Thursday, September 25, 2008

And what to do with the pumpkin seeds?

My younger brother Jon and I fight every year over who has the best pumpkin seed. He always loses although he doesn't agree with me and thinks he wins.

How can he? All he does is soaks the seeds in salt water over night and bakes them. How boring!!

I kind of invented this recipe myself and like most things I don't have measured ingredients.

Anita's Pumpkin Seeds
pumpkin seeds
Worcestershire sauce
margarine
salt (I started using McCormick's Broiled Steak Seasoning last year)
Heat oven to 225
rinse seeds
boil seeds in salt water for about 10 minutes.
dry seeds on a towel
melt margarine (just a couple of tablespoons)
mix margarine, Worcestershire sauce, and salt in a bowl and add seeds
spread out on a cookie sheet
bake for 1-2 hours
They are softer then the way my brother makes them and they are so tasty with the nutty flavor of the seeds.
I store them in the fridge (if there is any left overs) not sure if you have to, but I don't want to take a chance.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

It's Time. Let the comfort food cooking begin!

I just love as the weather get cooler and the pumpkins come in it is time to cook up some pumpkin soup.

Growing up my mom would make this in the fall, it is a recipe that my great grandmother made. Great Grandma was from Poland and I often wonder if it was handed down in the family more then I know (I do hope so).

I make mine a little different then moms. Mostly because I use half and half, and mom would use milk. Yes I know it is fattening, but I do use Slenda (lol) instead of sugar.

I don't follow actual measured ingredients, just one of those recipes you can play with. If you make it I hope you enjoy it as much as anyone that has tried it. I actually have some of my daughters friends asking for it this year. Most of them before trying thought it the grossest sounding recipe in the world.

Anita's Babcia's Pumpkin Soup

-Peel, de-seed, and cube whole pumpkin (canned pumpkin does NOT work in this recipe). I like to use a couple good size pie pumpkins, they have a good flavor

-In a large pot add pumpkin cubes and just enough water to cover

-Add pumpkin pie spices and alittle vanilla-Boil till pumpkin is soft.

-Drain the water, but reserve some for the dumplings.

-Mash pumpkin

-Add milk and half and half to the pumpkin. Add as much as you want to soup to be. (you can use 2% milk, but then the soup will not be that creamy)
-Add more pumpkin pie spices.
-Add sugar (or Splenda®) to taste.-Slowly simmer, stir frequently, till just about boiling.

Dumplings
-Mix flour-baking powder (about 3teaspoons)

-add a little sugar (or Splenda®)

-1 to 3 eggs (depending on how many dumplings you want)

-add some pumpkin pie spices and vanilla

-Add some of the warm reserved pumpkin water and a little warmed milk just enough so your flour is mixed in, you want it the constancy of cookie dough.

Give the soup one last stir and drop the dumplings in by spoonfuls and give them a little room (don't just drop them on each other or you will have 1 large dumpling.

Cover and simmer (on the lowest setting) for 20 minutes. *

*Important thing to remember if you want the perfect dumplings. When you cover the pot after dropping the dumplings in DO NOT uncover for the full 20 minutes, you need the steam to cook dumplings.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Wildlife Rehab and Me


I have now officially entered my 13th year of 'legal' wildlife rehab. Before this I really didn't know it was against the law to posses wildlife of any kind without a permit.

This is how I and many other rehabbers have started. 13 springs ago my husband comes home with a baby raccoon. It was in the middle of the road with its dead mother and siblings. He looked around just in case there were others and finding none he brings him home.

Not knowing what to really do with it, but knowing that they carry diseases and having a youngster at the time, I called the Humane Society in Ann Arbor and they gave me the number for an organization called Friends of Wildlife. I talked with a woman named Barb that dealt with raccoons and we chatted for quite awhile. We started talking about the animals that my family had on the farm that my dad was raised on and that we still used. She asked if I would be interested in wildlife rehab, that their organization was having their yearly meeting for new members that coming Saturday. She gave me directions to her house so I could drop off the little guy and by time I got there she made sure there was still room for me at the meeting.

The rest as they say is history!

This is a volunteer group that takes in, rehabs, and releases wildlife back where they belong. I am the official "Cottontail Placement Coordinator". Which means that I take in most of the calls for cottontail rabbits and give lectures about cottontails. 90% of the calls we get in are for advice. I get on average 700 calls a year. With the majority of those in April-May. It is really a full time job, but done on a volunteer basis. But like I said most of the calls are just informing the public on what to do if they find cottontails, whether it be a nest, a single baby, an injured adult.

Because cottontails are a prey animal they don't do well in captivity and can die just from stress. So keeping them in the wild is the best for them, but we do bring in babies if they have been very badly hurt, or if we are pretty positive that the mother has been killed. We also rehab adult injured or ill rabbits too.

Cottontails are one of the many animals that I have dealt with, but it has been my main animal. I love doing squirrels they are so flippin' cute. I have successfully raised reds, fox, and a flying squirrel also. I have filled in for one of the rehabbers when she was on vacation and feed a mean ass mink. Dealt with chipmunks and I am forbidden to rehab raccoons anymore.

Our organizations goal is to release these animals back into the wild and have them live successfully on their own (this means that cottontails really just become a hawks or coyotes meal, but THAT IS THE CYCLE OF LIFE). I started with raccoons and after a couple years raising them which means about 3-4 months of teaching them how to be raccoons. For them to be successful in the wild, (they must be wild). Unfortunately I had a group of about 6 babies that got conjunctivitis (an eye infection) and they needed medication. To do this twice a day my husband and I had to grab these 10 pound animals that didn't like to be grabbed out of their cage and given eye ointment and other medications., No that really isn't they way it went. My husband would grab them out of the cage and I gave them their treatments. Well it is not a fun and happy time grabbing these 10pound wild animals out of their cages 2 times a day for 10 days. It was just too much and to keep peace in the household I stopped rehabbing raccoons.

In the spring and fall I take on 'self feeding' squirrels. These are little guys that mostly eat on their own, and learning how to crack nuts. I have a large release cage in a small woods next to my house. So after they are eating on their own very well and climbing the large branches I have in the cage, during the day time I will leave the door open for them to start exploring and close them up in the evening when they come back to the cage. I have squirrel houses in the woods, and when it is time (which is really up to them) they will either start using the houses or most of the time they start building their own home and they are on their own, but I feed them all year long.
I love working with babies, but unlike rabbits that only eat up to 3times a day at most. Other animals must be feed many times a day (recently born animals will need nightly feedings too). And working full time at a 'real' job, I just can't do that anymore (whens retirement? :) ). Also cottontails are the only animals that we do what is called a 'cold release' which means that they don't have to be taught to survive on their own. They are independent at around 3 weeks of age and as long as they are hopping without falling over and don't have any health issues we release them.

People know me as "The Rabbit Lady" or "The Animal Lady". People find me through Friends of Wildlife, Neighbors, friends, and others are calling or coming over with all kinds of questions, concerns or animals. I think the animals know it also, as I seem to find animals or they find me.

The opossum that is pictured here is proof of that. This last spring my husband came home it was just getting dark, lucky it was still cold and he had his gloves on. He gets to the front door and here is a half grown opossum. He grabs it up and brings it in, I look at both of them and ask what's up? He figured someone dropped the little guy off and he got out of a cage. Well we put him back out and watch from the windows, he went to his little home next to the shed, but no mother or siblings. I fed him out there for a few weeks to make sure he stayed strong, we never seen him by the house again, by the start of summer he must have moved on.

Opossums are really sweet little things if you give them a chance. They are a marsupial and when born will go into the mothers pouch till old enough to start venturing out. Even when they are teeny tiny they look just like a opossum, just a miniature version of mom. Most people think that they carry all kinds of diseases, because they will play dead which includes drooling at the mouth and out their behinds, the slime can smell like a dead animal and be nasty in color. It's just a ploy. In all reality their body temperatures are usually too low to house germs, this is why they can eat dead animals and not get sick. Too bad alot of people don't know these facts and will end up killing these guys who have a big part in this world of ridding animal carcasses that can carry diseases. Opossums like many animals do have a function.


Here are the organizations I belong to and you can find much information:
Friends of Wildlife http://www.friendsofwildlife.net/
National Wildlife Rehabilitators Association http://www.nwrawildlife.org/
International Wildlife Rehabilitators Council http://www.iwrc-online.org/
You can find Michigan Wildlife Rehabbers at the MI DNR wesite http://www.michigandnr.com/dlr/

Thursday, September 18, 2008

The start of hunting season

Today is the first day of doe season in Southern Michigan. It is an early season that is not just for kids, but is only on private land.

I don't agree with it. 2 weeks ago I was on my way to work and coming into the road was a fawn that still had spots.

Deer almost never have a single baby. 3 is common, but 2 is usually the number. These babies may not be able to survive winter at this age if they don't have their mothers now.

This is also true for squirrel and cottontail rabbits. Until I got into wildlife rehab (I will get into that in the next blog) I didn't know that squirrel have 2 litters. One in the spring and one in the fall. Cottontails have babies from spring to fall. The latest baby cottontails I ever got in were on Oct. 31.

The start of small game is Sept. 15.

Sometimes I wonder how they make these rules. They stop the season right about breeding season for these animals.

I have written the DNR and have asked questions with no response.

I don't bow hunt, though the weather is usually wonderful in Oct. I do not feel confidant to shoot an animal with a bow. With a gun, I never take a 'pop shot'-I know where it is going and it will be a clean QUICK kill or I don't do shoot.

For now I will wait till Nov. 15th and I hope others do the same.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Starting again

About 5 years ago I started a blog and then lost it. I have no idea where it went. I tried the couple of email addresses I have and was never able to find it.

Since that time I have been reading my friends and others blogs and keep telling myself that one day I will just start over. Then I start and think what do I really do that would interesting enough to write down? I am still not sure, but I have to start somewhere.

My daughter graduated high school this past June, she had a pretty hard time the last couple of years. Her junior year was plagued by illnesses and trips to the doctors and urgent care. Finding many urinary, and pelvic infections. Sinus infections, bronchitis, allergies to Motrin and aspirin, just to name a very few. Throughout this she learned a lot from the radiologists and techs that were working with her. She now wants to get into that career. Illness wasn't the only set back she lost both a cousin (that was one of her best friends growing up) and a boyfriend due to overdoses. This now is making her stronger in wanting to help others. It has been and will be a struggle for all of us. This also has made her angry and we are working with her on that. How can you not be angry when someone you love does something so stupid? And they are not there to be angry with?