Category Archives: Rambling stuff

Saying goodbye to old stinky stuff

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Mister Dumpster guy pulled into the driveway at 7am this morning. I heard the telltale backup noises trucks make-beep, beep. There went my old cabinets forever. I feel like the new kitchen, though still unfinished, goes so much better with the house because it’s what I like and what I picked out-glad I got to finally achieve this makeover.
A few hours later Mister Plumber guy showed up and said he was taking out the grease trap/bucket and why was it inside the house anyway? We have a nice, new long plastic pipe and he had to take away the stinky bucket. Don’t you love when the parts are like $30 and the rest of the $230 is just stepping in your door and labor? I wouldn’t have wanted to do what he had to do and it’s still has that mucky smell down there-ugh.
Got to go food shopping too-checked out next to a lady from church who has one of the cutest husbands (next to mine of course) in the parish. She acted like she hadn’t seen me before. Who cares, I can admire her husband from a far.
The guys cut the grass, I potted up geraniums and a fuchsia. Also planted the wildflowers from the sale on Sunday. The one plant is coral bells. No way am I digging into that dusty earth to plant the rest of the annuals until it rains.
We had stew (the Banquet stuff) in the new crockpot and it worked like a charm. It wasn’t fun carrying the interior ceramic piece downstairs to wash it. Did I say how great it was to have a place for everything in the kitchen? No more piling up stuff on the counters or beverages on the floor. Heck I have about 25 assorted bottles of stuff in the frig now. Can’t wait to start baking out there.
BTW, got stash enhancement in the mail too. The ladybug gardeners and the plants on chairs which I saw over a buck cheaper at AC Moore. It’s so much fun to get goodies in the mail though.

Matz- an amazing person

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Michael Matz living an improbable dream
BY JOHN CLAY
Knight Ridder Newspapers
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – You wouldn’t believe his story unless it were a movie, and in that sense, Michael Matz has a celluloid quality about him.
See, some of us live lives, and some of us live lives.
“So far, I’ve lived a full life,” the modest trainer admitted in the week leading up to the world’s most famous race.
Yes, winning a silver medal and carrying your country’s flag in an Olympic games, marrying the King Ranch heiress and saving three young lives in a horrific plane crash qualify as an existence rich in experience for many, let alone one.
So why wouldn’t he win a Kentucky Derby?
And Saturday, Matz did, when the magnificent horse he trains, Barbaro, made a shambles of a top-flight field in the 132nd running.
“I really don’t know what to say,” Matz said, shaking his head.
It has to be real, because you wouldn’t believe it unless it was.
This particular Derby cup runneth over with great stories, starting with Dan Hendricks, his spirit resurrected by the California juggernaut Brother Derek. That was the Santa Anita Derby winner Hendricks trained from a wheelchair after a motocross accident rendered him paralyzed from the waist down two years ago.
There was Lawyer Ron, running for the estate of the late Jim Hines, the Owensboro businessman who drowned in February and whose children hoped he would be honored by his prize colt winning the roses.
There was Lawyer Ron’s trainer, Bob Holthus, in failing health at 71, hoping to cap a long career with his first sip of Derby champagne.
There was Beverly Lewis, the owner of Point Determined and part of racing’s first couple, in her first Derby without her husband, Bob, who died of heart failure in February.
And there was Matz, 55, an Olympian and true-life hero rolled into one.
There was good reason to root for them all.
But when the gates opened, sentiment was trumped by mass and muscle, by a beautiful animal schooling a tough field in head-turning fashion.
“It’s obvious,” said Matz, “he is a terrific athlete.”
His domination was obvious in the reaction of Hendricks, watching the race on a 13-inch NBCmonitor in the Churchill tunnel with his three young boys draped around him. Hendricks’ shoulders sagged when it became clear that Brother Derek, a dead-heat fourth-place finisher, was not Barbaro’s match.
Neither was Steppenwolfer, who finished third.
“He’s better than I thought,” said Danny Peitz, Steppenwolfer’s trainer. “Ithought Barbaro was a very good grass horse and a good dirt horse, but he’s obviously better than that.”
Perhaps as good as the Matz story itself.
Yes, in case you’re wondering, Matz did get to see the three Roth children, whose lives he saved during a United Airlines plane crash in 1989 that killed 111 people. The Roth siblings, now ages 26 to 31, were guests of Churchill Downs.
While Matz and his wife, D.D., both passengers on that plane, have stayed in touch with the Roths, it was but the second time they had met in person, the first being at a hometown ceremony in West Grove, Pa., ( A few towns over from us!) honoring Matz for his 1996 Olympic team equestrian medal.
“It was nice to see them again,” Matz said, “and it was nice to see that they’re doing so well.”
Although maybe not as well as the trainer himself, who had the added satisfaction on Saturday of proving his detractors wrong.
Matz had encountered critics who doubted a horse could win the Derby off a five-week layoff, the time between Barbaro’s win in the Florida Derby and his entrance into yesterday’s starting gate. Matz didn’t disagree with the argument so much as fail to understand the logic.
“He’s the most stubborn person I’ve ever known,” said Billy Glass, Matz’s friend of 40 years, who wore a Barbaro hat and a steady beam. “There’s no compromising with him. That’s the way it’s always been with him. If you don’t want to hear what he thinks, don’t ask him.”
Barbaro did the talking, and afterward, as Matz himself smiled in the spotlight, it hit you that the handsome trainer looked a little like English actor Ralph Fiennes, a former Oscar nominee of class and distinction.
Maybe Fiennes can play Matz in the movie.
But first, a Triple Crown awaits.
Who among us can say Michael Matz, or Barbaro, can’t accomplish that?

Pennsylvanians again have Kentucky Derby-winner to root for

LOUISVILLE, Ky. Pennsylvanians again have a Kentucky Derby-winning horse to root for.

Barbaro, who is owned by Roy and Gretchen Jackson of West Grove, Chester County, blew away the rest of the field yesterday in Louisville, Kentucky.

The undefeated three-year-old is also trained by Collegeville trainer Michael Matz.

Barbaro becomes the sixth undefeated winner, following Philadelphia Park’s Smarty Jones in 2004. Next up for Barbero in the Triple Crown quest is the Preakness in two weeks.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Raining clothes

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No rain for 12 days now-that’s not good. I worked inside anyway.
I really hate changing my clothes out for the different seasons because of the attic hassle. I have too many of everything as I take care of my things and they don’t wear out. Sean’s running into the same problem-he isn’t growing anymore and keeps buying new things.
I got Space Bags a few years ago-they are ok, they need to make the closure sturdier as it sometimes won’t stay closed or tears and all the air re-enters them. Brian didn’t like lifting the heavy plastic boxes up into the attic. It looks like besides the 5 Spaces Bags, I will need to use a few boxes. One box is mostly Bri’s things, so I don’t feel too bad. And I did get rid of about a dozen things-that is a rule.
Is anyone else hating the Capri/bicycle pants that seem to be all the fashion this year? I do own some, but I much prefer the above the knee shorts for the summer and am having trouble finding them. I think the Capris only look good on thin or tall people, which I am not.
I loaded up the dumpster with two more cart loads of flowerpots from ‘tick country’, next to the shed where we always seem to get a tick on us if one of us ventures over there. It looks neater there.
I threw in an OnCor dinner and it was so bad, Bri went and got us hamburgers. It was their enchilada-beware-it’s just lasagna noodles and hamburger sauce with too much chili powder in it.
We have a leak down the basement in the ‘grease trap’. It’s like a metal bucket with a lid. It not a big leak, but enough to have Bri tell me to call a plumber in here to look at it. I do wish we could replace that, the water heater and the water pump. Bri has the ‘if it’s not broke, don’t fix it’ philosophy. I believe new is better. Our electric bill was only around $100 which is not bad. I bet it’s the new appliances. : )
I forgot to mention that I went to AC Moore yesterday and got the 5-$1.00 DMC (bought 15 skeins) and a Mouse in the House kit called Hot Fudge. I just wanted a cute kit to do if we go down the shore in a few months or a change of pace piece.
It’s been a year already since we were in Orlando. Saturday Night Live, the tv show had a Universal Studios skit on the exact day we got to that area last year. Talk about a funny coincidence!

A drive in the Delaware countryside

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There was a wildflower exhibit over in Greenville, DE. Sean said he’d take me since he knew the back roads from doing volunteer work at Ashland Nature Center in that area a few years back. Well, we were up and down these narrow country roads, and my mouth was hanging open from all the gorgeous streams, waterfalls and homes literally in our backyard that I had missed seeing in 19 years! Sean said he’d take me back so I could take some photos. He’s finished everything and has a good solid ‘B’ average. He’s looking for a summer job and has applied online at a few places.
So we saw signs for a wildflower sale and did find that, thus the following photos:


That seat was screaming out for someone to go sit on it-

So Sean did!

I did buy a few wildflowers, but I can’t remember the names of them right now. The one has a spikey white flower and the other looks like a cross between a coleus and coral bells. The flowers were pretty much picked over and rather pricey.
Earlier, after church, Brian had taken me to Avondale Gardens and I got some gorgeous peachy flowers-I’ll let you know what they are soon. I remember the Lantana and diascia, coleus, ruffled white petunia and burgundy salvia. I made up several pots and put two on the front steps.
We’ll get some rain tomorrow so I can switch over my winter clothes with my summer ones and clean up some of the mess Brian left behind in the basement. I think I almost have room for a craft table now!

Brokeback husband-the dumpster is full!

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Yep, Bri spent the afternoon tossing in old doors, drywall, my Bruce Jenner piece of crap treadmill and most importantly, the old riding mower into the dumpster we rented. It took 10 days to get one as the next town over had rented dumpsters from the same company and moved 34 tons of rubbish through their yearly clean-up. Bri had ‘parked’ the mower next to the side of the shed and never moved it again. Well it would hardly budge. After hitting it with a sledge hammer, he knocked one of the back wheels off. Sean and him managed to push it around to the dumpster with the wheel-less side supported by Sean’s old wagon! I could not let them toss the wagon, I plan to use it somewhere in the yard. I know all the happenings because I was outside planting pots of flowers. I could not enjoy it as much as I usually do because Bri was so grumpy and complaining the entire time. We still have to rake out old flowerpots and stuff next to the shed that have accumulated there even though I toss out dozens of them each year.
Sean went to church tonight and had to sit through First Communion (whew for us). After I took a shower, Bri and I watched the running of the Kentucky Derby and a local horse won (from the PA-DE border area). What gorgeous horses! The winner-Barbaro (I think) was way ahead of the others.

Kitchen Aid is almost mine

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The most important thing was seeing my mom and helping her out. I hadn’t planned on doing any yard work at her house, but the grass next to the lily garden (I almost got a stroke planting) was high as an elephant’s eye-almost. Mom had to find the weed whacker-she had no gas for the push mower. I weed whacked for her and pulled honeysuckle vines and onion grass out of the lilies. Everything is growing well there including Sweet William (dianthus) and mums. I think the sunny corner next to the back step needs some portulaca. Sean had joined us after his last final. He is feeling better, not 100%, so he didn’t do yardwork. The Nyquil really put him in La-la land last night-I didn’t hear one sniffle or cough out of him the entire night.
We went to this popular place near mom in Broomall and bought some geraniums, begonias, carnations, and a few other flowers. I was really tempted to buy jasmine and gardenia, but they wouldn’t last too well outside. They smell so wonderful.
We headed to Macy’s and I ordered a ‘blue reef’ Kitchen Aid stand mixer. I won’t get it until next month as it was a special order. It took the man forever to type in all the gift card #s-he had to do this twice as he hit ‘clear’ by mistake.
We ate at Carrabbas which we all enjoyed and did another Macy’s walk-thru. The shopaholic in my mom drew her to the clothes and she couldn’t leave without buying some. I tried to get her to just walk out to no avail.
When we got home to her house my brother Ken had cut the entire yard. My weedwhacking seemed like a futile effort and now I am suffering for it with my bum shoulder blade.
I have an entire box of old photos from mom, so be prepared to see a few after I scan them.
There are a ton of tailgate sales going on tomorrow, but I’m not in the mood to attend (things can change), so I guess I’ll plant some flowers and help Bri with the hedges and the bush to prepare for the window installation next Friday.
The floor guy called and said he was installing a floor in North Wildwood and couldn’t complete the kitchen floor moulding for us today and that someone would probably come tomorrow-ugh. Did I know where Wildwood was? How lame a question was that? Of course you idiot, I use to go down to ‘the beach’ every summer there!
Mom loved the photos of the kitchen I took down for her to see. Even Ken got to see them. The walls are grossing people out-they both thought it was mildew. I can’t wait to cover that up!

Brokeback

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And you know what I am talking about without even adding ‘Mountain’ to the above title. Sean brought home 3 DVDs and that was one of them. Not that I really wanted to see it because I figured they would show certain kinds of scenes. The outdoor scenery itself was majestic. Heath Ledger’s drawl drove me crazy through the entire movie as I couldn’t understand him. And I saw Ann Hathaway and Michelle Williams in scenes that left nothing to the imagination. Annie girl was no princess!
I’ve never seen guys act ‘like that’, meaning madly in love. I guess it showed how difficult it was in the early 60s and beyond for men to have these feelings. They had wives and children, but they still needed to see each other over the years.
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Sean has his last final tomorrow and he is miserable with a cold, his first in a few years. He just took some Nyquil so he can sleep. He has a good appetite, which is good, but he is blowing his nose like crazy. We went out to the jiffy oil change place and then to Wally World this afternoon. I checked out their plants and got some 25ยข Johnny jump-ups, some eggplants, basil, a purple pepper and a pretty hanging basket of petunias. Most of what they had wasn’t that unusual. I need my Avondale Gardens fix for the year.
I’ll probably go to my mom’s and meet Sean there. The floor people are suppose to come tomorrow and add moulding to behind the frig and stove-it looks unfinished. The Home Depot guy installed a corner door today too. I got some knobs by Fed Ex, but the wrong color! Man, what’s wrong with those people? It will surely get finished too long.

Can’t help myself

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I just had to take more photos tonight of these beauties while Bri loadede more junk in the dumpster. The guys are hitting the basement on Saturday and we’ll get rid of the dumpster on Monday (I hope).

Honey Glaze Iris

Raspberry blush iris

Johnny jumps-ups being planted by gnomes!

Snagged from

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Roger Ebert has released a list of 102 movies you must see in order to be considered “movie literate”. I’ve posted the list below with the ones I’ve seen in bold, though I may have seen the older ones and have forgotten.
2001: A Space Odyssey” (1968) Stanley Kubrick

“The 400 Blows” (1959) Francois Truffaut
“8 1/2″ (1963) Federico Fellini”
Aguirre, the Wrath of God” (1972) Werner Herzog
“Alien” (1979) Ridley Scott
“All About Eve” (1950) Joseph L. Mankiewic
“Annie Hall” (1977) Woody Allen
“Apocalypse Now” (1979) Francis Ford Coppola
“Bambi” (1942) Disney
“The Battleship Potemkin” (1925) Sergei Eisenstein
“The Best Years of Our Lives” (1946) William Wyler?
“The Big Red One” (1980) Samuel Fuller
“The Bicycle Thief” (1949) Vittorio De Sica
“The Big Sleep” (1946) Howard Hawks
“Blade Runner” (1982) Ridley Scott
“Blowup” (1966) Michelangelo Antonioni
“Blue Velvet” (1986) David Lynch?
Bonnie and Clyde” (1967) Arthur Penn
“Breathless” (1959) Jean-Luc Godard
“Bringing Up Baby” (1938) Howard Hawks
“Carrie” (1975) Brian DePalma
“Casablanca” (1942) Michael Curtiz
“Un Chien Andalou” (1928) Luis Bunuel & Salvador Dali
“Children of Paradise” / “Les Enfants du Paradis” (1945) Marcel Carne
“Chinatown” (1974) Roman Polanski
“Citizen Kane” (1941) Orson Welles
“A Clockwork Orange” (1971) Stanley Kubrick?
“The Crying Game” (1992) Neil Jordan
“The Day the Earth Stood Still” (1951) Robert Wise?
“Days of Heaven” (1978) Terence Malick
“Dirty Harry” (1971) Don Siegel
“The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie” (1972) Luis Bunuel
“Do the Right Thing” (1989) Spike Lee
“La Dolce Vita” (1960) Federico Fellini
“Double Indemnity” (1944) Billy Wilder
“Dr. Strangelove” (1964) Stanley Kubrick?
“Duck Soup” (1933) Leo McCarey
“E.T. — The Extra-Terrestrial” (1982) Steven Spielberg
“Easy Rider” (1969) Dennis Hopper
“The Empire Strikes Back” (1980) Irvin Kershner
“The Exorcist” (1973) William Friedkin
“Fargo” (1995) Joel & Ethan Coen
“Fight Club” (1999) David Fincher
“Frankenstein” (1931) James Whale
“The General” (1927) Buster Keaton & Clyde Bruckman?
“The Godfather,” “The Godfather, Part II” (1972, 1974) Francis Ford Coppola
“Gone With the Wind” (1939) Victor Fleming
“GoodFellas” (1990) Martin Scorsese
“The Graduate” (1967) Mike Nichols
“Halloween” (1978) John Carpenter
“A Hard Day’s Night” (1964) Richard Lester
“Intolerance” (1916) D.W. Griffith?
“It’s a Gift” (1934) Norman Z. McLeod
“It’s a Wonderful Life” (1946) Frank Capra
“Jaws” (1975) Steven Spielberg
“The Lady Eve” (1941) Preston Sturges
“Lawrence of Arabia” (1962) David Lean
“M” (1931) Fritz Lang
“Mad Max 2” / “The Road Warrior” (1981) George Miller
“The Maltese Falcon” (1941) John Huston
“The Manchurian Candidate” (1962) John Frankenheimer
“Metropolis” (1926) Fritz Lang
“Modern Times” (1936) Charles Chaplin
“Monty Python and the Holy Grail” (1975) Terry Jones & Terry Gilliam
“Nashville” (1975) Robert Altman
“The Night of the Hunter” (1955) Charles Laughton
“Night of the Living Dead” (1968) George Romero
“North by Northwest” (1959) Alfred Hitchcock
“Nosferatu” (1922) F.W. Murnau
“On the Waterfront” (1954) Elia Kazan
“Once Upon a Time in the West” (1968) Sergio Leone
“Out of the Past” (1947) Jacques Tournier
“Persona” (1966) Ingmar Bergman
“Pink Flamingos” (1972) John Waters
“Psycho” (1960) Alfred Hitchcock
“Pulp Fiction” (1994) Quentin Tarantino
“Rashomon” (1950) Akira Kurosawa
“Rear Window” (1954) Alfred Hitchcock
“Rebel Without a Cause” (1955) Nicholas Ray?
“Red River” (1948) Howard Hawk
“Repulsion” (1965) Roman Polanski
“The Rules of the Game” (1939) Jean Renoir
“Scarface” (1932) Howard Hawks”?
The Scarlet Empress” (1934) Josef von Sternberg
“Schindler’s List” (1993) Steven Spielberg
“The Searchers” (1956) John Ford
“The Seven Samurai” (1954) Akira Kurosawa
“Singin’ in the Rain” (1952) Stanley Donen & Gene Kelly
“Some Like It Hot” (1959) Billy Wilder
“A Star Is Born” (1954) George Cukor
“A Streetcar Named Desire” (1951) Elia Kazan
“Sunset Boulevard” (1950) Billy Wilder
“Taxi Driver” (1976) Martin Scorsese
“The Third Man” (1949) Carol Reed
“Tokyo Story” (1953) Yasujiro Ozu
“Touch of Evil” (1958) Orson Welles
“The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” (1948) John Huston
“Trouble in Paradise” (1932) Ernst Lubitsch
“Vertigo” (1958) Alfred Hitchcock
“West Side Story” (1961) Jerome Robbins/Robert Wise
“The Wild Bunch” (1969) Sam Peckinpah?
“The Wizard of Oz” (1939) Victor Fleming