Monday, February 29, 2016

- Sunshine on a cloudy day

I've been trying different ways of combining cloudy gray with sunny yellow on my weather patches since our Hill Country days often start off cloudy, but end up sunny. Previous attempts were somewhat successful, but not much fun to make. Today, that changed, so much so that I made a full-size patch to mark the breakthrough ...

Patch #60

I did debate in my mind whether to put the morning clouds on the top or the bottom, but on the weather patches themselves I've gone with putting the grey to the left and the yellow to the right ...


Perfect timing as the past two days have been perfect examples of cloudy mornings turning into glorious afternoons ...


Luckily, the sun came out in time to shine on both the January and February strips of daily patches ...


Then I put them on the bed, where I think they may someday become a part of a full quilt ...


Of course I've got a long way to go, but the biggest hurdle was overcoming my decades-long aversion to doing patchwork and quilting ... so contemplating a full-size quilt is truly a leap of faith (pun intended).

Never say never.

My patchplay is admitedly a bit eccentric, but I love the serendipity of it when the two strips are brought together ...

crescent moons ...

lighthouse and anchor ...

grasses and wildflowers ...

and the arcs of sotol barbs and migrating sandhill cranes.

For now, I've hung the strips from a door frame in the living room until they can be joined by some additional months ...


  • and I still don't like the sunset patch from last week (sigh)

Sunday, February 28, 2016

- Catching up

How can this happen when I've been posting everyday? I'm already two days behind documenting the first agarita blossoms with some impressionistic stitching on Deb Lacativa dyed cloth ...


Patch #59

a reprise of this scene ...



Then there's the latest weather week, a-side ...


and b-side, which better shows yesterday's red seam for the death on the floodplain ...


Not to mention Melissa's birthday towel from two weeks ago ...


with her own saying ...


and a bevy of anchors to make the point (ha!) ...


front ...


and back ...


I also revised last Tuesday's Patch #54 with an Inktense sunset ...


which I'm calling "just okay" compared to the real thing ...

The view from Meg's dining room

And the addition of herbage (can you believe that's a word?) ...


to Wednesday's droughted floodplain Patch #55 ...


which has already been revised in real life by 1.2" of rain this past week ...


Finally, I'm now thinking of doing some agarita dyeing ... 

 
From Edible and Useful Plants of the Southwest by Delena Tull


which I'll surely do with the sweet strains of Tupelo Honey running through my mind.

Saturday, February 27, 2016

- Life and death on the floodplain

The abridged version of this post is:  a beautiful creature met its end today. This is my remembrance ...

Patch #58

The (much) longer version follows. 

***

I've always been fascinated by the natural world. As a child, I would walk to the Mineola public library by myself (in those halcyon days when walking to school was what you did, of course we walked to the library, too). I remember asking once where I could find books about whales and was directed to books about Wales. After that, I just looked for myself.

I read every book they had about whales, then moved to books about horses and dogs. It didn't take me long to explore the other shelves in the science section. I remember reading books about how to cure your dog of dropsy and how to build an air raid shelter (I was incensed when my parents weren't interested ... my mom said something like "If they drop the bomb, I'd rather be dead"). 

But the book I remember best was one on how to create your own natural history museum. It had chapters about how to organize and label collections like rocks, fossils, shells, and butterflies. It even had diagrams on how to skin and mount small animals ... not that I ever did that, but I was fascinated nonetheless. Sadly, living on the terminal glacial moraine that is Long Island, there weren't fossils and all the rocks were cobbled remnants from somewhere in New England. Shells we had in abundance, yes ... but I never did make my own museum.

***

Do you remember Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom? I loved that show, especially when Marlon Perkins would say, "Watch out Jim!" from the safety of his studio office. And I always hoped Disney's Wonderful World of Color would feature a nature program with flowers opening at hyper-speed (even if they were in black and white on our TV). I saw every Jacques Cousteau and National Geographic special, even when they weren't required for homework. For a time, I was sure that an oceanographer was what I was meant to be.

***

I majored in geology at William and Mary. The one book I remember from those four years was The Descent of Woman ... a scientifically-reasoned alternative theory about the evolution of humankind. Another Elaine Morgan title, The Aquatic Ape. is on my book shelf to this day. I still think it's a good theory.

I never became a geologist or an oceanographer though.

***

In my mind, the third week in June was (and is) the reason for the other 51 weeks in the year. A week at the Outer Banks of North Carolina, walking forever gathering shells, watching the sun and the moon, the weather and the waves, inhaling the deep saltiness of it. Feeling fully alive. Yes.

That was where I was going to retire, yes I was.

***

When we moved to Texas seven years ago, we enrolled with the local Master Naturalists (think Master Gardeners on a hike) so we could learn about the rocks, trees, wildflowers, and critters in our new home. The very first picture in this blog was a roadrunner we spotted as we drove around the neighborhood. And when we moved to our current home one year later, we thought we saw a coyote slide through the mist one morning. Or maybe it was a fox. We dropped out of the Master Naturalists before the class on mammals, so we never were quite sure.

***

After my mom passed away, my dad and I continued to have long talks on the phone each week ... always a bit of a challenge since both of us had/have significant hearing impairments. One evening as we sat talking, a beautiful gray fox walked onto the porch outside my window. It was not the least bit perturbed to see me not six feet away. "Yep," I thought, "it must've been a fox we saw when we first moved in."

Dad passed away in 2012.

***

Don: "Do you hear them?"

Me: "Uhhh ... I don't hear anything."

Don: "Coyotes! Listen!"

We have this exchange every few months, but almost always upon opening the front door, the sound stops.

Me: "Maybe you heard foxes."

***

Don was looking out the west window in our bedroom this morning. A Rio Grande turkey was right outside, pecking away at something in the grass. We often see wild turkeys in the yard. Every so often, they roost in our trees. During mating season, the males strut their stuff. Usually there are lots of them. Not today.

The sun was low in the sky, slanting through the trees. 

"Look how iridescent the back feathers are!" Don observed.

But all I could see was the pattern of dark and light bars on the wing feathers ... like patchwork. Then thought, "I really should make a turkey feather patch like the one on Land of Flood and Drought."

A few minutes later while brushing my teeth, I looked out the north window.

"Don! Come here ... quick!!!  Coyotes! Four of them!!"

They were headed for the floodplain, probably 300' away, running back and forth. Strangely. And there was no doubt ... they were most definitely not foxes.

Then I saw a turkey flail into the air, only to be pulled back down to earth.

The ending only took a couple of minutes.

Afterward, we walked down the east trail and watched as a coyote trotted up the west trail, a bloody wing gripped in its mouth.

A few hours later, we took walking sticks and went out on the floodplain. I had spotted large scat recently, thinking it to be from a neighborhood dog. Now thinking not, hindsight being 20/20 ...


Then I saw the feathers: wind blown across the flood plain ...


soft down caught in the rocks and dry grass ...


blood ...


 but nothing else left for the buzzards ...



I picked up a feather. Carried it back to our sitting spot and contemplated it ...


When we returned to the house, I drew a new feather on a bit of blood-red linen ...


and stitched a eulogy.

Friday, February 26, 2016

- Deep knowing

Feel something in your bones, know what to look for ...

Patch #57: indigo-dyed linen from a vintage table cloth

know what to listen for ...


then shield your eyes as you look into the sun and blindly point the camera at the sky ...


because, yes ... the sandhill cranes are headed north again.


Thursday, February 25, 2016

- Takin' it easy

I realized today that I should do a belated patch about making Valentines with the grandkids. The original projects consisted of meat-tray styrofoam heart stamps slicked with washable markers (just the thing for 3-year-old fingers).

Today's version was stamped with Soft Scrub to discharge the color from the raspberry linen used on the first February patch ...

Patch #56

I think the one on the right looks like a classic sugar heart, but as you can see, there's still a bit of stitching to do. Not tonight.

After an exceptional dinner of blue toro and wagyu nigiri, two orders of shumai (steamed pork and steamed shrimp dumplings), and tuna tataki salad at A-Tan Bistro, we are awaiting the beginning of a Mystiqueros concert ...


Someone in the line gave us an extra ticket (our offer to pay for it was met with "pay it forward") and the person in front of us just showed us the set list ...


And I just found way too many typos in the above text, surely attributable to the nigori sake that I had with dinner (others most likely lurk unfound). So away I go ...


Wednesday, February 24, 2016

- The geography of broken hearts

As promised, today was a two-fer patch day ...

Yesterday's make-up Patch #54 and today's Patch #55 (Revised 2/28/2016)

and therein lies a story. I went out on a picture walk a few days ago. "Picture walk" is a term from my elementary school librarian days. I used to talk through the pictures in a book with early readers as a way to help them understand the storyline before trying to decode the words on the page. These days I use the term with my three year old grandsons when presented with a text-heavy book ... we talk through the pictures instead.

Anyway, as I headed out Don called after me, "It's raining."

"I know," was my reply. After all, it was just spritzing. Nothing to worry about.

So, there I was picture walking through the floodplain, trying to get a sense of story. And among the pictures I took was this one of the soil cracking for want of water ...


"I'll have to come back to this spot after it rains some more," I thought.

The next day, Nancy Erisman at Pomegranate Trail posted a picture of a heart-shape captured in her parking lot at work ... you can go take a look here if you missed it. Anyway, it reminded me of the cracked earth ... so much so that I went back to my picture looking for a cracked heart. Do you see it?

The original picture has been cropped and rotated ... the heart is middle right

Even though I didn't have the right color linen with me in Austin today, the idea took hold in my mind and insisted on coming out of my fingers, thinking all the while how cool it is that someone's words in California triggered this ...


I still have to add bits of leafy green and tiny blue star flowers a la Cindy Monte at Handstories (and no, that's not the name of the flowers ... it's just what they look like to me). But the sun is slowly sinking down, so I'll save the finish for tomorrow when the colors will be easier to pick out.

One other thing got done today: another blue jean patch for G, this time in University of Texas longhorn orange ...

This is actually burnt orange, believe it or not

Which reminds me of a story. Since G had already learned the Star Spangled Banner, I asked him if he had also learned the Texas pledge of allegiance. He pondered for a moment, then broke out in song, "The eyes of Texas are upon you, all the livelong day ...  

Look out longhorns, he's getting ready to join the team ...



Tuesday, February 23, 2016

- A little rain'll do

For the first time in nearly two months I don't have a new patch.

Fortunately, there was rain in the gauge this morning, so at least there's that to show ...


Tomorrow will just have to be a two-fer.

Monday, February 22, 2016

- Unearthed

They say rocks don't rise up out of the soil. Rather, the soil is washed away, thereby exposing the rocks ... un-earthing them.

Patch #53: Rust-dyed linen

The story behind today's patch is actually two stories. It began when Don found an unusual rock on the floodplain, surely a fossil.

"Look it up," I suggested. And so he did, finding first an image ...

Fossil a-side

and then a description ...

Fossil b-side

that both seemed to fit what he had in hand. Pleurotomaria glenrosensis most likely, since the Glen Rose formation outcrops in our area. And the Lower Cretaceous dating also fits with our location in Hays County  (although I was later proved to be incorrect as my college roommate showed this post to my Paleontology prof who dissed my ID) ...


How old does that make it? 100-145 million years old. Definitely worthy of a commemorative patch ... but how?

I started pawing through piles of cloth (no other word for my search methodology), which yielded some potentially interesting dye experiments on muslin. Still, they weren't exactly what I had in mind, so I headed back to look some more. And there on the floor, I spotted a small scrap of rusted cloth that had worked its way loose from the overlying cloth strata. I recognized it as a one-time contender for a compass rose on Triangulation ...


but fortunately, it didn't make the cut for that project. Because really, when turned to the back it became the perfect solution ...

Wouldn't you say?