, don't cook it into a mush.














This is our asparagus patch. I pulled the weeds and the grass out and put a mulch of compost all around it. The compost will keep the weeds down and feed the asparagus so that it will come up early and strong in the spring. This asparagus is a purple variety that is sweet to eat raw and turns green when steamed or stir fried. Don't cook it to death and make it mush so that kids hate it. Leave it crunchy and tasty.

God bless your day. So long from Grants Pass Real Estate.
chuck

Friday, October 9, 2009

Late Garden Greats

One of the benefits of an organic garden here at Grants Pass Real Estate is healthy animals as well. This is a tree frog on a corn stalk. He earns his keep by eating bugs. Plus he is beautiful.
















This is a surprise. I bought a four way pear tree to plant in the garden and the root stock sprouted and grew into a lovely quince! Who knew! I just now looked up recipes for quince and found some neat ones.
















This is sweet meat squash and a pumkin. The sweet meat squash is supposed to be a very good keeper and have good sweet flavor. The pumpkin is---well it is a pumpkin.
















Last of the cucumbers, peppers, and tomatoes. It has been getting unseasonably cold at night and I think soon there will be a frost to end this particular part of the harvest.
















So long from Grants Pass Real Estate for now. May God's blessings follow you throughout your day.
chuck

Monday, September 28, 2009

Mac vs PC


Now that Snow Leopard has been out for a while, I have a few comments. First, by way of full disclosure, I have been a Mac user since 1989. I became a real estate agent and had to use a computer. The first one I used was a windows machine using DOS. A real pain and more user unfriendly than anything windows now. But then I got a Mac, an SE, which worked and was fun to use.

In 2001 with the advent of OS X 10.0 the computing world changed radically. The original OS X was Cheetah in January 2001, followed in September 2001 by Puma, followed in August 2002 by Jaguar, followed by Panther in October 2003, followed by Tiger in April 2005, followed by Leopard in October 2007 and Snow Leopard in August 2009.

All the various iterations worked well with each succeeding iteration working better than the last one.

During this time Microsoft was plodding along with XP (which admittedly was better than Windows 98) and promising year after year that they would have a new wonderful version codenamed Longhorn. When Steve Jobs introduced Tiger he commented that you know what happens when a Tiger goes up against a Longhorn. Shortly thereafter, Microsoft announced the new name was Vista. After five years in production it came out in January 2007 with much fanfare and a thudding response. Many corporations refused to update to Vista because of its many problems. Eventually Microsoft stopped selling XP to force adoption of Vista. Now they are coming out with Windows 7 (basically lipstick on the Vista pig) which is meant to fix all the things wrong with Vista.

Installing Snow Leopard was easy and quick. I put the DVD in, clicked a few times, and 45 minutes later I had a new computer. It made my computer (an iMac that I bought in 2006) faster in many areas and gave me back 11 gigabytes in disk space. Snow Leopard was meant to be a refinement of Leopard. So Apple charged only $30 for the upgrade. A great deal for a small price. I keep finding little enjoyable surprises about how things work--it is like being on an extended Easter egg hunt.

I don't have Windows 7 and won't go there ( I use XP that I run on Parallels for the few Windows applications that I need to run) but I have heard that it is very difficult to install. From Microsoft's website Windows 7 will cost $119.99,or $199.99, or $219.99 depending on the version you use. (Apple has one price for Snow Leopard--$30.00) If you would like to pay a lot and have a difficult time installing and an inferior OS once installed, then go for Windows 7.

However, that is not my choice.

So long from Grants Pass Real Estate.

chuck


Friday, September 11, 2009

Harvest Time!

Hello from Grants Pass Real Estate. This is a wonderful time of year in the garden. Just take a look at what God grew for us.
We have sweet corn, lots of juicy tomatoes, sweet red, yellow, and orange peppers, cucumbers, hot red cayenne peppers and still some honeydews getting ripe.

Everything is organic, bug free and full of taste that you cannot get from food in the store. Fertilizing with compost makes the plants strong and bug resistant. The one pest that we have problems with is ground squirrels. They take one or two bites out of a tomato or cucumber or melon and then move on. The only thing to do is to cut off the bite area and eat the rest. Not that big of a deal.















It is a joy to go to the garden to see what is new today. Beautiful colors, great smells, fresh air, sunshine, and God's bounty. What more could you want? A great use of real estate.

One of my daughters will not eat tomatoes from the store since they taste somewhere between a piece of cardboard and a piece of plastic. But a couple of years ago when she was six, we went to the garden and I gave her a yellow cherry tomato which she ate and then said, "Now that is a good tomato!"

So long for now from Grants Pass Real Estate.

chuck

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Garden Growing

The garden is growing here at Grants Pass Real Estate. We have gotten lots of melons--watermelon, cantaloupe, and honeydew! Yum. Also lots of cucumbers, tomatoes, and now peppers.

It is a great time of year for a gardener. Great fresh tasty stuff free for the picking from your own real estate.

As you can see I also need to look at the sweet corn as it is looking like it will be ready soon if not now.


The picture here of a pepper also has a little bit of the orange cherry tomatoes in the bottom right hand corner. They are sweet and beautiful as well.

Gotta go check the garden. Later from Grants Pass Real Estate.

chuck

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Watermelon!

Wow! Watermelon fresh from the garden. We have had some unseasonable hot weather this summer in Grants Pass Real Estate so melons have ripened early this year. I actually got our melons planted late and they still got ripe early. This is a picture of a sugar baby watermelon and two varieties of cantaloupe, namely fast break and ambrosia. Both are exceedingly sweet. Cantaloupe is easy to pick--simply watch and when it turns tan or brown check the stem and when it pulls off easily the melon is ripe.

Watermelons are a different matter. There are several things to check for with watermelons. One is a yellow patch on the bottom where it touches the ground. Next is a low pitched thump when you pat the melon. And the third is the curly tip that goes off to the side of the stem end. When it is still green so is the melon. When that curly cue is brown, the melon has a yellow patch on the bottom and the melon thumps when patted, then the melon is ripe and sweet. Nothing like a fresh melon right out of the garden. Cost effective too. So far we have gotten three watermelons off of one plant with at least one more to go. The plant cost me $1.50. Try to buy four watermelons in the grocery store for $1.50. No luck. Plant your own.

Put down black plastic, cut a hole for the plant, put in the plant, water regularly and wait for God to grow your melon. Very easy.


This is a picture of the watermelon pictured whole above, here cut with what was left of it. Within a half hour it was all gone as our family loves melon and this one was really good.

What a great way to use your Grants Pass Real Estate.

Bye for now from Grants Pass Real Estate.

chuck