Thursday, February 24, 2011

Mango Tree

[This post was originally on another blog of mine, but that one is not really in use anymore so I thought I would share it here!]

So most people know how to grow an avocado tree from an avocado pit. Big whup, avocado trees are soooo 4th grade. I don't know if many people do this (I guess I could just check the internets, but whatever!), but at one point I wanted to see if I could grow a mango tree from a mango pit, AND IT WORKED! So I thought it would be a cool and easy tutorial and mangos are like the most friggin delicious fruit ever! So here ya go.

Here are the tools you will need:
mango
knife
cutting board
scissors
small glass
window that gets some sun
pot
potting soil

I have tried and succeeded with both the big greenish mangos and the little yellow mangos. I think the little yellow ones are tastier, but both are pretty delish.

mango1

Start by cutting up the mango. The easiest way to do this is by finding the little nob where the mango was attached to the tree and cutting along each side of the big flat pit in the middle of the fruit. This will give you two meaty pieces and one piece that is mostly pit.

mango2

Feel free to just dig in and gobble up that juicy goodness, but if you want to share or have nice uniform pieces hold each half steady on the cutting board and cut diagonal in one direction and then the other to make a grid. This will allow you to pop it inside out and cut off little cubes of mango (plus it just looks cool).

mango3

For the pit part you can peel off the skin and either try to cut off all the meat or just gnaw on it a bit until it is clean of mango. Now scrape off the remaining bits under running water, this will leave you with a hairy, slimy, little stone.

mango4

This part gets a little tricky because the bit you actually want is inside this. The casing around the seed is kinda like that annoying plastic packaging around electronics, a bitch to get into and even a little dangerous. So be VERY CAREFUL when doing this next part, children should have ADULT SUPERVISION or just adult help for this part. Feel free to let the pit sit overnight and dry out so it is not so slimy and hard to hang onto. Pinch the smaller end of the pit and it should feel hollow up to a point, snip this part off.

mango5

Being careful not to damage the bean inside make a slice with the knife or snip with scissors and you should be able to tear the casing up the edge and carefully take out the little bean.

mango6

Now the hard part is over! Put this little guy in some room temp water (just a little, don't submerge completely) in a little glass and set on a window sill.

mango7

Mine took FOREVER to start growing so don't get discouraged. It can take a month or two before you see some roots forming. If the water starts to get a little slimy rinse it out and add some more water (NOT COLD! room temp!). Some pink roots will shoot out and then finally a little pink hand (literally! It totally looks like a little alien hand reaching out the top with leaves for fingers!) will reach up and then you can plant it in potting soil with leaves up, roots down (duh). Keep the soil pretty wet, mangos like lot's of water.

mango8

Good luck! Mangos are waaaay cooler than avocados.

And here it is after 7 months of growth, so pretty!



-Anna

Snow and Ice

We finally got some snow here in Portland, but doubt it will last through the afternoon.




The Cumulus Beret in Wheat - by Topher & Co. ($45)
Ice Cone Ring - by Nodeform ($165)
Melting Blue Icicles - by Dye For Yarn (€19)
The Montana Warmer in Glacier - by Zetta ($65)
Aqua and Silver Pow Wow Princess Moccasins - by Darlingtonia Moccasin Company ($129)
Snow Drops - by Jade Flower ($45)


Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Monday, February 21, 2011

Local Love!

Portland has a ton of amazing artists and makers, here are some of my favorites:



Girl Drop - by Two Sarahs ($20)
Canyons Necklace in Saffron - by Pearl Everlasting ($87)
Bow Necklace - by Rubygirl ($64)
Dancin' Bob Greeting Card - by Shop Thorazos ($5)
Ham and Cheese Sandwich Felt Food - by Pickle Things ($20)
Aero Tee - by Makool ($58)

Leave a comment and share some of your local favorites from where ever you are!

Friday, February 18, 2011

Sniffles...

Sorry for the lack of posts this week, but I have been feeling a little under the weather, here are some Etsy finds to help if you are too:



Handknit Hot Water Bottle Cover - by Yubomination ($30)
Chicken Noodle Soup Necklace - by Betsy Etsy ($22)
Cobalt Blue Mug - by Turner Studio ($25)
Immune Booster Herbal Tea - by Spirit Horse Herbals ($10.50)
Handknit Harvest Centerpiece Afghan - by Knitty Knitty Bang Bang ($149)
Felted Slippers - by Bure Bure ($63)

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Photographia: Hair and violets and open road



Untitled by you're my monday

Dinosaurs and Ranting...

So I collect these silly plastic dinosaurs from the '80s, they are not very accurate to how we understand dinosaurs to have looked by today's standards, but they are very brightly colored (which I like in everything) and I just generally like dinosaurs and collecting and the hunt.

Anyway, when I was recently in Los Angeles and scouting thrift stores I came across the mother load, four HUGE (by huge I mean like 15" long and 6" tall so not that huge, but granted most of mine are pretty small) orange and green beauties at $8 for the lot. Woot! It had been a while since I had found any and for whatever reason this made me think about this ex-boyfriend of mine that would on occasion go to someplace like Target and buy me toy dinosaurs, which was pretty much misses the point and is the most frustrating thing ever. The point is not to just go buy something new, it is to hunt around for that perfect addition to your collection, whether it be at yard sales or thrift stores or even ebay. It is like buying someone that collects baseball cards a pack of football cards. At the time I was like, "does this person even know me?, sure they got the dinosaur part right, but the rest has nothing to do with my collection." I know he was trying to make a nice gesture, but wtf? How is one supposed to react to that?

Getting to my point now, so, it having just been "the holidays" and Valentines day coming up along with a slew of other pointless holidays just meant to make us buy $7 factory-made greeting cards (buy handmade!) for each other that are just going to get thrown out in a few days anyway and got me to thinking about the meaning of gift giving and that it really bums me out that we are doing it for all the wrong reasons. Holidays like Christmas seriously gross me out, everything has turned in to quantity not quality. Someone at some point decided that to make a perfect Christmas there has to be a huge pile of presents under the tree. I would a million times over prefer one simple gift that meant something to me than hundreds of dollars worth of crap that I will likely never use anyway. PLEASE! Enough with the toiletries! That in mind I really encourage you to buy things for loved ones that are meaningful, sure to some people crap from Target is meaningful, but for the rest of us don't forget places like Etsy or great gift guides or making it yourself or shopping at local boutiques, etc. Blah, blah, blah, end rant.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011