Introduction

Introduction: Mapping Out a Plan for the Rest of My Life and Enjoying the Journey

My Golden Years are an extension of the life I have lived up to retirement which began on December 1, 2011. I have organized this blog to include the top ten relevant topics shown below in the right side column in General Topics. Just click on one and you will see all that I have written on that topic. Click on the Most Current tab for chronological order of all entries.

I have addressed each topic in no particular order other than what is currently on my mind on the day I am posting. I started each topic by describing where I was when I began this blog and then exploring the possibilities of progression and any goals that I would like to meet. After that, I write about the path to reach that goal as it happens. Sometimes I just write about what is happening now.

I welcome any comments and questions either on this blog or email as I travel these paths and hope to share my growth with interested persons who may find some common elements in their own path to the rest of their life. I hope to use my skills as an appraiser for nearly 30 years to continue to observe different perspectives on a subject and reconcile into a conclusion that is of value to me. Please join me whenever you like. Email notice of new posts is no longer available so just bookmark the address.

The Blog Archive tool is helpful to find posts by year. Of most importance to me is the confidence developed in my intuitive skills over the years and it is that part of my character I am trusting to define value in my life. I believe change can be good and I can be enriched by believing in my true self using my intuition. The analytical part of my life no longer has a financial grip and I can let go of what absolutely made sense at the time in favor of what feels right now. I have done a lot of work since this blog began in 2011 and I hope you will join me as I explore this approach in My Golden Years.


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Monday, June 30, 2014

Wild Berry Cobbler

Summer Berry Time!
This recipe works well for wild berries such as gooseberries, black raspberries, dewberries, blueberries, and blackberries.   The sugar amount can be doubled if you like less tartness.

Gooseberry Cobbler with Ice Cream

Ingredients for Gooseberry Cobbler



Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Filling:
4 cups gooseberries (or fill any deep dish with cleaned berries to 1" from top)
¾ cup sugar
3 tablespoons flour
1 tablespoon butter
½ teaspoon nutmeg
2 eggs

Put all ingredients (except berries) in blender and blend thoroughly.  Pour over berries in deep dish and stir to cover all.

Topping:
1 cup all-purpose flour
3 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon sugar
1 teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon baking soda
¼ teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons unsalted butter, cold, cut into ½" cubes
⅔ cup low-fat buttermilk

In large bowl, combine flour, 3 tablespoons sugar, baking powder, baking soda, salt.  Blend in butter until mixture resembles coarse meal.  Add buttermilk; stirring until a dough forms.  Drop dough onto berries in about ⅓ cup mounds.  Depending on the size of your deep dish, you can leave as mounds or spread out leaving gap at edges.  This recipe also works well for individual servings in oven-proof cups such as ramekin dishes.  Sprinkle dough with remaining sugar.  Bake until fruit is bubbling and biscuit topping is golden brown; about 35 to 45 minutes.  Let cool 15 minutes; serve warm.



Finished Berry Cobbler

Monday, June 23, 2014

Celebrate Summer Garden Tour 2014

What better way to celebrate the first day of summer than to spend the day on a Garden Tour?  A full day of fun and education put on by The Master Gardeners of the Ozarks from Taney and Stone Counties in SW Missouri.  This is the same Branson Area Chapter that hosted the Five Oaks Farm Tour at Forsyth last year that I blogged about.  You can find it using the "Search" tool on the right.

This year was a "go on your own" tour that covered three stops beginning in Kimberling City, then a private garden in Blue Eye, lunch and tour at Persimmon Hill Berry Farm, College of the Ozarks, and we ended at Big Cedar Lodge.  Keith and I were looking forward to this day and got up early for the 2-hour drive from Hermitage.

Registration was at the Senior Center in Kimberling City where we got our packet and map.  We had registered and paid $22 each online previously so we were ready to go after some early morning refreshments at 8:00 am.  We walked around the building and saw the Master Gardener approved gardens that the chapter designed and maintained.  There were 23 perennials/shrubs/trees and eight annuals around the Senior Center.  Lovely.

The next stop on our tour was a short distance to the Library where there was a KAL Children's Garden.  The Mission of the KAL Garden is to provide a garden environment in which plant based and reading activities generate interest and appreciation of reading and horticulture that lead to a lifelong pursuit of these beneficial activities.  The plant list is extensive.  There are eight trees/shrubs, 23 flowers in the ABC Garden, and 28 other annuals and perennials.  Volunteers for the library installed irrigation and the garden is currently funded with grants from the Master Gardeners of the Ozarks and the Kimberling City Area Library Association.

KAL Children's Garden at The Library in Kimberling City


The last stop in Kimberling City was at the Kimberling City Center - a shopping mall with about two dozen businesses.  One was the Table Rock Art Gallery www.tablerockartguild.com where there was an Art Walk on this day.  Keith found a couple pieces he liked.  This day was also the dedication and demonstration of a new Storm Water Management Project.  The previously paved parking lot was redesigned.  This 3-acre lot will now capture an estimated 8 pounds of nitrogen, 1.5 pounds of phosphorus, 4 pounds of metals (iron, copper, lead) and 125 pounds of soil and minerals per year off cars and trucks.

While the nutrients, nitrogen, and phosphorus do not sound like a lot of pollution, keep in mind that it only takes one pound of phosphorus to enable the growth of 700 pounds of algae in the water!  Metals such as lead can also concentrate in fish which is a bad thing for people that like to eat what they catch. Table Rock Lake is within view of this shopping center and is known as one of the best for bass fishing.

Storm Water Management Project - parking lot area of the Kimberling Center

Crossing the bridge over Table Rock Lake, we drive to Blue Eye.  Linda Redford currently has what many people sat is the most beautiful garden in the area.  Her house is more than a century old and she promised her family she would not sell.  She has restored the house and revived the gardens she grew up with.  Her father was also a fishing guide in the area and Linda is a member of Women's Professional Bass Tours and travels for tournaments all over the country.  Gardening and fishing is her life!

Linda Redford's Garden in Blue Eye

Linda Redford and her 100+  year old house

Time now for lunch!  Persimmon Hill Farm is a real berry, fruit, and mushroom farm that began several decades ago.  The current owners started in 1982 turning two acres into blueberry fields with hives of honeybees for pollination.  They added fields of blackberries, raspberries, gooseberries, plums and more.  Their goal was to provide top quality berries and an enjoyable family experience where Branson Area tourists could pick their own fruit.  The addition of log-grown shiitake mushrooms began a new gourmet product line.  Other products developed and available for sale include barbecue sauces, jams/jellies, mushroom sauces, with a total of 30 gourmet food products.  They ship gourmet food items and baskets all over the world.  www.persimmonhill.com

Here we met up with Beth and Frank from our Hickory County Master Gardener Chapter.  Lunch was not what we expected.  The Thunder Muffin was good though.  The company was the best part.  When we took the tour, this farm was not at its best.  They had experienced a recent hail storm that tore up plants, the mushrooms were not growing at this time, and it was getting too hot to walk around much.  So time to move on…

Persimmon Hill Berry Farm - sorting blueberries
Big Cedar Lodge is proud of their environmental efforts that enhance the natural beauty that surrounds the area.  Their motto is "Take care of the soil, don't worry about the plants."  To create and nurture rich soil in which they grow their gardens, they compost with their vast supply of horse manure, any plant/grass clippings, and a plentiful supply of vegetable and fruit waste from the kitchens.  They also fertilize with organic fertilizer in the spring and fall.   They provided a small booklet of Gardening Tips from Big Cedar along with descriptions/photos of many of their plants in the landscape.  www.bigcedar.com

"Your sacred plants, if here below,
Only among the plants will grow.
Society is all but rude,
To this delicious solitude."  
~ Andrew Marvell

"Remember, we all live downstream."

A fine view of the Table Rock Lake!

Oak Leaf Hydrangea is my new favorite flowering shrub!  I just planted one at my home this spring.

Another fine view of Table Rock Lake

Wonderful rock work and landscaping!

College of the Ozarks is a college where no tuition is charged because all students work on campus; debt is openly discouraged.  This "Hard Work U" has long been supported by the Master Gardeners of the Ozarks with a portion of the proceeds from this tour to be awarded as a full scholarship to a College of the Ozarks student whose study is plant-based.  A CD is provided for a walking/driving tour of the campus.  The annual flower beds, greenhouses, and 32 fruit/vegetable plots are of most interest.  There is also a working mill.  These gardens supply produce for the on site Farmer's Market that began in 2013, Dobson Dining Room in the Keeter Center, and for the Pearl Rogers Student Dining Room.  There is also a dairy that produces and sells unpasteurized milk.  Other products include meats, bedding plants, hanging baskets, Edward's Mill products, Fruitcake and Jelly Kitchen items, stained glass, and goodies for the student's Keeter Center.  Most of the campus is self-sustaining which includes producing their own water, sewer treatment plant, steam heat, water cooling systems and more.  www.cofo.edu

Master Gardeners greeters provide cold water and answer any questions between the mill and greenhouses/gardens.  There was also a large dairy area but we decided not to visit today.

Greenhouses

Hydroponically grown vegetables

Water-Cooling System



Orchid Greenhouse

More lovely orchids!



Students working in the mill - weavers.

Working machinery of the mill.

All about this mill...

Map of all the mills in Missouri

Part of the working mill process.

Mill products include several types of flour and cornmeal.

In the basement of the mill, the wheels are turning!  There's also a lot of old fashioned farm tools and machinery on display.  



The upper floor is all about weaving and basket making.

Up close view of weave...

…love this pattern!

Front of mill with greenhouses to the right behind.

Side of the mill…there's a small lake to the rear.

Student guide tells all about vegetable production.


Keith had a long visit with this official with the college.   It was a good day and a good Celebration of Summer!