Pine cones, pain, and peanut butter
I mentioned in yesterday's post that the book Grandma's Bag of Tricks: Toad Cottages & Shooting Stars is a great boredom-busting book. It's also an awesome need-a-mellow-activity-while-recovering-from-tonsil-and-adenoid-surgery book. I can vouch for that because that's exactly what it offered up for my recent visit to see Bubby while he healed from his surgery.
The mellow activity I chose to do with Bubby was to make a pine cone bird feeder, using the pine cones I packed away in my Grandma Bag for the trip. (I lugged them along because while I have far too many pine cones in my yard in the mountains, they're nowhere to be found in Bubby's yard in the desert and he didn't even know what pine cones are.)
This is how the activity went:
First you take the pine cones ...
Then you add a wire to the top and coat them with peanut butter:
You taste the peanut butter, of course:
Then you spread a little more on the pine cone:
You roll your coated pine cone in birdseed:
And realize too late that tasting the seed probably wasn't such a good idea:
You finish the feeder:
And take a break because your throat hurts so cuss bad (maybe as much from swallowing peanut butter and seeds as from the T&A surgery):
Next, you hang your completed bird feeder in the yard:
And smile so proud for a job well done:
Then you sit back and wait for birds to arrive. Or for a dog, enticed by the scent of peanut butter, to nab the low-hanging fruit and gobble it down within a day of being hung. Which Roxy did. Twice.
So you complete the process all over again (thankful that Gramma brought spare pine cones and seed) and hang your new feeder up for the birds ... only this time you hang it high enough that Roxy can't reach it.
Today's question:
What is your latest project, completed or still in progress?