Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Bright Lights in the Big City

Lately with work, I have ended up on some late night flights.  If you know me as a traveler, you know I am a window seat traveler - even though I am 6 feet tall.  What can I say, I like to look out the window at everything below.

Getting in this late at night is a newer experience for me.  My first thoughts when I saw Atlanta lit up in the black sky was of the Nazca Lines in Peru.  The Nazca people created these geoglyphs (think ground sculptures) that could be viewed by the gods above.  This was nearly over 1500 years ago.
 Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazca_Lines

What they created was so amazing - no airplanes or satellite imaging.  And I look from my airplane window at what we, modern society have created.  While it is also amazing, it is also a bit disheartening.  The bright lights go on forever, but they are strictly for our utility - not for the beautification of our plant or in honor of anything.  I can see subdivisions - planned to maximize land space.  Roads that carve into the landscape.  Clusters of shopping centers and parking lots.

I am not by any means saying we should have focused our building and planning so that God above or airplane passengers would have had a pretty scene to gaze down on...  but maybe as we move forward we should think more than the local impact of our usage of this place.  The simple lines that the Nazca put on the ground are here over a thousand years later and are still beautiful.  Can we say the same about what we are creating today?  Will people still care a thousand years from now?  Will our cities one day be considered a wonder of the world or just ruins to clean up?

As far as my home relates, know I have been replacing my "bright" lights with the newer compact light bulbs that require less energy.  I have also strove to keep the lights off when possible.  I may not be able to change the hardscape of our city, but at least I can be more conscious of the resources I am using.

And as far a beautification - people from a plane can't see this and it will not stand the test of time -but I have decorated my fireplace with my 'bright lights', which I think are beautiful.  I thought this candelabra was a great addition for the house since the fireplaces are no longer functional.
 I am Suzy Homemaker - see me shine!

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Can't Escape the Snakes!

Okay - I really am believing I live on a snake bed at this point.

I raked up leaves a month or 3 ago, but never quite got around to bagging them - we still had leaves falling and blowing around - so what was the point?  Then we got rain so I didn't want to bag wet leaves... and let me honest with myself here - I just didn't want to bag them but was unwilling to pay someone else to do it.

So finally, the weather has gotten nicer and I was going to start having spring cookouts - so the leaves had to go.  Now, if you recall, the last time I raked leaves, I raked up a snake - still alive.  It gives you this paranoia about raking leaves.  But, I had on my big girl panties and my thick gloves, so I was committed.

Tim opted for the manly way, bare hands and elbows deep into the leaf piles.  I cautioned him about snakes and he informed them that they would be hibernating and that they generally hibernated in large groups - so we would know by the first scoop.  I am still not sure if that was true... and I don't know if it was more calming to think we would definitely know if there were snakes or more terrifying to think that there could be multiple to deal with if they were hibernating in my piles.

So we approach the last pile.  He start scooping and I spot one.  That is right - there is a snake in my leaf pile again! It looks dead, but then again I have never seen a hibernating snake and I don't want to take chances.  We scoop it onto the rake and take it to the sidewalk.  As much as I am not cool with snakes, I wanted to see it more closely.  It didn't seem to move - but was in perfect condition - no indication of death.

We poked at it like little kids on the beach with a jellyfish.  Maybe it slightly moved.  Maybe it was my mind playing tricks.  Either way, it got a brick to the head.
We tossed it and I went back to bagging leaves with my gloved hands.  Tim opted to use the rake.

I am Suzy Homemaker, snake wrangler.

Monday, February 20, 2012

So Fresh and So Cheap Clean!

Pinterest fever has struck the nation and I have a bad case of it!  It is a DIYer's dreamland.  I mainly started with recipes because it was around the holidays.  I made amazing homemade Almond Joys and an awesome Butterfinger pie.  Breakfast casseroles, salads, you name it - there is a recipe for it.

Then, I moved over to the DIY/crafts page - and hit the jackpot!  First, I made my own Febreze.  With the real stuff costing around $5 a bottle, I was ready and willing for a cheaper alternative.

You need 4 things:
1.  a big spray bottle (I used my latest empty Febreze bottle)
2. 1/8 cup of liquid fabric softener
3. 2 tbsp of baking soda
4. hot water

Just add the fabric softener and baking soda then fill the rest of the bottle with hot water and shake.  I have used this on my curtains, furniture and clothes.  No residue, no damage - only freshness!  Besides how cheap this stuff is to make - I love that you can decide what scent you want - you get to pick out the fabric softener.

Okay - now my current obsession - Homemade Laundry Detergent!!  Now, this one takes a bit more effort than Febreze.  You will need the following:
Required: 1 box of Borax, I box of Washing Soda, 4 lbs of Baking Soda, 25-30 oz of Fels Naptha bar soap
Optional: 3 lbs of Oxy clean or the like, 1-2 bottles of dry fabric softener (Purex Crystals)
Tools and et cetera: Grader, huge bucket - preferably with a lid

Attention all shoppers - I could only find all of these ingredients at the grocery store - I could not find the soap or washing soda at Target.  That being said, if you are going to add Purex and the Oxy Clean - unless they are on sale, it is usually a dollar or two cheaper to get these at Target or Walmart.  And as you see from the photo - I don't care about brands - so I often use the generic if possible.

Once you have everything - grade your cheese soap - it definitely looks like cheese, but is more of a pain to grade.  Use the fine grader to keep the soap pieces small.  It took me about an hour to grade all of the soaps.  This is the hardest part.

Next (and finally) mix everything together.  2 notes about this - I would mix it outside if possible - there will be dust and I can't imagine that it is good to inhale that stuff.  Next - I would layer - pouring parts of everything in so that mixing is easier.  Once everything is in - mix it up.  I found having a lid and just shaking the bucket was easier than trying to mix it by spoon.

You are done.  Start washing your clothes - they are going to smell wonderful and be just as clean as the stuff you pay an arm and a leg for.

It only takes about 2 tbsp of this stuff to wash a load of clothes.  I have washed it with all blacks in cold/cold and it left no residue.  Now, I will start the water and add the detergent then add the clothes - but I have always started laundry this way.

You will see that this recipe makes several pounds of detergent.  Cost-wise, I spent less than $20 on everything to make it.  At 2 tbsp a load and 1-3 loads a week - this stuff could last me nearly a year (if I wasn't giving out samples to all of my friends to try).

So, if you are interested but want to try it out first - let me know - I will give you a "sample"!

I am Suzy Homemaker - keepin' it clean!

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

New Appreciation for My Maid

Okay, so I don't have a maid.  At times I definitely wish I had one.  Keeping my apartment clean when I had one was not a huge deal, so I didn't think my small house would be much more.  I was very wrong.

As a child, my mom would constantly tell my brother and I that "she was not our maid".  Every weekend we would have certain chores so that the house could be cleaned every week.  I never understood this - the house was not constantly dirty - why were we always cleaning?!

Now I know.  The house was dirty - but I didn't see it as a child or as a teenager.  Maybe I didn't see it in my apartment because it wasn't my own.  Now that I have a place that I am responsible, I see every piece of dirt, every speck of dust, every blemish on and within my house. 

Even when I travel all week, I still have to clean my house on the weekend.  How does it get dirty when nothing is happening?  No children, no parties, yet dust and dirty accumulate everywhere!  Now, I am my own maid.

Life can be messy at times- it is only fitting that my house is too.