Ann Wood Stitch Book begins January 19, 2024

I followed along and did the daily stitching to make a stitch book in 2021 with Ann Wood Handmade. It was such a great experience for me, to have 15 minutes of stitching every day for 100 days.

As a caregiver for my husband with early onset Alzheimer’s, I could keep supplies by my chair and stitch. The reason I joined was to make myself do something. But, in the end, one of the things I learned from the 100 days of stitching was that it was an idea factory. When I would sit down to stitch, I would grab some perle cotton #8, which is my favorite, and thread a needle and just start stitching. Some days my stitching was simply running stitch or “taking my needle for a walk,” as I would call it on social media.

I am joining the Ann Wood stitch book sew along again, on January 19, 2024. You can read all about it on Ann Wood’s blog or do a search in Instagram.

I’ll post some of my “pages” from 2021. To be honest, I am missing 1 page and hadn’t sewn my first book together yet because caregiving and taking care of our acreage at the same time, got pretty busy in April 2021 and I set the pages aside, but that’s on my list to finish before I start the 2024 sew along. It’s an even busier time now, as my husband passed and I’m getting my acreage ready to list for sale in the spring. But, that’s why I chose this project. I’m packing up my bigger projects and sewing stash so it’s ready when I have to move. Small projects, that require little time but make me pick up a needle and thread help me feel more alive.

Join me on Instagram or on my Prairie Woman Arts Facebook page, where I’ll be posting my daily stitch in my story with the hashtag #annwoodstitchbook2024 .

Thank you for visiting my blog, friend.

Anne

“Rightsizing” after Caregiving

For the last 3.5 years of caregiving, I knew when early onset Alzheimer’s finally took Dave, it was likely that I would end up “right-sizing.” Downsizing is probably the term you are more familiar with, but I prefer to think of it now as “right-sizing.” It’s not that I have too much, it’s that what I have doesn’t serve me in the next chapter and season. And, that’s really okay…I keep reminding myself, so it much be true! 🙂

It was a bold move for our family in 2014, to leave our house in town for 52 acres of native prairie and mature timber. The barnhouse and attached barn, were a pretty big chunk for even the most adventurous of DIYers.

But, bite it off and chew, we did.

As I established a walking path around the 52 acres, we dreamed that this would be our last big move. I got very attached, especially as we put the final touches on the renovation inside the house.

We talked and dreamed about our upcoming empty nest years, and all the things we wanted to do with the house and land.

I’m really glad we were bold enough to hope and dream, even if early onset dementia took us down a path we didn’t expect.

Every day gets closer to listing day and ‘what comes next?’ day.

I’ll be doing all the things one does when getting ready to sell a house as well as continue my online work and schedule in some playtime in my studio.

Will I miss my 52 acres? I will, without a doubt. But, I trust that the strong urge to buy this place in 2014, along with all the blood, sweat and tears we put into it, will bless just the right family in 2024. That is my new hope, dream and prayer for my acreage.

What’s next? I trust God has that too.

#acreagenebraska#nebraskalife#nebraskaforever#nebraskafarm

Give Yourself This Gift

Presence

Give yourself the gift of presence.

Despite best intentions, master lists, spreadsheets, and plans…hustle and bustle might be at full throttle. Pause. Take a breath. Notice. Be interested. Be present where you are right now.

Even if right this minute, you are doing another batch of dishes or trying to fit one more casserole in the overloaded oven. Take a pause. Sounds simple but to be present in a flurry could mean, even over a sink of dishes, slowing down just long enough to feel the temperature of the water on your hands, notice the way the bubbles reflect, did you wash the pan clockwise or counterclockwise. Pause. Breathe.

This Christmas isn’t the one before. Or the one 5 years ago. It isn’t that one where the beta fish died prompting a tearful pet funeral between batches of cookie baking.

This Christmas isn’t the one in your memory that was the most perfect one ever, where all the gifts, food, people, came together like a gold medal worthy synchronized swimming routine.

This Christmas isn’t the one where the shower broke and flooded the hallway while guests were arriving.

It’s not the one where you looked at a family member and knew it was their last Christmas.

It’s a new day, friends. It’s a new Christmas time, open to fresh experiences and new beginnings. It’s a Christmas you haven’t lived or loved through before.

If you don’t feel the Merry…that’s okay.

Just be present. Give yourself that gift.

Your blogging friend,

Anne Dovel

How to Use A Cotton Rope Sourdough Proofing Bowl

Sourdough proofing basket

Prepare the cotton rope sourdough proofing basket for first use.

  1. Mist with water, add rice or other coarse flour to inside of basket, and tap out excess flour. Alternatively, use a cotton or linen towel inside the bowl.

  2. After use, tap out excess flour, store at room temp in the open so the cotton rope dries. It’s okay if the flour dries on. That’s what makes your basket more “nonstick” over time. If you need to wash the cotton rope basket at some point…say the dog got ahold of it, for example, just hand wash in the sink and let it air dry.

  3. If you have pests in your kitchen, and need to store it in the freezer, let it dry first before sealing in a gallon freezer bag.

For more information: www.prairiewomanarts.com/blog/basket