the most popular things you’ve been reading on my blog

I have a confession to make…..I don’t really know my way around Google Analytics. I check my uniques and visitors each month and that is about it. I don’t delve too deep into the pages but as part of my study with BSchool I wanted to see what my top blog posts were and so I looked at the past 12 months and what do you think it was? My kitchen? The kids? Recipes?

Wait for it……drum roll………….Is a thermomix worth it? Yes that’s right, number 1 blog post for the past 12 months is whether a thermomix is worth it or not? Clearly a question on a lot of people’s minds and google searches.

And 2nd? A subject close to my heart…………………….knitting for newborns. I have my 19 week scan next week and despite the nerves and hoping that everything is ok with this pregnancy I am really looking forward to finding out whether I need to crack out the pink or blue wool yet.

february baby sweater

And 3rd? Pottery Barn comes to australia! 

When it comes to top categories on the blog for the last year. Well renovation comes up top and after 2 kitchens I get that. Will I do another kitchen? I’ve been asked a few times and actually I don’t think it will be in the life of this blog. A new kitchen is going to be a long long time down the road.

baking was up next……….I do love to bake…..except when I’m pregnant and exhausted. Then I don’t feel like baking which is why there have been no cake recipes lately. But if you want to bake me a cake then that is another matter. I could eat cake all day long this pregnancy.

and third category you have been reading? Family. Awwwwwww. Something close to my heart.

Now if you’re a blogger then get on to Google Analytics and by selecting the date range and then on the left hand side select Behaviour and then overview and you can see your top posts and pages for the selected time period. Another cool thing if you run a website or blog is to check out peek user testing. This was hilarious! The site will review your blog and see how user friendly it is, did the reader get what they expected, would they come back again

fast family dinner: beef + vegie meatballs

This is a delicious weeknight dinner that is quick and easy and went down a treat with my kids……except for elodie who is a bit under the weather and off her food. So it’s not gluten free but to make it gluten free just swap out the tomato soup for 2/3 of a jar of passata and use gluten free flour. I made this after school and emerson had 2 plates and keira ate finn’s meatballs as well as her own dinner. That to me is always a good sign that dinner was a hit. If you want some good old fashioned meatballs that take you half a day then please make these 3 hour meatballs…..amazing.


beef + vegie meatballs for the kids
 
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
 
Recipe type: Dinners
Serves: 6
What you'll need
  • 2 carrots
  • 2 zucchinis
  • 1 onion
  • 500g beef mince
  • 1 tsp each of coriander, cumin and tumeric
  • salt and pepper
  • 1 egg
  • 3-4 Tablespoons flour (use gluten free for gluten free option)
  • 1 can of tomato soup (or about 600g passata for gluten free option)
  • rice to serve
Instructions
  1. Rinse and cut the carrot and zucchinis into a few large pieces. Place in thermomix and process for 10 seconds speed 6. Scrape down bowl.
  2. Add in peeled onion and process another 5 seconds on speed 6 and scrape down bowl.
  3. You can do these steps in a food processor or just a grater will do.
  4. Add in egg, beef, spices, salt and pepper and the flour. Mix well with your hands so that everything is evenly distributed.
  5. The mixture will be soft and not too dry. If your mixture feels really wet then add some more flour or cornflour.
  6. Pour the canned soup or tomato passata into a casserole dish, add ½ can of water to the dish (don't add anything if using passata as use ⅔ a jar of passata (about 600g).
  7. Now roll the mince mixture into meatballs, we like a generous size and fill the casserole dish. Any extra mixture can be baked separately for 15 minutes in a 180 degrees oven and added to the tomato mixture later on.
  8. Place the casserole/baking dish into a preheated 180-190 degrees oven and bake for 20 minutes. Your sauce should be bubbling and the meatballs cooked right through. Check by cutting into the middle of a meatball.
  9. Serve with some rice or mashed potato or steamed greens. Garlic bread would also be delicious with this too.
  10. Hope you enjoy it! We just loved it and will be making it again some time soon.

 

quick + easy for the mother’s day stall

This year I’m excited that we are at a school with a mother’s day stall! I was a bit surprised that there are now all of these catalogues where you can buy things for your stall. In my mind I had it that everyone made or brought something in from home to donate from their family. But times have changed……….mind you it’s been a while since I was actually a student at primary school. And I decided (with the other ladies on the committee) that it would be nice to have a few handmade items to donate to the stall. I settled on 3 but have now cut that down to 2 since the mug cosy tends to take a bit too long on my needles compared to the sewing projects. I see people on ravelry can whip one up in a night but I’m falling asleep after a couple of rows. I love this pattern by Interweave Knits because it covers the bottom of the mug so you don’t need a coaster.

So that leaves me with tissue covers and iPhone covers. I have to tell you that both of these projects are super addictive. I’m still trying to find the tissue cover pattern that I found a few years ago that just had 1 big piece of fabric and was a breeze to use but I won’t give up on finding it. For these covers I used the pattern here which has 4 pieces but I’m sure you could use one big long piece like this pattern.

And for the iPhone cover I settled on this easy pattern which was a breeze to whip up. I might try  some cotton batting inside next time with a few rows of stitches. I’ll have a little play and see what I can come up with but the pattern is great and because you trace your own phone I’m thinking I could do a samsung/android phone size too for the stall.

If you get on to pinterest and put in handmade iphone cover or tablet covers there are lots of patterns to choose from. Thank you pinterest for making things so easy these days.

Anyway I’d love to hear what your quick craft is or how your mother’s day stall is run at your school? Do you have memories of taking in your money and picking something nice for your own mum when you were at school. I’m sure I always picked soap or pot pourri for mine. And if you need some inspiration for your mother’s day stall or craft stall for the school fair check out my pinterest board here. I had a lot of fun making it and have put up my hand to help with the school fair next year and see more craft to make and donate…………

I’m doing BSchool

Retro daddy came home late this week and everyone was in bed, I called out that I was studying. He said what. I said you know the course I’m doing. He said what course. I said you know the one I’m doing that I told you about last year. But last year I decided that I had to do something. There aren’t many courses you can really go on as a blogger and I had heard great things about it so I paid off the fees in monthly instalments (I’m still paying) and signed up. And I’m loving it.

It certainly has me thinking about what I want to do and what makes me happy. Writing down all of the things you love to do and how you could turn that into a business. Very interesting. So often we just get on with the day to day without sitting down with pen and paper and writing things down. Or we devote all of our energy to our family and forget about what we really want.

It’s also made me realise that being a positive and open person is a good thing and that we have made dreams happen. Remember when I walked on glass up at the Whitsundays? Well that was totally out of character but it was part of an exercise on facing our fears so that we can achieve our dreams. We had to close our eyes and think of our goals for 1 year and 5 years ahead. My goal was just to move to acreage. That was pretty much it. It involved apple trees, my kids picking apples off the trees, having space to run around and acres.I stared at that broken glass and said I’m not doing it. Then I said if I don’t do it I’ll go home and regret it. So I did it. And I felt great afterwards.

And we have made that dream  happen. It’s been a dream for a while and it has taken us outside of our comfort zone. It’s been stressful. We had offers knocked back a couple of times. We even made an offer on a serious fixer upper that was so depressing it made someone go back and do some number crunching and reevaluate our budget but now I can look back on it and laugh as it’s part of our story and journey to owning something fabulous.

Anyway over to you – sit down with a pen and paper or let me know what your dream is. Is it to not having to return to the workforce? Getting fit and healthy and back to your old self? Finding your passion because you just don’t know what it is? Leaving the suburbs and having a big property? Learning a craft or hobby? Turning your hobby into your business? I would just love to find out what it is that you dream about doing…………………..

what do you treat yourself with?

Today I did the usual school run – out the door at 7.30am (last year it was 8.40am!), back home to preschool and the fastest drop off ever because now someone loves preschool after not loving being left there and then I went to the shops for milk and chux cloths. And decided to get my toes done since I only had emerson. It always feels like such a treat to get my toes done. I don’t know why because I’ve been getting them done since before I got married but I still love getting them done. And I’m not one of these people that gets them done on a very regular basis…basically they look like they really need to be done and then I know it’s time to go again or I have somewhere to go and want to wear a sandal or open toe.

And then after the groceries (which were a lot more than just milk and chux)

I popped into my favourite newsagency and picked up 2 english country magazines. Again a total treat and I stopped buying them when I moved away from the newsagency but I am itching to sit down with a cup of tea and these babies and just imagine I was in the english countryside.

So what is your treat? Chocolate? a magazine? your toes? your hair? an hour to yourself at the shops? New dress? There are times when just getting a treat is a hard thing…..I’m thinking of life with a new baby or little twins or when all the kids are home 24/7 but I feel like a new woman when I’ve had a little treat……love to hear yours. Once upon a time it was just getting up to Spotlight for an hour without anyone else with me.

green pasta (gluten + dairy free)

I loved this dinner so much that I wish we were having it again tonight. Six out of seven of us ate this up and a few of us had seconds….including Emerson! I take that as success especially since vegetables were involved. Meanwhile elodie ate one piece and ended up with a vegemite sandwich on her favourite bread.

I am usually missing cheese on my pasta lately but the flavours in this dish are so delicious that you won’t be missing anything. Mind you if you really love cheese just add some grated cheese before serving to each dish. The kids didn’t miss the cheese in this dish and I don’t think they would have known I’d made this dish just for elodie.

Enjoy…………I also love broccoli with pesto too. A great combination and just swap out the zucchini for broccoli florets and you’ve got another winning dinner. Enjoy……………….

green pasta (gluten + dairy free)
 
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
 
I've made this recipe gluten and dairy free but you can use your favourite pasta and serve topped with some grated cheese if not following a special diet.
Serves: 4-6
What you'll need
  • 1 nice big bunch of basil
  • 2 -3 cloves garlic
  • about 50g pinenuts
  • about 100g raw cashews
  • good quality olive oil
  • salt and pepper
  • 500g gluten free pasta (read the label if making as gluten and dairy free to ensure the pasta is suitable)
  • 2 zucchinis, washed and thinly sliced
Instructions
  1. Remove basil leaves from stems and rinse well. Place in bowl of thermomix with peeled garlic cloves and nuts and process on speed 7 for 20 seconds. Scrape down bowl and process on speed 5 and with the motor running add some olive oil.
  2. You can make this in a food processor or blender just keep blending till you've got the right consistency.
  3. Be generous with your olive oil.. You can add more as you season as well until you get the right consistency. I don't like mine too oily but I like it to be easy to distribute in the pasta.
  4. Scrape down the sides of the bowl, taste and then season. I mix for another 10 seconds on speed 4 after seasoning to check how it tastes. I find without the cheese I needed more salt than usual.
  5. Boil pasta and in the last 2 minutes of cooking time add in the zucchini (or any vegetable will do).
  6. Drain pasta, add in your pesto, serve and enjoy.

 

 

 

finishing your granny stripe blanket

Exciting times here since I have almost finished my granny stripe blanket! Well I say almost because I still have to do the edging and I have no idea how long that will take me but I’m excited to see most of the blanket finished.

I didn’t have an exact size or measurements in mind for this blanket so just kept working on it till I thought it was long enough…..and as I was starting to run out of a few colours like the teal.

For the edging I’ve found two ideas and am tossing up which one to go with. Firstly Attic 24 does a lovely one here and another lovely one is on the new to me blog ‘Crocheting and Knitting the Day Away’ here. Both pretty don’t you think? I’m thinking of doing pale pink, yellow, cream and the blush (hot pink/coral) for my edging.

If you’re inspired to start a granny stripe blanket then do it…the first few rows were the trickiest and then you’re off. The pattern is here just remember to use the correct US or UK terminology as what she calls a treble crochet I call a double crochet.

I used lots of Bendigo Cotton 8 ply from the stash and am really happy with the result…..so are the girls who are already claiming it as theirs.

 

hit me with your favourite baby names

I’m home from my 16 week check up at the OB’s office and feeling relieved……..this might be my 6th baby but the nerves and worry are just as much as they were with the first. I worry the whole time that something will go wrong and I know I’m not the only one. I don’t think it’s really sunk in that we’re having another baby because the worry has been so bad this time around……….then I fall asleep on the couch at 8.30 and realise oh yes I am definitely pregnant.

In a couple of weeks I’ll be finding out if we’re having a boy or girl which is exciting………..and I have no clue on names. OK well I have a cute boy name picked out but for girls I’m blank. I feel like I’ve used up all of my favourites. Retro daddy keeps a spreadsheet (in typical accountant style) which he brings out every time we are pregnant and we go through it and add some new names.

But I’d love to hear your favourite baby names – maybe you’ve used it or maybe you’ve been wishing you’d used it or maybe you heard it recently and thought to yourself now that is a good baby name!!! Hit me with it………………

If I had to pick one debbie bliss book……

Another great question from a reader up on the blog today. Sarah asked if I had to pick one Debbie Bliss book (only one!) what would it be? Mmmmmm tricky question because I have a few favourites. First of all my all time favourite and go to book is Baby Knits for Beginners. So many great patterns and my favourite raglan sleeve cardigan is in there which is a gorgeous present for a new baby and a great unisex cardigan.

But I couldn’t just stop at one. Next I said it would have to be Essential Kids. I’ve made the party shrug and super cute doll from the book and it’s a great book for once you’ve moved past baby and toddler knits because your little ones are growing up.

Then I said…….well you’ve also got Simply Baby and Essential Baby and I have made the bolero more than a few times (Ravelry tells me I’ve made it 6 times!) from Simply Baby

And in the end my lovely reader Sarah picked up Essential Baby. Good choice.

And a little tip that I’ve shared before but will share again. If you’re umming and ahhing over a book just pop over to Ravelry. Put the authors name and book title into pattern search or just the book title will do and it should appear and then if you click on ‘view all    patterns’ then it will bring up most or all of the patterns in the book if you are lucky and you can see other people’s projects using that pattern. Very handy if you are buying a book over the net and haven’t flicked through it. Here is an example for Simply Baby.

when people comment on your family size……….

This week two readers have messaged me on facebook with exactly the same question so I thought that would make for a great blog post and kill 2 birds. So my readers are each pregnant with another baby and they are either copping the questions and comments from strangers (and people they know) or expecting them. And they wanted to know what my advice was. What do you say? What do you do?

And I have to think of Madagascar! Smile and wave boys, just smile and wave. Seems to work for me. Just kidding. Well sort of because I do just smile. Sometimes it might be a fake smile like when someone says don’t you know what causes it or don’t you have a tv or are you catholic. But a few years ago I realised that people just like to talk for the sake of talking. So it doesn’t have much to do with you or how many kids you have but people just like to say something. I can be pushing the twin pram and people say you’ve got your hands full (and I’m thinking this isn’t even half of our family) or I could be out with all the kids and people will say something. You could have one child and people ask aren’t you having any more. You have no children and people ask are you having any and you have a big family and you get the comments too.

Basically my advice is smile and just say to yourself they just had to say something and are making small talk. Let me tell you that I’ve heard it all and then some more too – twice I’ve had people say ‘but they are so clean’. Oh yes. But I can honestly say that 95% of the time, people don’t intend to be mean or critical and they just want to say something. I can count on one hand the number of times people have really offended me with their comments over the years. And at those times it has really irritated me but they are not people in my life or that I’ve ever seen again and their comments mean nothing to me and my family life. And I can always remember when there are people who have just been so sweet and nice about our family and that always makes up for anything that might have offended.

So that’s my answer……it’s not deep or anything but basically I’ve heard it all before and I’m sure once my big pregnant tummy comes on show that I will hear some more……like every single time I go the supermarket. But I love my family, I have a great life and I’m proud of my family.  People’s opinions and comments don’t bother me when I’m out and about anymore. They probably did when I had the twins or we had our 4th but really twins are a whole new world of sideshow entertainment when you’re out and about anyway. If people say you’re crazy or whatever I tell them I love it and we have lots of fun at our house. And I’ll tell you something, I’ve seen little kids looking over at our table if we’re out eating and I’m sure they are wishing they could sit with us and all the kids at the fun table.

Over to you………what’s your advice? worst thing someone has said to you? Does it bother you? Love to hear……..

one bowl spag bol (gluten + dairy free)

We’ve been eating quite a bit of this lately so I thought I’d write it down and share it with you. This is for those afternoons/nights when you get home, everyone is cranky, you have no energy or time to cook and you want your Thermomix to do it all for you. We’ve made it gluten and dairy free – but let me tell you that I would love some grated cheese on mine – and you can easily use your favourite  pasta and delicious cheese on top of your version.

This was prepared under normal after school/dinner time conditions complete with tears, homework, requests for snacks and more.

And one word of caution………don’t wear white! In fact you might even be rethinking a white kitchen after this photo..but thankfully some spray n wipe and a cloth tidied this all up….and a bath too.

Anyway back to the recipe, this is easy, healthy, delicious, gluten and dairy free for those following special diets and it’s popular with everyone. What more do you want. Except for a bit of grated vintage cheddar on top but maybe that’s just me. Anyway give it a go and enjoy…………..

 

 

4.7 from 3 reviews
one bowl spag bol (gluten + dairy free)
 
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
 
Serves: 4-6
What you'll need
  • 1 onion
  • 1 stalk of celery or a carrot or both
  • olive oil
  • 500g beef mince
  • 1 x140g tub tomato paste
  • 700g tomato passata
  • 300g/mls water
  • fresh or dried herbs like basil, oregano, parsley
  • 300-350g pasta (we love san remo gluten free)
Instructions
  1. Peel and cut onion in half. Rinse celery stick and place in thermomix bowl with onion. Process on speed 6 for about 5-7 seconds and scrape down the bowl.
  2. Add in some olive oil (be generous) and salt and saute your vegetables for 2 minutes at 100 degrees on speed 1.
  3. Add in mince and break up a little with your spatula. Cook for 10 minutes at varoma temperature, reverse and speed soft. You can add in some wine half way through this cooking time.
  4. Add in tomato paste, passata, water, herbs, salt and pepper and cook for 10 minutes at 100 degrees, speed soft and reverse .
  5. Now add in the pasta and cook for the time on the packet (I usually do about 8 or 9 minutes), 100 degrees, reverse and speed soft.
  6. Check your pasta, you don't want it super soft as it will keep cooking in the sauce once it's removed but if the pasta really isn't cooked then give it another 2 minutes at 100 degrees, reverse and speed soft.
  7. The pasta I bought for this recipe took longer than my san remo so I gave it more time then left it in the thermomix with the lid on a few minutes. Usually the San Remo is done in about 9 minutes.
  8. Serve and enjoy.............feel free to add some grated cheese to this.

 

Cecily shares her tree change story

We made our own little tree change last September! We haven’t moved too far but the benefits are numerous.  We previously lived on a residential block in Bli Bli on the Sunshine Coast and have our own business.  As we rapidly outgrew our house and block we decided to move to acreage.  Hubby always wanted at least 5 acres but a reality check with a small family and business to run saw us purchasing a 2 acre block with a 6 year old house with 5 bedrooms which needed some titivation and TLC !, just on the outskirts to the Sunshine Coast main hub and about 15 mins in to the best beaches in Queensland.

By contrast to the busy coast, Glenview is a very leafy and quiet little spot just off the highway heading into the Sunshine Coast.  We have inherited 4 chickens who came along with the house, TAJ Mahal chook house , plenty of trees to climb and room for two girls to run and ride their bikes, a fort and cubby house as well.   We are 20 minutes drive to school which some consider long but compared to the big smoke and living in Brisbane its been worth it.   We made a purchase of a little kubota tractor vs a ride on mower as we have plenty of landscaping projects to do and it mows the acreage in less time.  We built a 5 bay shed in December and work is starting on painting inside soon.  The neighbourhood is filled with kids on similar acreage blocks and a friendly horse called Chadwick pops his head over the fence for a pat often and a nibble of licorice.    Birds and ducks visit and plenty of green tree frog croak along at night.

We have lots to do here but love it already, walls to paint and gardens to make , I would never go back to the ‘burbs’ my friends joke that my hubby and I are like the couple out of the english show The Good Life – Tom and Barbara!!.  The kids have never been dirtier and happier and as your previous reader said plenty of home grown produce available locally.  Anyway will pop in a few pics of our recent purchase.   Its a work in progress !

Cecily !

Lis shares her tree change story

Thank to you my lovely reader Lis who is the first to share her tree change story here…………and I’m sure I won’t be the only one a bit envious of her lovely home and views……and that craft room! Thanks Lis!

Not sure how much my personal story will help, since we are an older couple.  We moved to the country from upper north-shore Sydney (where we had lived for over 25 years) when my husband retired from full time work – that was 8 years ago and I will be having my 70th birthday in a couple of months.

However we are so pleased we moved – and wouldn’t dream of moving back to Sydney!

We now live in the Manning Valley: we bought a 2 acre block of land just outside the town and had a house built on it (gorgeous almost 360 degree views).  That process took almost 18 months – we sold our house in Wahroonga and moved to a rental place while the building was happening.   We used a local architect because the block sloped quite drastically and we had pretty definite ideas about how we wanted the house to function:  although we didn’t have very firm ideas on how it should look.  It’s a long house, built along the contour line, with a bit of cut and fill to give a flat area for building.   We have 3 bedrooms and a study and a craft room – and  a large kitchen dining area, as well as a lounge.

We are not on the town sewage system so we have a recycling wastewater system with the greywater irrigating underground into a large garden area which has bushes and perennials (most of which have survived the drought – so far ) helped considerably by regular mulching.

We live in a pretty small country town, near Taree which is much bigger.  When we first moved to the area the thing we missed most (apart from our friends!) was the big variety of delicatessen type food that we had been used to (from the local shopping centres and also bigger shops at St Ives and Hornsby): we used to take a couple of eskies with us when we went back to Sydney (every few weeks to begin with – we still had a couple of our adult children living there at that stage), and come back home with all sorts of things.  Now 8 years later there is a greater choice available locally – through some of the bigger supermarkets, and also we have found more shops stocking more exotic items.  (Quite a lot of this has been as a result of the increased emphasis there is these days on local produce.)  We also have a fantastic continental smallgoods shop at Taree.

I thought I might miss shopping for clothes in the larger department stores that I was used to at Macquarie Centre and Hornsby – but I haven’t!   Partly because with a more relaxed lifestyle I don’t feel the need to ‘dress up’ so often, but also because there are quite a few good shops when you get to know the place better  – and Port Macquarie is only 1 hour away.  (And a few of our younger friends shop in Newcastle when they want a bigger selection.)  Last year our younger son got married in Waikiki, Hawaii, and we stayed there for three weeks – I purchased most of a new summer wardrobe for the occasion either here in town and in Port Central at Port Macquarie.

We tried to take our cue from having watched Hugh Fearnley-Whittingham of River Cottage fame for quite a few years – and his willingness to get involved in local things.  We joined our local church, helped in various activities and quickly made friends – I have small craft classes I run from home, my husband sings in a local choir and is pretty involved in a local prison ministry.

Part of our original reason for moving north was to be a bit closer to our eldest daughter – she and her husband moved away from Sydney almost 15 years ago, and have 130 acres about an hour west of Port Macquarie: they love their country life style and are very positive about all the advantages they see for bringing up children in the country – they have three children who are now 14, 13 and 11.   They are building up a flock of sheep which they milk – which they make into cheese and yoghurt.  They also have a holiday cabin which they built 2 years for farm stay holidays.

And then about 3 years ago our younger daughter, her husband and two young children (now three of them) moved north as well – they now live in Wauchope – almost exactly 100 kms from here so day visits are reasonably easy.  The families get together on a regular basis and it is great seeing how well the cousins get on together – the older ones are particularly good with the younger ones.

We were very lucky in quickly finding good medical people: a doctor (who is now one of our closest friends), dentist and optometrist.

We decided early on that we wouldn’t grow our own vegetables (but we do grow herbs); we find that the local produce is good, and prices are so reasonable when things are in season, that certainly for just two people we couldn’t justify the time it would take.  Local markets are very good – and improve every year.  We did spend a lot of time and energy (and some money too!) in landscaping our land though:  having put in a dam very early on, we also now have three ponds which were built by my husband with the help of our older son, which are connected to each other so that the stormwater (and overflow from our three large rainwater tanks) fills the top one and that goes on to fill the other two – and finally runs into the dam.  Our other son is a landscaper and helped us with a courtyard and fountain that is immediately outside our family room – we really enjoy seeing the many birds that come for the water.  Putting in the 3 ponds, and planting the banks around them, together with our other garden has been a labour of love, with most of the work being done by my husband.  We have a small Kubota tractor which has a grass cutter fitting, as well as a zero turn ride on mower.  We bought the tractor very early on, while the house was being built, because the land was just a rough grassed paddock, which had been used for horses.  My husband was very diligent about mowing and eventually the grass started looking very good (when we had good rain!).  And keeping it cut meant that we could see snakes more easily (one of the few downsides of country life!).  The area close by the house was turfed after the builders moved out.  We had to store the tractor before the garage was built so we rented a container – which we then purchased – and that now sits next to the garage.  Very, very useful!

We don’t go to Sydney very often now – and would go even less often if our younger son and his wife didn’t live there!

Thank you Lis! If you have a tree change story to share with me then we’d love to hear it. Just email me on retromummy@hotmail.com with a few photos and I look forward to sharing more stories as the weeks go by and I start packing……….

share your tree change story!

It’s not often that I am lost for words or a blog post but lately I’ve been blank. I think it’s the long hours travelling in the car, pregnancy brain, rushing everyone to where they have to be and that little thing of selling and trying to find a new home. Last week we made the decision that it’s acreage or bust and so the search is on.

The last few years whenever I’ve been asked for my dream or a long term goal it has been 5 acres. Imagining the kids picking apples from our own fruit trees. So I’m dreaming of chickens, fruit trees, veggie patches and a ride on mower for retro daddy. My neighbour is a mad keen gardener and has already offered her services to help me get started.

I thought that it would be fabulous to hear your own stories. If you’d like to tell me about your move out of the city to a few acres or life on a property then I would love to hear about it. Email me on retromummy@hotmail.com and include a photo or two or just share it in the comments. Maybe you’re building your own home or you’re doing something up. Maybe you’ve bought somewhere and making the move out there later down the track. Maybe it’s your dream that you’re working towards. I know it’s a dream of many and I would love to have my lovely readers share their stories for some upcoming blog posts………then I can sleep easy that I have a few blog posts up. Win, win.

40 bags in 40 days……….I’m early

With settlement just over 6 weeks away the race is on to declutter our house and get out of it. If you know me then I’m a bit of a hoarder. I wouldn’t get my own show or anything but we have a lot of stuff. And it’s mine. Retro daddy doesn’t really keep stuff except his footy and basketball trophies and the odd Mentone footy jumper from his youth. Me……..I’ve got everything. School yearbooks, diaries, craft, more craft stuff, vintage patterns, fabric I’ll never use, wool I’ll never use and the kids wardrobes are overflowing. Getting this house ready to sell meant putting everything in the garage…………as you can see.

In my defence every now and then I have a big clear out and go crazy……..like when I donated all of my maternity clothes including my favourite jeans to vinnies. Really regretting that decision since I can’t remember the size, DJs don’t sell them any more and I’m not sure where to find them now.

Anyway 40 bags in 40 days is something I did a few years back. The idea being that over Lent you fill a bag – any size – grocery to garbage and you do one bag a day to get the stuff out of the house. Could be going to charity, a friend, the garbage bin or the tip. Just get it out. Cleaning and getting ready for easter or in our case to leave this house.

So that’s what I’m starting today………..once I’ve dealt with mount washmore.

Got a clutter problem like me or are you amazingly good at decluttering…….