Lazy W Marie

Carpeing all the diems in semi-rural Oklahoma...xoxo

  • Welcome!
  • Home
  • lazy w farm journal
You are here: Home / Archives for 2014

Archives for 2014

Grow Your Own This Spring

March 12, 2014

Straight line winds. Cold mornings, warm afternoons. Thick new flower leaves elbowing their way out of the packed earth.  Budding fruit trees. Shedding horses and amorous buffalo. Hens sitting faithfully on their eggs. All sure signs of springtime in Oklahoma, and they have only just begun.

I just came inside from working another raised veggie bed, thrilled to see the decomposition progress there. Horse and llama manures rotting together with dried leaves, chicken litter, and shredded paper. Sand has transformed into deep black, crumbly magic stuff. A vast universe of possibility for food growers.

What are you growing this early part of the season? What is your last average frost date, do you know? Are you working seeds early, indoors with fancy equipment, or waiting for a week later in the season to plunk it all down into the sun-kissed earth? So many wonderful decisions to make. All of it makes me deliciously light-headed. Drunk on chlorophyll and loam. So I hope you will forgive me for a slightly disjointed garden post tonight.

Grow your own food. Go ahead, you really can do it!
What do you love to eat? Grow your own. xoxo

 

My sweet, smart, sassy friend Stephanie gave me this flat-out perfect dish towel for my birthday. Don’t you love it? I sure do. Steph is also growing a veggie garden of her own this year, right here at the farm. I am hoping she’ll bring her nieces to learn, too. Once kids see for themselves how fun it is to design and tend a personal garden, they are often hooked for life. Then, once they taste that incredible fresh food, well… Let’s just say that for every fresh carrot a teenager eats, a bag of potato chips dies.

So, here’s what I am planning to grow this month…

  • spinach
  • kale
  • leaf lettuce
  • head lettuce (butter crunch)
  • mesculun
  • radishes (both crimson and French breakfast)
  • carrots (both scarlet nantes and a rainbow blend)
  • snow peas
  • potatoes (both reds and Yukon golds)
  • cilantro
  • asparagus
  • strawberries
  • garlic
  • parsley

Five times as much edible beauty is on the books for May and beyond, but the foods listed above are classic springtime faves. The Lazy W is happy to honor the tradition.

Deep breath… Inhale all the new life. Listen to how many new bird songs you can hear. Walk around barefoot and peer into the naked trees and rosebushes for specks of bright color. Get tipsy on the details around you.

Tomorrow I have nowhere to go and a long list of happy farm  chores to tackle, mostly centered on the gardens. Cuffed up jeans and a wide brim straw hat all day long. The only thing that could make tomorrow lovelier would be starting it with Hot Tub Summit and a few mugs of perfect coffee with Handsome.

Grow Your Own. Ok, I think I will.

“The care of the Earth is our most ancient and most worthy, and after all our most pleasing responsibility. To cherish what remains of it and to foster its renewal is our only hope.” ~Wendell Berry
XOXOXOXO

6 Comments
Filed Under: gardening

Marathon Monday: Longest Yet

March 10, 2014

Good Monday morning friends! How was your weekend? Mine was pretty spectacular. From a productive day of work at the farm on Friday to a really fun “surprise” birthday party that night… complete with a MOON BOUNCE… then romance all day Saturday and dinner with friends Sunday night… Yes. My fortieth birthday weekend was just great. Throw into that delicious mix a heaping dose of sunshine and my longest run to date, and I feel deeply satisfied. Sore, tight, and exhausted, but so satisfied.

 

This may look like featured fun for a nine year old girl's birthday party, but no. Because apparently forty is the new nine.
This may look like featured fun for a nine year old girl’s birthday party, but no. Because apparently forty is the new nine.

 

Yesterday afternoon my new friend Carrie, who is an old friend of my dear friend Marci, and who also went to high school with Handsome, invited me to join her for a long run, twice around Lake Hefner in Oklahoma City. I have needed a really good stretch out run, something deeply challenging, for a while. With unpredictable late winter weather and even more unpredictable life circumstances this past month, I was beginning to fall behind on my mileage for marathon training and had started to wonder whether it was even possible to be ready in time for the late April race date.

Well, yesterday’s run answered so many questions for me.

Carrie and I struck out early Sunday afternoon, and after about three hours and forty minutes we clocked 18.75 miles. (Yes, I am slow. I had to walk a few times, too.) My running buddy, who smelled fresh and shampoo-y the entire time, had to hold back to let me keep up with her and had tons of energy to spare. She rounded out her miles to about twenty after I had stopped at my Jeep, stretched against its steel push guard, then curled up in a fetal position on the sidewalk. She is amazing. I could write all day about that how she inspired me. Anyway, here are some things I learned on my long run yesterday:

  • Yes, a full marathon is totally within my grasp. I have about six and a half weeks left to prepare, and I feel super confident after yesterday. I’m ready to fork out the mulah to be part of OKC Run to Remember.
  • But from now on I will ramp up to those long runs a bit more slowly. Because 18.75 miles is exponentially more challenging than 8 or 9 miles, which before yesterday was the most I had run since the Half last April. Yikes, you guys, it didn’t seem like that much of a difference in my brain, but it is. Carrie pointed out with measured concern in her voice that it was an increase of 100% in one day. Maybe not my smartest move.
  • I need new shoes. My super cute white-and-turquoise Brooks which have carried me so faithfully around a zillion west pasture laps… Well… They are breaking down quickly. Also, running on concrete and asphalt is a far cry from running on sand and grassy hills, so that’s even more reason for new shoes before the Marathon. Ouch. More mulah forking over to do. Yay for birthday money! 

 

Since I run mostly here at the farm, in our red dirt and sand back field, these cute shoes aren't so white anymore.

 

  • Starburst candies make me sick to my stomach but those little sports beans are so good. I plan to stock up. The tiny dose of electrolytes made a noticeable difference when I was ready to quit. Which, by the way, is a pretty hilarious concept when you are running twice around a lake. There is no quitting unless a helicopter comes to rescue you. Which would be really embarrassing. Thank you for sharing your sports beans, Carrie!
  • I am a music runner for sure. I thoroughly enjoyed chatting with Carrie and getting to know her as we jogged, but my brain is so geared toward zoning out with music that without it I was acutely aware of every single step I took, not to mention my microphone-loud breathing, and I think that made the mental journey much longer.
  • Apparently I care about my speed more than I have wanted to admit, but at this point in the game I am just going to focus on finishing my first Full. Maybe in the future I’ll work on speed. (LOL Yeah, right. Maybe I’ll give up Diet Coke and chips and salsa, too.)

 

lake image run

  • Running isn’t always fun, and it’s okay to be emotional. Until yesterday, running was lots of fun. Now it is mostly fun. I had at least three moments when I was questioning my motives. I had to articulate them to myself all over again just to keep going. Then, between miles thirteen and sixteen, I started having bizarre mood swings which ranged from minor irritability to full-blown ticked off. I do not know who I was angry at. On top of the Lake Hefner dam is a rock retaining wall where several people were sitting, just gazing at the water below them. I felt like pushing them off, over the edge, just real fast and mean. Why aren’t you running?? I wanted to scream. That’s terrible! I’m sure they’re all nice people and didn’t deserve that. In fact, everyone on the trail was so nice, especially Carrie. Then the last two miles I was on the verge of tears the entire time. Suppressing those tears probably required as much energy as moving my legs. So next time I will probably just allow them to flow and give all my energy to moving forward and not pushing random people off of rock ledge retaining walls. (For the record, it was a violence-free day. Everybody please calm down.)
  • Recovery snacks should be light and controlled. I was famished after running that far and especially after passing the row of luscious lake front restaurants serving pasta, steaks, and other amazing, fragrant foods. After stretching for a while and collapsing in a fetal position on the sidewalk, I crawled pathetically up the passenger door of my Jeep to excavate the snacks I had brought: a banana, a tiny can of pineapple juice, and more water. That is where I should have stopped. But instead I ate my emergency food, a single piece of wheat bread smeared with a little peanut butter. Then I sat there for a while, cooling down, and when I felt steady enough to operate the stick shift tank, pulled away from the lake and stopped at a convenience store for a Diet Coke and salty almonds. MISTAKE. I felt super queasy right away. This over-snacking totally ruined that light, buoyant feeling of having depleted myself so well, but at least I had the bodily fuel to drive forty-five minutes to the farm. Anyway, lesson learned. Eat slowly and eat light after those long runs.  And maybe plan for someone else to drive you home. As with everything else in this discipline, pace pace pace.

 

I think that’s about it. I could really talk about this experience and this goal all day long, a fact to which Handsome will eagerly attest. But I know you have things to do and so do I. Thanks for stopping in at the Lazy W! If you see me running around Lake Hefner soon, send for a helicopter.

Training gives us an outlet for suppressed energies created by stress and thus tones the spirit just as exercise conditions the body.

~Arnold Schwarzenegger

XOXOXOXO

6 Comments
Filed Under: running

Friday 5 at the Farm: Birthday Lessons

March 7, 2014

Happy Friday!! This is a special Friday for yours truly, and I do not mind indulging in a little extra dose of fun. This is officially the last Friday of my thirties. Wahoo!! Tomorrow I will turn the big four-oh, a fact that is oddly thrilling and not stressful in the least. Tonight Handsome is throwing me a surprise party, and I am really really really excited. (Don’t ask me how I know about it.)

Around the Lazy W, we have lots of wonderful birthday traditions. Among them is asking the birthday person what he or she has learned this past year. Okay, only I make people suffer through this, but I just love to hear how people have grown in a year’s time.

Last year for my 39th birthday I loaded you all down with thirty nine pieces of unsolicited advice. And you were such great sports about it!! I had a blast writing all of that and appreciate everyone’s comments and love.

Unsolicited Birthday Advice 2013, #1-14

Unsolicited Birthday Advice 2013, #15-23

Unsolicited Birthday Advice 2013, #24-39

This year, I will spare you an additional forty pieces of advice and just tell you a quick five things I have learned this past year. This will serve as our Friday 5 at the Farm for my 40th birthday week:

  1. Carpe Diem is important. It means taking life one day at a time, seeing each day for the unique opportunities it brings, and making the most of it all. It means not looking back for too long nor ahead. It means being present both mentally and physically. And it makes life much, much better.
  2. Grief is a powerful force, and it is different for every person. So it’s cruelly unfair to measure love by how we express grief outwardly. And while there are lots of normal ways to grieve, some of those can be terribly destructive and hurtful to others. I guess what I’m saying is that the lesson to judge not certainly carries into this necessary chapter of life.
  3. Exercise is as good for your spirit as it is for your body, maybe even better. You really really must find some kind of physical activity that you LOVE and thoroughly enjoy to the point of craving it, then make it a part of your regular weekly routine. It’s vital. It will work magic in your life.
  4. Miracles are still very real, and prayers can be answered suddenly, in bizarre and unexpected ways. Never give up on a good hope. Trust that your prayers are already answered, even if you have yet to see the “proof.” Be patient. Allow life to surprise you with how good it is!
  5. As cliche as it sounds, life really does get better and better, despite inevitable heartache and difficulty. So does romance. And feeling comfortable in your skin is a real phenomenon that does a world of good for women, and I wish I could tell my twenty year old self all about it.

 

Life is beautiful! Treat it with that expectation. xoxo
Life is beautiful! Treat it with that expectation. xoxo

 

That’s about it! Whether your birthday is soon or not, what have you learned this past year? I would absolutely love you for sharing it in the comments!

Now… I am off to get dressed for this surprise party Handsome is throwing. I am one lucky girl.

Carpe Diem. Especially Your Fortieth Birthday.

XOXOXOXO 

 

2 Comments
Filed Under: Friday 5 at the Farm, Unsolicited Advice

How Automatic Doors Teach Me Patience

March 6, 2014

Sometimes I approach a pair of automatic doors more quickly than they are opening. No, not sometimes, every time. I am never not in a hurry to get to the other side of those glass doors. This frequently results in stubbed toes or (because it’s me after all) nearly smashed front teeth. It’s embarrassing. As I stand there wiggling against time and closed doors, I check my peripherals and worry that people think I am Windexing the glass with my tee-shirt or reading taped-on advertisements up close; but neither of these is true. And at that last motorized moment when the gap is finally widening enough for me to slip through, I always get really irritated, panicky like a race horse, like it’s taking a full decade for the doors to fully open. Then I bolt through as if I am fleeing a fire or a skunk or maybe the librarian who knows my books are past due.

Something has to change.

Either the people in charge of designing and maintaining automatic doors need to invent some kind of a sensor that tells the doors to open at a speed conducive to the speed of the approaching traverser… Or… I need to slow down a bit.

Experience tells me this is my problem to solve, not the mysterious Automatic Sliding Door People.

I simply need to ease up and slow down. My stride needs to be gentler, less urgent. More patient.

 

january plate collage

 

We have heard since childhood that the best things in life are free and that good things are worth waiting for. These sentiments are so true! But they sort of fly in the face of busy adulthood, multitasking, and thrill chasing. In recent months Handsome and I have learned to take life one single day at a time, often one hour at a time. We have been forced to learn how to accept the good, loving, bright days for the wonderful gifts that they are and really soak them up in our bones. This can only be done at a slow pace, really. This can only be accomplished by pausing to notice details and breathing deep, cleansing breaths. Some days this requires more discipline than others, but the payoff is always amazing. And then we are always better nourished for the darker, more challenging days that inevitably follow.

Ann Voskamp and C.S. Lewis both liken this phenomenon to Einstein’s theory of relativity, though I am so sorry I cannot provide the right quotes. Just please set aside time to read Voskamp’s One Thousand Gifts. It is heart-transforming! Perhaps it would be a perfect read for Lent if you observe that season. I think Edie wrote about it this past winter, too. The idea is so simple: the more your focus on the present moment and deliberately slow yourself, the more slowly time passes. Conversely, the more rushing about you do, especially when it is not absolutely necessary, the more harried you and your life become. And the more quickly your time passes. All of this and accomplishment are not necessarily bedfellows.

Patience.

On every level of life, from housework to heights of prayer, in all judgement and effort to get things done, hurry and impatience are sure marks of the amateur. ~Ann Voskamp

I have learned a lot these past months, but I still have so far to go. I still crave so much more stillness of spirit and personal power to carve out and build the life I imagine for myself and my loved ones. So much is available! So much noise is ready to be cut out and muffled. So much truth is ready to be unearthed.

So this means I will be walking through more doors in coming weeks and months. If they are automatic sliding doors, I plan to approach them more slowly. More safely and with greater patience.

Happy life-lesson-learning, friends! Protect your front teeth.

Rivers know this: there is no hurry. We shall get there someday.

A. A. Milne, Winnie the Pooh 

XOXOXOXO

4 Comments
Filed Under: thinky stuff, Uncategorized

Guest Blogger of the Month

March 4, 2014

Howdy! How are you? Are you surviving the wacky weather, keeping those springtime day dreams alive? Don’t give up, friends. We’re almost done with winter.

I have a super quick little announcement to make. For the month of March I will be guest blogging over at a lovely corner of the virtual world called Oklahoma Women Bloggers. It feels extra special to be invited at this particular month, because this month I am turning 40. The big FOUR-OH. eek! (I’m not really upset… Birthdays are way too much fun.)

 

Oklahoma Women Bloggers
Oklahoma Women Bloggers

 

I was lucky enough recently to enjoy a really leisurely, instant-friendship kind of coffee date with one of the editors, Mari, and today she has given me the sweetest introduction possible. Go check it out, say howdy to the ladies there, and then get inspired to think toward springtime, travel, and transformation, which is the writing theme this month. I know I’m ready!

Thank you Mari for meeting with me, and thank you for such a warm welcome to this smart group. I’m definitively looking forward to our farm days this spring!

To my regular Lazy W readers and friends, this week you can expect to read about the winning brownie recipe, how much our parrot loves the new baby chicks, the next installment of Tiny T’s love story, my 40th birthday, garden planing updates, and much more. Happy Monday! Make this week amazing.

A small group of thoughtful people can change the world.

Indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.

~Margaret Meade

xoxoxoxo

Leave a Comment
Filed Under: UncategorizedTagged: OKWB

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • 27
  • 28
  • …
  • 33
  • Next Page »
Hi! I'm Marie. Welcome to the Lazy W. xoxo

Hi! I’m Marie. This is the Lazy W.

A hobby farming, book reading, coffee drinking, romance having, miles running girl in Oklahoma. Soaking up the particular beauty of every day. Blogging on the side. Welcome to the Lazy W!

I Believe Strongly in the Power of Gratitude & Joy Seeking

Pages

  • bookish
  • Farm & Animal Stories
  • lazy w farm journal
  • Welcome!

Lazy W Happenings Lately

  • friday 5 at the farm, welcome summer! June 21, 2025
  • pink houses, punk houses, and everything in between June 1, 2025
  • her second mother’s day May 10, 2025
  • early spring stream of consciousness April 3, 2025
  • hold what ya got March 2, 2025
"Edit your life freely and ruthlessly. It's your masterpiece after all." ~Nathan W. Morris

Archives

July 2025
M T W T F S S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  
« Jun    

Looking for Something?

Theme Design By Studio Mommy · Copyright © 2025

Copyright © 2025 · Beyond Madison Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in