Friday, March 28, 2025

be my guest

"I am excessively fond of a cottage; there is always so much comfort, so much elegance about them".   ~ Jane Austen

"The ornament of a house is the friends who frequent it."

 ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

"Please come in to Good Drop Cottage and make yourself right at home," this she spoke with as much warmth and grace in her voice as she genuinely felt. ~Me 

Because the living room is longer than it is wide, I wanted to  provide a division of sorts. I call this space the "Reading Nook".  It still could have a small bookcase in the corner which I hope to add when I find the perfect one. It is a sunny spot to sit, read, sip a cup of tea, and dream. There is also a turntable record player with some old albums. One guest reported she and her husband put on a record of the Carpenters and danced. Isn't that lovely?

"There is room in the smallest cottage for a happy loving pair".    ~Friedrich Schiller

The Grandfather clock was in my childhood home. My brother wanted it when my parents passed away and then when he died back in the summer of 2023, my sister-in-law gave it to me. This is a Ridgeway Clock  which was originally manufactured very close to where I now live. These clocks were popular in their day.  
See the little mouse?
 
"Hickory Dickory Dock, the mouse ran up the clock..."

When we got the clock home we decided to put it in the cottage and we hired our clock keeper friend to get it working again. When Ridgeway Clocks were being sold as a small USA business locally, they would give their customers a little mouse to sit on the weights. Our friend was happy to have received a supply when they sold out to  a company in Michigan, that was in 2004. He gifted us with this little fellow! Herman rides the weights down daily, then we make sure he "holds on tight" as he rides up when winding the clock.

 
This is the "Queen's Room" named so because it has a queen-sized mattress on the bed.  No magic in that. The names of the rooms are not significant other than what we initially called them as we were furnishing the rooms. This southwest bedroom is full of sunshine.
My son lived for a couple of months in the other bedroom. He was nicknamed "the Professor" by my late father-in-law years ago. That name has stuck, since he stayed there the "Professor's Room" seemed to stick. I hope to stitch up the names of the rooms, frame them and  attach to the bedroom doors one day.
I even embroidered a set of pillowcases in the "Professors's Room".  My plan is to stitch Good Drop Cottage in the blank spaces, but the spacing is tricky and I just need to sit down with my needle and embroidery threads and do it.

If you forget anything we try to have a simple supply of items on the bathroom shelf.

When we were ripping out the kitchen, I convinced my husband to take the ceiling clear to the beaded board and please at least one wall I begged? I would have loved to have had the entire kitchen with the original beaded board, but I am thankful for what I did get!

"I had rather be shut up in a very modest cottage, with my books, my family, and a few old friends, dining on simple bacon, and letting the world roll on as it liked, than to occupy the most splendid post which any human power can give." ~ Thomas Jefferson



The kitchen is completely supplied with anything you would need for cooking and baking. Though I am still on the look out for pretty casserole dishes to add to the cupboard.

My grandchildren go into the dining room and the first thing they observe is the candy on the buffet, "Grandma, why is there candy on the table?" They know they are not allowed candy so I try to remember to put it up high when I know we will be over there. Their father helps with with certain things that need to be done at the cottage when he comes.  But my other guests are always welcome to enjoy as much sweet candy as they like.
There are still things that need to be added to the cottage, it is an ongoing process, but hopefully our guests can come here and always feel comfortable and welcomed.

For now it is only for friends and family...or if friends or family know someone that need a getaway. It is our pleasure to be able provide this cottage.
And do not forget to sign the Guestbook!

There are plans in the making to create an inviting and enjoyable place outside too. I am presently planting a flower garden and establishing garden beds, the roofed open area above will be a lighted arbor to dine under during mild days and evenings.
The view from the front porch and the arbor.

For the Christ-child that comes is the Master of all; No palace too great no cottage too small.  ~Phillips Brooks

Thursday, March 20, 2025

come along inside...

 Today I arose from my bed while it was still dark. The very first morning I managed to get out of my bed before seven o'clock since the time change. Despite my silent protest, this bi-annual event continues to throw off my rhythm seeming to askew it a wee bit and it actually takes me  a couple of weeks to get it back on track. How about you?

Today I pick up the tree limbs, branches, and sticks blanketing the areas of my yard from all the winds of late.
And with a little foot shovel I dug up the copious supply of wild onions that have popped up all through my flower garden and around the hydrangea bushes. It was just as someone came along and planted them! It is approaching the time to plant soon and any prepping such as this helps.

I hosted a Tea for four friends this past Saturday afternoon.
 Grace, truth and beauty feeds a soul of any age, I know this full well. These ladies were part of a prayer group reaching back thirty years until two of us moved away. 

"Come along inside... and we'll see if tea and buns can make the world a better place."
                               
Kenneth Grahame, The Wind in the Willows

Tuesday, March 4, 2025

gifts

Today I am sharing a treat for any of you who might enjoy reading the classic books of Grace Livingston Hill. And that reminds me I failed to add a book of her writing to my posted 2025  Reading List. Actually, I read it back in early January, The Blue Ruin, (I will go back and update the recent post). Other similar authors are found on this site 

 Isabella Alden, 

Marcia Livingston, 

Faye Huntington,

  Margaret Sidney

 Isabella Alden was the aunt of Grace Livingston Hill. You can read several selections of their novels FREE on your browser and you have the capability to store them in your own personal library for later reading.

On a totally different matter altogether, I hosted a couple from my church for Sunday Dinner this past weekend. I have assuredly known for years how much invitations for sharing a meal together will bless people. The act of selecting a menu, preparing the food, setting a table, and then inviting friends or acquaintances to your home makes hosting a reality, and yes it will take time and energy, but the rewards are priceless. Then all that is left to do is serve your guests with love and  the chosen food around your table. Conversation bubbles up as closer and newer friendships are formed.

If the people I invite are fellow believers it seems as if I am experiencing a touch of eternity.

For those of you who might be curious to what I served:

Cream of Broccoli Soup

A Beef Chuck Roast with Carrots/Potatoes/Gravy

Green Beans

Deviled Eggs/ Pickles

Tea and Water

Lemon Drizzle Cake/Coffee


"Dining with one's friends and beloved family is certainly one of life's most primal and innocent delights,  one that is both soul-satisfying and eternal."   ~Julia Child

Saturday, March 1, 2025

2025 reading list

 (This post was written during the first weeks of January. I wanted to come as close to completely composing  the 2025 Reading Challenge as I could, so I delayed posting by a bit.)

A new calendar and a new reading list. These are a few of my favorite January things.


                                 What a blessing that I love books.
                                                             ~Elizabeth von Arnim

It is no secret that I love reading good books. Since I love books and reading it is with alacrity that I prepare an annual reading list. Part of the enjoyment is making the decisions of what books I will spend time reading throughout the year. So many books...

 1. 19th Century Classic

              Madame Bovary   Gustav Flaubert

       This could also count as a book in translation.

A note on this novel. I have in the past shied away from reading Madame Bovary due to it's notoriety in the literature world.  It's a fact that  Flaubert went to trial in 1857 on obscenity charges from French public prosecutors. However, he was acquitted from the charges and the novel went on to become even more popular. I certainly will not fail to lay aside this book if I find it obscene in any shape or form. There are way too many great classics worth reading to waste time on a novel that offends or is uninteresting.

2. 20th Century Classic

              The Return of the Soldier  Rebecca West

3.  Dickens Classic

                David Copperfield

4. Children's Classic

                Anne of Ingleside     Lucy M. Montgomery

5. Abandoned(Second Chance) Classic

    A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court  Mark Twain

6. Perennial (Re-read) 

      Christy      Catherine Marshall

7. Modern Fiction by a man

                Nathan Coulter     Wendell Berry

8. Modern Fiction by a woman

     The Pilgrim's Inn     Elizabeth Goudge

9. Biography or autobiography

      St. Simon's Memoir Eugenia Price

10. Mystery

          The ABC Murders     Agatha Christie

11. Christian Non-Fiction 

     A Grief Observed    C.S. Lewis

12. Self-help, craft, or cookbook, etc.

       Nature Drawing and Journaling  John Muir Lewis

13. Classic in Translation

      Babette's Feast    Isak Dineson

14. Non-Fiction

     The Backyard Bird Chronicles  Amy Tan

15. Grace Livingston Hill novel

                   The Blue Ruin

This is my definite list thus far, though there are some other genres I am seriously considering adding, for example: Classic with a Season in the Title, Classic with a Place in its title, Classic with an animal in the title, and even a Classic Play, perhaps. And then I will continue reading several other books not listed on my 2025 list.

Any suggestions?

Update:

I have finished reading: 

The Backyard Bird Chronicles

The Return of the Soldier

St. Simon's Memoir

A Grief Observed

ABC Murders

I am presently reading David Copperfield, which I am supremely enjoying.



be my guest

"I am excessively fond of a cottage; there is always so much comfort, so much elegance about them".    ~ Jane Austen "The orn...