wan-na find something?

Friday, October 30, 2020

looking for that holiday hustle

so i've been doing lots of crafting around here.  once all of those crocheted pumpkins were done and sent out to their new owners, i started looking around for what could be my next hustle.  i'm torn between raising money for the treadmill i really want and upgrading my embroidery machine, which is something i've wanted for awhile.  my little beginner-level machine is still alive and kicking, but it's so basic and i'd love to have some fancier features.  i'd love a multi-needle machine so i wouldn't have to change thread colors so often, with options for a bigger hoop to crank out larger sized items (or multiples of smaller ones in one hoop) and automatic stitch cutters and things like that.  

i thought maybe i might be able to pre-make a bunch of handmade items that might be good for christmas.  i came across this adorable crocheted gingerbread mickey and stitched out a sample.  it turned out to be quite a time suck - look at all the pieces involved:

once i got it all assembled, it was actually pretty cute.  

but it WAY too much work.  and took too long to make.  not a good hustle candidate.

i moved on to reusable coffee sleeves, which are really fun to make.  and picking out feltie designs to dress them up is super fun.  i think these would make great teacher gifts, or for anyone you want to give a starbucks gift card to, but when i posted them on my facebook page to gauge interest it didn't really attract a ton of attention.



in the midst of all this crafting, the bean decided to make a little plushie for one of her favorite friends since it was his birthday.  she'd made him one of these a couple of years ago, so she was excited to present him with mr. pigs 2.0, with his birthdate embroidered on the bottom.



have you heard of among us, the newest game that all the kids are playing?  the characters come in different colors and have all kinds of silly things on their heads and i guess it's a thing right now.  this same friend is a big gamer, so i made this for her to give him with mr. pigs 2.0:

and we carved pumpkins the other night.  i was pretty proud of mine until the girls looked at it and the old lady said "that's it?  it's not even carved" and i kind of wilted like a dead flower.  sigh.

still, she looks pretty cute next to the other pumpkins.

so, back to the hustle.  i think i found it, because i posted this on my personal facebook timeline and ended up making about 20 elf mask and sweater sets for friends:

and then i posted it on the local small business/boutique facebook page and WHOA.  i'm currently attached at the hip to my embroidery machine with the old lady helping to trim and cut because i have over 100 orders to fill.  i present to you the official 2020 elf survival kit:

if you don't hear from me for awhile, please come check on me to make sure i haven't been buried alive in fleece and thread, or somehow managed to sew myself to a hoop.  it could happen.

Thursday, October 29, 2020

taste of fall-o-ween

with our beloved disneyland closed since march, when knott's berry farm started doing a ticketed food festival it definitely caught our attention.  for $35 plus tax, you got a "tasting card" that gave you five tickets to use at any of the food stands and kiosks open in the park.  it reminded us of the "sip & savor" pass during the food & wine/holiday food festivals at disneyland, and so we decided to sit back and watch to see how it all went.  all you needed was the tasting card - no separate costs for admission or parking, and a lot of the shops were also open for business.

after reading reviews and comments from others who went, we decided to go ahead and buy midweek tasting cards for me and the girls.  the event was pretty popular with lots of people looking for something fun to do, and since it was outdoors with masks required everywhere and attendees spread out through the whole park it seemed pretty safe.

ticketholders were encouraged to wear halloween costumes, but none of us had really planned a costume this year and everything we already had was disney.  i have a snoopy t-shirt that has him dressed as a stormtrooper that i was going to wear, and of course for some reason i couldn't find it anywhere.  d-oh.  and before you say it, no - i won't wear disney gear to a park that's peanuts themed!  or to universal, where you could wear simpsons or minions or harry potter.  we either wear properly themed attire or go in plain clothing.  it's just how we roll.

when we got to buena park, we found that the front entrance wasn't open.  instead, there were small yellow signs pointing the way to the lot behind the hotel.



there was plenty of signage out about not entering if you were sick or had been exposed to anyone with the virus.  and we were pleased to hear an employee telling someone ahead of us that their mask needed to cover their nose and mouth, and another telling the same group that the kids also needed to have their masks on - even underneath the costume mask they were wearing.


i do have to say though that the "health screening" was a joke.  you walked through this building and the security guard simply waved you through - although i also think taking temperatures is ineffective as well.  i'm pretty sure my temperature is up a bit even just walking through the parking lot, and so many people who test positive never even run a fever.  but i digress.

i think this is our first time back at knott's in about 3-4 years.

after scanning our tickets, we were handed our tasting passes on a lanyard to wear around our necks.  the food options and locations were listed on both sides, along with a bar code to scan that kept track of how many tickets we had left.


the park was really festive, with every building decorated in some way for halloween.  normally, you wouldn't find me anywhere near here around this time because i hate being scared, and this is when the park turns into "knott's scary farm."  this was nowhere near the usual, but i was happy for the park and its employees that they were able to open in some form to generate some kind of income and keep people employed.





our first tastes came from the wilderness dance hall patio.  we happened to get there at just the right time, with only one party in front of us.  the bean picked up a rather generous portion of the cheeseburger mac & cheese with panko crumbs and bacon with optional tomato garnish, which she declined.

the old lady and i had heard good things about the boysenberry sangria:


i'm gonna go ahead and say it:  we were really disappointed by it.  it was pretty and also a fairly good sized pour, and i'll admit that i caught a fun buzz from it, but that's only because i'm a lightweight and drank it on an empty stomach.  but it was so bland!  it really needed more boysenberry syrup or whatever they were supposed to use to flavor it.  oh well.  at least we got these sweet wristbands to show that we were, indeed, old enough to drink.


it was fun to see that they had costumed employees positioned in some of the buildings, offering a little extra halloween fun to the mix.  and they kept it family friendly instead of scaring passersby.





there were lots of picnic tables placed everywhere, and here they had a big screen showing previous years' entertainment since they couldn't perform live.

photo op!  there actually weren't very many of these, probably to keep people from congregating at them.

the bean was a little sad as we walked past johnny rockets, remembering that the last time we'd been there was for her friends' birthdays.  it really was kind of bittersweet.

and it was weird to be there and not see and hear the rollercoasters running, or the riders' excited screaming.



we ended up at coasters diner to grab some more grub.  while it looks like there were a lot of people there, it was really because they were all properly spaced out with the help of these markers on the ground.


the old lady ordered the diablo fries - chili, cheese, hot cheetos and crispy jalapeƱo strips.  she was pretty happy with it.

...unlike me and the bean, who'd gone with the cheeseburger slider and fries.  they were okay - just nothing particularly exciting.  i was really just looking for something to put in my stomach to help with that buzz i mentioned earlier.

and here i'd also ordered the boysenberry wine - which sadly was exactly like the boysenberry sangria.


and the old lady was the winner again here, with the frozen "bloody lemon slime margarita."  at least it was tasty, if not super lacking in actual alcohol.

in the dia de los muertos section, we found a cigar-smoking skeleton and took this for the hub.



now that i think about it, i suppose it's a little weird to see any kind of smoking depicted at a theme park.  heh.







we decided to head over to the gourmet churro factory, where the old lady picked up some pumpkin spice churro sticks sprinkled with candy corn sugar and served with bavarian cream dip.


looks and sounds pretty good, right?  wrong.  the churros had been precooked and were cold and crusty, with not much pumpkin spice flavor to be found and the dip was similar to prepackaged buttercream frosting you find at baking supply shops.  so disappointed.

much like the graveyard funnel cake - chocolate and vanilla funnel cake with oreo crumbles, gummy worms, chocolate ice cream and a drizzle of chocolate sauce.  the funnel cake had also obviously been sitting under a heat lamp and not up to par with fresh funnel cakes we'd come to expect from knott's.


at least we found a nice table on the front porch of one of the buildings, away from people but near the window where we were lightheartedly heckled by the costumed employee inside.


the old lady and i used our last tickets at sutter's grill, where she ordered the deep fried cauliflower bites tossed in buffalo sauce with a little salad and topped with cotija cheese.

i got the pastrami tater tots, topped with diced garlic pickles, cheese sauce and a drizzle of boysenberry mustard.  this was really tasty and filling, and i was definitely done afterwards.

the bean decided she wanted another serving of that cheeseburger mac & cheese, and as we headed back towards wilderness dance hall patio i wondered aloud if this was actually where cordelia knott had baked her famous pies back in the day.

everything was more fun and festive looking in the dark.



one last reminder as we exited:

they have a build-a-bear store just outside the gates that was already closed for the day, but it looked kind of sad as we walked by.

and the bean campaigned us pretty hard to stop and grab some chicken to go, but we'd eaten so much food that we just told her we'd come back another time for it.  i mean, yeah, there's the "chicken to go" store next door, but i really think it's only good when you eat it fresh.  reheated fried chicken is not the business.

all in all, it was a pretty fun evening.  it was fun to do some sort of halloween, and while it was a little sad to be in the park with no rides it was really nice to just be out and doing something fun while still staying relatively safe with masks and social distancing.  they're doing another one of these through november and  december for the holidays, and let's just say that we've already picked a date and bought our tasting passes.

shocking, i'm sure.

heading out to the big apple

like most of our best vacations, our christmastime trip to NYC was kind of a last-minute decision.  i don't even think there were six we...