Is It Farther or Further, Father?

Grammar police, further or fartherOne of those grammatical faux pas that people sometimes make is in confusing the words “farther” and “further”. They do have distinctly different meaning and cannot be used interchangeably.

The easy way to remember it is that farther is a measure of distance: think, ‘is it far?” while further is a measure of degree: “how thick is your fur”.

Here are some example sentences:

  • I can throw the ball farther than you.
  • You can further your education with self-study courses.
  • How much farther will we drive before we stop for the night?
  • How much further will you read in that book before you turn out the light and go to sleep?

See the difference?

Farther is a measure of physical distance. Further is a measure of degree or proportion. If you keep the memory key of “How far – thick fur” in mind it should help you use these words correctly.  Holly Jahangiri brings it all together for us with this example, “The son of a pro mountain climber attempting to scale Everest, furthers his career by climbing farther than his father.”

Happy Michaelmas Day

Michaelmas Day
The Archangel Michael

Michaelmas, or The Feast of Michael and All Angels, is celebrated in Europe on the 29th of September. As it falls near the equinox, the day is associated with the beginning of autumn and the shortening of days; in England, it is one of the “quarter days”.

St Michael is one of the principal angelic warriors, protector against the dark of the night and the Archangel who fought against Satan and his evil angels. Michaelmas occurs at the time when the darker nights and colder days begin – the autumnal equinox – the celebration of Michaelmas is associated with encouraging protection during these dark months. It was believed that negative forces were stronger in darkness and so families would require stronger defenses during the late fall and winter months of the year.

Around the time of the fall equinox, Michaelmas marked the end of the harvesting season with great fairs and festivals. Traditional foods for Michaelmas include goose to bring prosperity, new wine, and cakes of oats, barley, rye, and carrots.

Once the harvest was in, farmers would pay their yearly rents to the landowners.  Many farmers included “a goose fit for the lord’s dinner” with their rent payments. Especially if the tenants required a delay in payment, they may have placated their landlords with gifts of geese as interest.  Continue reading “Happy Michaelmas Day”

Inside a Free Spay and Neuter Clinic

Because I work with rescue animals every day, I am quite aware of spay and neuter programs like The Big Fix and Beat the Heat, and I applaud their efforts to reduce the animal overpopulation which results in around 4 million animals being destroyed each year. These programs offer low cost, or no cost, spaying and neutering on special “clinic” days. This morning I was able to volunteer in one of these major clinics. This one was hosted by the Dr. Carol Hood Memorial Animal Clinic in Newport Tennessee.

I was to show up at 7:00 AM, and I did so. Though it was barely light outside, there was already a table set up outside the front door, manned by volunteers, and a line of folks bringing their pets in to be “fixed”. My role was to help get the animals inside, weighed, and crated to await their surgery.

spay and neuter clinic catsThe shelter’s Director and staff had everything well organized and it seemed to go smoothly. I heard several of the other volunteers comment on how well organized this clinic was. Reservations had been taken ahead of time, crates and neckbands had been labeled with each pet and owner’s names, files had been set up with all the pertinent information. As patients arrived they were ticked off a master list, neck banded, weighed, and crated. Cats went into small crates in the hallway, spay and neuter - dogsdogs in larger crates in the laundry room. Files went into the medical room so they could start drawing up drugs by each animal’s weight.

spay and neuter - mobileIn addition to the shelter’s own medical staff: Dr. Gill Conklin DVM and vet tech Alicia Payne, working diligently in the shelter’s operating room, a mobile unit from Lowell Michigan run by Dr. Bruce Langlois arrived to help out. Continue reading “Inside a Free Spay and Neuter Clinic”

Pursue the Dream

dream, expectations
Great Expectations

Do you have a dream? Yes, you do. You may answer in the negative because your dream has become buried under so many layers of life that you’ve lost track of it, but everyone has a dream: an aspiration, a goal of some sort. For some, the dream may be grandiose: “I want to be an NBA superstar”, for others the dream may be simply to have a stable family and a nice home where they can all be content. I have had a number of aspirations during my life; I’ve pursued several careers in different fields but through them all has been the desire – the need – to teach.

Even as a kid, I remember my sister and I setting up a play school and inviting the neighborhood kids to attend. Looking back, it boggles my mind that those youngsters chose to spend their summer vacations – at least an hour of each day – attending a pretend school!  Continue reading “Pursue the Dream”

Tomatoes: Keep Some for Later

As summer winds down the tomatoes ramp up and we’ve got a bountiful harvest coming in. Some we use fresh – in fact we try to enjoy as many as we can fresh – but what to do with the rest?

tomatoes by the bucketSharing is good: if you have friends and family that don’t raise their own tomatoes. A couple of Sundays ago we went to church and found a large basket of ripe, red tomatoes sitting inside the door. From the pulpit, the pastor clarified, “Those tomatoes inside the door are for taking home and eating, not for throwing at your pastor.”

Tomato season doesn’t last long so it’s a good idea to preserve what you don’t eat or give away for use later. Here are my favorite ways to preserve tomatoes to be enjoyed throughout the year.

Freezing

Tomatoes freeze well and it’s easy to do. Freezing does make the skins tough, so you can blanch the tomatoes in boiling water for 30 second to get the skins to slip off easily, but I prefer not to. I remove the core, cut the tomato in half along the equator, use a plastic spoon to scoop it the seedy-goopy stuff (that does not freeze well) then cut the tomato halves into wedges. Lay the wedges skin side down on a cookie sheet and pop in the freezer. When the wedges are frozen stiff, quickly transfer them into a freezer bag and put it back into the freezer. When the bag is full, squeeze out as much air as possible and seal the bag before putting it into the deep freeze.

By freezing the wedges individually you will be able to take out and thaw just what you need and put the rest back, still frozen. If you throw a whole bunch of wet tomatoes in a bag and freeze them as a unit, the whole bag will have to be thawed to be used. This is not a problem if you have specific uses in mind and package according to your intended use. If not, versatility without waste is good.

When you thaw the wedges the skins will pull off easily.

Dehydrating

Vaccum packed tomatoesDried tomatoes can be enjoyed directly as a crunchy snack (tomato chips) or can be stored for long terms to be used in cooking.

Remove the core, slice the tomato in half along the equator and use a plastic spoon to remove the seeds and goop.

Tomatoes can be dried with the seedy goop left in, but it will take a lot longer and you risk scorching the tomato flesh. Slice the tomato halves into rings ¼” thick for “chips” ½” thick for storage.

Spray the tray of your dehydrator with non-stick cooking spray (or rub with olive oil). If you don’t have a dehydrator you can use cake cooling racks on cookie sheets in your oven set at its lowest temperature (and even at that you may need to crack the door). For a dehydrator, 140° works well. Be sure to rotate the drying trays (or cookie sheets) around the oven to produce even drying.

When the slices are leathery, flip them over and continue until they are dry. Store in an air-tight jar, or vacuum pack them.

To use in cooking, soak the slices in hot water to reconstitute. If you’re making soup, the liquid in the soup will do this for you.

Instant Tomato

Another angle of dehydrating is to keep the skins you remove from tomatoes you process in other ways, dry those then use a mini-food processor or grinder to pulverize the dry skins into powder. This “instant tomato” can be used as a tomato flavored thickener or can be mixed with a little water to make tomato paste.

Canning

Canning tomatoes can be a little time consuming, but it’s not hard to do. They can be pressure canned, if you have that equipment, or water bathed. You can put them up as sauce, or soup, as tomato chunks, or whole: plain or pickled. Recipes abound. My favorite way to can raw tomatoes is what’s called Raw Pack Canning.

Raw Pack Canning

Raw Packed TomatoesThe tedious part is preparing the tomatoes. I tend to do this when I get about a half-bushel of tomatoes – this will yield a full canner run of 10 pint jars. But that’s a lot of tomatoes to clean.

Blanch the tomatoes in boiling water for 30 seconds, then drop into icy cold water to arrest the cooking process. Core, slip the skins, and remove the seeds.

Chop the tomato into whatever size chunks you tend to use. If you want very small chunks, drop the tomatoes into a food processor and pulse just enough to chop them. Put the cut tomatoes in a colander to drain off as much water as possible (this helps reduce separating that produces a half-jar of tomatoes floating atop a half jar of clear liquid).

While you are doing this, have a canner full of jars & lids boiling up.

Some folks say that if you’re going to can something for more than 10 minutes you don’t need to boil the jars and lids to sterilize them, they’ll be sanitized in the canning process just like the contents; just wash them well and rinse. Others say always sterilize the jars. If I’m going to err, I prefer to err on the side of caution: especially if an error could make my family sick or dead. So I always boil up my jars and keep them hot in the canner.

Remove a jar from the canner with tongs or a jar lifter, dump the hot water in the jar into the sink (unless you’ve boiled your water level in the canner down, then dump a little of the hot water into the canner first). Put a tablespoon full of lemon juice in the bottom of a pint jar (2 Tbsp. for a quart – don’t use the 1½ quart jars for raw-pack) and spoon in enough tomato chunks to half-fill the jar. Use a non-reactive spoon or pestle, or something (I uses a small stainless steel whisk) to smoosh the tomatoes down. This forces out air pockets and fills gaps with juice. Air pockets are bad. Fill the jar almost full and do it again. Now inspect the jar for air bubbles that might have been missed and remove them with a plastic or bamboo utensil (I use an orange peeler). Top the jar to leave ½” of head space, wipe the rim, install a lid and band (just finger tight) and return the jar to the canner.

Repeat until all the jars are filled.

To water bath these you’ll need to boil the full jars for 85 minutes. Adjusting for altitude means I have to water bath the batch for about two hours! To me it makes a whole lot more sense to pressure can raw-pack tomatoes … especially since I DO have a good pressure canner. That means venting steam for ten minutes to purge the canner, install the 10 pound weight and process at 10 pounds for 15 minutes. Low altitudes can go 10 pounds for 10 minutes. Then turn it off and go do something else while it cools down. A half-hour instead of being stuck watching the pot boil for 2 hours.

Cooked Tomatoes

tomatoe sauceMy favorite way to put up cooked tomatoes is to make sauce out of them.

Blanch, peel, core and clean the tomatoes as above.

If you’re a purist, run them through a food mill. If not, use a food processor to pulse the tomatoes for a fine chop and transfer this to a stainless steel stock pot on medium-high heat. Simmer, stirring frequently, until the tomato mixture is reduced in volume by half. Reduce heat just to keep it hot.

For an Italian sauce add to each prepared pint jar: (double this for quarts)

  • 1 fresh Basil leaf
  • ½ tsp Thyme
  • ½ tsp Oregano
  • ¼ tsp Rosemary
  • ¼ tsp Sage
  • ½ clove Garlic (smashed)
  • ¼ tsp Onion powder
  • 1 Tbsp. Lemon juice

By measuring the spices into each jar instead of into the stock pot you get a more consistent taste across the batch – and you can adjust or eliminate the spices if you desire to do a split batch. I also like to put up sauce with BBQ seasoning and with Chili seasonings.  These make quick meals possible.

The lemon juice is required as an acidifier, anything else can be adjusted.

Ladle your cooked tomato into the hot jars, leaving 1/2” head space.  Remove bubbles (recheck head space), wipe the rim, install a lid and band (finger tight) and return to the canner. Water bath the batch for 35 minutes (adjust for altitude).

There You Have It

By having tomatoes put up in a variety of ways we have options. By having some put up as pre-seasoned tomato sauce we have an easy open-and-go means of fixing dinner. By having the raw pack canned tomatoes we have versatility. Frozen tomatoes retain more texture. Dried tomatoes are compact and last a long time. You can transfer some from glass jars to vacuum packed bags to take along on camping trips for better-than-average meals in the wild.

Maybe you won’t be able to do BLT’s in January with your own tomatoes, but most anything else can be created from at least one of these forms of preserved tomatoes. Enjoy!

Recycling Cardboard

At a recent Keep Cocke County Beautiful board meeting, Director Tim Berkel told us that cardboard recycling is one of the most financially beneficial programs in the waste management arena.  So we thought we’d look at recycling cardboard this month to see how it’s done and what those old boxes become.

Recycling cardboard is so easy to do that it doesn’t make sense that some people won’t do it.  77% of cardboard is recycled, according to the EPA, so these hold outs are a minority!

There are two types of paper product accepted for recycling cardboard: one is the pasteboard used in packaging food and light-weight consumer products.  The other is corrugated cardboard used in shipping containers and packages for larger items like electronics and appliances. 

Preparation for Recycling Cardboard

Continue reading “Recycling Cardboard”

Labor Day

labor dayLabor Day means different things to different people, just as many holidays do.  It seems that to most people, most holidays mean a day off of work — and little more.  I know very few people who actually spend any time reflecting on, much less celebrating the meaning of, most holidays.  But Labor Day has some unique qualities that bear looking at and at least acknowledging.


Labor Day differs in every essential way from the other holidays of the year in any country, said Samuel Gompers, founder and long time president of the American Federation of Labor.  All other holidays are in a more or less degree connected with conflicts and battles of man’s prowess over man, of strife and discord for greed and power, of glories achieved by one nation over another.  Labor Day…is devoted to no man, living or dead, to no sect, race, or nation.

Labor Day, the first Monday in September, is a creation of the labor movement and is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers.  It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country.  Continue reading “Labor Day”

Recycling Water

The historic draught of 2007-2008 opened many people’s eyes to the very real prospect of a fresh water shortage. Until then, most modern-day Americans took it for granted that clean, fresh water was always just a twist of the faucet away; forever available in any quantity we desire. During that time period, many residents, especially in the Southeast, learned the reality that fresh water is not an inexhaustible resource. Since then, more people are looking at fresh water in a new way.

Some people, while not in drought areas, want to decrease their dependence upon a water utility. In both cases collecting and using rain water and some waste water can help them achieve their goals. By recycling the water they have access to they can maximize their use of that water. But this must be done carefully to prevent health and legal problems.

Two types of water can be collected for use: rain water and grey water. Continue reading “Recycling Water”

Mullein: Alien Plant that Heals

Do you remember the movie Day of the Triffids?  It is a schlocky sci-fi adventure from 1962 involving plants from outer space trying to take over the world after blinding most of the population.  In case you’d like to see it, I’ll embed it below.

common mulleinLately I’ve been seeing these strange plants popping up along our roadways and wondered what they are.  They are big.  They look alien.  They remind me of the Triffids in the movie.  So I asked my super searcher web sleuth (Marie) to see what she could find on them.  She found an excerpt from a book written by Tom Remaley of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, TN.  It identifies the strange plant, which grows to be as much as 10 feet tall, to be a Common Mullein.  It is a member of the figwort family of plants which is native to Europe and Asia and is identified by the Alien Plant Working Group (I KNEW it was alien!) as one of their Least Wanted Plants here in America.

Mullein may not have the ability to pull their roots out of the ground and walk around like Triffids (although they do have very shallow root systems, so; maybe!)  Nor do they spray poisonous gas at passersby, but they seem to be almost as invasive and dangerous as Triffids: at least to meadows and forest edges.  Here they spread rapidly and choke out native vegetation.

On the flip side herbalists collect mullein – a few actually cultivate them.   Continue reading “Mullein: Alien Plant that Heals”

Recycling Can Be Rewarding

For many people, knowing that consistently putting recyclable materials into the special bins helps keep the planet healthy, saves room in the land fill, avoids pollution of water, soil and air, reduces manufacturing costs, conserves natural resources, and keeps their city and county taxes lower is all the reward they need. They’re helping to achieve a grand goal. For others, more of an incentive is needed.

Some communities have chosen to take the punitive approach with mandated recycling programs and fines – just like there are fines for littering – for not recycling designated materials. But other communities are taking a more upbeat approach by directly rewarding citizens for their participation. 

Rewards: Not a New Idea

Back in the day, kids earned pocket money by collecting glass pop bottles from their parents, neighbors and from vacant lots and roadsides. These could be taken to a grocery store and turned in to collect a bottle deposit.

Some have suggested a similar program could be implemented for recyclable food and beverage containers today. Most stores have opposed this plan because they don’t want to be saddled with the responsibility of collecting and paying these deposit amounts and they don’t want to have to store the goods that are turned in.

On the flip-side, some stores are working with local waste management companies by installing mini-recycling centers in their parking lots. In most cases there is no financial incentive, but the convenience encourages their customers to participate.

Community-Wide Cash Reward Programs

More and more communities are entering into a partnership between waste management, local businesses and residents. Details vary by program, but in general; customers use a wheely-bin to store all the accepted recyclable materials. These are collected by a special truck. The address’s participation is tracked, and discount coupons to local businesses are earned through their participation. The businesses get to advertise on the program’s web site and generally increase their customer flow because of the program.

Everyone wins: residents get discounts at local businesses, the businesses gain new customers, the waste management companies gain recyclables to sell, the government reduces its waste disposal rates by qualifying for the higher recycling rates, and the landfill reduces the bulk coming into the facility.

For some examples of actual programs and how they operate, browse these links:

Fund Raising Programs

Another way to benefit from recycling to us join one of the programs that pay an organization for specific recyclable items like printer cartridges, cell phones, small electronics items and spent rechargeable batteries.

Details vary by program: items accepted and whether the program will pick-up or you will have to ship the items to them. Many of these provide a pre-paid shipping label.

Schools, churches, youth organizations, sports clubs, bands, and more are all using these programs for their fundraising. In doing so they reap all the benefits of recycling we’ve discussed above. Again: a win-win situation. Just of few of these programs:

Direct Recycling Rewards

If you are nit fund-raising for a group and your community does not offer a rewards program you can always cash in by taking your recyclables to a processor that will pay you for them instead of depositing them in waste management recycling bins. You may need to do some research to find the nearest scrap yard or recycling center. And you may need to drive a ways if you’re rural, which will mean collecting enough to pay the travel expenses or time it with a trip to some other destination in the same area. This is not as convenient as a community program, but can be worthwhile.

What can you do?

If your community does not have a recycling rewards program, you could write to your waste management company and ask about implementing such a program. If enough people inquire, they will consider it. Or talk with your city and county government officials and suggest such a program to them. Again, if enough people show an interest, they will too.

By working together, the whole community can benefit.