Friday, August 13, 2010

10 Ways You Know You're in the Country

I am a city girl. I am a city girl, I am a city girl, I am a city girl. No, this is not a Bart Simpson-inspired punishment. This is my constant mantra with all the new fascinating things I've discovered. A constant excuse for my habitual stupidity and amazement.

I was thinking about it the other day and realized that my life has changed A LOT in the last 2 months, so those who live in the cow pasture-next to the high tech park as country world of my youth, here are the top ten ways you know you live far from civilization.

10) The nearest grocery store is 40 miles away. Which means when you need gas, you're really at about 1/8 of a tank. And getting ice cream involves a cooler.

9) Decent cell phone reception occasionally involves walking out into a field and standing next to a deer/cow.

8)The strawberries you've planted because the grocery store in 40 miles away have all been eaten by said deer or cow.

7) You pass more tractors on the way to work than cars. Seriously, 5 tractors, 2 cars. It was a busy morning on the farm. Mint harvest and all. Made me crave Mojitos all day.

6) Your favorite roommates are the spiders, because at least they kill the bugs.

5) The 4 inch bug that the spiders don't kill is either on your foot in the morning or comes crawling out of your bath towel.

At which point you go running for your camera so when one lands on your face and you wake up the roommate who is not of the 8-legged variety in the middle of the night, you can show him you're not a totally sissy girl. It's happened more than once. No wonder he doesn't like me.

4) The biggest event of the year is the fire man's bbq and baseball game. Which eireminds me, I need to sweet talk them into giving me the recipe to their baked beans. They say its a trade secret, but maybe their dog will tell?

3) The talk in the bar is of water rights.

2) The only restaurant in town is frequently closed on Saturday nights. Especially when the fireman's BBQ is going on.

1) 15,000 people without power cover 50 miles.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Walking Across America

I worked with a guy once upon a time who decided that he didn't have the money to drive the 1000 miles home so he'd walk it. This sounds like something that would happen in China. It did actually, in a totally different circumstance, but this guy was walking across the American southwest.

As much as walking makes me happy, I learned my limits one really cold day in Toronto, but that's another story for another time. 6 miles makes me happy. It also makes me slim. Which really makes me happy.

Hats off to anyone who walks that far. You'll meet a lot of really cool people and see a totally different flair of the country. But when I think of people who walk that far, I think of this:

(C) Paramount

Well, at least he invented a cool shirt, a cool slogan, and a successful shrimp company all at the same time.

But no, there's a video on Youtube that makes it look so much cooler. Cause the guy is just dreamy.


Oh, and the stop motion is cool too.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Oh those Germans!

From the land of the Autobon, the saurbrauten, and Tacitus's hatred comes a clever ad series. Its entertaining, innovative, and makes me really want to find the nearest metro with a long staircase.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W4o0ZVeixYU&feature=player_embedded

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEcbkusXUlo&feature=channel

It's gonna be the biggest hit since the trunk monkey. If in December we're not watching these on the funniest ads, well, TBS is doing something wrong. Oh, those nutty Germans!

Friday, July 16, 2010

Medicine Lake

We went camping at Medicine Week on Wednesday. Well, not so much camping as drove down/up there (it's South but about 1,000 feet higher in elevation), ate dinner, swam, got eaten alive by mosquitoes, drove the 45 minutes down a road that hasn't been paved since around 1969, and slept on a friend's couch at Lava Beds. Which was far more comfortable.

Anyway...



There was also a picture-perfect sunset, a really pretty Cheshire Cat moon, and some incredible acrobatics by bats and night hawks. But by that point, the camera was dead. Always an excuse right?

There were about 20 of us, which meant an amazing array of hummus, roasted garlic, and salad. Healthy people who know how to cook? FANTASTIC! There was also some great grilled chicken in a mustard-soy marinade, which I really want the recipe to, chocolate-coconut cookies, which I'm getting the recipe to, and my contribution, grilled teryaki vegetables. Which I also, very slackingly, didn't get a picture of. But I do have the recipe. Cause I made it.


Campfire Sweet and Salty Vegetables

For Teryaki
1/3 cup low-sodium soy sauce (or regular, if you don't mind bloating)
1/3 cup white wine vinegar
1/3 cup brown sugar

Combine in a sauce pan and over medium heat bring to a simmer. Let simmer for 30 minutes, stirring occasionally until the sauce has a viscous, honey-like consistency. Remove from heat and let cool. The sauce can still be warm, but should not be bubbling.

Vegetables
1-8oz package white mushrooms
1 medium onion
1 large red bell pepper
1-16oz can of pineapple chunks, drained

Wash all of the vegetables and peel the onion. Discard the seeds in the bell pepper. With the mushrooms, cut into quarters. Chop the onion and bell pepper into large, bite size chunks.

Combine the vegetables and the teryaki sauce in a plastic bag. Let sit for several hours, until all the yummy flavors have been absorbed. I did this in tin foil, so I could just throw them onto a fire. The teryaki went everywhere. Use plastic.

At this point, there are a number of ways to cook it. Use skewers to make Shish kababs (sheesh cababs... how the heck does one spell that?), put 'em on a grill for 3-4 minutes, or do as we did, wrap them in tin foil and chuck it onto a fire for about 5-6 minutes. If there is no grill or fire handy, or if it happens to be snowing/raining/way too hot to use an outside cooking method, throw them in a 400 degree oven for 8-10 minutes. Serve hot and enjoy!


And then eat the marshmallows if you're at a campfire. Even a bunch of health nuts jumped like rabid dogs on a package of marshmallows.

Love from what can pass as civilization,
Lily

Monday, July 12, 2010

I Hate People

I hate people. Not all people. Most of the time I really like people. They're cool and give me something to do that doesn't involve burying my head in a book. But today, I really don't like people. And we've had 28 visitors and I've given 6 tours. With my gallbladder staging war in my gut. So my blood sugar is low because all I get to eat is apple juice with vinegar and saltines. Which means faking it is a bummer. And its currently over 90 degrees, the air condition is off, and my face is breaking out.

Hey, I'm a woman. We complain right? We're touchy. That's what my father said when my car broke down. It needs gas and is making a whiny noise. Today is not a good day. I hate people.

Anyway, funny story to illustrate why people are stupid today. I went out to give a tour then came back to the office. There were some folks wandering around the museum and one of the high schoolers that pull weeds and clean the bathroom tell me someone is looking for me. So I ask them if they were looking to speak with the visitor center. They say no. Later, the phone rings, the lady asks where we are, and she is standing across the lobby from me. It was out of a movie. Or a really lame book. And then I found $10.

Wouldn't that make such a better story. But the rest is true. I hate people. Least I'm no longer cooking for them. Ooh, chicken. I want chicken. Now go, let me eat my saltines and drink my spiked apple juice in peace. Because, at least until I get something real in my veins, I hate people.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Scenic Friday

It was going to be Foreign Food Friday, as I've been cooking foods from other countries for the last month. My roommates love the smell of curry and garlic, I'm sure. But yesterday was a 13 hour day involving showing a really nice photographer around while she complained about light and took pictures with 4 cameras.

So, since I couldn't edit pictures and I've lost the notebook I wrote said recipes down in, and possibly also lost my head because I'm not sure if its screwed on, I'll just show you this:

Purrty!

The photographer asked how I can live in the middle of nowhere. She's from LA. This, which is unedited, is how I can live 40 miles from the nearest grocery store, and an hour and a half from the nearest mall.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Sheepies!

There was a 4-H competition at the fairgrounds, and after leaving the doors open to draw in some air, I heard more about how the hind quarters of farm animals should be more developed than I ever wanted to know. What are they supposed to do, squat thrusts?

But it was all just so interesting that I had to venture outside. Approaching teenagers and asking if you can take pictures of their sheep illicit strange looks. Lots of strange looks. And then you explain that you're a city girl, your sister is a city girl, and despite her being 23 years old, she still squeals with glee whenever driving past a sheep farm. Then they look at you with pity and agree to let you take a few shots.

So, without further ideas, Sheepies!



They get cleaned with Woolite. And Febreeze. Makes sense, when you think about it. Same material, its just still growing.



But there coats are made from cotton. And the most stylish ponchos too.



Meanwhile, the pigs are bored. Like good little supermodels.



And to round out the cloven hooves, we have a cow, who was pretty and black. She took second place.

There may have been chickens somewhere, but I did not see them.

I've used half a tank of gas in a car that gets exceptionally (in comparison to my jeep) good gas mileage, and was not expecting to be out in the sun all day helping a bunch of high school kids pick up trash. Note to self, SPF 15 in face moisturizer is probably meant for jaunts into sun, not hours and hours. Use extra powder on nose tomorrow. But that's a story for another time.

From the middle of nowhere,
Lily