Friday, November 27, 2015

Miss Mouse's Breakfast with Santa

Miss Mouse's Breakfast with Santa

I wrote this. I was feeling Christmasy.



Once, in a very small hole in a wall in a very large kitchen, lived Miss Mouse. She was a very small mouse, with a very small nose, and very small paws, and her very small hole was just the right size. She loved her little hole, because it was right near the big, black stove, where all the good things were baked, boiled, fried, and steamed. Every day new delicious smells would come from that great big stove, and every night the fire was banked up so that the coals would smolder until the morning. On the cold winter nights, Miss Mouse loved to curl up under the stove with her favorite shawl, and feel that warm stove and smell the memories of the feasts it had made.

On one particularly cold winter night, when the wind blew around the corners and the eaves, making sad sounds, Miss Mouse was curled under the stove when the big door to the kitchen opened and a gust of wind came in. The door shut again, and two feet came over in front of the stove. They were peculiar feet, rather small, and covered in wooly green slippers. The slippers stood on tip-toe and the little person took a big pot off the stove. This pot was making heavenly smells, and Miss Mouse desperately wanted to see what was inside it. It was such a big pot that you couldn't see much of the person carrying it, except the feet. The feet walked back to the door, and let in another gust of wind as they went through. Miss Mouse hesitated, then pattered across the floor as fast as possible to go out the door before it closed.

Outside, it was just beginning to get light out, but Miss Mouse couldn't see the pot or the feet. The snow was deep on the ground, and the air was full of crystal flakes. It was very blustery, and the cold cut right through her little shawl. She looked around and around, until she saw the foot marks in the snow. She jumped in the first one. Blasts of wind tried to squish her or pull her out of the little hole, but she kept on going, right into the next three foot marks. When she jumped to the fifth mark, a big white owl swooped down out of the darkness and tried to snatch her up. It grabbed with its big feathery feet, but she burrowed into the snow, and waited. The owl hopped around on the snow for a while, but the wind was fierce and the owl was not hungry enough to hunt around in a heap of snow. Miss Mouse was very cold now, soaked to to skin, and her little shawl was drenched. She climbed out of the hole, and hopped to the next foot mark, and then next, and the next. By now it was dawn, and the snow glistened and sparkled as it swirled around. She saw the pot again now, and the little person carrying it was just going through a door into a big wooden house, with chimneys smoking everywhere. Miss Mouse darted through the door at the last second, and it shut the cold and the wind out behind her.

Now she saw that the feet had belonged to a little man, who gave the pot to a little woman. The room was vaulted and spacious, but filled with little people like the man and woman. A wide wooden door, with knobs low down, was thrown open then, and a whole crowd of little people then trooped into this other room. Miss Mouse followed them and the big pot, and the great room she entered was so bright that she had to look at the dimmest things first. There was a dark wooden table with benches on either side, covered with a feast fit for a king. There was turkey, and ham, and fried eggs, and heaps and heaps of bacon. There were jugs of milk, and cream, and wine, and cider. There were platters of apples piled high, heaps of oranges, fried mushrooms, piles of toast with pools of creamy butter. At the end closest to Miss Mouse, there was a jolly woman, taller by twice than the little people, laughing at their antics as they closed around the table and filed into the seats. At the far end of the table was an even fatter, jollier man, laughing and waving for the little people to come and sit. But the biggest, most dazzling thing in the room, was a tall fir tree, standing upright behind where the big man sat. It was covered in glistening orbs of glass, and delicate ornaments of gold and silver. Under the tree were colorful packages covered in bright paper. At the top glistened a great gold star, and all over the tree magical lights floated, blazing white and yellow all around. It filled the hall with blazing, cheerful light, and made Miss Mouse forget for a moment how cold and tired she was.

Now all the little people were seated, except the first little man she had seen and the little woman with the pot. They ceremoniously gave the pot to the jolly woman, and as they bowed the little man caught sight of Miss Mouse. “Hello! Who have we here?” He exclaimed, “ I do believe it is Miss Mouse from the kitchens!” Miss Mouse gave her best curtsy. The little woman was very kind, and said, “Miss Mouse, would you like to join us elves in a breakfast with Santa?” Miss Mouse was very glad to do this, hanging her wet shawl by the fireplace and coming up to the table. The little elf lady made a place for Miss Mouse on the table (for even very polite mice may sit on tables to eat). Santa, that great fat jolly man, bowed his head, and they all did the same. He said grace, and then carved the turkey. Miss Mouse ate until she could hold no more, and all the elves and Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus had eaten their fill.

Now the table was cleared off, and Mrs. Claus ceremoniously went to the blazing tree and gave Santa the first present. Then everyone brought out their gifts, one by one opening and exclaiming over them. Santa gave Mrs. Claus a beautiful comb for her white hair, and she gave him a new pair of rabbit skin gloves. The head elf gave his wife a neat little green coat with beautiful designs on it, and Santa gave him a new sledge. Finally, every present had been opened. Miss Mouse had enjoyed herself immensely, and was just getting ready to slip away when Santa turned to her and asked, “What do you desire for Christmas my dear?” Miss Mouse paused. She knew exactly what it was that she wanted, but it seemed to big a thing to ask. “Anything at all my dear.” She decided. “What I most dearly want is a little kitchen of my own, in my little hole, with its own warm stove to make delicious smells of my own.” Santa looked very wise, and winked at the head elf. The head elf winked back, and then helped Mrs. Claus to put the big good smelling pot on the table. Then she opened up the lid and the delicious smell filled the room. She started scooping out heaps of popped corn, buttery and delicious. Miss Mouse ate three whole pieces, before she was too full to hold another bite. Sighing with happiness, she sat back for a moment, but now the party was breaking up and it was time to go home.


She took her leave of Mr. and Mrs. Claus, and the head elf and his wife, then she got her shawl and scurried back to the door, over the fresh new still snow, and into the kitchen. She looked at the big stove, and then her hole. The stove was so warm and delightful that she couldn't resist going under it to curl up, warm and cozy, for a snug nap after her delightful breakfast. She slept and slept, and when she woke it was quite dark outside. She pattered to her hole, but it was different. Instead of chill and shadowy, her hole was light up with warm golden light, and quite warm. She looked around, and there in the corner was a brand new stove, with a little stove pipe and a little wood stack. In the fire box was a little banked up fire, and on the warming box sat a little note. “Merry Christmas Miss Mouse, and thank you for joining us for breakfast -Santa Claus”

Sunday, November 1, 2015

How it all turned out

Wow, what a cool costume dance!

We had so much fun and I got it all done! Whew!

I spend all that time making the costumes, and all that work is really worth it, but what really makes or breaks a costume is the person that wears it. This year, everyone was so fantastic, and made their respective costumes come to life

Jolena was the most amazing Danielle deBarbaroc: so elegant! So amazing! She totally stole the night! (She also won the best women's costume prize)




My armor ended up really nice. I wish I could have made it better, but my fist attempt at armor was, on the whole, a ripping success.



Becca made an amazing viking, and it was so much fun copying the large scale work on Stoick's outfit. I even convinced her to wear the fur cape. :-D




I only did the vest for this costume, and a little advising, but she rocks it, dontcha think? (plus, she is dancing with Barbossa!!!)


And last but not least, there is Cori as Bellatrix Lestrange; this one speaks for itself. :-)


It was great! Good times were had, so many cool costumes were there! 








Wednesday, October 21, 2015

What is up:

I have been doing nothing but costumes and watching The Flash.



I like the Flash. It is like the Spiderman character of DC, in many ways. I have mostly dismissed DC as dark and depressing and unworthy of my time, because of their characters like Superman and Batman. These characters have dark stories, full of unhappy endings and the futility of goodness. However, the Flash has been surprisingly upbeat.

I finished the Ever After costume, the Jack Sparrow vest, the Jane Foster costume, and the Stoick costume. Now for Bellatrix....


Thursday, October 15, 2015

Random stuff

Why is everyone talking in poetry? *Left brain rebels* :-)

I have been sewing like mad, and doing other things. Like, I learned to make armor. And wings.

Mostly costume work for me nowadays, although I am also working up to a wedding dress for a cousin.

My costume list includes:

Danielle DeBarbaroc from Ever After, the Breathe dress she wears to the ball.

Jane Foster from Thor 2, an obscure blue dress with armor

Stoic the vast, but turned into a girl ("gender bent")

Jack Sparrow, also gender bent 

Bellatrix Lestrange

Hmmmmmmm, I think that is it. Most of them are undone as of now, but they need to be done pretty quick now....



Thursday, September 24, 2015

What I have been thinking about recently

What I have been thinking about recently:

What I got when I looked up "pretty pictures"

Has anyone else experienced that tangled-brain that comes from trying to think about too much at once? When your circuits go haywire and you can't logic anymore? It usually happens to me when I am tired, or when I take too much on at once, or when I consume things I am allergic to. For a person who thinks all the time, this is a really hard state to function in. Also, it usually produces really bad ideas.

How much stuff does a person actually need? I am narrowing down my possessions, as I redo my house, and I have a lot of books and do-dads that I probably don't need. If I was sentimental I might keep them. Is a set of 3D puzzles going to get used? How much historically-accurate clothing do I need for my work? How many pairs of shoes do I need? So many decisions.

Loneliness is part of being a grown up. An immature person goes around begging for friendship and for their needs to be fulfilled, a mature person realizes that they must stand on their own two feet. Everyone outside of you has their own lives to live, and if you are strong and wise enough to understand it, you will... "mind your own business" in the best of ways.

 No one else can actually make you ok. That is why God does it. Making you ok is the whole point of our faith. So in a very real way, God IS a substitute for people, in that he has provided for it. I don't think he is the same as having people. It isn't like you are going to take God to lunch or play frisbee with God, or even have a back and forth conversation out loud. And I think humans do need those physical things. God is more core than that need.

Discipline or something. Mostly an interesting picture to break up the monotony.

Leading a disciplined life is something I need to do. I am not doing it. Darn. What is a disciplined life? My awesome definition was this: a disciplined life is when you curb the most destructive desires of the flesh, and moderate the desires that are good and fulfill them in proper proportion. As such, it is in accordance with walking by faith, and is not inherently legalistic... I think. How you actually do the curbing and moderating is a work in progress. Theoretically it is different for everyone. For me I think it is making my body do stuff. At least that is what my parents tell me, and I think I agree. There is, at least, an 85% chance that they are right. Also, going to bed on time and getting up early and doing chores regularly and brushing my hair daily and washing my clothes and stuff. :-|

I am working on armor for a costume (!) and it is going well, but the planishing takes FOREVERRRRR. And the original in the movie had a front and a back out of metal, but in real life the costume was made out of some sort of foam or plastic, so the back actually would have to be more flexible than the stainless I have. Hence, I am not making the back, or (for that matter) the double shoulder armor ("pauldron") because of the planishing. I am going to do a good job on the etching though, and my version is better than any other version I have seen on the internet so far. And it is my first time making armor, so it is all awesome. :-)

I have three sisters, a brother, myself, Jolena,and Cameron to sew for, if nothing else comes up, when it comes to costumes. And I am making two for myself if possible, because the folk dance costume with the armor is cool, but I also wanted to make a Spiderman dress, and there is a costume swing dance so now I am totally making the Spiderman dress. Booya.

Also everyone I know (<exaggeration) is getting married. Or they have beaux. Or interested parties. And I get to sew some wedding stuff! Like a whole wedding dress! ISN'T IT JUST THE MOST EXCITINGEST THING EVER?! 

That is the most macro things. I am also doing school. Lots of school.

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Emily wishes me to make a post

For Emily!

What is up?

ALIENS!

Like this:


Humanity loves it's alien invasion stories. I am thinking of writing one myself.


Wednesday, August 19, 2015

A fond farewell to a very dear tent.

My tent, it is sad to say, must go. At least, the sides are going. SO, this is it's last few days as a tent.


In case I forget, or one of you who reads this hasn't heard this story, this is a brief history of why I sleep in a tent, and how it came to be here:



When I was 18, I had my own room inside my parents house. I was the only child that had their own room, and it was great. It even had a secret passage to my sisters room. But I wanted/needed to start phasing out of the house, so I was going to get/make a tiny house. You know, the ones on the trailer, with a loft for a bed and a super small living space? Well, Dad said, "You should try out something a little cheaper before buying a tiny house." So, I bought a tent for $350 and built a wooden platform for it, with posts in the ground.
I built the bed too, with help from Zack again. Custom day bed from recycled wood...

It was the first time I built any kind of building thing, and I did it almost all on my own (Dad used the skill saw for me, cutting the flooring and the tops of the posts, and my brother helped with the two-person bits. Zack rocks.) So, besides being "my own" it is rather a special part of my growing up, that I am sadly/nostalgically improving upon. One last sentimental thought: I will always love the smell of tarred canvas, which is what my clothes and bed have smelled like for two years now.


BUT, it is by no means perfect. The floor plan is hexagonal, and (while trying not to go into too many specifics) I can tell you that every part of the building shows my.... neophyte skills. The posts are not square to the walls, the stud framing is hilarious, and the flooring is uneven. That said, the basic frame is in good enough shape to keep for a while, even though the canvas is wearing out. So, I am taking off the canvas and putting board and batten siding and a roof on the thing.

I have many talents, but photography and housekeeping are not on the list.
I am so excited to work on this: one of my favorite things to do is build. 

For my own satisfaction, here is the basic idea of what I am doing:
The hexagonal floor plan is based off the tent's shape, and I am keeping that shape. The tent is designed to have eight posts, one at each corner and one in the middle of each of the "door" sides, which face eachother. Basically, and extruded hexagon with a pointed roof, with two of the roof facets being divided in half and peaked. Like this:

So, what I currently have is a post at each corner and a stud-wall kind of structure on the peaked sides. Then there is a truss going from two posts and a couple supports from the peaked ridge to support the roof.

What I am doing is putting boards on the sides that don't have a peak, and then roofing the whole thing. :-)


Monday, August 3, 2015

Really quick...

Becca told me to post 7 lines from the 7th page of something I wrote.

I never have a long enough attention span to write 7 pages, apparently, so here is a random (and only approximately) 7 lines:

He meditatively gulped from his tankard, then choked. “Well, your first blessing will be that your wine will always be better than this. In fact, lets make it interesting; you will have the finest spiced wine, so fine that it will be something entirely on its own. Yes, that seems like a good blessing. You should call it something good. Come up with a good name, will you? I will think of two more blessings.” They sat meditating for a while, until Tobligundaremusartolimew XVII stated, “I have the name. The drink should be called after someone, and since Tobligundaremusartolimew XVII is a little too mu-” “TOBLI-WHAT? Well I know what your second blessing will be…” “-too much, I will call it Throob.”

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Dear blog

Dear Blog,

I have been thinking about you a lot recently. Even though I have not seen you in a while, the things I want to say to you are always on my mind.

School and work have kept me from writing. Although it has been too long, maybe you will agree with me that sewing for 9 hour stints does not provide excessive time or energy to form words into sentences. At least the 9 new petticoats are done, and the bonnets are almost there too. I do not know if I already told you, but my last three college tests went well: I got credit on all of them.  Excuses are never lacking; I now have federal taxation, advertising, and another marketing test to study for.

Maybe sometime soon I will write some more to you. I want to rant about alien invasions, individuality, zombie apocalypses, heaven(s), and what I ate for lunch.

Until that happy time, I remain, yours sincerely,

Cassie

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

What I have been working on

It has been a bit, but there are some good reasons for it.

First of all, we went to Mother Earth News Fair with our wood-fired forges (http://whitloxhomestead.com/) and that was a lot of fun. Cori blacksmithed all day every day. I went through the fair, and Becca bought chicks. If you have any interest in homesteading etc. you should check out Mother Earth News and their fairs!

I got a book there (Mom and Dad bought it for me) about edible plants. Of course, that means today's lunch was a chickweed salad, with some mallow, sheep sorrel, and daisies.

I am also doing school, college as I am sure you have seen, and I am buckling down to do three tests in a week. I am in chapter 5 of my text books, on average, so I need to get cracking.

It is also starting to be hay season, and though I don't do nearly as much as the rest of the family in this season, there is enough work for everyone. Yesterday we got the equipment out and sharpened and oiled. I was replacing old mower blades with Becca, finding and puting away tools (I tend to be the one that organizes the toolboxes), moving the skidsteer, hitching equipment, and my personal favorite: riding the skidsteer bucket up in the rafters to bring down the accumulator. Fun stuff.
This accumulator is like ours, but I found the pic on the internet
And finally, I have also been working on compiling a Bible study on our hope. It is very hard. Very, very hard. I will post the draft soon, after I edit it and make it somewhat clearer (instead of mere notes that I cannot understand afterwards.

Monday, June 1, 2015

Puzzles

I like doing puzzles. Here are a few of my favorites:

Physical puzzles, like the Gordian knot above. I also like the Rubik's cube, but I don't know how to do the last layer.

Computer games, like Myst, Riven, Uru, Portal, Nancy Drew, all  the ones with puzzles. The Myst series is by far my favorite. You should try them!

Puzzles on paper, like Sudoku, logic grid puzzles, and (a new favorite) nonograms.  You should try a nonogram out here, but you will have to google an explanation because the site is from Russia. :-)






Friday, May 29, 2015

My chickens are awesome!

Isn't it beautiful?

My amazing chickens are already laying...


Not in the nest boxes I made so nicely for them.


Isn't it beautiful?! :-D

Update: Mom found a nest in the garden, so I am tightening up security. Also, this one turned out to be a double yolker. :-)

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

The Truth About It All!


    You will find that I talk about truth a lot. The following is my framework for truth, and why I think it is so important to find truth.

    We need the truth, as humans. If you do not have the truth, you live a deluded life. Every lie that you believe is a step in the direction of Satan, every truth is a step towards God. An  extreme example is the criminally insane; they believe an untruth (the lie that they can/should get what they want through criminal actions) to such an extent that they are certifiably insane. Knowing the truth about everything leads us to right actions, and the lack of truth leads to wrong actions. That makes truth vital to a Christian's life!

    Truth tells us about grace, love, faith, hope, God, and many other pivotal ideas.  If you are uncertain about the truth of your eternal hope, will you be certain that you need to keep trusting God? If you are ignorant of the truth of God's love, will you love the way he says to? We must find the truth about our own faith as well: what is it that we believe in? What part do we play in God's story? In short, Truth Matters! It is also hard to get.

    How do we find the truth then? Where can we get it? Which teacher has it? What denomination or sect has it? Thankfully, in the vast wilderness of advertised truths, God has given us the truth in the form of scriptures. Yet, how do we find the truth in these scriptures?

    There are a couple ways to read and interpret the scriptures: 

  • Having a teacher tell you what it means before/as you read it.
  • Reading it to find out what the author was trying to say.
    Having a teacher tell you what scripture means is the easiest answer. You read the Bible, and then a person tells you what it means. Or they tell you an idea, and give you the scriptural support. In both cases, a person (Wayne Grudem, John Piper, Jonathan Edwards, John McArthur, C.S. Lewis, James Vernon McGee, Chuck Swindall, a parent, a mentor, a pastor, etc.) is telling you what the Bible means. I think this system is a bad idea

    The alternative is reading the Bible with the intention of hearing the author. You read the scripture, and you find out what the author was trying to say. If he never says it, he is not trying to say it; if he says something repeatedly and clearly, he is trying to say it; if he talks about it in a certain way, he means it in that way, etc. etc. It sounds simple, just reading what the author says, and yet that means that if Paul never mentions Heaven as the place you go to when you die, then he probably doesn't think that. 

    This means sacrificing the group thinking,  and sacrificing the safety of the herd. YOU must be responsible for the truth of what you believe, if you are figuring it out yourself.

    But what if we need these teachers? What if we CAN'T find out what those obscure Apostles and Prophets meant? No, we can do this; scripture is meant for the common man. God has given us scripture in our own language, with the study resources to explore the original language too. It isn't rocket science to go to your Bible and look for what Peter, John, and the rest were trying to say. Those men were qualified, trained by Christ to teach the gospel. They were no dummies, they knew the story and the plan better than anyone. In fact, you could say that since neither God nor Christ directly wrote those books, these men own Christianity. We need to find out what they believed, it just takes time and a willingness to sacrifice what you already think. Not easy, but not complicated.

    This is something we all need to grapple with, and determine: are we going to sit and listen to a teacher telling us what the Bible says, or are we going to go find out ourselves?



Thursday, May 21, 2015

I know I just posted but...

I just posted a long thing, but this came up:

MY HERO!!!

Fun Blog Challenge Thingy

So my sister Becca has two blogs



She just posted one of those weird challenge things that let you talk about yourself on the internet, and nominated me for it too. And because I wouldn't miss a chance to talk about myself....

But... I am not challenging someone else or doing any of the tedious rule copying/following. I will only answer the questions, because that is the fun part.


So here they are:

1. Something you feel strongly about?
Um. Lots of stuff. I am going to say Truth, in all things, but especially in theology. Truth is super important: Truth tells us how the world works, about the reality that exists beyond our perception and feelings. Truth is really important for everything and I cannot possibly say everything I think about it in a tiny, easy-to-read snippet.

2. A place you would like to visit someday?
Hm. I dunno. I am kind of Bilbo: I like staying home, drinking tea, and reading, and taking walks in places I know. And then, if I HAVE to go on an adventure, I usually run into trolls and nearly get my friends eaten. True, I may help those same friends escape from prison, and then chat with dragons while wearing magic rings, returning home fabulously wealthy and with a terrific tale, but I spend a lot of the trip thinking of my tea set and warm fire side.  Maybe I would like to visit England. :-D

3. Cool, obscure skill or talent you have?
Spitting. I can spit.  And I can almost whistle through my fingers. 

4.Something I most likely don't know about you?
I am your sister. You know lots about me. You might not know that I am secretly an evil mastermind, playing a globe-spanning chess game with another villain, named Pietro.

5. Favorite genre of music?
Probably movie music- dramatic classical, although I do enjoy Relient K, Lindsey Stirling, and Owl City.

6. What are you going to do with your life?

Probably something really mundane. Farming, I hope

7. How do you react in stressful/frightening situations?
You just want me to say I faint, don't you? Well I do, as you well know. But in my dreams, I fight like a ninja. 

8. Is being right/correct important?
Uh, yeah. See my statement about truth...

9. What is the last word you spoke aloud?
Probably "fabulous", in the sentence, "I am so fabulous!" After finding these memes...

10. If you could change anything about your physical appearance, would you? If so, what?
I would be fit, and not fat. Because being fat has a weird social stigma, and also it is really annoying to try and live around it....

11. Do you lean more towards introvert or extrovert?
Introvert, people are exhausting. Bilbo is an introvert. I am Bilbo.

12. Slugs or snails? (Important question, that.)
Snails. Still slimy,  but they have a handle to grab so they can be gotten out of the way. Slugs are just gross, and they get slime all over, and if you accidentally touch one it is all over for the rest of the day because it doesn't come off!

13. If you were travel back in time to any time period, where would you go? And this is not an optional trip. 
You're lucky you get to chose the time.
Ok, so mandatory trip to the past, in any place and time? Well, I will decide that I will be here (Oregon), in the 1840s,  Because I work at a historical site from that time and so I feel prepared. :-) Plus you could get free land! If I was being smarter, I would choose to be part of Abraham's family or something, because even though it would be harder, God made some sweet promises to them and you get big rewards for good behavior.

14. Did anything terrible happen to you in your childhood?
I think I was depressed. Other than that, my childhood was awesome. I grew up on a farm!

15. How fast can you run?


Actually, I am pretty fast. Not Athletic-Boy fast, but Could-Probably-Beat-More-Than-Half-Of-You fast... maybe. :-D

Have I ever told you how I feel about my nose?


Or at least, my tent and recent exploits as an herbalist? :-)

The tent
A short history: when my family decided that my brother needed his own room, and hence I would need to trade around and share a room again, I decided to not do that. I decided to build my own bedroom... so with help I bought a tent and built a platform for it out of lumber we have from the farm here, and voila! Now I sleep in a tent. It has some great improvements: I ran an extension cord out so that I have light, I built a stove (with lots of help from Dad), and there are many cool things like that around... 


I have also been working on collecting the herbs I want to have next winter. So far I have a pound or two of Horsetail, and a few bunches of Stinging Nettle.

Stock image from Google

Horsetail grows in moist areas, like ditches etc. I got mine from the logging landing that has a spring near it, in our woods. My brother and his friend helped collect it and the nettles. 

Stock image of a stinging nettle from Google
The boys were really helpful with the nettles; while I gingerly snipped and carried, they whacked and toted. :-) The nettles really do sting, but only if you touch the bottoms of the leaves or the stem, generally. I got stung and I think the boys did too, but we got a whole bunch of the stalks for putting in teas or hair treatments. 


The nettles like moist areas too, and I have seen a lot in ditches, but while the horsetail does well in almost-mud, the nettles seem to like perpetually moist soil, in the shade, instead.

That is not even close to my whole list. The list looks more like this:

Herbs I want to gather/grow this year:
Nettle
Horsetail
St. John's Wort
Peppermint
Sage
Parsley
Rosemary
Thyme
Blackberry leaf
Dandelion, root and leaf
Chamomile
Rose hips
Elderberry
and more as I find them...

Some of these are on the list because I want to try to make this:


What have you been up to?