Archive for year: 2010
Sunny Spot: Cleveland, Ohio
/1 Comment/in Sunny Spot, United States /by EY - fordafunofit
SHOUT OUT to our fans in CLEVELAND, OHIO. This week you have the highest number of hits on the EntertainingYourself.com website. We LOVE it and we wanted to find out what’s happening in your town so we did a little digging. First – your weather for Wednesday, 12/22/10 – 32 degrees & partly SUNNY, partly cloudy, with a chance of snow flurries! OK – so a little chillier than our usual Sunny Spots, but great for outdoor activities OR last minute Christmas shopping. Fun Fact – You are surrounded by the Emerald Necklace, a ring of 16 parks circling this major US city, which span across 22,000 acres. The parks include hundreds of miles of walking, bicycle, and horse trails, woods, picnic areas, beaches, five nature education centers, seven golf courses, rivers & lakes for fishing and the Cleveland Metropark Zoo. And, if that is not enough, you are right next to the Cuyahoga Valley National Park and Lake Erie – one of the USA’s 5 Great Lakes (the largest group of freshwater lakes on Earth). You also boast an amazing array of museums, including the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame. One other little fact, you are home to the Great Lakes Brewing Company, Ohio’s first microbrewery, famous for their Burning River and Christmas Ale. Thanks for stopping by our site. We look forward to hearing more about how you are Entertaining Yourselves in Cleveland!
Dipping Delectable Delights
/0 Comments/in Food & Recipes, Hip Hobbies /by EY - fordafunofit
It all started when we were in Kindergarten. Our mom wanted us to feel like we were part of the gift giving process, but she didn’t want our teachers to end up with something they had absolutely no interest in.
Someone suggested to her that dipping strawberries was really very easy and the next thing you know, a tradition (a hobby?) had started.
The beauty of dipping strawberries is that it is really the easiest thing in the world, but everyone feels they are receiving something very special.
Of course, it is critical to mention that this is only a universal truth if you use good chocolate and decent strawberries. We say decent because the chocolate will hide some imperfections. But if you use bad chocolate or a rotten strawberry, you can be sure that the whole bunch will be tossed in the trash, (this year and in subsequent years), because nobody is going take that risk twice! 
We were told to “only buy Merckens” because it was the best. Everyone seems to love it and it is easy to use, so we continue to buy it. There may be other good alternatives – we just don’t know them!
Anyway, that first year, the strawberries were such a big hit with the teachers, we decided to do it again the following Christmas.
By then, since strawberries were in short supply, we had seen some beautiful pretzels in an expensive catalog and we decided to branch out.
During our first foray into the chocolate mess, we discovered that after you dip the strawberry in the chocolate, it takes awhile for it to stop dripping.
So, if you are not careful, you will drizzle chocolate all over the other strawberries on the tray. Not a big deal when you are using the same kind of chocolate, but if you decide to start dipping in say, white chocolate, you have suddenly created a slightly modified concoction. No worries, we discovered…it actually transforms them from ordinary to extraordinary! We now purposely drizzle in white, dark and milk!
And we’ve branched out beyond strawberries and pretzels.
We’ve dipped Oreo cookies (we like double stuffed), grapes, raisins, miniature marshmallows, caramel squares, peanuts, roasted pecans and almonds (salted are best), potato chips, peanut butter stuffed pretzels…honestly, if it appeals to you, give it a try. You may end up inventing your own delectable delight.
Then, if you’re feeling like you want to add a few creative touches, not only can you drizzle more chocolate, you can also cover them in colorful sprinkles, chopped nuts, chopped toffee, other crushed candy, and little candy decorations, to name a few. Once again, imagination is key, and if it appeals to you, it will probably appeal to others too.
Lately we’ve seen advertisements for chocolates sprinkled with sea salt. We haven’t tried it, but it is probably good.
The complements and comments over the years have been amazing. We are now in our twenties, but when we run into former teachers and friends from the past, they still tell us they remember those hand-dipped chocolates and they ask if we’re still making them. When we say yes, they sigh and give a big smile.
So would you call this a hobby? While not something we do all the time, it is something we like to do now and again, particularly at Christmas. For us, it is a nice alternative (or complement) to traditional cookies. Both are good and have their place, but if you are looking for a fool proof, easy recipe, you can’t beat dipping chocolates for a fabulous change of pace.
Our melting process calls for putting the chocolate disks in a microwave safe bowl and melting on high for one (1) minute. Take out the bowl, stir and then return for shorter intervals (30 seconds, then 15 seconds, then 10 seconds). You do not want to over heat the chocolate because that changes the consistency and ruins the flavor (learned that the hard way). So don’t get impatient and try to heat for longer intervals. (If you ask at the store where you buy the chocolate, you’ll no doubt find an expert there that will be happy to give you all kinds of advice). And if you don’t use all the chocolate that you’ve bought, it can be frozen for another time. Video of Dipping Strawberries (note: glass of wine and music are optional!)
Our only problem: they have become so popular that we end up making what feels like thousands. So be prepared to find a place to store them (you want to keep them cool) and to package them so they stay fresh. Or just make enough for yourself and ENJOY! You really can’t go wrong.
Take the Blessing and Run!
/5 Comments/in Attitude Adjustment, Rosy Outlook /by EY - fordafunofitYou know it’s true, you really can get used to being the square peg in a circle town. It might have taken a year, but hearing my name on the street finally feels ordinary. Groups of “We Real Cool” teenagers greet me in German or Japanese, in any foreign language they know. Gazes and stares blink out “Incredulous!” in some Ukrainian Morse code when I ask for strange spices like clove and ginger at the shop. Little starfish-shaped children all bundled up for winter yank at babushka’s coat sleeve and whisper, “Missamanta, tse missamanta.” 
Yes, that’s right, here I am. And here, in Ukraine, that is what I am: Miss Samantha, the rootless and forever smiling foreigner-in-residence. With her excessive use of ‘please’ and ‘thank you,’ her USDA-approved toothpaste, and a checkered coat that just screams, “I’M FROM AWAY!!” With all that noise, it’s a wonder I can hear myself think.
Considering the frequency with which I write about running in Ukraine, you may have been persuaded to believe that it is a national pastime, that Ukrainians are a lot who take to the streets in sneakers and tracksuits on the daily. I assure you, this is not true. So, if you are sitting there fancying Ukraine to be such a place, please accept my humblest apologies. It seems you have been misled. It seems, what with all my talk of running on icy patches past grazing goats, I have led you astray because a runner’s country Ukraine is not. In fact, I’d bargain that there are more people running around the Charles River in Boston on any given day than there are running in the whole of Ukraine.
Any takers?
No, seriously.
I’d bet my last jar of peanut butter on it.
Needless to say, here I am running again in a place where people don’t run. The truth of it is, though, that’s why I love to do it. When I’m running in Ukraine, it’s not me who’s foreign but what I’m doing. It doesn’t matter that my coat is checkered or that I’ll never properly pronounce the word for love, it doesn’t matter that I’m an American; I am a runner and that is foreigner enough.
Now, while Ukrainians may not be wind-sprinting down Carl Marx Street, that’s not to say they aren’t active participants in my physical training. (You may, oh diligent reader, remember a previous incident wherein I participated in a pas-de-deux with an inebriated fellow I encountered while out running in the fields.)
“Here’s another one,” I say to myself, looking ahead down the road.
A man in a bright pink, green and blue MembersOnly jacket rides his bicycle toward me. In his limp, fish lips he dangles a cigarette. He has the kind of hair that people sported to look cool back before I was born; nappy waves to the shoulder – distant listlessness in his eyes. Just the kind of character I try to avoid when I’m out running on my own.
But, I’m so intrigued. It’s the jacket that really gets me – especially since here, in Ukraine, the color spectrum usually dies out somewhere between dark purple and black. This jacket would have been Thrift store find-of-the-semester in college. He rides the way you imagine people riding in places that don’t allow cars – like Fire Island or Put-In Bay, like some college kid who’d started riding one day and never quite figured out where he was going.
Despite the jacket, I brace myself for another unpleasant interaction on the road. I clench my jaw a little, stare straight forward and speed up, annoyed that yet another drunk ne’er-do-well is messing with my runner’s chi. As we draw closer, I plan escape routes, ways to avoid his attempt to engage me in another two step. He’s getting ready to do something, I can tell, and I practice my…er, yoga moves in my head (and promptly make a promise with myself to do more kickboxing). Just a few feet ahead of me, I catch his creepy, off-the-deep-end eye and immediately wish I’d been born a boy. I’ve got chills and not just because it’s below zero.
And then, out of the blue, it happens just like that.
“God Bless ya, young one!,” he says.
Say what?
“May God give you health!” He shouts again, almost toppling sideways off his bicycle.
Yup, definitely drunk, but not nearly as harmful as expected; in fact, kind of sweet in his own way. More “Weekend at Bernie’s” than Freddy Kreuger for sure. My gate slows and my fists unclench; I’m nearing the end of my run anyway.
And here I am smiling because that’s the thing about Ukraine – when you learn to take the good and trust that the rest will right itself eventually, it becomes a pretty amazing place. Sure, the sun sets at 3:30pm but have you caught the blaze in which it goes?
Let’s just say, these days, I’m learning to take the blessing and run.
“You too!,” I shout back, though I doubt we’re close enough anymore for him to hear.
-Sam
ps – Sam is currently serving in the Peace Corps in Ukraine. You can follow her blog at: http://atyourperilmisspeace.wordpress.com/
Sunny Spot: MIDWEST, USA
/0 Comments/in Sunny Spot, United States /by EY - fordafunofit
SHOUT OUT to our fans in the MIDWEST, USA. First let us say that in the world of EntertainingYourself.com, a Sunny Spot is really a state of mind. Therefore, not every Sunny Spot is necessarily warm, or even sunny for that matter! In the Midwest this week, you are in the midst of a Winter Wonderland! Perfect for Entertaining Yourself indoors and out! With so many flights cancelled, traffic delays, school and business closings, not to mention really chilly temperatures (friends in South Dakota reported wind chills of minus 35degrees F) it makes sense that many of you would be snuggling up inside, sipping hot chocolate and what else? Surfing the web of course!
Then there are the brave souls that are willing to bundle up and get outside. We’ve heard tales of 7 -10 ft drifts in places like Wisconsin and Minnesota, with snow quickly piling up in the Dakotas, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Ohio too!
If you dare, it is the perfect weather for hiking, snowshoeing, cross country and downhill skiing, snowboarding, tobogganing, sledding, snowmobiling, skating and the old standby’s: building snowmen and waging snow ball fights!
Once you’ve had a chance to warm up again, we’d love to hear from you. What’s your favorite way of entertaining yourself on a cold snowy day?
-EY Staff
ps: Over the coming weeks and months, EntertainingYourself.com will showcase indoor, as well as outdoor, recreational activities and hobbies. Look for articles ranging from Brewing Beer to playing indoor Hockey (both ice and field)! Stay tuned…
Second Chances: UB Mongolia
/3 Comments/in Attitude Adjustment, Rosy Outlook /by William KennedyAugust 24th, 2008 – a symphony of fireworks exploded over Ulaanbaatar, (or UB as it’s locally known), as crowds jumped and shouted in the streets.
Passengers slapped high-fives with strangers from car windows; horns blared; people danced across the sidewalks. Mongolia, a nation of three million, had just won its second Olympic gold medal ever—its second of the Beijing Summer Games—and the city’s population had gone bananas in a wildly infectious way.
Standing amidst a swell of humanity in UB’s Sukhbaatar Square, I contemplated how incredibly fortunate I was to experience this celebration and how second chances have a peculiar knack for emerging soon after you think you’ve really blown it. Just 10 days ago I’d felt differently when Mongolia won its first gold medal and I had foolishly missed the festivities.
That proved particularly painful because I’d come to Mongolia specifically with the goal of chronicling the nation’s Olympic aspirations and hopefully exploits. During my last semester of college, I’d made up my mind to work for a Mongolian-owned, English language newspaper (yes these actually exist) in Ulaanbaatar, inspired by my love of sports journalism and my anthropology advisor’s passion for all things Mongolian.
After making contact with one of two such papers in Mongolia’s capital, I sent out my resume and secured a spot as an English editor, booking a plane ticket for the summer. Within weeks of my arrival at Genghis Khan International Airport, I found myself in the ideal situation, covering Mongolia’s national team of pistol shooters, wrestlers, boxers and other athletes from my office in Ulaanbaatar as they represented their country in Beijing.
Perhaps the best part of my job was getting to watch broadcasts of Mongolia’s athletes with their compatriots in my host country at the Grand Khan Irish Pub. The nation had waited its entire forty-five year Olympic history for a gold medal, and virtually everyone seemed hungry for success.
And then it happened. On August 14th, an unknown judo wrestler from the city countryside Tuvshinbayar beat a series of heavily favored opponents. I watched the final match at a gym, enjoying the cheers and laughs of my fellow spectators. That was nice, I thought, walking back to my apartment, where I promptly climbed into bed, exhausted after a long day of work.
As I drifted off, I noticed the city’s perpetual honking sounded unusually consistent and loud, and some popping in the distance that could have been fireworks. The next morning I found out in my office that those noises I heard were the entire city of Ulaanbaatar, the entire nation of Mongolian, locked in celebration. Over 10,000 people had taken to Sukhbaatar Square where the city exhausted its fireworks supply for the year, and rival politicians toasted one another and their suddenly ascendant homeland.
Well, I thought, that’ll never happen again. What a remarkable moment to sideline myself in an apartment. I spent the next few days alternately covering the remaining Olympic events and kicking myself for my missed opportunity. And then, that second chance presented itself.
Mongolia’s boxing prodigy E. Badar-Uugan won his gold medal match, and after waiting its entire Olympic History for one gold medal, Mongolians saw no problem holding a second celebration.
The match ended at 2:30 pm and the horns, high-fives and shouts didn’t end until early the next morning. I had learned my lesson. When something important happens, go to Sukhbaatar square. That evening, a raucous crowd surrounded the courtyard’s statue of Sukhbaatar, Mongolia’s great revolutionary hero.
People climbed on top of one another, danced, and sang as they waved Mongolian flags and embraced. An old, intoxicatingly happy man approached me. “This is a great day for Mongolia,” he said. “I am very happy.”
The city had literally exhausted its fireworks, so the scene was not as raucous as it had been the first night, but the earnestness and joy of the celebrations made the night a magical one, and the perfect ending to my coverage of Mongolia’s Olympic endeavors in 2008.
-Will
The View From The Top
/1 Comment/in Africa, Sunny Spot /by EY - fordafunofitSometimes the magic in the view from the top is even more spectacular when you’ve pushed yourself to find it! 
We started out in a small village on top of the ridge, after hiding most of our luggage in the back of the 4-wheel drive Jeep.
We then started our trek through the upper Dogon Village before heading off on a long dirt road into the desert heat of Mali. As we hit the edge of the cliff, we began hiking down into the desert plain. Following two grueling days of hiking through the lower elevation Dogon Villages in 100°F heat, we finally began our ascent back to the top of the cliffs. 
We asked our guide “Where do we go up?” and he replied “there” pointing to the rock face of the cliff. After several more miles of desert trekking to get to the cliff, we climbed through a narrow crevasse that led to the top.
Though we had to stop several times and my friend had to hold the guide’s hand for fear of heights, the view from the top was worth the trek! We felt like two powerful women who had conquered the world!

Sometimes the view from the top is worth the trek. At first the challenge was daunting, but the high from finishing was unbeatable!
-Rosemary-
The Zone and the Art of Goat Milking
/2 Comments/in Animals, Fordafunofit /by William KennedyIt took sweat, tears and getting peed on, but this month I learned how to milk a goat. It wouldn’t have been possible without a lesson I learned at eight years old inside a dim elementary school gymnasium, when I first experienced “the zone.” I’m sure you’re familiar with it—that mindset that transports you to a state of potent, yet effortless focus.
I was toeing the free throw line to practice shooting, growing increasingly frustrated by a series of misses. Everything distracted me: the old building’s echo; dust particles in the light; my dad’s firm reassurances.
After one particularly bad miss, he stopped me.
“Let’s take a break,” he said.
We walked outside to a tanbark playground and sat, looking at the dry hills for awhile. My dad asked if I was excited about the house we were moving into.
“Well yeah,” I said. “It’s got so much space.”
“Did you explore with your sister?”
“Around the house a little. The neighbor girl played tag with us.”
“It’s a good place for sports” he said. “Maybe we’ll build a basketball hoop there.”
“I think I want to be a baseball player.”
My dad laughed. “Come on. Let’s give it one more try.” He slapped my shoulder. I was feeling pretty good.
Inside, I stepped to the free-throw line once more, took three deep breaths, bent my knees and made my first shot. And my next one. Then I couldn’t miss. It was better than that; it was like the ball couldn’t even touch the rim. The walls reverberated with swoosh after satisfying swoosh.
“You’re in the zone son,” my dad said.
The next shot went up, way wide. That was lesson number two about the zone—when you’ve got it, don’t think about it.
Over the next 17 years my family and an assortment of pets grew into our house, and I had plenty of opportunities to get into the zone. It helped me pull weeds in the garden; helped replant the flowers I mistakenly yanked, and helped me shoot baskets in the backyard. It also came in handy when I came home from college one summer and constructed a goat pen for some new residents.
I can rarely recall needing it more, however, than earlier this month when my parents left for a summer weekend in Yosemite and I had to milk a goat for the first time. And not just any goat. Milky. So named by my sister for her whitish complexion, though she could have also been called “Kicky,” or “Obstinance” or “Stumpy” for a variety of her other traits.
“There’s no way that’s a goat,” my mom told my sister when she brought the scrappy looking creature home, believing for months it was a pig, and eventually a sheep.
But Milky proved her genetics when she gave birth to three very cute baby goats last month. To keep the milk flowing and our fridge stocked after the kids were weaned, my mom and dad went out every morning to milk her, until it was just me home alone.
My practice run the day before my parents departure ended very badly. I squeezed, Milky’s udder and nothing came out. I squeezed harder and she had bucked and rocked. I squeezed one more time and she peed on my hand.
“She’s never done that before,” said my Mom.
“Aaaahhhhhh,” I said.
“Oh well,” she said.
“Aaahhhahhh aahhha hahhhh,” I said.
My parents finished the job while I cleaned my hands off, thinking about the mess I would be in the next day. I returned to watch the last stages, and hopefully pick up a few tips from my mom. Milking a goat is not a difficult process. You gentle push the udder to guide the milk into one of the teets, clamp it with thumb and forefinger so the liquid doesn’t retract, and gradually squeeze down with your middle and ring fingers to push the milk out.
If you’re bad at this, it produces a meager drizzle of milk. If you are good, it’s more of a stream that hits the milking pan in a satisfying shower. For the experienced milker, it’s a 10 minute job; for the inexperienced one, it’s half-an-hour plus.
Probably the real challenge is getting the goat to cooperate, and handling the assorted goaty smells.
Before my mom left, she gave me some good advice.
“You’ve just got to get in the zone,” she said.
The zone. Of course. But easier said than done.
The next day I should’ve done the milking at sunrise, but overslept and had to go to my sister’s house to help her build a fence. When I next looked at my watch, it was 5:35 p.m. and I’d left Milky with a near bursting udder for an entire day.
She let me know about it when I finally got home with a bleating that started strong but faded to a whimper. I lured her onto the milk stand with some grain and fastened her in. I don’t know the exact consequences of not milking goats at the right time, but the way she wavered uncomfortably on her perch, it looked bad. As I started, the more she stomped and kicked, the more I started to feel the pressure. If I didn’t pull it together, my situation and that of the animal I was supposed to be helping, was bound to get worse.
But the goat did not seem to be in a cooperative mood. With each squeeze of her udders only a few drips of white fluid came out. My arms and wrists grew tired. A goat of her size typically yields three cups of milk; my efforts had produced a quarter teaspoon.
I stopped for a break and went to cut some rose branches.
“Alright Milky,” I said. “We can do this.”
I put her favorite food in front of her and took three deep breaths, then started again. The milk came out a little faster, the strain on my arms was less severe and then the sound of the milk hitting the pail became hypnotic. And there I was—in the zone.
I squeezed Milky’s udder once more and nothing came out, this time because the bag was empty. Milky seemed content as she walked back to her pen and I returned to the house to strain the milk and have some with a bowl of cereal.
My mom and dad returned two days later.
“How’d it go,” they asked.
“Easy,” I said.
Really though, I’m not taking anything for granted. They’re headed out of town in a few days and I’m prepping for another visit to the milking stand and the zone.
-Will
postscript: Time has passed and Will is now a “semi” pro at milking Milky – look for the long video version of “How to Milk a Goat” under EntertainingYourself – Hip Hobbies. It’s sure to entertain – at least for a bit!
How To Milk A Goat
/3 Comments/in Animals, Fordafunofit /by William KennedyOnce you’ve tried it, you might actually like it. Milking a goat that is! Now that he’s been doing it for awhile, Will shows off his skills at milking Milky! It’s all about the technique – and of course, getting in the zone!
Sunny Spot: Scottsdale, Arizona
/0 Comments/in Sunny Spot, United States /by EY - fordafunofitSHOUT OUT to our fans in Scottsdale, Arizona. Thanks for checking out EntertainingYourself.com – now we want to check out what you’re up to. So far, it’s clear that you are a Mecca for outdoor enthusiasts. #1 – SUNSHINE! For this first week of December you’ll be SUNNY (mostly) with temperatures in the 70’s. Nice! #2 - Amazing Parks. You’re known for having the largest urban wilderness area – with over 60 miles of trails! The 3rd Annual McDowell Sonoran Challenge which will include Mountain Biking (30K course), Running (15K) and Hiking (9 miles) will take place on January 29, 2011 (on the McDowell Sonoran Preserve – almost 14,000 acres of open land). Sounds like an awesome way of Entertaining Yourself in the new year! They tell us that the premiere trailhead, their “Gateway to the Preserve,” is located at 18333 North Thompson Peak Parkway. #3 – World Class Golf Courses. The International Association of Golf Tour Operators voted Scottsdale 2010’s Top North American Golf Destination! #4 – (if the other 3 are not enough) Scottsdale is just a 4 hour drive from The Grand Canyon. So tell us – what is your favorite way of Entertaining Yourself in Scottsdale?




















