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Jul
1

Sample Chickens in the Road Newsletter

I’m publishing the June newsletter on the blog for a couple reasons–one, a number of people have told me they didn’t receive it, and two, I’ve been wanting to publish a sample newsletter for awhile so that people know what they’re getting when they subscribe. They can check out the sample first.

The Chickens in the Road newsletter always includes a short story exclusive to the newsletter, a kitchen tip or extra recipe, a favorite something or other I’m excited about at the moment (FYI, this is not a sponsored section), an embarrassing photo, and a blast from the past post along with a round-up of my favorite post links from the past month. Sometimes I let out a special secret in the newsletter. For example, the June newsletter included the news–and a photo preview–of Sprite, our newest (and not yet arrived to the farm) goat.

If you didn’t receive the June newsletter, please check your spam folder to see if your spam filters are tossing it there. If you don’t find it, let me know and I will double-check the subscriber list to make sure you’re subscribed. I’ve had quite a few people tell me they found the newsletter in their spam folder.

If you’re not signed up, don’t miss the next newsletter–register here and check the mailing list box.

June 2009 Chickens in the Road Newsletter


IN THIS ISSUE:

*Story Short: Hiking the Appalachian Trail
*Kitchen Extra: Ice Cold
*Embarrassing Photo of the Month: The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same
*My Favorite Thing Right Now: Thistledew Farm
*Recent Highlights: Planting by the Moon, Pie with Beef & Italian Peppers, Goodbye to a Wash House, and Two, Count ‘em, Two Miniature Donkeys, and More
*Sneak Peek: Yes, Pepsi, There is a Sprite
*Blast from the Past: The Ornery Angel


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Note: This issue marks the Chickens in the Road newsletter subscriber list topping 1000 subscribers! I just updated my newsletter program and I’m hoping my struggle with some previous newsletters being delivered twice is at an end. If this one goes twice again, bear with me. I’m working on it! (I never send two newsletters at once. If you get it twice, you can feel confident to delete the second one from your inbox without opening it.)


*Story Short: Hiking the Appalachian Trail


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I’ve always wanted to hike the Appalachian Trail. It’s been a lifelong dream. Recently, without telling a soul, I headed off to the Shenandoah Valley and hopped onto the trail at Harper’s Ferry.


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It was hot. I was courageous in the face of the heat and even sudden rain and beating wind. The geese cheered me on.


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Are you buying any of this? I didn’t think so.

Okay, I made a quickie overnight trip to the Shenandoah Valley this weekend to pick up Morgan from camp at Shepherd University. The Appalachian Trail runs right through nearby Harper’s Ferry.


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I stopped for a few pics and walked the trail for, oh, about 20 feet.


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The Shenandoah Valley is a gorgeous area. Shepherdstown is in West Virginia at the Maryland border. The scenery there is amazingly picturesque–flowing fields of corn, rows upon rows of peach orchards, and incredibly manicured farms. I was lazy and took very few pictures, but I did take this shot of one of our two accidental trips to Pennsylvania. (Wrong turn, both times.)


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Other highlights of the trip included the truck breaking down and having to stop for repairs, and getting lost leaving Martinsburg (didn’t even end up in Pennsylvania that time).

I also couldn’t help myself when I saw how close we were to Boonsboro, Maryland, the home of Nora Roberts and her famed little bookshop, Turn the Page.


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What kind of Nora stalker would I be if I didn’t drop in?

I mean, you KNOW Nora would be disappointed if I didn’t stop to see her!

Only she wasn’t there. What is up with that?


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Next time I’m in town, I’m gonna let Nora know in advance so she can be waiting for me at her shop.

Or, you know, so she can head to Canada or something……

*Kitchen Extra: Ice Cold


Here’s my summertime tip for keeping your glass of wine ice cold on hot days–wine cubes!

Freeze cubes of wine and pop them out into your glass to keep wine frosty-cold without watering it down. You can even add grapes to each cube before freezing, or sliced fresh fruit, which makes the cubes pretty and fun plus leaves you with a little treat at the end of your glass. I’m using sliced strawberries here.


Here’s to lots of summertime wine sipping on the porch in the evening after chores are done!


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*Embarrassing Photo of the Month: The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same

Another seriously tragic photo revealed.


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My office-slash-soon-to-be-craft-room looks exactly the same as it did in last month’s newsletter. I think I need an intervention.

Even the cat is ashamed of me.

*My Favorite Thing Right Now: Thistledew Farm


honey-moonI’m always behind and always late. (Just ask my kids.) I ordered both last year and this year for Father’s Day from Thistledew Farm, a small West Virginia company specializing in honey and other bee-related products. I love their decorative honey jars and sent my dad the Honey Moon jars in light and dark honey. Why I love them right now is because I was ordering on Thursday and Father’s Day was Sunday. This is typical for me. They had no dark Honey Moon jars ready, but poured one just for me and then made a special trip to the post office that afternoon to send the honey by the cheapest route possible, U.S. postal service flat rate, and they actually got my gift there by Saturday afternoon. I highly recommend them! (They are perfect for disorganized, late people like me! And you can’t beat West Virginia honey.)

*Recent Highlights: Planting by the Moon, Pie with Beef & Italian Peppers, Goodbye to a Wash House, and Two, Count ‘em, Two Miniature Donkeys, and More

Finally meet Pocohontas, then meet Jack, and don’t forget Sausage and Patty! See all my cute farm animal stories here.

Posts in cooking included Deep Dish Apple Pie, Pie with Beef & Italian Peppers (Oliverio peppers, yum!), and my long-lost and reinvented Gingerbread with Nutty-Buttery Broiled Topping. Don’t miss a thing! Get all my recipes.

June was all about goodbyes in Country Living as I said farewell to the wash house, goodnight to spring, and my eldest said goodbye and good riddance to high school (while I stood by in disbelief). See all my country living stories.

Find out how to plant by the moon, build a truly creepy scarecrow, and what all not to do in your garden. See all my garden stories.

Also see all my posts in crafts.

*Sneak Peak: Yes, Pepsi, There is a Sprite


sprite
Photo courtesy Bob Lewis

Sprite has landed! Well, not here as in on our farm, she’s still in Tennessee, but Sprite (on the left in the photo above) has been born and she’ll be coming to Stringtown Rising Farm to join Pepsi later this summer. Here’s how Bob describes Sprite’s coloring: “She’s black with a white forehead and white striping as you can see from the picture. She also has the neatest white pattern inside her ears…looks like she was standing around when someone spray painted and caught the overspray.”

Won’t Sprite and Pepsi make beautiful babies!

*Blast from the Past: The Ornery Angel

It was a year ago that I first posted about my travails with the Ornery Angel. I posted an Ornery Angel update after I tried to kiss up to her to get her to move out of my way on the road, and also posted about when Coco had An Unfortunate Affair with Rat Dog. Here’s the most recent update: Coco’s been in heat again (no, we didn’t breed her this time, either) and the Ornery Angel completely cooperated by keeping Rat Dog at home for the duration.


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She even gave us Sausage and Patty. That’s a lot of progress in a year!

Know a friend who would enjoy receiving the Chickens in the Road newsletter? Send them over to Chickens in the Road and tell them to sign up with the newsletter link in the sidebar, or just send them this handy link to register and subscribe to the mailing list at the same time.

And, always, feel free to forward this newsletter!

Thank you for your comments, your support, and just for being there. Here’s hoping to see you on the Chickens in the Road Forum (make friends, have fun, come join us!) and every day on the farmhouse blog!

Love,

Suzanne

P.S. Wanna help out? Donate. You can also advertise in this newsletter. Thank you!

*More Handy Links:
Follow me on Twitter
Friend me on Facebook
Watch me on YouTube

Visit the Craft Shops at Chickens in the Road:
Just Like Nannies.
Mim’s
Four Acre Farm Country Fixins
Paper Promises
North Star Knits

Interested in opening a craft shop of your own? Get all the info here.

You can see more about my trip to the Shenandoah Valley in I Could Have Had a Very Happy Life with That Bee.

If you have any suggestions, requests, or even criticism of the newsletter, let me know here and I’ll do my best!

Posted by Suzanne McMinn on July 1, 2009  

More posts you might enjoy:


Comments

11 Responses
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  1. 7-1
    3:42
    am

    Incredible. I don’t know how you do it all! You have now hiked the Appy Trail. I am ashamed to say that as a life-long West Virginian I have never been to Sheperdstown. Newsletter….A+

  2. 7-1
    5:16
    am

    First time for me and I love it! Great stuff!! I agree—don’t know how you do it all.

  3. 7-1
    5:51
    am

    Sprite’s a little cutie!

    Didn’t have any problems receiving my newsletter. Although if memory serves correct, I think I had to pull it from the spam folder.
    ~Jenny~

  4. 7-1
    6:04
    am

    Neat post. We were just in Harper’s Ferry recently and I posted about it. Posted some of the very same pictures you have here. It was neat standing on Jefferson’s Rock in the very same place he stood over 200 years ago. It’s a very interesting place to visit. Bet you had fun, we also got lost going through Martinsburg. Wish I’d known about the Bookstore Cafe.

  5. 7-1
    8:08
    am

    I’m so happy you posted the sample newsletter – OMG, what I’ve been missing! I’m signing up as soon as I finish my comment! I like Nora Roberts, but Suzanne – I’d rather stalk you! Sprite is beautiful.

  6. 7-1
    8:38
    am

    Thanks so much for posting the newsletter. I did not get mine either :(

    Tried to sign up again, but it didn’t like anything I did – LOL

    Hopefully, next month I will receive it, if not, I’ll let you know.

    Sprite is sure cute :)

  7. 7-1
    9:30
    am

    Thanks for sending the newletter in your blog. I registered but did not receive it via your “sender”. Love your writings and photos but especially your “asides”.
    Gayle

  8. 7-1
    11:15
    am

    Great newsletter!! I have also ‘hiked’ the AT, started in Ga and ended in GA, about 10 feet. Got my pic taken by the sign, Hubby was so jealous!! Love Sprite, she is beautiful!, and you need a new apron!!

  9. 7-1
    12:02
    pm

    Didn’t know you were going to Shepherdstown. You had to pass right by my old farm! Where I used to raise goats, had dogs and cats and did all the things you are doing now. Well, most of them. I wish you so much happiness on your farm.

  10. 7-1
    2:52
    pm

    Here’s a little bit of trivia:

    If you look closely at the photo of the Harper’s Ferry Tunnel above, you’ll notice it says ‘1931′ above the name. I noticed the same thing on various bridges in the Boston area when I was on vacation a few months ago – bridges labeled 1931 or 1933 for example. Maybe you have noticed the same sort of thing as you travel around the country.

    The significance of the age of the tunnel? It was one of the projects funded and completed by the WPA – Works Progress Administration – started during the “Great Depression” to put people back to work. Look at the lasting benefit of those projects. So many things we take for granted were completed under these programs. The TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority) that brought electricity to rural America including WV was one such project.

    If you are interested, here’s a link to more information:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Works_Progress_Administration

  11. 7-2
    2:05
    pm

    Is Sprite also a fainter? You didn’t say what breed she was.

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