A Project a Week:: Week 5: Patio Sprucing

Week: 5
Project: Tidy and spruce the patio

The goal this week: get flowers planted in pots around the patio and generally spruce it up. We use the patio a lot during the summer for dinner and after-baby’s-bedtime drinks. It hasn’t gotten a ton of attention yet other than the new border shrubs, and I want to add some potted plants and flowers and just generally clean it up.

The challenge here is that the small breezeway porch that borders the patio is under-construction, as Pat has taken down the ugly louvres that have been there for 50 years and is rebuilding/replacing the three sides.

The patio has come a long way since we moved in, when it was half-asphalt (terrible bumpy broken many-layered asphalt) and half poorly-laid flagstone. Once the porch is done we’ll have completed all the major work we envisioned for this area of our yard. Almost there!

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A Project a Week:: Week 4: Complete

Week: 4
Project: Reign in the toy chaos with some hidden toy storage.

Status: Complete!

This one was super satisfying to check off the list. This is the kind of project that will be ongoing, but getting to a good place with the toy organization feels good. 

We started out with toys in every little corner of the living room, and Evy would regularly pull every single toy out and then move on to do the same thing in her room. There was too much stuff around for her to concentrate on any one thing for very long, and we needed some order to the situation. We have a small living room that doubles as play room for now. Here’s some ‘before’ shots to set the scene.

I had attempted some organization with some bins and baskets here and there, but mostly they were crammed with stuff, some outgrown, with no rhyme or reason to where things were. 


Storage in a small ottoman started out well, and then just became layers and layers of toys, pieces of puzzles, and just another place to hide the mess. 



As I talked about in my last post, I wanted to drastically cut down on the number of toys out and visible at any one time, weed out anything that had been outgrown, broken, or should be filed elsewhere, and generally make it a less overwhelming scene for everyone.

I started by moving the blankets we had stored in our coffee table/ottoman and finding new homes for them. My goal was to stow most of the toys out of site in our two ottomans. 

The second step was going through and removing anything that had been outgrown –  a tote bag full of rattles, teethers, cloth books, and a couple stuffed animals went to basement storage.

I put most of the books from the living room along one side of the ottoman (I left out about five books in various baskets around the living room – we’ll rotate these once a week or so). I added a couple baskets to organize things inside the ottoman. One basket contains the musical instrument-type toys. Another contains puzzles (now in bags to contain the pieces) and a couple of other toys. Some wooden toys and puppets take up the remaining space arund the baskets. It’s more organized than this photo lets on, really.

The smaller ottoman, previously crammed with stuff, contains just a few larger toys and a basket with some smaller toys. The plan is to rotate the toys that are stored out-of-sight with the toys ‘on display’- always keeping just a few out for play.


Storing toys in the ottomans freed up some baskets. The basket on the left contains a couple books and a small bag of about eight wooden blocks. The other basket contains our Playmobil Noah’s Ark, an all-time favorite. 

On to the bookshelf. I gave in and moved another stack of our (grown-up, non-board) books to another room. I also moved the extra chair and other clutter out of the corner and into another room (which now needs to be organized, of course). Another basket here contains a couple of board books. Just a few toys are displayed on the shelf (and I may even edit this further). 


 This is the final corner of the room. The table is still a favorite (even without the lights and sounds turned on- phew), so that stays out for now but I anticipate stowing that away in the near future. 




That’s the large ottoman, where all those toys and books are nicely concealed (hopefully it will be a little while before Evy realizes what’s in there and figures out how to bust in…)

I felt like I could see a difference in Evy’s play immediately. She played with her blocks for awhile this morning, rather than emptying the bag and moving on. She’s always spent a good amount of time with her books, but today she went back and forth between two rather than twelve. And when we brought her to the living room for clean-up at the end of the day, it was a much quicker process!

My remaining challenge here is the stuffed animal situation. Most of them are in E’s room and not the living room, but I don’t know what to do with them, how to store/display them, or how to cull the growing collection. Evy has been gifted some adorable stuffed animals, and she has a couple favorites, but the giant teetering pile in her room isn’t in line with the toy streamlining we’re working on. She doesn’t really play with them, and they are very hard to store. I really don’t know what to do about that one. I guess that’s a project for another week!

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A Project a Week:: Week 4: Toy Storage

Week: 4
Project: Reign in the toy chaos with some hidden toy storage.

I had to keep it simple this week – dreary weather and plans to travel this weekend mean that it isn’t the week for anything too ambitious.

I don’t read a lot of parenting books at this point, but Simplicity Parenting: Using the Extraordinary Power of Less to Raise Calmer, Happier, and More Secure Kids has been my recent bedtime reading. The basic idea is that in a world of screens everywhere we look, constant information, and new things to worry about, childhood must be protected and kept simple. With too much pressing in from the outside world, they can feel the pressure and become anxious, unable to focus, or end up with a jumbled-letter diagnosis. The author, Kim John Payne, focuses on ways to slow down and make space for childhood, while keeping the ‘adult world’ out. It all makes a lot of sense to me.
All of that to say that one of the concepts that resonated with me was cutting back on the number of toys a child has access to in order to simplify the child’s environment. I can see a difference in how Evy plays based on the number of toys around. Giving one or two simple toys, she focuses on those, playing independently for long stretches. But given an overflowing basket of toys, she flits from one to the other, pulling everything out, leaving trails of toys as she moves around the house, never focusing on one toy for more than a minute. It’s not a good scene for anyone.

My goal this week is to make use of some storage to put away most of her toys, and rotate a few favorites every few days. We have two storage ottomans -one large and one small – that are great for this. They need some organization and shifting of ‘stuff’, and some weeding out of toys that have been outgrown or broken. 

Pretty straightforward, and hopefully the payoff will be the freedom to be immersed in play, for Evy, and a neater living space for all of us.

  

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A Project a Week:: Week 3: Complete

Week: 3
Project: Organize the plasticware cabinet (and finish hemming the curtains!)
Status: Complete (mostly)

The plasticware cabinet has been tamed! 

While the very-curious toddler was safely napping in her crib, I pulled everything out of the cabinet. (And totally forgot to take a ‘before’ photo. It wasn’t pretty. I’m sure you’ve seen an overflowing cabinet.)

I had a few rules: 
  • Anything that went back into the cabinet had to have a matching lid.
  • Containers with any sort of damage would be chucked.
  • Anything we hadn’t touched in a year would be thrown out or relegated to basement storage.
 Here’s what didn’t make the cut:
  •  A very fun but never-used, ice-cube tray for making arrow-shaped ice.
  • Two metal racks for our pizza stones. We use the stones once a week, but never use the racks. 
  • Two plastic pitchers.
  • A scraper for the George Foreman grill that we gave away prior to moving to Albany in 2009.
  • A travel coffee mug that I didn’t know existed.
  • A stack of lids for plastic deli containers.
  • A burger patty shaper.
  • A lasagna pan that we use from time to time, but not frequently enough to store here. 
  • Several containers either damaged or missing lids.
  • Several lids without matching containers. 
  • A cat-shaped lid for cans of cat food. Our cat has had canned food a total of three times.
  • One of those trays for microwaving bacon. Gag. I have no idea why we own that thing. 
Storage space is at a premium in our kitchen, so weeding out all this stuff made a big difference.
Here’s the cabinet after putting the frequently-used items back:

It’s not easy to see, but you get the overall idea. It’s an organized cabinet! The remaining lids and containers are organized by size/shape. Larger containers and the electric mixer live on the top shelf, cutting boards and containers on the bottom. After taking this photo I relocated our travel mugs from the counter to the area behind the container storage, and placed the toddler snack cups in the open area in front. There is also room remaining for our glass/aluminum food storage containers that currently take up valuable counter space.
Another long-looming project, done!
(Curtain update to follow…)

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Creating Our Albany Blue Zone

This past fall Pat attended a conference where he heard a talk given by Dan Buettner, the author of National Geographic’s Blue Zone study. He came home talking about the Blue Zone concepts – the idea that the places where people live the longest have certain ways of living in common. I’ve always been interested in this kind of thing, and the Blue Zone findings were intriguing to both of us.

The more I read about Blue Zones and about that approach to living well, the more I’ve come to realize that our life in Albany already encompasses many of the concepts – and that we could do even more to capitalize on those opportunities for ‘good living’.

There are nine lessons that the study uncovered through researching the areas with the highest percentages of centenarians (as listed on BlueZones.com – you can read more about each lesson there):

1.Move naturally.
2. Have the right outlook – Purpose
3. Have the right outlook – Shed stress
4. Eat wisely – Until 80% full
5. Eat wisely – Mostly vegetarian, with limited meat
6.Wine @ 5 – 1-2 drinks per day, preferably wine
7. Connect – Belong to a community
8. Connect-  Put loved ones first
9. Connect – The right tribe

It struck me as I learned more about each of the above that several are made easier for our family to attain based on the community in which we live.

Move Naturally 

Blue Zone Finding: As it turns out, the world’s longest-living people don’t lift weights, run marathons, or join gyms.  It turns out that they live in places where they naturally move more, without thinking much about it.  They live in places where they can walk to the store, to work, to their friend’s house, or places of worship. They garden and work outside. Movement is a part of their daily life.

Here in Albany: It’s my guess that, overall, we have the opportunity to walk more than many of our suburban-living friends.  One of the reasons I wanted to live in Albany was for the walkability. From our home we can walk to the library, our daughter’s daycare center, the gym/pool, a couple of drug stores, the hospital, several restaurants, the homes of many of our friends, a pond, a few playgrounds, Stewarts, my doctor’s office, the salon where I get my hair cut, church, our dentist’s office, and (if we were so inclined) the municipal golf course.

Do we walk to all of these places? Nope. But we do walk a lot. (It is oh-so-valuable to be able go places without going through the putting-the-baby-in-the-carseat struggle!) We take walks with our daughter most days of the week, sometimes just around our part of town, to no destination in particular. Sometimes we have a destination – the library, CVS, the pond, the playground, Stewarts, the coffee shop, and occasionally a restaurant. We often walk to visit our friends (we are lucky to have several friends living within a 1-mile radius), or meet friends for walks (or ice cream!) We’ve walked to church a couple times. But I know we could do an even better job of making the most of the awesome walkability of our ‘hood.

Eat Wisely

Blue Zone finding: The Blue Zone researchers found that the people that live the longest eat meat, but in limited amounts – “consider it a condiment”. Beans, including fava, black and soy and lentils are the cornerstone of most centenarian diets.

Here in Albany: The quality of our local food scene is extolled often. Local farms, restaurants that value local/happy food, Honest Weight Food Co-Op, a supportive gardening community, several Farmers Markets, and a great local food blog scene make it easy to access and value this kind of diet. In our new role as parents we’ve become more aware than ever of what we eat, where our food comes from, and eating well. We’re making more from scratch, buying as much locally-sourced food as we can afford (via Honest Weight, various Farmers Markets and our CSA), eating less meat, growing vegetables, and overall just being more aware of what we consume. I love that it’s so easy to eat this way from here (although I do wish there was a weekend farmers market in Albany proper for city residents, rather than the mid-week mid-day markets for State employees. Probably too late for this now as all of the farmers are in Troy/Saratoga/Delmar/Menands on Saturdays and Schenectady on Sundays. It’s not hard to get to any of those places, but it would be nice to feel the kind of community a market brings.)

Connect 

Faith:
Blue Zone finding: All but five of the 263 centenarians that were interviewed belonged to some faith-based community. The religion didn’t matter, as long as it met as a community.  The research found that attending faith-based services four times per month will add 4-14 years of life expectancy.

Here in Albany: We’ve been attending church more since living closer to our families, and certainly since Evelyn was born. Having a church within walking distance helps on the particularly lazy mornings. I’m also inspired by the many Jewish families I see walking through our neighborhood to and from synagogue on Saturdays. The presence of organized religion is stronger (and more diverse) in our current neighborhood than anywhere else I’ve lived. It’s not a surprise, with several synagogues and churches of various denominations nearby, but I think it’s an uncommon neighborhood trait in 2012.

Loved Ones First:
Blue Zone finding: Centenarians in the Blue Zones put their families first. Aging parents and grandparents live nearby or in the same home. The researchers recommend working on being in a positive, committed relationship and investing in children with time and love.

Here in Albany: We could probably achieve much of this living anywhere. Except that here, we live less than 15-minutes away from both sets of parents. Evelyn sees her grandparents- all of them- at least once a week, often more. Same goes for her aunt and uncle. This was a big factor in our decision to live in Albany. We could find- and have found- many of the other good-living qualities elsewhere. But the family that we have here, especially now that we have a child, is something we wouldn’t have anyplace else.

Right Tribe:
Blue Zone finding: The world’s longest lived people chose (or were born into) social circles that support healthy behaviors. Research shows that smoking, obesity, and even loneliness is contagious. And so is happiness. The Blue Zone researchers recommend evaluating who you hang out with, and then surrounding yourself with the right friends. They claim this will do more to add years to your life than just about anything else. Isn’t that amazing?

Here in Albany: We have dear and awesome friends living far and wide. Having friends living so nearby here in Albany has strengthened many of our friendships: easy weeknight meals or hangs together, frequent visits, meeting up for walks and talks, sharing garden bounty, baby play dates at the library and playground, meeting up for a drink at the neighborhood bar after work, and being able to easily help each other out in a pinch. The ease of our Albany friendships goes a long way. I worry that we’ll lose that as years go on and young Albany residents and families do what young Albany residents and families seem to do as they grow: move to the ‘burbs. For now, it’s another thing that I love about living in Albany.

Our family can do plenty more in terms of living well, but achieving the Blue Zone ideals aren’t so out of reach from here. Who wants to meet up for that glass of wine?

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A Project a Week:: Week 3: Organize the Overflowing Plasticware Cabinet

Week: 3
Project: Organize the plasticware cabinet (and finish hemming the curtains!)

Background: There isn’t much to say except that the cabinet that houses our plasticware/cutting boards/etc has become a cluttered mess. I’ve been buying fewer plastic storage containers and more glass/aluminum containers, and the new stuff has no place to live – so this needs an overhaul.

The Plan: Match containers to lids, ditch anything that doesn’t have a match or is in bad shape, move anything we haven’t used since moving in to the ‘donate’ pile, make space for glass and aluminum containers/lids currently taking up counter space, and do it all during a naptime so that this cabinet doesn’t become toooo appealing to the toddler in the house.

Also: Finish hemming the curtains that did’t get hemmed last week.

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A Project a Week:: Week 2: Hemming Curtains – Update

So, here we are. At the end of Week 2.

And I have not finished hemming our curtains. (Although they are pinned, so that’s progress.)

The thing is, the weather this week was amazing. And there was a three-day weekend. So, other projects took precedent.

I could consider this a failure, but I’m going to take it as a Project a Week lesson. Sometimes, project plans change based on conditions. The important part is that projects are getting checked off the list.

Instead of hemming curtains this week, I:

  • Transitioned my closet from winter to summer.
  • Planted flowers in pots for the front stoop.
  • Weeded the front gardens and planted some new annuals.
  • Collaborated with Pat to pick out shrubs for the patio border (Pat did the hard part of this project, planting the shrubs on an 85-degree day- and it looks great)
  • Planted marigolds in the vegetable garden for some natural pest-control and added bird netting over the strawberries and chives (a cute but destructive rabbit has already been helping himself to the chives- hoping the netting deters him)
  • Planted bulbs and thinned out lily-of-the-valley in the side yard.
  • Planted various other flower bulbs/seeds and herbs in containers on the patio.
I still feel like it was a productive week, although I did stray from my plan. 
Since the curtain-hemming project is partially complete, I’m going to keep this one in the plans for next week and add another. 

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A Project a Week:: Week 2: Hemming Curtains

Week: 2 
Project: Hem bedroom curtains

Does everyone have these little projects that hang around, undone, for ages? Or is it just us?

Background: A few weeks before Evelyn was born last year, we did a mini-makeover of our bedroom: moved all the furniture out, scrubbed the floors and walls, purchased a new mattress and bedframe (our first actual headboard/footboard set up), put up shelves, photos and artwork that we’d wanted to hang since we moved in, organized nightstands and dressers, and hung new curtains. Except the curtains were too long, and we meant to hem them, but Evy was born a week later and, well, those curtains are still dragging on the floor in front of the baseboard heaters. (By the way, I highly suggest the master bedroom spiff-up as a pre-baby project for expectant parents. There’s so much focus on the baby’s room but, at least in our case, the baby spent more time in our room than hers for the first 6+ months. I spent a lot of time there with her in the early weeks and I was so thankful that we’d gotten it in order before she arrived.)

The Plan: There’s not much to it- this week, I will hem those curtains. Not the most exciting project, but it will be crazy satisfying to cross this one off the list.

It is beyond silly that this project has needed doing for over a year, but it is what it is, and this week it’s time to get ‘er done — which is, of course, the entire point of this Project Project.

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A Project a Week:: Week 1: Complete

Week: 1 
Project: Plan and plant my vegetable garden
Status: Complete (mostly)

The vegetable garden has been planted!  Since kicking off this project last week I checked the following off my list:

  • Planned out the garden, taking into account that we’ll also have a farm share, so we don’t need a ton of veggies.  
  • Bought seedlings (tomatoes, strawberries, oregano, parsley, chives, calendula, zinnia) to plant in addition to some sugar snap pea seeds I already had on hand. I bought most of my seedlings at Honest Weight Food Coop – they’ve had a beautiful selection of organic vegetable and herb seedlings. I picked up the zinnias and a few other random flower seedlings at a neighborhood plant sale.
  • The organic co-op seedlings are lovely, but the tags could use a little proofreading (click to view larger…)  
  • Planted the herbs in a container garden on the patio. 
  • My partner-in-crime/husband built the frame for the netting we’ll put up for the peas and tomato vines.
  • Picked up some other supplies like soil and bird netting to go over the strawberries.
  • Planted the seeds and seedlings in the raised beds. 
Before:
After the frame for the vine plants was built, but before any plants or seeds were in the bed. 
After:
Not much to look at yet, but everything has been planted! We’ll add the net to the frame this weekend so it will be all ready for the peas. 

This wasn’t a huge project- I did most of it in small chunks during E’s naps. Giving myself a 1-week timeline (and the fact that I had to report back on it here!) kept things moving along. Focusing on this project also inspired me to work on some other projects around the yard- it felt like a productive week. 
I still need to buy some basil for a second container on the patio (the nights were still too cold to plant it last week), put the bird netting over the berries, and hang the nets for the peas. That should be wrapped up this weekend.
Gardening has already been fun with the little one  — I had some help with the watering this morning.

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A Project a Week:: Week 1: Planning and Planting



Week: 1 
Project: Plan and plant my vegetable garden


Background: The summer of 2010 was our first summer in this house, our first home. We built and planted our first raised bed vegetable and herb garden, loosely following the square foot garden method. We planted too many things and generally had no idea what we were doing, but we certainly learned a lot! We harvested tomatoes, eggplant, herbs, cucumbers, beans, lettuce, and peppers. We made notes about what to do in future years and hashed out plans for building more beds.



In the summer of 2011 our time and attention was consumed by the darling infant who had arrived that spring, and pretty much everything else fell off our radar. We hastily planted some tomatoes and peppers, watched the mint that we stupidly planted the year before take over everything, and really didn’t touch the garden.


This year I’m determined to have a successful garden.  Being outside and having a few minutes to myself to tend the garden is calming, centering, and good for the soul. I want that back in my life this summer. I am imagining summer evenings of putting my daughter to bed and heading to the yard before the sun sets for some time with the garden. That’s not to mention my excitement over afternoons spent showing my daughter the garden and teaching her how to pick and bite cherry tomatoes. She’s still very young, but this is the summer she’ll begin her journey of gardening and learning about where food comes from.


The plan: I’ve spent a couple nights this week thumbing through my gardening books and finalizing my plan for the garden. My challenge is that our family is also doing a farm share. We’re splitting a share with friends, but we’ll still be getting plenty of vegetables from the farm. That changes my planting goals. Rather than planting for a summer of vegetables from the garden, I’m planting vegetables to round out the farm share (hard to predict), that we can easily process or freeze, and that my 13-month old will enjoy picking and eating throughout the summer. Since that will leave plenty of room in the bed, I’m also planning to grow several rows of pretty flowers to cut and enjoy/share through the fall.





I originally thought I’d start my own seeds, but clearly that ship has sailed. Perhaps another year, if I can figure out a spot for seedlings that’s free from danger of crushing by child or cat.


At this point my plan is to visit a local nursery and co-op to pick up some plants over the weekend, and to get them in the ground within the next few days. The raised bed itself needs a bit of weeding and some soil refreshing, but overall is in pretty good shape. I’ll need to construct/string up some sort of frame and/or netting for the snap peas, but that might be a project for another week. My Mother’s Day request was for some time to work on this project, and I’m raring to go!

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