Do you know how to read an almanac??? This is one of the those things that was passed down to me. My Granny taught me how to use and read the Blum’s Almanac. I’m very thankful that she taught me how to do this. A part of my Granny’s legacy now can live on with me as I plant each season. I do plant and transplant by the almanac signs and use the Almanac prior to planting. It’s my “Gardening Bible”.
Here’s the signs I look for to plant or transplant Full Month view by each day complete with moon phases The signs to stay away from when you need to plant 🪴 but these are great for weeding or trimming.
I hope this is a helpful tutorial especially if you have never done or used this before via picture format. Wilkes County Hardware keeps the Blum’s Almanac in stock each year. Last year was the first year that we debuted the garden calendar. Look for the 2024 editions to arrive in November.
This is definitely the quick version of a plant guide!!! Love it 😍
FYI: Some folks will not get a haircut, have a dental procedures, or even have major surgery IF the sign isn’t correct. I have answered many questions for people when it was a good time to can, or what the correct body sign was because they had a medical procedure upcoming.
Dental procedures… wait for a sign that is below the waist for faster wound healing.
I am a firm believer in using this as my planting guide. I haven’t ever used the Almanac to plan a surgery or a haircut, so I can not speak to the effectiveness of this expertise… the Almanac does say it does not give medical advice, but provides advice on the best days to do such activities such as gardening, and cooking. The “Zodiac man signs” are included as the 12 signs dividing the human body into parts. Ancient astrologers believed that each sign influenced a certain portion of the body, so folks have used this for years seeking the “best days” medical advice.
True confession time, I love plants. Now that the truth is out, and I’ve officially said it, “I’m a plant lady”, my green little plant heart is “rooting” for you to get on board with me! I must admit the presence of green plants in my home makes me smile on the dreary, dank, bitterly cold days of winter. Simply put, my Plants bring me joy.
Here’s to Going Green!
October has arrived!
It’s a beautiful time of the year, but the reality for a “Plant Lady” living in western North Carolina, means a significant dip in nighttime outdoor temperatures. Nighttime temperatures can begin to dip into the 50’s some nights. The daytime temperatures are still quite gorgeous with ample, warm sunshine all day. Dare I say, the word FROST! But alas, Frost will be expected by the end of October, if not before. All that being said, my green, tender, warm-natured plants must find residence back inside, as they have enjoyed basking in the summer warmth on the back porch steps for the last few months.
Frosty Fall mornings will be coming soon!
For me, as a “plant mama” who enjoys her houseplants flourishing outdoors during the late spring and summer months, knows the time of change is arriving. I must prepare for the transition from the shaded back porch steps to life indoors for the late Fall and Winter months.
These beauties will be headed inside by the end of this week. Low temperatures are expected to be in the 40’s by Saturday night.
So how do I prep these “green little goddesses” for the adjustment indoors??? AND keep them “growing”all year long. Here’s my step by step guide that I have been using the last few years for moving my cherished plants back inside.
1. Evaluate each plant. Repot if necessary. I tend to repot plants before moving indoors and allow a few days of adjustment before moving inside.
This year, I’m in the process of repotting a few plants prior to moving them indoors.
2. Consult your almanac planting calendarand be a weather watcher!!!! Weather can change quickly and cooler nights are a given in October. Be proactive and begin working towards moving your plant babies back inside in late September or early October before the cold weather hits. I never transplant until it’s a good time to do so! I’m a firm believer in this step! Unsure how to use an almanac??? Click the link below to learn more!
3. Remove any damaged leaves, or dead areas of the plant. Take additional rootings if possible to begin new plants! “Get growing”! What type of plant lady would I be if I didn’t root my own plants 😂.
My kitchen window is my rooting station for my newest plants. The sunlight is perfect for them to root beautifully and flourish into a newly established plant. For plant roots that take a little bit of extra work… stocked inside Wilkes County Hardware
4. Spray each plant you plan to move indoors with insecticidal soap. This will help prevent bugs from making their way inside with your plants. I also spray the soil as well. Reapply as needed if pests appear during the fall or winter.
Insecticidal soap sold at Wilkes County Hardware For the DIYer… I’m sure you can find a homemade version of Insect soap on the internet. Spray bottles are a essential item stocked inside Wilkes County Hardware.
5. Clean pot to remove surface dirt prior to moving indoors.
6. Call in the “troops for assistance” if needed… to help move your plants inside. Make it a family project! Get everyone involved!
7. Find the sweet spots… where are these plants going to thrive and have the correct light requirements. Take note to keep plants away from heat registers, drafts to maximize the plants potential.
8. Find your joy in planting! I do have plants that I haven’t been able to get “growing”. But, I haven’t given up on all plants. Take the time to grow what you love and find your joy! Final plant motivation thoughts… “I beleaf” in you! Take a “leaf of faith”! You can do this! I’m “rooting” for you!
One of my favorite old black and white Christmas movies has a scene where the star, Barbara Stanwyck, is asked to flip a pancake high in the air as she is making her trademark pancakes for breakfast for a group of House guests that have gathered in her kitchen.
She is terrified that she will be unable to make the flip high in the air because truly she isn’t a cook, unbeknownst to her House guests. After encouragement, she goes for it, eyes closed and the flipped pancake somehow leaps back into the pan. The room is filled with joy and laughter as the completed pancakes are laid out for the breakfast bounty.
Christmas in Connecticut, Making Pancakes for the first time
Pancakes have to be one of the best meals for morning or even a special evening meal. Whether you are a novice or a cooking pro in the kitchen, I hope this recipe that I found a few years ago for making pancakes, will inspire y’all to “flip them high” as you make the lightest, fluffiest pancakes ever.
Stack them high… For National Pancake Day or just any day… Dry mix ingredients… this can be prepared ahead of time and stored in pantry, ready to go when you are all set to make pancakes or even waffles. The basic recipe calls for 2 cups of the combined dry ingredients with wet ingredients added. Wet ingredients… FYI: A dash of vanilla is always a good addition to your wet ingredients, which I usually add into my pancake batter. Combine wet ingredients with the dry mix I use my favorite skillet or waffle maker to make these. ORTry something new!!! Make the Pinterest version of sheet pan pancakes!!! Find your favorite baking pan, spray with baking spray, or butter well. Preheat oven to 425. Add in pancake batter as an even layer across baking pan. Sprinkle in fruit or other toppings if desired. Bake 15 minutes.
The potential is endless! Y’all might just “flip out a bit” over how easy this recipe truly is once you make it.
Making a basic pancake or adding in a sweet addition… sprinkles, chocolate chips, or blueberries. Take your pancakes from basic to simply light and delicious with this recipe the next time you are in the mood for this breakfast treat.
Which one of these statements BEST describesthe cook in your household???? Are you the Southern cook who uses a recipe as the roadmap to the ultimate meal success making absolutely NO alterations to the recipe as you cook OR do you simply use a recipe as a reference… using available ingredients on hand??? Too hard to answer??? I think I’m both but it depends on what I preparing.
When it comes to baking, I’m always going to be a recipe reader prior to baking, and even during “the making process” of the dessert.
Here’s one of my main reference tools from my kitchen wall… family favorite recipes…thanks to chalkboard paint. Yes, you can find chalkboard paint at Wilkes County Hardware!
Casseroles… Creative Cooking:
Alternately, when it comes to making a casserole, I’m definitely the latter. I’ll make a new casserole based on ingredients on hand AND using leftovers found inside the refrigerator and pantry. My favorite phrase to describe my supper creations in this type of instance would be“creative casserole cooking”.
Pantry staples…
For the creative cook, Casseroles are a chance to experiment with different flavors, textures, and ingredients to create the ultimate family style casserole dish. That’s the ultimate beauty of a casserole, you don’t have to be a recipe follower, you have the freedom to make and create as you cook! Use the “formula” guidelines below for making the perfect casserole adding these different components. Keep on reading to make and create a new family favorite casserole.
Casserole Cookbook Fun:
I’m betting that you can find a multitude of casserole recipes in any Southern cookbook. Lol, there might be a whole section devoted to just casseroles! I would bet that you may find some casseroles that you have NEVER heard of before or maybe even have the curiosity to make them. Go and seek out your favorite church cookbook, or elementary school fundraiser cookbooks, and you can find many different versions of the same casserole recipe too!
I keep a small stash of my favorite cookbooks right on the kitchen countertop. The cute doggie cookie jar holds some of my handwritten recipes.
I’m not really sure when “The Casserole” came into existence, nor is it the purpose of this blog post today, but as the seasons begin to shift and change, and the holiday season begins soon, I have begun to think about my favorite casseroles to make and consume. AND potential new casseroles to try… Pineapple Casserole, you might be on the slate for the holiday season!
After all, casseroles are the ultimate comfort foods and have become a “Mainstay” in most Southern households. Casseroles truly hold center stage at the long table at church potlucks and are always at the forefront of family holiday meals. So let’s dig into “The Casserole”. I’m getting hungry y’all! Anyone else???
Components of A Casserole:
Casserole components are pretty simple in composition: protein, vegetables, binding ingredients such as (cheese, eggs, sour cream, cream base soups, etc) and the crunch. But, I must admit that the crux of a casserole has to be the binding… the creamy sauce brings together the ingredients formulating your casserole dish. The binding ingredients once completely warmed in the oven, creates a bubbly visual that lets the maker know that the final product is done and ready to eat and consume.
The beginnings of Chicken Casserole… a family favorite…. Starting with the chopped chicken chunks Adding the binding… cheeses and soups. I add a bit of parmigiana cheese and cheddar cheese into my chicken casserole binder … it’s an flavorful addition. Milk instead of water adds a nice touch of a boost of flavor to the binder sauce.
Now, we must discuss the last component of a casserole… the crunch. Adding a bit of crunchiness on the top layer of the hot, bubbly casserole dish takes it to a whole other dimension of flavor, complexity, and texture not previously recognized.
Classic flavors like the crunch of a chopped Ritz cracker or French fried onions to top off old favorites casseroles, like the green bean casserole. Imagine taking these classic recipes to a higher level by adding a new flavor profile and texture with Panko, nuts, bacon bits, Saltines, or even crushed potato chips, or crushed pretzels. Your choices are endless! I bet it will be a smashing success!
A staple for Chicken Casserole topping (the crunch) and Thanksgiving Dressing!!!
I would just reckon that the top crunchy layer is the distinctive part of the casserole that sets it apart from someone else’s at the church potluck… beckoning the hungry parishioners to try that crunchy, browned casserole over the soggy topped casserole carefully situated next to the beautifully browned casserole. I know which one I’m spooning out and sampling.
Defining The Casserole:
As a student of history, I would bet that casseroles were a staple in Southern homes during the First World War, The Great Depression and also during World War 2. A casserole could easily supplement OR be the main course of the meal AND extend the number of people one could easily feed during a time of rationing. Of course, the use available ingredients on hand during the cooking process was crucial during these war years. Casseroles did become very common during the 1950’s when convenient, canned goods were the central ingredients, making the evening meal a little bit easier to prepare.
Dish It Out!
As I have mentioned, casseroles are a mainstay of Southern cooking, but I’m also suggesting that the casserole dish ITSELF is important! Whether you use the classic 9 x 13 baking dish or another baking vessel, my gut tells me that most of us probably use the same casserole dish EVERY SINGLE TIME we make a casserole! Let’s face it, we all have our favorite cooking utensils, and bakeware that we routinely use more than others. I know that I have one or two “go to casserole dishes” that I always use over all the others in my kitchen.
This Lodge Dutch Oven would make some amazing casseroles! You can find this available for purchase at Wilkes County Hardware!
According to one definition, a casserole is a dish baked and served in the same dish. In Minnesota, Wisconsin, and the Dakotas casseroles are known as “hotdish”. A central ingredient of those “hotdish” recipes gravitates around the tater tot. There’s a whole debate about the hotdish vs the casserole … But for our purposes in the blog today, the dish itself is important “hotdish” or casserole!
AND remember, to never overfill to the top of your casserole dish prior to baking in the oven… are you chuckling as you read this??? It has probably happened to you at some point in your cooking experience, too much goodness in a dish overflowing everywhere all over your the inside of the oven. No one wants to be cleaning the oven as a result of the overflowing, bubbling, baking casserole. That’s definitely not magical!
Oven cleaner available at Wilkes County Hardware
Let the Casserole Magic Begin:
I firmly believe that part of the magic of the casserole has to be recipes themselves. The casserole recipes are as unique as each creative cook, using ingredients that you, as the chef, LOVE!
Enough said!! If you love it, and your family scarfs down the warm casserole goodness, SUCCESS !
Mojo Of Casserole Cooking:
There are definitely a few distinct advantages to casserole cooking, keep reading to get the casserole mojo mindset going right into the holidays.
Casseroles can feed a crowd, like the loaves and fishes in Biblical times. The spoonfuls of goodness can feed many in pinch or serve as a second meal as leftovers.
Casseroles can be prepared ahead of time… using the fix and freeze method which is a gift and a blessing to those who need a quick meal, like a sick loved one, a sleep deprived mom with a newborn baby, or even a family experiencing bereavement.
Casseroles can be the focus of the meal… breakfast, lunch or supper… yes, this dish can be served any time of the day. A versatile magical way to cook! Casseroles can also serve as a side dish, a “second fiddle”of sorts, to the main course. Have an abundance of vegetables from the garden???? Don’t be bewitched or bewildered by the excess. I bet you can find, make or create a casserole in order to use what you have! Now that’s just a bit of chef wizardry.
Casserole Comfort Food 101:
Nothing is better than on a cold, nasty day than making your favorite comfort foods. I have a few go-to dishes that I love as Comfort Foods. Casseroles fit perfectly within this description. With the ease of baking (using only ONE dish), then taking the hot, bubbly food out of the oven, casserole flavors wafting through the air, inhaling the first smells as it cools on the kitchen counter, and then finally the tasting… which warms the body, soul, and spirit. Comfort food at its best… right???Happy cooking y’all!
When people walk into our hardware store, they often say y’all have just a little bit of everything here don’t you!!! As we have entered into year number 8 of business, we have slowly expanded and refined our offerings to our customers. Here’s a sampling of our product offerings via ABC’s of Wilkes County Hardware.
Top down view overlooking the back corner of Wilkes County Hardware
Let’s begin by diving into the Amazing finds from All Around the Hardware Store! Sometimes our building might be considered an “Antique” due to its advanced age…1905 is A long time AGO!
A- Almanac, acetone, axe, American Flags, animal repellents
Deer repellent, snake and more!
B- bird feeder & seed, BBQ sauce, brooms, bi-fold door hardware, bungee cords, batteries, black iron fittings and pipe cut to size, bolts
C- Customers! We can’t do this without you!!!Thank you for shopping with local with us! It’s soooo easy to forget about local businesses when you’re busy running errands or just headed to that “box store” for something on your to do list. Keep the CASH in our community!
Thanks for shopping local and keeping the CASH in our community!
Sometimes all you need it just one bolt or fastener… that’s ok with us, no need to buy a whole box. This area of our store is often full of customers all day long.
G- Gardening tools, garden seeds, grass seed, gloves, glues, grilling accessories, Greased Lightning, gas cans, galvanized fittings and pipe cut to size, window glass cut to size
Lawn and Garden area has been moved towards the front of the hardware store. We are excited to offer new products in this busy area for our customers.
H- hammers, hooks, hinges, hand tools, hose barb, Howard wood cleaning products, honey(it’s local y’all!)
Only local honey sold at Wilkes County Hardware!!
I-I didn’t know you had this! I should have come here first… we have heard this a few times over the last 8 years when folks find what they need and more as they shop.
I- Iron Out, ice melt
J- Juxtaposition of old school hardware store with excellent customer service found in 2023 versus “the box store experience”in 2023, no self service checkout here.
J-Japanese beetle traps, joint compound
K-keys duplicated with ease, knives, kerosene heaters & replacement wicks
Wayne has been a fixture inside Wilkes County Hardware for over 20 years. He just celebrated his 85th birthday!!! I bet Wayne has made a key or two for you.
L- Ladder wall, this wall showcases some of our amazing local artisans work.
Our local artisans are prominently featured along the back ladder wall.
M- Mural.. have y’all noticed the new mural on the front side of the building? Why the chicken??? Our building was a poultry processing plant in its early years.
N-nails … we don’t sell these by the pound anymore but we have small size packs available for purchase as well as larger sizes, National Hardware what an amazing selection of all things related to home hardware and more!
O- Order it for me please! Yes, we special order items for our customers each and every week
O- O-rings of all shapes and sizes!
P- Pool supplies, paper towels, PVC fittings, PB Blaster, Pex fittings, plungers, plumbing supplies galore! PVC pipe, padlocks, potting soils, polyurethane and and plethora of so much more!
Our plumbing section has been recently updated
Q- Quite a step back into time.. our building dates back to 1905, they don’t build them like this anymore. You can quickly find what you need and save TIME by not driving to a box store fighting the traffic or the crowd… and if you need our help we are here to answer any questions you may have about your project.
Q- Quick knife/scissors sharpening done in a matter of a few minutes, Quartz piston clock… locally made
R- Repairs made to lamps, kerosene heaters, re-screening windows, and tool handle replacement
Fall and winter season is a busy time for Kerosene heater repairs
R- Ready Seal, rodent control products, Rid-X , rope cut to size or just buy it by the package.
Rocking chair… we brought this chair from our house once we bought the hardware store. I rocked my son as a baby in this rocking chair. It was a sweet reminder of home. Harry loved this chair as well.
S-Staff… we are blessed with an amazing team!
Richard & Coby … these two can fix just about anything! Wayne … the key master! Tim … expert in glass Lisa .. we can’t live without her! She is a gemAngie… I’m not sure what to say 😂😂😂Lastly, Carter Call … I don’t seem to have a good photo of him but he has been a star pool guy all summer long! Look for him at the hardware store in the afternoons and Saturdays to come!
S-snow shovels and sleds, locally made soaps, suet, screws ( sheet metal, lag, stainless, self tapping, wood, deck), spray paint, Shark Bite, sandpaper, stove pipe, screwdrivers and much more!
T- Take a few minutes to wander from the front of the store to the back of the store.. you never know what you might find!
We keep a variety of pellets in stock for our established Traeger customers.
U- U-bolts and unique gifts from locally sourced artisans
V- Don’t be vexed by our selection of furnace filters, we have so many different sizes in stock!
Furnace filters of all sizes!
V- Vulcan 55 gallon drum liners for your trash can
W- Wood stove… warm by the fire on those cold days
It won’t be long until this stove will be back in action again!
W- wheelbarrow, WD-40, window glazing, water hoses, locally made wooden bowls and boards, weed eater trimmer line, wing nuts, wrench
X- Xacto blades, Xtreme contractor trash bags
Y-y’all are always welcome
Our doors are normally open for most of the warmer months, and conversations are usually flowing most of the day… near the old wood stove.
Y- Yellow Quell- did you know that we sell pool supplies and test pool water???
Pool season runs from May to September for most of our pool customers. Thanks for shopping locally with us!
Z- Zep products, Zip ties(cable ties) , Zero-G lightweight hose
The best water hose for watering plants
That’s just a glimpse of some of the familiar hardware products that we have inside Wilkes County Hardware. Richard and I are proud to continue into year 8 with new products to be added into the hardware store lineup as the next year progresses. Thank you for your business and continued support.
Thank you!
Living the "hardwarelife", join us in our journey of hardware store ownership