Tupperware is a great product. I even sold it for awhile until I figured out that (1) I did not really make any money doing so, and (2) I did not like changes the company made to their marketing program about the time the national economy went downhill. While I was a consultant, I used my discount to purchase a lot of pieces I wanted for myself. But, now I remember why I do not love all Tupperware.
Take, for instance the refrigerator produce keepers. Yes, you can set the amount of humidity to preserve your produce, and things do keep a long time in them. Notice the onion I picked and put in there about two months ago. The bulb end is still edible although the green stems are beyond anything I would want in a green salad. Although the orange did not fare so well after two months, I know it was, after all, old and almost gone when I put it in there two months ago.
So, why am I just now getting to these after two months? Because I am a visual person when it comes to my refrigerator. If I cannot see it clearly, it does not exist or me. And, instead of keeping their products clear and see-throughable (Okay, I know that is not a real word.), Tupperware is always changing its color schemes. I guess they figure that if someone loves this year's color scheme better than last year's, they will throw out that piece they paid a small fortune for a year ago and buy a new one in the latest color.
Not me. Back to using the plastic bags from the grocery store produce department. Once I realize I have food spoiling because I do not see it, I vow to never spend money on Tupperware again and I start using the Tupperware I have for other things where I do not need to see what is in the box.
That is my sentiment. But, I am going to give it one last college try. I was able to shuffle things so that I could get about half of the peaches I was gifted with a few days ago into one of the keepers. A few more -- not as many because even though this keeper is longer, it is shallower (the blue one that is long enough or celery). Both -- together or individually -- take up an inordinate amount of space on my refrigerator shelves. And, the only way I will remember the peaches are there, since I cannot see them through the color, is to make appointments on my smartphone calendar every 2-3 days to remind me that I have fresh peaches in the frig .
What I really need to do is make a peach cobbler. Also, I should get some of that stuff that keeps fruit from turning brown and then prepare the peaches for the freezer. I could use my freezer containers by Tupperware.
Now, those I like. Even if I forget to label them I can pretty much see what is in them.
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Double Challenge
With everything going on last week, it was a double challenge to work on my two challenges for the week.
First, there was the tail-end of the weed-out-the-garden-boxes challenge. I intended to do it Monday, then Tuesday morning, but finally got it finished on Friday.
Now I can start all over with the first box and try to get the weeds before they are two feet high again!
I also started working on the hanging quilt I am making out of the Challenge Fabric I received at the Gateway Quilter's Guild January meeting. The yard I received was the large leaf pattern of pink, lavender and aqua green on the black background. Since these are not the usual colors with which I work, I spent a couple of months and trips to several fabric stores looking for coordinating colors and patterns. If I want to finish this project by the quilt show the first weekend in October, I decided I need to get busy on it.
I used the gold metallic thread in a leaf design around the black border of the center square to bring out the gold outlining on the leaves. I really focused on getting my points clean.
First, there was the tail-end of the weed-out-the-garden-boxes challenge. I intended to do it Monday, then Tuesday morning, but finally got it finished on Friday.
Now I can start all over with the first box and try to get the weeds before they are two feet high again!
I also started working on the hanging quilt I am making out of the Challenge Fabric I received at the Gateway Quilter's Guild January meeting. The yard I received was the large leaf pattern of pink, lavender and aqua green on the black background. Since these are not the usual colors with which I work, I spent a couple of months and trips to several fabric stores looking for coordinating colors and patterns. If I want to finish this project by the quilt show the first weekend in October, I decided I need to get busy on it.
I used the gold metallic thread in a leaf design around the black border of the center square to bring out the gold outlining on the leaves. I really focused on getting my points clean.
Labels:
garden,
Gateway Quilter's Guild,
quilting
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Oh, Garden --What a Mess!
A long, wet spring and a week of temperatures with highs from 101-105 degrees, and the garden got definitely out of control. These pictures were taken Thursday, July14th:
Buck built a compost box for me. By Thursday afternoon it was full.
Part of our problems started when the irrigation water from our neighbor's land (elevation about a foot higher than our lot) broke through a gopher hole and started flooding our yard every time he irrigated. It covered my black felt weed control between the grow boxes with about an inch of dirt which immediately sprouted weeds. It also undermined our pump house next to the faucet. So, Buck pulled up the felt and filled in under the pump house. He also built berms to channel the water between the grow boxes and out to the lawn so that it would not undermine the concrete floors of the pump house or the shop.
In addition to the bermuda and crab grass getting out of control, I used some "straw" I was gifted for mulch to keep the weeds down. Instead, I ended up with some nice stands of oats. The good new was that because I set it on top of the soil, the roots were shallow and pulled up easily. It was a different story with the other.....
The store-bought squash did not make it -- none of the four plants. I got enough zucchini out of the garden to give two away and make a double batch of zucchini bread. The volunteer second-generation "pumpkini" plants, however, is hale and hearty, and may make it if the bugs do not kill them.
As I cleaned out a grow box, Buck replaced the rotting and splitting three year-old stakes holding the sides up with two foot sections of the fiberglass poles he sells as portable ham antenna towers and garden stakes.
Buck was not my only company in the garden that day. One was a pollinator, one was a plant chomper.
Only one grow box left to weed. Then the weeds in the first box will probably have grown back and it will be time to start again!
Buck built a compost box for me. By Thursday afternoon it was full.
Part of our problems started when the irrigation water from our neighbor's land (elevation about a foot higher than our lot) broke through a gopher hole and started flooding our yard every time he irrigated. It covered my black felt weed control between the grow boxes with about an inch of dirt which immediately sprouted weeds. It also undermined our pump house next to the faucet. So, Buck pulled up the felt and filled in under the pump house. He also built berms to channel the water between the grow boxes and out to the lawn so that it would not undermine the concrete floors of the pump house or the shop.
In addition to the bermuda and crab grass getting out of control, I used some "straw" I was gifted for mulch to keep the weeds down. Instead, I ended up with some nice stands of oats. The good new was that because I set it on top of the soil, the roots were shallow and pulled up easily. It was a different story with the other.....
The store-bought squash did not make it -- none of the four plants. I got enough zucchini out of the garden to give two away and make a double batch of zucchini bread. The volunteer second-generation "pumpkini" plants, however, is hale and hearty, and may make it if the bugs do not kill them.
As I cleaned out a grow box, Buck replaced the rotting and splitting three year-old stakes holding the sides up with two foot sections of the fiberglass poles he sells as portable ham antenna towers and garden stakes.
Buck was not my only company in the garden that day. One was a pollinator, one was a plant chomper.
Only one grow box left to weed. Then the weeds in the first box will probably have grown back and it will be time to start again!
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