Saturday, July 14, 2007

H.O.P.E... in a bar



Our local Oncology center asked me to make a donation for their upcoming fund raiser. I formulated this bar for my ddh as he is presently undergoing therapy. It's an infused herbal olive blend with just a touch of lavender, geranium & helichrysum eo's.

H.O.P.E .. Hope oncology patients everywhere!








Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Spring Gardener's Soap

With all the ice storms & floods behind us, we can finally begin to enjoy Spring! Much cleanup to do around the farm this year & with any luck I will be able to get into the gardens to get some transplanting & splitting of plants done. Hopefully.. this year's garden club show will not get rained/snowed out :(

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Balms, Salves & more Balms

Herbal balms are probably one of my favorite things to make.. I really enjoy harvesting the new spring botanicals and making my own herbal infusions to be used in my soaps & skin care items.
Harvesting spring comfrey, chickweed, horsetail, goldenseal, violets, burdock, & plantain are among my favorites. After weeks of infusing they are then incorporated into my healing salves and hand balms.
Hundreds of tins of Old Goat Muscle Rub, Gardener's Hand Balm, Herbal Healing Salve, Calendula Baby Balm, Herbal Lip Saver & Bug Off! will then be prepared and readied for our customers and summer shows.



Friday, April 20, 2007

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Soaping Tidbit ~ Hemp


Hemp


How do you feel about hemp? I've grown quite fon dof it as of late and have begun formulating it into my new soap line, specialty creams & toiletries.

After much research I found out that Hemp is quite simply, nature's best beauty secret - and the secret is in the seed. Hemp seed oil and extract offer many benefits useful in personal care products. The reason hemp is so effective is largely because of the essential fatty acids (EFAs) it contains. More than 75% of the EFAs in hemp seed oil are poly unsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), known for their excellent emollient and lubricating properties.Hemp seed oil contains what is considered to be an ideal ratio of Omega 6 and Omega 3 fatty acids - 3:1, perfectly matching the needs of the human body.

And while the benefits of hemp in beauty products seem magical, hemp contains no THC, the drug that gives marijuana its mood-altering properties. Hemp can not affect you in any possible way other than to give you soft, smooth, supple skin! How can you not love this precious oil?

Thursday, March 01, 2007

March Spotlight - Elixir8

' March Spotlight '

Captivating elixir of Jasmine, Passionflower, Lavender and Musk with skin
loving essential botanicals to awaken your skin.


Wednesday, February 28, 2007

On the racks!



On the run here.. but here's a few of this months' soaps curing on the racks. I', just loving this new ( used) baker's rack my daughter gave me.. a fabulous space saver!


Monday, February 12, 2007

Spotlighting Products


We've been so busy working on our new Spring line of products, that we have decided to spotlight a new product monthly. With much on our plate lately.. time has just escaped us... ya know.. that real life stuff :) So check back in March.


On my curing racks though are some really yummy new soaps, three new cream formula's we've been testing and a Spring Gardener's Skin Care lineup. I've been testing some new soy formula's as well.. still undecided if I care for them or not just yet.


It's been a dreadful winter so far.. power outtages, many ice storms, frozen pipes too! The joys of New England LOL!


Monday, January 15, 2007

Soaping Tidbit - Castor

Everyone who makes soap knows that castor is just one of those wonderful oils that makes handmade soap lather like crazy. I personally wouldn't omit castor from my soaps because I really think it adds something special to each bar.
There is some confusion though as castor oil is often used to super-fat soap. This means that it is ususally added at trace... this useage however doesn't add to the lathering ability of your soap. You MUST add the castor oil to your pot before adding in your lye liquid, so that the castor oil will become fully saponified in order to produce that desired extra lathering quality! And no need to cut back on your coconut oil/ PKO as these are typically the main lather creators... castor will simply enhance that lather & bring it to a new lather as well as condition. Happy soaping!

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Celebrating Christmas Prelude





I thought it might be nice to share how we celebrate a part of this season..

Part of our holiday season will begin this evening.. our town has a 'Tree Lighting' ceremony. Though we haven't had any snow yet, but a few flurries.. thank gawd!! LOL It's very hometown.. everyone comes out for it... Santa will arrive...carols will be sung.. candles will be lit that everyone will carry..& of course the tree lighting will take place... and in our church, the sound of the lovely bellringers perform their magic.. then later a potluck dinner & xmas cookies for all! Here's a shot of of last years tree in our village.


Next week begins cookie baking for me.. 20 or so of us bake assorted xmas cookies and make up tray supon trays that we will deliver to over 200 elders, & shut-ins this year. It's a very special project for me.


Sunday, November 26, 2006

Tis the Season



He's making a list.. checking it twice.. Everyone ready for Christmas yet? My list seems endless.

Kennebunkort's Christmas Prelude
Tree Lighting Ceremony
Christmas shop
Chop down Xmas tree
Decorate house
Holiday cards
Trays of cookies to bake & deliver
Squeeze in one last show of the season!

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Holiday Fairs

Just a few left of the season. Our Bow Fair was a very busy one.. many shoppers, with few lookers. :+) People are beginning to get into the spirit of the holidays.
This year at the show we set up a Christmas tree with assorted gift items under it.






Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Rainbow Bridge Tribute

We're very sad to say, we lost our best boys this week
For my little boy... Duffy & Jackson. our Bubba boy....

Duffy 10/8/2006 Jackson 10/10/2006
If our tears could build a stairway to heaven, we'd run right up
and bring you both back home

Thank you Duffy and Jackson for years of enthusiastic wags. Losing you both in such a few shorts days is clearly a sign that you were meant to be together forever... enjoy the heavens as you enjoyed the earth.





Rest peacefully my Little boy Duff... you'll always be loved... Rest easy now Jackson.. take good care of Duff and always know Mum & Dad love you big guy.

Saturday, September 30, 2006

Punkinfiddle Festival

As a member of the Wells Farmers Market, were all invited to participate in Laudholm Farm's National Estuary Day Punkinfiddle Festival this year. A marvelous event that brought thousands of visitors to the Estuary & stately historical farm.




Punkinfiddle, A National Estuaries Day Celebration, was held at the Wells National Estuarine Research Reserve at Laudholm Farm in Wells, Maine, on September 30th, 2006. This was the 4th annual Punkinfiddle festival. We held onto the best Punkinfiddle features - lively music, engaging artisans - handmade soaps,Border Collie sheep herding demonstrations, sheep shearing, wool spinning, stunning creatures.. oxen, turkeys, goats, sheep, scrumptious food, farm animals, old-fashioned games - and we added opportunities for hands-on learning about estuaries, the places where rivers meet the sea.




National Estuaries Day was introduced in 1988 as a way to educate the public about estuaries and the need to protect and preserve them. The event generates a new appreciation and heightened understanding of our valuable estuaries. This event also acknowledged the efforts of agencies and local communities working together to protect and restore estuaries.




To find out more about Laudholm Farm: http://www.laudholm.org/

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Something's Fishy!

Something's fishy?? You bet! Our annual deep sea fishing event brought overcast drizzle weather.. and even worse.. no fish!!:+(

Nubble Light- Cape Neddick, ME



Here's a fish story for ya.. they caught Moby!



Now here's an Old Salt if I ever saw one!




But we braved the chilly air and still managed to have a great day out on the water, followed by a splendid dinner birthday celebration for daughter Shawna the same night.

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Wells Farmer's Market

For the first time, this summer I was asked to join the Wells Farmer's Market and accepted! Each Wedsnesday from 2-6 you could come & purchase fresh organic veggies, homemade pastries, organic goats' cheeses,fresh venison, fresh cut flowers & what else? Oh sure! Handmade soaps & skin care specialties :+)

Sales were always good, & we met some super nice new customers and regulars of the market. I'm already looking forward to next years' market.

Read about our market and all it's vendors!

http://home.maine.rr.com/rickandmarilyn/wfma/




Saturday, June 10, 2006

Summer Lineup

We've been working hard readying for our summer shows and filling orders.. whew! Here are a few of our newest products you can expect. All of these items were a big hit at our shows so far!

Soap Samplers



Gift of the Sea



Eggstraordinary Egg Yolk Soap




Naturally colored soaps

Sunday, May 14, 2006

Spring soaps

With all the rain we have been having, I've been able to make tons of new soaps for the upcoming season! :+)My Garden Club show was cancelled this weekend.. hundreds of potted plants would have floated down the road!

Monday, May 01, 2006

May Day

May 1.. May Day.. my birthday.. and officially it's Spring! Here's some of the new items I've been working on.. some successfully, some not so successful LOL




Liquid soapmaking.. trials & tribulations.. worth an entire new thread :+)

And some natural colorant soaps I've been playing around with.. madder and alakanet root... so far, I'm pleased with the results.


Monday, April 10, 2006

April Fools

April is a very busy month for us here at Cricket Corner.. everything comes alive & much work to be done. Fences need mending, barn needs to be mucked, perennials need to be split and transplanted.. need to ready for the upcoming Garden Show too! With the rains.. I've been able to make more fresh goat milk soaps.. luscious Lemongrass, oatmeal lavender.. more Mr Witty bars of course :+) and three new goat milk lotions and facial creams. Our two resident kitties have been busy at work/play? too! :+)




We visited the Ballard Farm yesterday to see the newborn 'kids' What a miracle!


Monday, March 20, 2006

Singing in the Spring rain

I'm Singin' in the rain... just

singin' in the rain... What a

glorious feeling, I'm happy again!







Finally it's March. I'm saying this with

fingers crossed because all of us New

Englanders know so well, we can "march"

our way right into Spring or take an

about face into Winter for another

storm or

two...

( or more.. ! )

As I sit looking out of the window this morning I can see the first signs of season. Spotty patches of grass peek out from underneath the remains of winter snow.

Last Autumn's leaves blow aimlessly down the road. Looking out the window at everything so brown and bare... I find it difficult to believe it ever will be Spring. When I take my afternoon walk, I will hear the little brook that runs along Cricket Corner Road. It flows only when the snow is melting. I know that when I hear that sound... I will believe that Spring will indeed come... and that .... 'the croccus always Do come up'.


I will watch the first robin and ants and wiggly worms after the rain. I will feel the wind as it roars... and the calm of the morning when I run out to get the paper from the box. I will do it barefooted for the first time this year.. wishing I had waited just a bit longer.. to test the ground! :-)

As the days and weeks go by, the grass will grow, taller & tender. The air will be fresh and clean.. the Spring winds & rain will see to it. Buds will appear. I'll search for the color green that I can only see in the Spring. I look for it, as I see those first buds.. hoping that I won't miss it when it arrives. I'm wondering if you've ever noticed it too? It's a green that only appears for one magical moment during the changing seasons. It's the green that arrives in the leaves, the wind, the grasses and air. It's a shade of green that only appears in nature. NO crayola or paint can duplicate this shade. It's the green of Spring, it's God's green.

Friday, March 17, 2006

Spring lineup

We've been busy soaping our Spring herbals, making healing balms and firing up the greenhouse! Though it's still pretty chilly here, it's always fun to be seeding while the snow falls overhead. I've been playing with swirls/colorants of late with not much success, but I will plod on! :+)



Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Luxurious Castile Soap



There is an ongoing debate among soapmakers about how much olive oil must be used in a soap to be called 'Castile'

Some use as little as 40% olive blend while others right up to 100%.

Traditionally Castile Soap is a very white bar & usually softer than other soaps because they contain none of the other oils that can contribute to the harness of the bar. Yes, taking some liquid discounts can & will harden the bars up sooner.. but left to cure for many many weeks, will leave you with an absolutely lovely hard, extremely gentle bar of soap. Actually the gentleness of the olive oil and its ability to act as a humectant ( draws moisture from the air to your skin ) makes Castile soap absolutely wonderful to use. Most often.. the bubbles are low and plentiful.

Myself.. I make a variety.. goat milk castile, herbal castile ~~ for both their additional skin care properties that I love in a nice bar of soap. We make all of our castile bars using 95 % olive oil & will cure for a good 6 months if not better before I'll sell them. I absolutely love the creamy gentleness of these bars on my skin. While spending a month in Italy last year, I had the good fortune of visiting a large soapmaking factory with a friend.. naturally... olive oil abundance is never a problem in Italy and I was in my glory testing all the huge blocks of pure castiles while there.. and took home :+) Too bad I couldn't fit a few vats of olive oil in my suitcases too! LOL

These are some of my castile offerings.

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Winter Snow

Winter being the longest at Cricket Corner Farm, it's time for rest. Many of the other seasonal chores have been put to bed under a blanket of snow.



The seed catalogs are quite the gayest blizzard afforded during the cheerless month of February. Since about half of every catalog is given to annuals, Is it any wonder that these visionary Edens are a delight of three-foot larkspur, glowing snapdragons, fragrant mignonette..... culinary herbs, Rosemary and Thymes.... and vegetables, so many delicious varieties of tomatoes, squash, peppers & every other perennial flower we've ever wished to grow to perfection?

We can sketch some tentative plans on paper, make out seed lists..and think green! About the middle of February, our growing season begins,with about as many flats of herb seedlings you can imagine..setting, all in rows in the greenhouse. And here... they will remain until early April, when they can safely be moved out of the greenhouse for hardening off.. before their final stages of growth into the garden in late May here in New Hampshire.


The snow is lightly falling,
Sparkling coming down.
The few remaining Autumn leaves
Are falling to the ground.
The wind is howling through the trees,
all the leaves must die.
One by one they've tumbled down,
buried by the snows.
The more the sparkling carries on
the more the wind does blow.
A large white blanket has covered the land.
I picked a snowflake from your wool...
it melted in my hand.



Friday, February 03, 2006

New Beginnings

2006! Wow, yet another year begins :+) After some much needed rest, and inventories behind us.. the wheels are starting to spin for some new soaps.. new design label packaging.. and fragrances!

Second to the gm soaps.. castiles are always on my hit parade, so I hope to add quite a few new ones to the line and jazz up the packaging as well. After seeing how well the new anti-aging facial care products did.. we're definitely going to focus on the Botanica12 line & ready it for Spring....

Be back soon... but first a quick trip to Florida with my daughter to visit family and catch some sunshine :+)

Saturday, December 10, 2005

Year's Ending


Hardly enough time to update here, readying for the holidays and two remaining seasonal shows. Two of our newest products this year have nearly sold out.. Cashmere Scarf.. our whipped shea butter/Monoi combo and the complete Monoi de Tahiti facial, body and soap line have been remarkably successful! And Mr.Witty's Bath bar.. our biggest seller of the season so far!





And for the teenagers stocking stuffers.. Zit's Be Gone bars :+)






We hope you all have a joyous Christmas and healthy New Year. Happy holidays!

Thursday, November 10, 2005

Put to bed..


All of the herb gardens have been put to bed.. the potting shed is chock full of drying basils,comfrey, burdock root, sweet annie, rosemary, mints & thymes. We'll be working on the winter balms & healing salves this week.. readying for the last of the years 5 holiday shows.

Friday, October 21, 2005

Autumn thoughts..

Summertime is gone my friends. It slowly comes...but quickly ends. It's been replaced by time called Autumn. Nature changes hues from top to bottom. Green gives way to red & gold. A lovely vision to behold.. whirling leaves go blowing by, carrying smells of pumpkin pies! The air turns crisp...the sky fades grey. Indian corn and bales of hay...overcoats, apple cider.. No more evenings on the glider! The harvest moon so orange & round, Holidays will soon abound. Soon the chrysanthemum petals start to unfold & Pumpkin festivals abound.





There is still the warmth of summer in an early October day; and the cool of autumn in the evenings. October is a month to be carefree.. The herb gardens are harvested.. all hanging to dry, the loft is full of summers hay, rows of canning jars fill the cupboards. Fall.. in New England I will remember with fondness. Freed from garden & other cares, we can explore "leaf peepin". We can watch the chipmunks with bulging cheeks scurry into the stone walls & admire the hummingbirds, still busy among the geraniums & bee balm. We have time for apple pickin' and baking.
Our trees are old and gnarled and widely scattered. Sometimes I think they had been planted by Johnny Appleseed's wide flung hands.


We can go to the fairs, spend a day or two antiquing.
We can pick beach plums & visit cranberry bogs. We can go to the beach for a lobster, pick up driftwood along the quiet beaches, & gather shells & wild beach rosehips. New Hampshire abounds in exhibits of handwork done in earlier times as well as present. Ours is a proud heritage of skill & good taste now being appreciated even more. Many with deft fingers are now following the example of our forebears.. taking pride in their handiwork.. As a rughooker, I'll take inventory of wools. In my basket there will be rugs unfinished since last winter.. but, soon to be tackled again & completed, hopefully before the Deerfield Fair! Oh, but I have more soaps to make too! Only so many hours in the day.. * sigh :+)

The smell of Autumn is in the earth, in the ripe apples & cider...in the clean sea & clean pure air. The mornings glisten as the sun falls across the fields with frost. A full golden flood illuninates the garden from the warm October sun which washes over maple, birch & oak leaves. We swish through dry leaves on the lawn and we rake & rake & rake! What harvest.. for the compost pile; what dividends in fine leaf mold in spring, bright healthy flowers in summer!



Walking the fields each afternoon in Fall is a favorite pasttime of Jackson Molly & Duffy! Leaves drop in whispers. Behind us there snaps a twig which is not timed to our own footsteps..and acorns fall with a bounce to the ground & wind stirring through the leaves.... freezing them in their tracks. Are the woods haunted????





The woods are haunted in October by the same 'little people' who inhabit them every other month of the year. Thoughts of witches & goblins & elves and fairies in October have filled the world with fright longer than anyone can record with certainty and the season wouldn't be complete without them.

" There are fairies at the bottom of gardens, and we have often found their traces there.. If you do not believe in fairies in the garden you are not a true gardener. They touch a box with a wand & make a palace for a homeless bird. In mischievous play, they pull up flowers & plant them in more surprising places. They weave silken webs from flower to flower & paint the wings of butterflies. In October they blow on the bittersweet & make berries pop open into gay necklaces of red & gold."

At the bottom of an old-fashioned garden the fairies arrange their mushroom conference stools in a fairy ring, and name all the flowers! Who else could have thought up such delightful names: Sweet William, foxglove, cowslip, Sweet Annie, snow-in-the-summer, larkspur, bee balm.... morning glory, johnny-jump-ups & bleeding heart. These fairies name them all!! But of course..there are fairies in the bottom of the garden.What is more cheerful, now, in the fall of the year,than an open wood-fire? Do you hear those little chirps and twitters coming out of that piece of applewood? Those are the ghosts of the robins and bluebirds that sang upon the bough when it was in blossom last Spring. Happy Autumn!