Travel:
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I think I ended up hand-squeezing about 5 lemons. From there I added some sugar and some agave (to cut down on the amount of sugar used). Then added some water, grenadine and a splash of pomegranate juice. Mixed it until it tasted good, so I can't share exact amounts of ingredients with you, but I'm all for experimenting and making according to taste anyways!
I later did a web search for how to really make homemade pink lemonade and the recipes that surfaced were all made with cranberry juice. Sounds good enough, but pomegranate and grenadine sounds better!





And Swampy rolling on the rug... he likes to follow me around the house, so you'll probably see him often on our tour. If you need more Swampy cuteness and missed the photos of his sink time, check them out here.
If you live in an older house, chances are you have a few wooden doors that stick from time to time. This happens especially when seasons change and when there's humidity in the air. To help a door out, take a bar of soap and rub it around the parts of the door that are sticking.
If you use any beauty products in smaller tubes with pumps, it's sometimes difficult to get the last bit of product out. No need to waste it- just turn the bottle upside down so that the rest of the product falls towards the top. To keep a small pump bottle actually turned on its head without falling over, stick it inside a toilet paper roll.






Got this at a super bargain! A vintage tin toy stove/oven. It's missing a few knobs sure, but it's already gotten tons of use from little ones that come over. And I just love the way it looks.
Travel/home cross-stitch was our first house warming gift when we moved into our current house- thanks Jessica!
The newest addition- found this on our recent trip to NC. I love vintage western stuff! The bells still ring and the voice box (kind of ) works.
And on the back wall... my anniversary gift to Skip from this year. And here's the story of how this came to be... we were eating dinner at our favorite Mexican restaurant down the street when we both looked over at a painting on the wall. Immediately both our eyes grew wide and started talking about 1, how awesome it was, and 2, how funny the glued on bark piece was. I thought how great it would be if I could talk the restaurant into selling it to me... 1, because it reminds me of our wedding because it's a mountain scene (and our wedding was in the mountains), 2, because it's from Mexico and one of our honeymoon stops was in Mexico. 3, it would be awesome in our house. 4, It would surely serve as a reminder for good times and eating at our favorite local Mexican spot. Long story short, I talked them in to letting it go (it was a struggle... they did actually bring all of the paintings back from their trips home to Mexico). The wood frame itself is pretty nifty and has little carved designs in it. And I still laugh just about every time I look at the fake (?) glued on bark trunk. 





The New Manchester Manufacturing Company started out as Sweetwater Manufacturing Company in 1849, and when sold in 1857 was renamed. It stayed open as a textile mill until 1864 when it was burned by Union forces in the Civil War. The original structure stood five stories tall and all that remains is part of the exterior brick walls. 







