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Gourmet Michigan products in unique gift baskets. Great tasting jams, dried cherries, chocolates, caramel corn, Michigan fudge, and much more.

All Things Michigan

Michigan travels, events, photos, and more

Thank you to our customers

Andrew Norton

Whew! After a super busy last three weeks we have pretty much sold out of EVERYTHING on our shelves. We met and passed our sales goals for the Christmas season a week ago. I would like to apologize to anyone that was still hoping to be able to place an order. I thought I had ordered more than enough inventory to keep up with demand, but we ran out of just about everything after another big day this past Saturday.

The post office is picking up the last of the orders to be shipped out today. I told them to bring a truck or a van. They are going to need the room.

If our little store is any barometer of the Michigan economy I would have to say that overall, our economy isn't as bad as we might sometimes think. Who knows, maybe this is too small of a sample size, but as a small business owner it gives me a ray of hope.

So, many thanks to you, our customer, for making this our best year ever!

Reminder to place your order by December 20th for Christmas delivery

Andrew Norton

One week from today (December 20th) marks the "last call" for shipping gift baskets and being assured of their delivery by Christmas. If you are shipping to Alaska or Hawaii you will need to make sure your order is shipped on December 19th. Remember, you can place your order any time and simply choose the "Ship December 18th" option in the checkout process of our online store for a delivery that will be just before Christmas.

If you are shipping your gift baskets here in Michigan you have until December 21st to make sure the gift basket will arrive in time for Christmas.

Free Christmas music streaming your way

Andrew Norton

There might appear to be something different going on at the All Things Michigan blog. I switched it from a two-column format to a three column format. By doing so, I moved the links that were on the left in a vertical format up to the top in a horizontal format. I just wanted something that would provide a bit more room for posts and to add some fun stuff from time to time. One such "fun" item I have added is the link for Christmas music. Finetune.com allows you to build playlists at their website and then share the playlist through your blog. So I put together a playlist of some old and some new Christmas favorites of mine.

Simply click the 'play' button and the music will begin streaming to your computer.

There are many things that I still want to tweak with the new format, but given that the Christmas season is our busiest time of the year it probably won't happen any time too soon.

Posts from Christmas' past

Andrew Norton

Here is a little roundup of a few posts from last December. Easy Slow-Cooker Bread Pudding Simply delicious when you follow the recipe. I made this a couple of weeks ago with my two-year-old son assisting. Needless to say, in all of the chaos I added twice as much butter and forgot the sugar.

Then I couldn't figure out why my son didn't want to finish his helping. He was the guinea pig - I let him try it first thinking it was a big treat. Little did I know how unpleasant it tasted.

The Christmas Tree Ship A brief look at the history and mystery surrounding the Christmas Tree Ship that once delivered Christmas trees from the forests of Michigan to the docks of Chicago.

Michigan gas prices drop slightly

Andrew Norton

The average price of gas in Michigan is down about $.07 from last week ($2.322) to a current price of $2.255. The price of fuel is also down from last month's average of $2.296. I filled up near Union, Michigan over the weekend for $2.19 per gallon. Most prices I saw over the weekend were right around $2.21 per gallon here in southwestern Michigan.

Snowplows versus my mailbox

Andrew Norton

The forecast is calling for up to eight inches of snow by this evening here in southwest Michigan. And so begins my annual battle with the snowplow versus my mailbox. This is a battle of less than epic proportions. Mainly due to the fact that it has a history of being a one-sided affair with my mailbox receiving the worst of it.

Our current mailbox is an ugly sort of beat up looking affair. It still accepts mail and the crooked flag manages to salute the post office when there is out-bound post present. There are many scars that it bears from numerous encounters with the state snowplow.

Our first mailbox didn't even make it through the first summer at our home. It was taken out by a driver who had fallen asleep at the wheel. Luckily for him the mailbox was the only party in the crash to suffer life threatening injuries.

I went out and purchased an exact copy of that ill-fated mailbox and with it I sealed my fate as a winter-weary protector of our mailbox. The first significant snowfall of that winter saw our mailbox seriously wounded but not yet bound for the trash heap. Unfortunately, later that winter as the snow ensued another snowplow came by and mercifully finished the job the first snowplow had begun.

Did you know that unless you see the snowplow's blade actually hit and take out your mailbox that it is your responsibility to foot the bill and buy a new one? It doesn't matter if the snowplow merely through heavy wet snow at your mailbox while traveling around 50 m.p.h.

As I held the sad remains of our shattered mailbox I gazed up into the falling snow and vowed to never spend more than $10 on a mailbox for as long as we live here. I went into town to the local hardware store and bought an all metal mailbox for about $8.

Then, I went into my wood shop and found a piece of plywood that was a remnant from a previous project. I cut it down to size and attached it to two steel posts that I had driven into the ground to the “snowplow side” of our mailbox. My first attempt at a deflector shield was a success in duty if not in appearance.

My wife tenderly referred to it as a “redneck deflector shield” as though that might be an insult. My retort was always, “it works, doesn't it?” I have since neglected to bother with putting up the “redneck deflector shield” not out of pride for how it might look, but out of surprise at how well my cheap little mailbox stands up to the snowplows.

Last winter was the first in which I didn't set up my mailbox shield. The first heavy snowfall came and with it the enemy – the snowplow. A blur of yellow came barreling down the highway with a white wall of snow rushing before it's blade. The snow knocked my mailbox clean off it's post.

I picked it out of the snow, brushed it off, and screwed it back onto the top of our post. Banged up, chipped paint, and crooked flag. But, like I said, it still dutifully accepts and delivers mail.

A funny postscript to this whole encounter is that I was the first person to put up a shield for our mailbox on our stretch of road. Each winter following the first one when I had put up our shield another house or two adds one. There are now about four or five houses with shields in place to preserve and protect their mailboxes.

Our neighbors put up a mailbox like the first two that we had had obliterated and this will be its first winter of battling the snowplow. They haven't put up a shield to protect it. I wonder how long it will last.