Changing with the times
A thousand pirate apols in advance.
I realize that you lot are not even remotely obsessed with my new grandsons or with my seasonal decor.
But as bloggers we do enjoy the odd family-home-hearth slide show; do we not?
So let's get started.
Yesterday I went to Erica's house and sat holding Baby Elliot for an hour or so.
He was mostly asleep but when I first started holding him, and again towards the end when he woke up and was hungry, he was alert and looking all around.
For an eleven- (now twelve) day-old, it was extraordinary. By my reckoning, he was acting like at least a two-week-old. Which he will in fact be, come Thursday.
As for Baby Guy in Tennessee, he recently got almost two weeks older (he will be seven weeks old on Thursday) while his dad, our Andrew, was serving his country by refueling fighter planes over the Pacific Ocean nonstop for eleven days.
From Hawaii to Japan and back. Rinse and repeat. He touched down in East Tennessee early in the morning a few days ago, and rushed home to see his wife and children. Baby Guy was probably wondering who the grinning mustachioed pilot was, but I'm sure that pretty soon he figured it out.
Dear old Dad! Welcome home.
Meanwhile, fall (If you mentally corrected the lower-case "f" ... don't. Contrary to popular belief, it's not supposed to be capitalized except at the beginning of a sentence, or when used metaphorically.) is progressing as it usually does in South Carolina: warm -- some might say unseasonably so, but not for us -- during the day, pleasantly chilly at night and in the early mornings.
We haven't had a whole lot of rain lately and I get the feeling that I say this every year, but the drier the weather is during this crucial time, the less likely that we will have "real nice" fall color when it finally does develop, which is usually in November.
But we shall see.
Despite the warmer climes (albeit with pleasantly low humidity), we as a family had our first chili supper last Friday. At our house.
I've shared this before, and I have also eaten better chili than mine, but for EZPZ you cannot beat my recipe:
Brown three pounds of extra-lean ground chuck or sirloin. To that add three cans each of chili hot beans and chili ready tomatoes, plus one packet of chili seasoning. Stir it up.
There you have it. Allow the flavors several hours to "marry," serve it piping hot, and I promise, your large crowd of chili-eaters will not be disappointed.
Of course you can amend this recipe to make smaller (or larger) batches. One pound of meat to one can each of the beans and tomatoes, for example. Adjust the seasoning to your taste.
But the smart money is on making my three-three-three-one recipe and freezing what you don't need, for the next time you feel led (not lead) to serve chili. Work smarter, not harder.
Anyway.
The chili -- which I made this time, to my exacting can-and-packet-opening standards, in my Lodge Dutch Oven instead of in the Crock Pot -- was delicious and of course I served it with the usual accouterments: Fritos (no apostrophe between the "o" and the "s") Scoops, hand-shredded extra sharp cheddar, sour cream, and mild banana pepper rings.
For dessert I baked a Marie Callender's Cherry Crunch pie.
The reason for the party was that I wanted Baby Elliot to come to Mamaw's house for the first time since the last time he was here, at which time he had not been born yet.
I also was keen to show off my October decorating.
After easing into late summer with a sunflower theme towards the end of August, it is my habit to transition during September to more sunflowers, plus the first wave of orange-and-brown autumnal decor.
As in, I break out some of my fall stuff but not all of it at once.
That's because in between September and November comes October, and although I do not "do" Halloween in any true sense of that word, I admit to a fondness for the funny, campy decorations for October.
And I have a real affinity for skeletons and skulls (year round, actually), which I find humorous. The skulls and skeletons, that is; not my affinity for them.
You know I'm a card-carrying, rank-and-file, dyed-in-the-wool taphophile, so I'm into cemeteries twelve months out of the year too, but in October I let that child out to play, as it were.
In fact, on Temu I recently found (and duly purchased) two new tees: one with sleeves and one without, but both in black and both with skeletons.
I got this one (I'm wearing it as we speak) and this one.
I mean who could decide between those two? Not the pirate.
I've already got (have had for years) not one but two versions of the classic I've Got Your Back skeletons, with one brandishing the other's vertebral column.
That's a classic.
At any rate, for the nonce I have put away much of the overt orangey autumnal stuff and brought out my black table runner with silver studs in a spider web pattern.
At one end of that I put my hearse and my pirate bride and groom.
Out came my graveyard-themed salt-and-pepper shakers from Cracker Barrel, and my heavy solid glass skull tea light holder. I added my cream-colored ceramic pail with a repeating pattern of skulls in black.
From the front room where he stays the rest of the time, I brought out Cassius Crow in his cage. There is also my raven.
Dagny found me the vampire gnome at the Dollar Tree for a dollar and a quarter, about a month ago.
I already had the black cat gnome from last year.
Then there is the usual lineup of pumpkins and owls and various and sundry other homey decorations that work for both October and November.
On November first we will switch out the October layabouts for the all-out autumn ones, adding turkeys and like such as, for the Thanksgiving holiday.
What a foofaraw! You may be saying.
If you're confused, don't worry. The pirate will take care of everything. And there will be pictures. You'll get to where you know my decorations so well, you'll think they're yours.
You may have noticed from my last post that I did buy a full-sized skeleton (it's plastic) this year, and poised him on the apple-green bench beneath the white oak just a few feet from our front steps.
Name of Skelly. He wears a pirate hat.
I plan to bring him inside after October, and put him on the bench in the sun room, and dress him for the seasons.
Or something along those lines. We'll play that one by ear.
Speaking of ear, you should hear the sound when an acorn pops off the aforementioned white oak which towers over our house, and strikes the metal roof of the sun room, where I am usually sitting.
It sounds like someone has lobbed a boulder at us from ten stories up. Sweetness does not flinch but Rizzo nearly jumps out of his skin.
When it happens I feel like quoting Rhett Butler in the library when Scarlett, in a fit of pique because her romantic overtures to Ashley were not repaid in kind, throws a priceless decoration across the room, which objet d'art shatters on the fireplace mantel.
Has the war started? the urbane Rhett inquires sarcastically as he makes his presence known. It's one of the greater cinematic moments.
Be that as it may, I am convinced that it's not too early to declare a mast, or boom, year for the acorns. We're getting a bumper crop, as it were.
On Sunday I sat on the front porch for a while and watched a squirrel poised at the base of the white oak, munching acorns as fast as his little jaws would allow.
I'd do that with the candy I put in that pumpkin jar, but neither my waistline nor my dentist would appreciate that. So for the most part, I'll stay out of it.
It's for the kids anyway.
And we're having another party this coming Friday for those same kids, so I'll tell you all about that next week, Lord willing and the creek don't rise.
And that is all for now.
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Happy Tuesday