Linda's Page
The musings of a crazy quilt lady
Tuesday, 26 May 2026
Monday, 25 May 2026
Flower Show
“Do you remember learning about Jesus feeding more than
5,000 people? Jesus had been teaching people all day, and they were hungry.
Somewhere in this large group there was a young boy who had five loaves of
bread and two small fishes. He knew that this food could not feed very many
people, but he decided to give Jesus what he had. Jesus took the food and
thanked Heavenly Father for it. That food fed thousands of people! Just as the
young boy did not have to figure out how a small amount of bread and fish could
feed so many people, you do not need to worry about fixing all the problems
around you. Heavenly Father can provide miracles when you simply offer what you
have. When you say, ‘Here am I, send me,’ Heavenly Father can take something
small and simple and make it great!” – President Susan H. Porter
Saturday, 23 May 2026
Forty-Eight Louisiana Blocks
I did an inventory in my sewing room this week, and
discovered I have seventeen different sets of quilt blocks that are ready for
sashing and/or borders. Seventeen. That doesn’t count the tops that are ready to be
quilted or the quilts that are waiting to be bound. It’s just blocks. Some are
in plastic bins and some are in cardboard boxes. Some are in zipper bags and
some in paper grocery sacks. Seventeen is just too many, so I set to work on
clearing the backlog. I made the first of these red, cream and blue blocks in
November 2022. I didn’t follow a pattern. I was just using up leftover scraps
from other projects. If I stitch these blocks together without sashing,
add a 2” blue stop border and a 4” red outer border, it would make an excellent
donation to Quilts of Valor. One down, sixteen to go.
Friday, 22 May 2026
Midnight Blue Pinwheel
We went to a potluck picnic last night, and had a marvelous
time. I brought my spicy English layer salad. If you’re interested, the recipe
is here: https://mombowe.blogspot.com/2016/06/four-teacups.html
It’s one of my favorite dishes, but it can be a bit of work.
I really should have made grape jelly meatballs. There are only three
ingredients; no slicing, grating, chopping, or julienning. (I looked it up. That
really is a word.) In a slow cooker, dump ten ounces of grape jelly. (Smuckers
is okay, Bonne Maman is amazing, but usually I just use my own.) Add 12 ounces
of Heinz chili sauce and stir. (There are other brands, but they might change
the taste.) Add 32 ounces of fully cooked, frozen meatballs. (You could make
your own, but that’s extra work.) Cover and cook 3 hours on high or 6 hours on
low. If you take this to a potluck, be sure to bring toothpicks for serving.
Thursday, 21 May 2026
Brimming Basket
I learned a new term (well, new to me) this month:
Maycember. If it isn’t obvious, Maycember is a combination of May and December.
It refers to the absolute mayhem that happens at the end of every school year.
This time of year, calendars are just as jam-packed as they are during the
holiday season, without the benefit of gift-giving, festive decorations, or the
cultural permission to slow down. So far, we’ve had two school band concerts, a
choir concert, a piano recital, a dance recital, an amusement park field trip, two
fund-raising carnivals, and several end-of-year farewell parties. As if that
wasn’t bad enough, some of these events occur at the same time on the same day,
so there’s literally no way to attend them all. The good news is summer break
starts a week from tomorrow. Then there’s a whole week of relative peace and
quiet before the summer musical starts.
Wednesday, 20 May 2026
Pink Tulip
For years I was a substitute teacher. It was a great way to
supplement our family’s income and still be at home when my kids were. I only
subbed in elementary schools, as older kids can be brutal. When I found this story, I could definitely
relate: “A former Marine Corps sergeant took a job as high school teacher. Before
the school year started, he injured his back and had to wear a plaster cast
under his shirt. The students didn’t know. The first day, he walked into the rowdiest
class in the school—the kind that eats new teachers alive. The kids, knowing he
was a former Marine, were eager to test him. The sergeant opened a window and sat
at his desk. When a breeze blew his tie around, he casually picked up a stapler
and stapled the tie to his chest. The room went silent. The rest of the year, discipline
was not an issue.”
Tuesday, 19 May 2026
Half a Dozen Kitty Cats
The other day, a friend-of-a-friend on Facebook posed a
question: If given the opportunity to forever be an age you choose (not a time,
but a physical age), what age would you choose, and why? There were thousands
of answers. Apparently, this is a subject we all have opinions about. A lot of
men thought seventeen was the perfect age, because that’s when they’d earned
their driver’s licenses. Several women chose 21, because they’d felt the most
attractive at that age. Older people were more likely to select forties or
fifties, when their health was better than today. Not me. If given the choice,
I’d be ten forever. When I was ten, I could ride a bike, run like the wind, do cartwheels, and
pull myself into a handstand. I ate whatever I liked without consequences.
I didn’t pay taxes, didn’t have a mortgage, and no one could make me do
anything I didn’t want to do: the perfect age.





