Homemade Push Pop Review

Last Fall we bought these:

And finally got around to trying them.  They are sturdy silicone and flexible.  The lids go on and off easily.  We filled ours with Great Value brand strawberry yogurt, the kind that comes in a 32 oz container at Walmart.  We laid them on their side in the freezer and since it was thick stuff, nothing leaked. If I were using juice, I’d prop them up in a glass or vase just to be safe.
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The lids came off easily.  My 5 year old could do it without help.

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The pops were hard to push up until the heat from our hands softened the outside a little.DSC_0555 DSC_0554

Yummy.  Mess free.  And I know what’s in them.DSC_0562

“Do I get one too, Mommy?”

 

Cosmos ® 10-Piece Pink/Light Blue/Violet/Green/Orange Food Safe Silicone Ice Pop Maker Molds Set with Cosmos Fastening Strap

A Woman’s Guide to FrontSight Take 2

We just got back from our second trip out to Frontsight, Nevada for 4 day defensive handgun training.  If you’re not a gun person, I totally understand.  I was pretty opposed to guns before my first trip, but took my first course at the insistence of my Dad and my husband. I was shocked that I  enjoyed learning to shoot and even more that I wanted to go back! Imagine a world where most citizens were trained with firearms and conceal carried.  What a huge deterrent to criminals that would be!

 

What it is:  4 days of intensive training that is as friendly as possible while still being safe.  It is not a boot camp.  Almost anyone can come, even children aged 11-15 can go with a parent. It’s okay if you’ve never fired a weapon before Frontsight.  It’s better to not have any habits, than to have bad habits to overcome.  But if you have shot before they will show you how to take your existing skills and get even better. The classes are more than just how to shoot, but also when to shoot, how to stay within the law and what the likely consequences are even if your shots were completely justified.  There is a background check required for all students.  And because everyone is armed, it is one of the safest places on earth. No one would dream of committing a crime there unless they were suicidal.

One of my favorite students was Lori.  She is 77 years young and not even 5 feet tall!  She carries 4 magazines on her left side and with 15 rounds each.  This was her second year at Frontsight.  4 years ago she decided to take martial arts classes and achieved her black belt in the second degree at age 75.  She was throwing large men on the mat and doing it well.  But threw out her back in the process.  She decided to take up shooting instead. I asked her what her son and grandchildren thought about grandma shooting.  She said they didn’t know about it!  She also said she really didn’t need either martial arts or guns, because she had Jesus.  I just adore her.  Isn’t she the cutest thing?

On the line next to us, a twelve year old boy was taking classes with his dad.  The boy was likely the best shot on the property that day (at least among the students.)  It was impressive to watch him!  The instructor told his dad if they were ever in need of tactically clearing a house to send the boy in first.  He was that good.  But I think that would be a hard decision for any parent to make.

The climate is unique in Nevada.  Hot and Dry during the day, cold at night.  Dehydration is a real risk as is sunburn, heat exhaustion, or heat stroke.  We found it is cooler to wear long lightweight layers than to have skin exposed to the sun.  Here’s the outfit I recommend:

 

A Woman’s Guide to What to wear at Frontsight Nevada

511 tactical gear pants in light khaki (the pockets in these are invaluable) (Try LApolicegear.com for the best price–around $29.00) Be sure to get the new fit or you will end up with mom pants–yuck. Also tuck the pocket flaps into the pockets on the left side of your pants while you are on the range.  The rough velcro is rough enough to cut your hands as you reach in and out multiple times.  Tucking in the pockets will protect you.  Mine are way too long.  They come in regular and long lengths.  Regular is about 30 inches.  Long are about 34 inches.  I’ll hem mine later but for the class I just flipped up the cuffs.  (Then I took home pieces of ammo casing and gravel every night.  If you are flying right away at the end of the class be sure to check your cuffs :).

tank top

white Long sleeved button front cotton shirt to wear over the tank and use for concealment on days 3 and 4

low cut socks and breathable mesh tennis shoes (you’ll want to wash the shoes in the washer once you are back home)

Hat with brim (not optional); and wrap around protective eyewear with a dark tint (also not optional)

A wide belt with a slide fastener instead of buckle and holes.  This will help a lot when it’s time to use the restroom.  (see below :).)

A loose weave neck scarf is nice too.  I’ve never had one, but my husband and dad love theirs.  They are popular on the grounds.

Wear sunscreen under the long sleeved shirt.  You will need to take it off at times, especially the first two days when conceal carry clothing isn’t used yet.

Also, be careful your tank isn’t cut too low.  I caught a hot casing down the front of my shirt on the last day and it really had me dancing. Those things can burn you, so it’s best to protect for that.

My Ammo Box. Looks too messy to me, but I move so fast normally that I don’t take time to stay organized. My SIL snapped this picture because my sparkly lip gloss tickled her funny bone. I was the queen of sparkly lip gloss on the range. Just in case, I felt like I was losing my girly edge during a fast draw. And we were in the desert–can’t have too much sparkly lip gloss in the desert.

What to Pack in Your Ammo Can

An ammo can is a plastic box with lid and latches for holding ammo, some people use a range duffle or tackle box instead.  You will need 600 rounds of ammo for a 4 day course, but only keep 200 rounds at a time in your can.  This will keep the can from getting too heavy and save room for the other essentials:

1.  A fingernail file.  Bring something heavy duty–your nails will break.  In preparation for the class, trim them just slightly longer than your fingertips and file them with flat ends.  Then reinforce your nails with 3 coats of clear polish or hardening top coat.  Still bring the file.  Guns are hard on fingernails.

2. Pocket tissues:  the range is dusty

3.  Beef jerky, nuts, and fruit or other snacks (that won’t melt.) Lunch is late 12:30 and if you have a time zone issue (we were delayed 2 hours) it can be really hard to make it to lunch or dinner.

4. Lip balm and lip gloss.  If you have one with sunscreen in it, all the better.  My lips got burned this time, ouch!

5. Sunscreen.  The higher the SPF the better.  And reapply often.

6.  Electronic hearing protection–this is required.  Just ear foamies won’t do.

7.  Ponytail holders (if your hair is long enough)  I like to wear a ponytail and pull it through the back of my hat.

8. Waterproof bandaids.  Frontsight has first aid kits there with a plethora of bandaids but I had a hard time getting any of them to stick after I started sweating.  I wished I had brought the sport ones that stick through anything.

9.  Frozen gatorade.  I don’t generally drink gatorade but make an exception in this case.  It can be hard to see the signs of dehydration or heat exhaustion in yourself, but others will see it–especially if you start doing stupid stuff or missing easy targets. It’s dangerous, so stay hydrated. They have deli trucks that come around with gatorade for $2 a bottle, but you can get it for 1/4th the cost if you plan ahead and bring your own.  Pop it in the freezer the night before.  Then as it thaws you can give it a good shake and it’s like a slushie.  Yum!

10.  Your photo ID.  You will need this to check in on the first day, and if any of your equipment breaks you will need to leave it as a deposit when you rent equipment to replace it from Frontsight.

11.  Caribiners.  The best price on these are from Wal-mart.  A huge one for $3 is handy to hang your electronic ear muffs from when you are doing dry practice.  And the small ones are good for clipping things like your loader to your belt loop.  I wish I had taped a small one to each of the front courners of my conceal carry shirt too.  The wind was making it hard to clear and draw for the exam and I know I lost points from wind delays that the weight of the beaners would have fixed.

 

Travel and Where to Stay

If you live close enough to Pahrump, NV to drive, I’m jealous.  If you need to fly, watch airline prices carefully. They will dip between $100 and $140 one way; book your flight on the low end.  We found the best prices on Southwest. Sunday is the most expensive day to fly and Wednesday is generally the cheapest.  We like to fly out Wednesday night for our classes that start Friday morning.  This gives us a day to rest, grocery shop, and get used to the time change before the crazy schedule begins.

Plan extra time when flying with guns.  You can check them in your bags but will have to fill out a declaration card at the counter.  Also you’ll need to pack ammo in a separate container from your gun (still inside the same suitcase though) and it must be in original packaging, not floating around loose.  You will be limited to 11 lbs of ammo.  Our friend’s ammo was weighed at the counter, ours was not–so you never know when they are going to check.  Your gun case will need to be securely locked for flying and a TSA lock for the outside of your suitcase is a good idea too.  Once everything is cleared at the counter you will be asked to wait 10-15 minutes for your bag to clear the 2nd level of security before finding your gate.

When flying home, book your flight for the day after your class ends.  You will be too exhausted to travel and if your flight is too early, you will miss the closing class activities (and the test.)  You definitely don’t want to miss those things. When you do fly home, check your pockets carefully for stray ammo.  During the class you’ll be shoving loose rounds into every available pocket so you can load on the line. TSA doesn’t find it funny if you forget and leave a round in your pocket.

Also, TSA doesn’t allow coconut oil, peanut butter, mayo or other spreadable items in your carry on bag.  I lost a big jar of coconut oil that way.  I thought it was just liquids that were restricted, but it’s not.  You can find the most recent TSA rules on their website: http://www.tsa.gov/traveler-information/prohibited-items 

If you are going alone or with just one other person, the cheapest hotel is SaddleWest in Pahrump.  It doesn’t have a great reputation, but we liked it okay.  Our room smelled of smoke, which I didn’t like, but we weren’t there much.  Most rooms do not have a fridge, so plan to buy a styrofoam cooler when you arrive to fill with ice and lunch fixing stuff.  Boxed lunches from the hotel are $10 each! but are $12 at Frontsight!  You’ll definitely be ahead to pack your own lunch.

If you are going with a group of 6, the cheapest option is to rent a vacation home.  We did that this time and loved it.  Plus the full kitchen made it super easy to make simple breakfasts and pack lunches.  I don’t recommend trying to cook supper even if you have a full kitchen.  You will be exhausted and most often won’t leave Frontsight until 6pm–with a half hour drive back to civilization and then starting meal prep–you’ll be hungry and frustrated before dinner is ready.  If you are set on saving money by cooking, it is easier to cook the 3rd and 4th nights.  We used a slow cooker for one night and grilled burgers the next.  It worked out ok. Vacationrentals.com is a good place to look for accommodations.

There is a Walmart in Pahrump with a full grocery store and an Albertsons too.  I took a few specialty items from home, like Trim Healthy Mama chocolate waffle mix, chia seeds, ground flax, and glucomannan powder.  But we bought most things when we arrived.

How to Use Facilities When Armed

Guns are expensive, and the last thing you want to do is drop one in a toilet.  While most have safeties that prevent them from firing when dropped (and you won’t be allowed to be loaded in the John) it’s still a bad idea to drop your gun.  If you have a belt holster and loosen the belt and drop your pants, the weight of the gun will pull your belt out and drop everything on the floor. (Ask me how I know!)  To prevent this, use a slide buckle and loosen the belt almost to the end to give you plenty of room to move your pants up and down. Then lock the slide so the belt can’t come off.

Also, when using the porta-potties at the back ranges, don’t lift the lid to the toilet until your pants are down past where your gun could fall in, and close it immediately before lifting your pants back up again.  This is TMI only if you don’t need the info!

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I’m not sure how to transition from that last topic, lol.  So I’m just going to move on :).  My goal is to pass the Defensive Handgun Course with 90% or better.  And even after 2 times through, I couldn’t even graduate.  It’s the speed pressure that gets me every time.  The key to graduating is dry practicing at home.  The hardest part for me is just getting out of the holster in time to take my shots. I’m going to take a year to practice and save my pennies so next time I can take my 2 oldest kids with me.  Once I graduate at 90% I can take the advanced course and then the tactical course.  I really want to do that!

So do any of you shoot?  I’m always pleasantly surprised to find out how many women do and don’t talk about it much.

Easter Sunday

I’m not very good at taking pictures and don’t have a shot of their Easter baskets.  I bought plastic bucket style baskets at Walmart for $.97 each. They look just like ice cream tubs but say Happy Easter and have spring things on them.  I intended to sew covers for ice cream tubs I already had on hand, but I decided it was better to be cheerful and sane and have dinner on the table.  (My 10 year younger self would have made a different choice, lol.)

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The tubs were all the same so I bought a different color of plastic grass for each one.  They will turn these items in in the morning and I will stack everything into my spring bin for next year so I don’t have to spend the money on it again.

Heather Easter 2013

I filled their tubs with:  silly string; bubbles; assorted chocolates from Dollar tree; Easter theme pencils; matchbox cars for the boys; and hair stuff for the girls.  They had choir practice early this morning so instead of hiding them, I stuck them right in front of their faces so when they woke up it was the first thing they saw.  It was very effective–almost more fun than a hunt.

Heather and Heidi Easter 2013

The Easter photos are on the porch at Mom’s house.  Heather’s dress came from Costco ($16.99) and Heidi’s came from Target ($20.00 on sale.)  We also bought Heidi a skinny belt to got with the dress and she wore her shoes from last year.  We would have all been happier if Heidi’s dress was about 3 inches longer.  Hello, Designers.  Are you listening? It was 3 inches longer than the other dresses being shown.

Angela and Darren

I wore a skirt I ordered from Kohl’s when they had 20% off their sale prices plus free shipping.  If I had shopped for it in store I wouldn’t have purchased it because the fabric is so thin that it shows every lump.  I had to iron my slip because the wrinkles from being in my drawer showed through! I love the stripes though.

The tank has lace at the top and bottom and was from my maternity pile (though I don’t think it is a maternity tank.)  The sweater came from Target last week ($15 on sale.) And the shoes I’ve had for years but rarely wear them since they are linen and I’m afraid to get them dirty.  I wore these footbed sock liners with them instead of hose and they were very comfortable all day and not at all sweaty.

Heidi and Heather

It’s hard to see but I found a huge coral stone necklace at Forever 21 that was the inspiration behind the sweater and them some white stone earrings in a similar style at Target.  Anyway, this is probably the most I’ve purchased for Easter–we usually sew and don’t go for jewelry much, but it was a nice change of pace this year.

Grant Hunting Eggs

The boys weren’t into dressing up and since I’ll being buying Brandon (5) a black suit in June to be a ring bearer, we held off on the new stuff right now.

We had a lovely service at church with the children’s choir and adult choir providing ministry.  Darren was an advanced greeter (code name for the security team) so spent the service standing outside wearing an ear wig to make sure that everyone inside was safe.  That left me juggling the children and I’m glad I sat in front of my brother who could grab Brandon by the neck when he got squirrely after I left to take Grant out.

Dub and Grant

After that we headed to my mom’s with my brother and his family for a roasted chicken dinner with scalloped potatoes; homemade rolls; fruit salad; lettuce salad; cheesy broccoli; green beans; and 3 kinds of dessert.  Plus all the chocolate candy we could want.  And I didn’t cook any of it, although I did set the table with my Sister in law’s help.  (Does that count for anything to keep me from total slacker status?)

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It rained a lot yesterday, so Mom planned an indoor egg hunt.  Each child had a unique color egg to hunt for.  That way we could hide the eggs simply for Grant and super challenging for Heidi.

Heather

After the egg hunt we sat around in the living room and took turns talking and napping until the evening was well on.  The children spent the entire time playing out in the yard leaving the house quiet and perfect for adult conversation.  Interesting that not one of them came in muddy after all the fuss of having an indoor egg hunt, lol.

Happy Easter to you and your Family.

Jesus is Alive and is preparing a place for you and me, our loving advocate with the Father who has won the victory!

Favorite Book Character Day

My kids are in private school, because I’m overwhelmed at home.  So when they do things like “dress as your favorite book character day.”  I have mixed feelings.  My first thought is, “Aaaah–we are in school so I don’t have to be creative.” And my second thought is, “I’m so glad they do fun stuff at school because I didn’t when we home schooled.”

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So I told them, they could be any character they wanted if they could think of it themselves and come up with the costume pieces themselves. I would help them think through ideas and assemble it if they can do most of it–and it doesn’t require 12 hours of sewing machine time.

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So Caleb dressed himself as “Boone” the cowboy from the classic, Indian in the Cupboard. He is actually reading this book right now–so I applaud him!

Heather found all the parts in her dress up box to be Angelina Ballerina.

And Dub proudly wore his store bought batman costume. I had mixed feelings about letting him be a movie character, but Caleb pointed out that the comics came first.  Well argued, Caleb.  And then he reminded me that Angelina Ballerina has a television series of her own now.  True, true.

Now we can work on our science fair project.  I’m making Caleb do most of his own work here too.  He is so smart that I’m having to slow him down a little so that his project is actually doable.  His first idea was to test the effects of water pressure on submarines—whoa boy.  Brilliant idea, but your mother just fainted.  He has agreed to build two versions of a solar oven and test the heating capacities of the two models and then ultimately attempt to bake pizzas.  We’ll keep you posted :).

Happy Valentine’s Day– Now go date your spouse!

I blew it last week.  I had planned to share with you an amazingly creative post each day on a frugal date that would dazzle your spouse.  But instead I crawled into my shell and studied about affiliate software, computer programming, and other equally boring things.  All those invisible hours will become something beautiful to announce in the future–It will glitter.

To be honest, I didn’t have a lot of my own ideas to share with you.  Darren and I love our date nights.  We get one every other week by trading babysitting services with his cousin and her sweet children.  But we usually do the same thing each time–dinner out, movie at home through Netflix, and then the rest I can’t really talk about here :).  We’re boring, but we love it. 

If we don’t do that, we work on some home repair project without squabbling children underfoot.  Or plan to go jogging, swim laps, or just lift weights together. It’s not romantic, but it is refreshing.  I love to talk and Darren is a willing listener in quiet moments.  And sometimes he has quite a bit to say himself.  Because of nights like these, we know each other really well.  We aren’t afraid of the time when the children are grown and gone, because we’ll still have each other–and we’re best friends.  So what I’m trying to say, is time together is more important than your creativity.  So if making a production stresses you out (like it does me) don’t.  Just plan to be together and see where the night leads.  (Later you can name the night Brandon or Grant–like we did, Bwa ha ha!)

Here are some actually creative ideas from other bloggers:

 

Source: self.com via Angela on Pinterest

 

The Evil Twin’s Recipe for Orange Cranberry Granola

You already know I have another blog.  A fitness blog.  Sometimes I feel like a fraud having a fitness blog.  I’m not holding myself up as an example of an amazing fit person.  Just a regular person with a life long weight issue and my journey to beat it.  But sometimes I think people might get the wrong idea if they read it–like I never mess up or eat a muffin at school on Mom’s and Muffins day and then find out that the 3/4 serving was 690 calories!  (Costco and I aren’t friends right now.)

orange Cranberry Granola

I feel like my two blogs are like the pins I see on pinterest or even the articles in a woman’s magazine.  The front cover will read the best headlines:  “How to drop 20 lbs in one week!” and “The best triple chocolate molten lava cake on the planet” right next to it.  On my other blog, you might read about pomegranate salad and over here—ooey gooey cinnamon rolls.  Or Orange Cranberry Granola.

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Challenge #1: I have a freezer full of fresh cranberries that were given to me a year ago after Christmas.  The stores donated them to Harvesters to pass out to the underprivileged.  The underprivileged wouldn’t take them so it was into my freezer or the trash.   I LOVE cranberries, if the recipe has plenty of sugar.  Cranberry muffins, breads, cakes, salads…they are all delicious.  Unfortunately, the sugar part of it doesn’t mesh with my fitness plan so well and the rest of the family won’t eat cranberries.

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Challenge #2:  I feel guilty buying sugary cereal.  It’s so bad for our health and to serve it as the first meal of the day almost seems criminal.  But the kiddoes got used to sprinkling a bit of sweet crunchy cereal onto their plain cheerios or bran flakes and held a revolt when I refused to buy any more.  (I shouldn’t have ever purchased it, but that $.50 sale snookered me.)

Solution for both?  I started to wonder if I put the cranberries into sweet crunchy granola I might have the best of both worlds.  I could use up a few cranberries, and the kids could sprinkle sweet stuff on their cereal.  Only I would know what was in it.  The trouble is, there aren’t any granola recipes on the web that call for fresh cranberries.  What if it didn’t work?  What if I wasted all the nuts?  What if I wasted money?!!  So I had to think about it for a few days .

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Then I remembered the joke Darren and I had when I first started this blog.  I would try a LOT of new ideas and recipes that didn’t work.  We decided my subtitle should be:  Wasting my money so you don’t have to waste yours.   It made me feel a little better, lol.

So I decided to save all of you from wasting your money and try making granola with fresh cranberries and it was AMAZINGLY DELICIOUS!  Crunchy, sweet, clumpy–everything granola should be.  Now, I have to keep telling myself, “It’s for the kids.  It’s not for you!”   I could fill a heaping bowl and cover it with raw milk and mindlessly eat thousands of calories while watching an entire season of Downton Abby and not even feel sick.

Here’s the recipe exactly how I made it, and then at the end I will tell you the changes I’d like to try, just to improve the nutrition a bit.

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Orange Cranberry Granola

6 cups old fashioned rolled oats

1 1/2 cups wheat germ (for gluten free, you could try oat bran, flax meal, or chia seeds–the wheat germ helps things clump up, so when subbing ingredients keep that in mind.)

6 Tbs dark brown sugar

1 tsp salt

2 tsp ground cinnamon

1 orange, zested

1 cup almonds, chopped (I measured from the 3lb bag sold at Costco, because they are the best price anywhere.)

1/2 cup pecans, chopped (Also bought from Costco, these are almost twice the price of almonds so I went light.)

1/2 cup sunflower seeds (purchased from a bulk food bin.)

2 cups fresh cranberries (frozen and then roughly chopped while still frozen hard)

1/4 cup white sugar (I think you could do with less or even sub stevia for this.)

3/4 cup honey

1 stick butter, melted

1.  Stir together the cranberries and white sugar.  Set aside

2.  In a large bowl, combine oats, wheat germ, brown sugar, salt, cinnamon, nuts, cranberries, and orange zest

3.  Melt together honey and butter and bring to a boil for 1 minute.

4.  Pour honey mixture over oat mixture and stir until everything is completely coated.

5.  Spread into greased baking pans.  (I used two large cookie sheets with a lip.  The more spread out it is the crunchier it will get.)

6.  Bake at 300 degrees for 45 minutes, stirring after every 15 minutes.  Rotate the pans every time you stir.

I started baking mine at 275 degrees, but the extra moisture in the cranberries makes it cook more slowly.  So I upped each baking session to 20 minutes and then added a fourth for 15 minutes.  The pan closer to the heat source got darker than I wanted during that last 15  minutes session and then I found out that it didn’t get as crispy as it will until it was completely cool.  The butter helps with this :).

So next time, I will take out the white sugar completely.  And dust the cranberries with stevia.  And I might take out some of the brown sugar.  It helps the cereal get crunchy and adds a nice flavor, but mine was plenty sweet.  It was deliciously sweet, actually, but sweet enough that I think I can get away with reducing the sugar some and no one would notice.

Also, I wonder if I could use a little less butter and use some of the juice form the orange instead?  There seemed to be plenty of sauce for the amount of stuff I had.  It was perfect enough that I wondered if I could ease up a bit and not miss it.    Also water/juic mixing with wheat germ makes even more clumps.

 

 

The Scripture Lady

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After services each week, The scripture lady is always surrounded by children, eager to learn a new verse by memory.

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If she has more children than she can work with, she has older children teach the younger ones.

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She creates pictures like these to help the children get a mind picture for the words.

And then rewards them with tiny candy treats.  I love it! Her incentives make the children feel fantastic about being in the Word.

Magical Messy Microwave Cure and Busy Bag Swap

I haven’t forgotten about the magical messy microwave cure,  but first I wanted to tell you about a wonderful party I’ve been invited to–A Busy Bag Swap!  So far there are more than 40 ladies coming and the hostess is having it at a church so we can all be together.  The huge group is divided into groups of 10.  We are each bringing 10 of the same bag and signing up so no one brings the same thing in their group. Then everyone goes home with 10 new activities!

There are tons of ideas for busy bags on Pinterest.  I’m making these pizza factories from secondstorywindow.typepad.com:

pizza factory from second story window

I researched printing the color cards at Kinkos.  They wanted $1.19 a copy if I used their card stock; $.53 if I brought my own.  I decided to print at home.  I need 30 colored copies on card stock–we figured we could refill 2 ink cartridges at Costco and be under budget compared to printing at Kinkos.  I have a no heat laminator that will come in handy to making everything last a long time and should have enough laminator on hand to do the project.

lemon

Now for the Microwave Magic:  Fill a glass cup with 1 cup of water and a splash of lemon juice (don’t get fancy, cheap from concentrate like they sell at Aldi is fine.)  Microwave on high for 2 minutes, then leave the door shut for 5.  Do something else.  Wipe down your counters (hmm), Eat a snack (ok!) Something like that.  Then take a damp rag and just wipe it out.  Everything will come off with no effort thanks to the power of steam.  If you have a pretty messy job, you’ll need to rinse your rag out a couple of times.  But that’s it!

Heidi’s Mystery Party Part 2–the clues

I took a lot of my inspiration for Heidi’s party from bloggers, but they were all planning for much younger girls.  I called my mom over in desperation to get some clues that would be super challenging for the girls.  We ended up with 11 clues and most of them required something in their sleuth kits to solve it.

The ground rules were:  My office, master closets, and sibling bedrooms were off limits.  (Those areas were really messy, lol.)  All girls must stick together and no one can read the next clue until everyone is back to the living room and sitting down.  (I was trying to slow them down :).)

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First I handed Heidi and envelope that I “found” in the attic. (She knew I had been cleaning up there recently to make it a guest room for some overnight company.)  It contained a “very old” letter that read:

Hello, Dear One,

If you are reading this, I have passed away. I have hidden this letter in my home, so from the grave, I can share a secret with you if you are clever.

You see, I have always loved a good mystery and fancy myself as something of a sleuth! In my will, I omitted a chest of heirloom jewelry presented to me many years ago by Lady Baillie of Leeds Castle.  My family knows nothing of this treasure and I prefer it to go to someone with more sense.  So I have hidden it in my home for the future owner, if you can find it!

You may need a few friends to help you in your search and there may be something special waiting for them as well if they are able to help you solve this mystery!

Good luck to you!  Here is your first clue:

 I’ll give you clues in the form of rhyme

When this thing stops, you’re out of time.

I borrowed a lot of the text from this letter from this blogger:  http://thedecorologist.com/party-proposal-mystery-birthday-party.  The original blogger had filmed this script herself dressed up as the old lady.  I loved the idea and had planned to do this too and even found an old gray wig to wear.  But at the end, the filming and dressing up and finding an old lady voice with an accent just about put me over the top with stress.  So my mother antiqued the paper instead.

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The next clue was hidden behind a clock in my bedroom and read:

(In large type) The clue you are seeking is really quite small.  It’s so tiny you almost can’t see it at all.  (Tiny Print 4 font hidden in between the lines of the big text) The game has begun.  See them all run. It glides on the air.  You will find it there.

The girls had magnifying glasses to read the tiny print with though many of them had excellent eyes and could read it without.  It lead to our air hockey table in the basement.

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The next clue was blank (invisible ink.)  3 of the guests had pens in their kits that would decode the clue.  But it was a hoot watching them try to figure it out.  First they scribbled all over it with invisible ink, and then found the decoder pen but rubbed it all over the wrong side of the paper, bwa ha ha.

When they finally figured it out the clue read:

In my long and fruitful life there is much that I have learned.  You should keep your eyes open so you won’t get burned!

That took them to the fireplace where I had taped the next clue up inside the chimney.  I promised the girls NOTHING would be in plain sight :).

This clue was coded in basic substitution code.  A =1 etc.  They used their steno pads and pens to solve the code. When they deciphered it, it read:

The lovely lady has something to hide.  Make sure you peek on the other side.

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One of the girls immediately ran to my newest most beautiful mirror. Claimed that when she looked inside there was a lovely lady looking back at her and found the clue behind.  She was too clever!

That clue was written in mirror image.  I thought they would use their compact mirrors in their bags or even a wall mirror to read it, but instead they held it up to the light and read through the back.  It said:

The next clue is not hard, don’t shed a tear.  You’ll find it inside Hannah’s Brave Year.

Heidi immediately knew that was a book on her shelf in her room and wondered how in the world I got a clue in there with her home the whole time and never knew it ;).  That clue was written in red letter code.  The real clue was made of green and blue letters and inside each of those words I typed red words.

The red words said:  You are the best friends a girl could have.  True beauty inside and out lasts forever.

 

When they put their red decoder film over it, the red words disappeared and they saw:

On the buffet there’s a fortunate snack.  Don’t worry about being rude, eat it now to stay on track.

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My mother had baked fortune cookies and placed one word inside each one for the next clue.  The girls had to arrange the words in order to find the next clue.  It read:

Tickling the ivories makes a lovely song, finding this clue takes a mind that’s strong.

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The next clue was hidden inside our old baby grand piano.  It was a word search.  The girls had to circle the words and then arrange them in the blanks to find the next clue.  I used an online word search program to make it and then designed it hangman style so they could see the blanks with the unimportant words like an and the already filled in.  That clue read:

Look in the spot where they used to mix batter, hidden away under the counter.

We have an old mixer built into our counter that pops up at the touch of a button.  It reminds me of something the Jetson’s might have, lol.  The next clue was under that.  And written in Pig Latin!  Makes me giggle still to think how much fun we had writing this stuff.

Iddenhay niay aya lacepay atsthay eallyray itequay oldcay, oullyay indfay ouryay extnay luecay.  roay osay veiay eenbay oldtay.

Translated:  Hidden in a place that’s really quite cold, you’ll find your next clue.  Or so I’ve been told.

This led to one of the freezers that was left in the house by the previous owner.

 

This clue was a fill in the blank. All the rhyming words were left out.  I gave them a word bank with lots of extra words to choose from in it.  But if they had noticed the extra words were red, so by using their red decoder lens only the useful words would have been visible.  Think girls, think!

The clue said:  All the squirrels are not in the trees, crack the nuts, it is a tease.

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Mom had hollowed out walnuts, stuck single words inside and then glued them back together so you couldn’t tell they had been tampered with.  (My mom is amazing, if you hadn’t figured that out yet.  I need her forever, because I don’t plan on ever getting that amazing.) The girls had to crack the nuts and arrange the words to find the final clue:

Around the house you must go, looking HIGH and looking low. Behind a wall where you think not, marked with a bright red dot.

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That led them to the attic where I put a red sticker on one of the removable pegboard walls. Behind that was a beautiful inlaid wooden box that my great-grandfather built.  It was filled with jewelry that had belonged to my grandmother and her mother.  The girls were allowed to look it all over but there was also a paper that read:

This Mystery is now history.  So take this treasure to someone quite wise to claim your real prize!

And we traded them for bags of candy.

If you want a copy of the clues and what we did you can download it here: Heidi’s birthday party script. You need Microsoft Word or something similar to open it.

Hedi’s Mystery Party Part 1

We had no invitations for Heidi’s party, because that would take planning sooner than a week in advance.  I’m just flying by the seat of my pants right now.  So we called, facebooked, and texted the guests. The mother’s were very sweet about it.

Heidi’s friend from home school that she rarely sees now that she goes to school came over and spent the night.  The day before they baked lemon cupcakes from a box, then frosted them with homemade butter cream tinted pale turquoise.  They weren’t prefect, but they looked nearly so after using Tip Junkie’s free printables.

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My glass cake plate was too small to hold all the cupcakes, so I topped it with a silver charger (From Dollar tree at Christmas time.) Just right :).

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Then in the morning, she and Heidi cleaned the whole house and decorated for the party. I helped, but those girls were amazing. Copy of Heidi's birthday 13th 097

The food table had chocolate covered pretzels (from Aldi); Walnuts in the shell (with clues inside); fortune cookies (homemade by my mama with clues inside); sweet potato chips (Heidi’s favorite); party nuts; chocolate filled wafer straws; and Krispy Creme Classic Doughnuts (Not pictured.  But I put them in my trifle bowl to serve.)

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The punch was Strawberry Limeaid with frozen strawberries and fresh lime slices floating in it.Copy of Heidi's birthday 13th 149

I made it by mixing the 3 bottles below (from Aldi.)  It was surprisingly delicious!  Copy of Heidi's birthday 13th 186

And the girls loved drinking it out of my best stemware.  (I totally forgot to buy cups for the party.  Big win–saved money and made the girls happy.)

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For party gifts, I bought canvas bags at Hobby Lobby.  They were $8 for 4 and then were 30% off.  Heidi and her friend picked out ribbons from  my stash and I sewed them on to spiff them up a little.

Inside the bags were tools the girls would need to solve the clues in the mystery.  They included:  detective kits (some had red decoders in them and some had invisible ink pens.); slide whistles for security, compact mirrors for reverse image code or sneaking around corners; steno pads; gel pens; and mini magnifying glasses.   Everything was from Dollar Tree.  I didn’t snap a picture of the stuff, but I’ll see if Heidi still has hers semi together and can snap a picture later.

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The girls didn’t all know each other even though they all knew Heidi.  So we started with introductions.  And then played a warm up game to get their detective brains warmed up.  They had 1 minute to look at the tray and then write down everything they could remember.  One girl got them all! If I had been super clever,  I would have had a prize for her….poor girl.Copy of Heidi's birthday 13th 110

Then the treaure hunt began with this old letter I “found in my attic” while cleaning around New Year’s time.  My mother made it look old with Roasted Barley Drink.  I’ll tell more about the clues and the treasure tomorrow.Copy of Heidi's birthday 13th 113

After the treasure hunt we opened Gifts.  Heidi got some cute shirts from her cousin; several gift cards to Barnes and Noble; and Hobby Lobby.  A set of adventure books from her church friend; and an art pastel set from the friend who remembered all the items on the tray. And a journal and sharpe set too.

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Her friend that spent the night knitted her a ruffle scarf and one for her doll.  Super stylish!

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Her Dad and I got her 1 gift. (I meant to sew her a bathrobe…but found the fabric this morning still in the shipping box–MAMA FAIL!)  So the 1 gift from us was a CELL PHONE!  She is super excited and she has already started texting, lol.  I’m glad I’ll be able to contact her now at her dance lessons and after school.