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Archive for August, 2012

Once in a Blue Moon

Other than I am going to post a photo I took of the second August full moon, this post probably has nothing to do with blue moons.

Well, other than it was one of my mother’s favorite expressions. She usually said it with an expletive or two thrown in, as in “God-dammit, my dog runs away once in a blue moon and the neighbor is calling the cops?” (She really said that once. She had the leash in her hand and she was headed out the door to retrieve Mr. Tack – aka “Tacky” – from someone’s front yard. I really felt sorry for whatever neighbor it was who threatened to call the cops because you did not ever want to cross my mom. Never.)

My mom very rarely got angry. That was my dad’s job. But when my mom did get angry, everyone within reach blanched and the whole world seemed to suck in its breath.

Except when she was mad at my father. Then she just left the house with car keys in her hand and went out on some back road where she could push the car to it’s limit. It’s been told that she pushed the Dodge station wagon up to 120 miles per hour. I have no idea why she was mad at Dad that night but speed helped her calm down and she returned home a much calmer woman than when she left the house.

I never saw or heard my parents fight. The first clue I had of a disagreement between them was when she walked out the door, alone, with the car keys and the tires on whatever car we owned squealed a little as she pulled out of the driveway.

But I did see my mother angry a time or two.

My most vivid memory of her being angry was set in the sand dunes north of Winnemucca, Nevada. We were part of a four-wheel drive club that hosted sand races. The dunes north of Winnemucca are reminiscent of the Sahara or some exotic place: white-hot sand rising in dunes and dropping off suddenly, fluctuating in the winds, pushing the sagebrush and cheat grass back, always changing, moving, shifting.

There were designated areas for the dune buggies and jeeps that came to compete, and a designated safe place for small children to play in the sand. We checked our tennis shoes for scorpions before we put them back on. We got sun-burned and we ran like wild horses between “our” dune and the concessions stand where our mothers alternated their volunteer time. That was a big old school bus converted into a concession bus.

What I remember of the moment was that I was not on the designated dune, but was somewhere between the concessions stand and the kids’ dune and the area where the rigs were prepped and raced. I didn’t really care much for the races, I just wanted to be a wild horse.

My brother, however, was in the middle of the oil and grease and gears and exhaust and roar of engines. My dad raced. And my sister was too little still to care, so she played on the dune with the rest of the little kids who didn’t care.

Enter the laws of physics and a negligent (and most likely drunk) driver. There were no DUI laws in place in those days that put blood-alcohol limits at .08. Driving drunk was… common. Unregulated, for the most part.

This driver had a passenger. She was one of the mothers of the young kids playing on the hill and one of the mothers who volunteered in the concessions stand.

They drove up the sand dune where the kids were playing and they turned broadside to the kids as they attempted to arc around the kids and on over to the racing area. The problem with this is: the hill was steep. Dune buggies and jeeps roll over. They were broadside to a number of small and clueless children. And they stalled.

And my mother saw them. While everyone else who was looking on sucked in their breath and hoped against hope that the dune buggy would not roll and crush the children below, my mother was hot-footing it from the concession stand to a position between said children and the stalled rig. She moved so fast that no one actually saw her move from the stand to the spot on the dune below the rig, but everyone – I mean EVERYONE – heard her.

She was 5’1″ and weighed 95 pounds. The kids on the sand dune scattered. The driver in the stalled vehicle might have opened his mouth to protest or argue with my mom, but she had the upper hand. And she reamed him out. And his passenger. When she was finished with her verbal assault on their lack of intelligence, common sense, and his driving skills, even the racers on the track had stopped to listen. The jack rabbits, scorpions, rattlesnakes and horned toads pulled their heads back into their shady places and blinked out at this tiny woman in red-and-white striped capris pants in fear. The vultures cleared the heavens.

It was the most awesome, wonderful, powerful display of grizzly bear mama on the sand dunes in the late 1960’s.

It was a once-in-a-blue-moon show of righteous anger and everyone ducked. And when she was finished, the spectators applauded. The jerk that was stuck on the hill meekly backed back down. He didn’t have it in him to argue with the 5’1″ woman who just charged up the hill faster than Superwoman could fly.

So when my mom headed out the door with Tacky’s leash in her hand, swearing at the neighbor who was upset that the stupid Schnauzer had just planted some brown logs on his lawn… well, I stayed home. I didn’t want to see (or hear) what my mother was going to unleash on the neighbor.

After all, Tacky only escaped once in a Blue Moon.

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Me? I went to the Oregon State Fair on Saturday. I wanted to just go to the fair and see the animals and exhibits, but my husband zeroed in on the fact that his hero, Joe Walsh, was performing Saturday night. He has a channel on Pandora that is titled “Joe Walsh Radio”. Not that I am complaining – they play a lot of Led Zeppelin on Joe Walsh Radio on Pandora. If I had been the one to set up the station, it would have been Led Zeppelin Radio.

I have Third Day Radio set up on there, too. But I’m the only one who listens to that & I do it when I’m cleaning house.

If I want folk music, I tune into www.folkalley.com because Pandora doesn’t “do” folk or bluegrass.

Anyway, back to what I have been up to. Before I knew it, Don had purchased tickets to Joe Walsh on Saturday at the State Fair. And then he seemed quite surprised that I actually wanted to go to the State Fair and check out the exhibits, too. Silly husband: there are horses at the State Fair!

Not any horse this year, but I noted that there were Gypsy horses and I have recently fallen in love with the breed. I just wanted to see them up close and all.

So we headed down to Salem at 3:00PM, thinking that we’d have about 3 hours to tour the fairgrounds before we had to find our way into the amphitheatre for the all-important Joe Walsh concert. I got to drive. Lucky me. Don is familiar with Salem and I am not. Fortunately, it was very simple, he’s a good so-pilot and the directions to the fairgrounds were well-marked. Parking was free.

Before we even got into the fair, things hinted at a sour day. And I am afraid that I fed into it. Something came over me: righteous anger, indignation, stupidity – I don’t know what. But there were three young men walking ahead of us, big burly youths between 17 and 19 years of age. The tallest and burliest was a strawberry-blond of some indistinct Nordic heritage with a very foul mouth. There were families with small children streaming along the same path; people of every color : pasty white, tan, brown, ecru, burnt sienna, chocolate, coffee. And this ignoramus has the bravado to call someone a “Nigger”.

If his skin had been black, I suppose I would have ignored it. but his skin was pasty-white and his companions were ecru. He didn’t mean the word in vernacular of good friends chiding each other: he meant it in the most derogatory terms. His voice dripped with hatred.

I muttered (loudly) to Don, “That is an inappropriate comment.”

Any swearing of that nature is inappropriate in a crowd, I don’t care what epithets you choose to use. Common sense should tell you that.

Red-head pretended he didn’t hear me and shot back some further derogatory description of people with skin of a different color than his. We were now entering the queue at the gate.

“Your ignorance shows on your face,” I replied – directly, this time because in my opinion the lines were drawn and Mr. 250-pounds of weight lifting anger had crossed a line that Ms. 135-pounds of flabby butter could not, in all good conscience, allow him to cross. My pasty-white flesh rose up.

To everyone’s relief, the three hoods left the queue and stomped silently away, completely (and hopefully, truly) abashed. I can’t stand bullies.

I apologized later to my husband who was just trying to keep his head down as the shots were fired.

It was stupid, I know – but if no one stands up, then who wins? Stupid wins. And I just can’t let stupid win.

I let it go. I wanted to have a great day, so I let it go. They left, everyone in the line let out a collective sigh (actually, I don’t think anyone was listening in, but that sounded good – didn’t it?), and we hustled right through with our tickets purchased online.

The Fair. Well, in a nutshell: the horses are inaccessible for the most part. A few are stalled where the normal fair goer can walk through, but most are kept in stalls beyond the chain-link fence around the fair grounds. How I had forgotten that detail is beyond me. DANG!

The only way to see the horses at Oregon State Fair is to attend the horse show in the arena. What horses you get to see depends on when you are there and the schedule. We got to watch four young horses vie for a ribbon in carriage pulling. I can only tell you that one was an Arabian, one was a draft horse of indeterminate breeding, and two were sharp-looking sorrel horses that could have been anything hot-blooded. The announcer never mentioned breeds.

There was a draft horse competition at 7PM, but we were headed to the concert by then. We did get to see several Clydesdale and Shire horses, but that was about it.

The cattle, sheep, goats and pigs filled a small building. There are more on display at any Clackamas County Fair. I suppose only the best of the best FFA and 4-H animals make it to the State Fair, but it just seems like there are too few when you’ve browsed the stalls at our local county fair for years.

We went looking for the 4-H exhibits and the General Exhibits. The guide to the Fair was ambiguous. The map wasn’t oriented to the North. The graphics did not outline all the entrances. We found all the commercial vendors trying to hawk their newest and bestest wares (stuff you can’t live without, you know), the Master Gardener’s display (banana trees outside? That’s pretty far-fetched in Oregon, even if we’re in a moderate climate), the bare and small 4-H exhibit, and, finally, a small corner at the very outer limits of the fair called the “Artisan’s Village” where local, home-grown Oregon artists demonstrated their trade and their wares. One blacksmith, one wood-carver, a couple potters, a couple jewelry makers…

We found the steam engines and the old car and jeep. We walked briskly through the extended tents of Midway traders selling cheap clothes, jewelry and miscellany made in China, Taiwan, Korea – anywhere but in Oregon. We braved a walk through the commercial exhibits (I pulled Don away from some hawker selling a grill cover you can fry eggs on). And we finally located the main exhibition hall only to realize we’d been there once.

The photography was great. Everything else was displayed county-by-county, presumably to give you an idea of what each county in Oregon is able to produce.

The preserves (canned goods) filled a 4×4′ table. All the jams, pickles, fruits, et cetera from across the entire state: one table top 4×4′. The quilts lined the walls, but I do not recall seeing any identifying tags hanging from them to tell you who/what/where.

Don asked if we could go see the poultry. YES! Certainly there would be a lot of birds! There’s an entire building set aside for birds.

Um. Yeah. Not. I figure – off the top of my head – that there were 40 birds. 12 bunnies. WOW. When I think of trying to make my way through the cages at the local county fair and all the variety of chickens… This was pitiful.

We watched the judging of a beef class (Red Angus). There was no announcer and you had to have some knowledge of agriculture to understand what they were doing. It was really very different from the fairs I have attended before where the beef was open applauded, lauded, and auctioned off to a local grocer or butcher. I’m not going to go into the ethics of raising beef for food (I am not vegan or vegetarian – I am an unashamed omnivore who likes red meat – sorry & yet I understand your position: is that OK?).

We finally found our way into the amphitheatre despite the looks on the faces of the people working the fair. We had a map. the map showed the entrances in different places than where we were directed. We downloaded the map from the Oregon State Fair web site. It was the worst map ever. Well, close. Someone needs to inform the map makers for the State Fair that ALL maps should be oriented to the North and that gates/entrances/exits should be *clearly* marked.

We were still in a very good mood, despite everything I have written. We found our seats in the upper tier. Not many people were seated around us. The grey-haired men who came to take their places around us were giddy with anticipation: the last time they saw Joe Walsh was in 1971. Over forty years ago. Don was in Junior High, so these men were older than him.

And Joe Walsh, that 64-year-old rocker?

He rocked. He rolled. He engaged the audience. He put on a show. He proved that he remains one of the best guitarists of our generation. And the audience sang all of his golden oldies with him.

Thank you, Joe Walsh, for a good show.

You pick. I can’t. It was all good, even if you are sick and tired of Life’s Been Good to Me… It brought the house down.

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Around the Garden

This was a lazy weekend. It was not so much by choice, but by a simple lack of water.

I woke up Saturday morning with foot cramps. Foot cramps became leg cramps throughout the morning. I realized rather quickly that it was more than likely a simple case of dehydration. Except it wasn’t that simple: by mid-afternoon, my legs were still occasionally cramping despite the copious amount of water I drank throughout the day. I added lemonade and juice to my regime, swallowed potassium and magnesium supplements and by eventide the cramping had abated.

This morning I went out and bought some Gatorade (which I detest) in an effort to replace the electrolytes my body was missing. Usually I can get that with lemonade but since I was so stupid as to let myself become severely dehydrated, I needed an extra boost. Today was much the same: taking in copious amounts of water and supplementing my normally healthy diet with minerals like potassium and magnesium. The spasms died off Saturday afternoon late, but I don’t want to take a chance of returning to that miserable place any time soon.

It was too uncomfortable to try to do anything: if I paused or knelt, some muscle in one or both legs would scream out for hydration. If I rested, the cramping would come on suddenly and I’d have to be up, walking. Flexing the muscles is the only way out of a cramp and walking was the only effective way to flex the muscles.

Since I was otherwise occupied in nervous movement, I was not very effective as a house cleaner or gardener. That isn’t to say I was completely lazy: I did the minimum work in the house and I managed to get most of the front yard whipped into shape and I read a lot. I finished one book and started the sequel.

And I drank a lot of healthy fluids.

I sat outside in the shade and read when I wasn’t flexing my muscles to fight off the constant cramping.

The Anna’s hummingbirds paid me several visits, often hovering six feet away from my face with their heads tipped slightly: “Who are you and why are you sitting in my garden?” Of course I never had my camera handy when they paused to ask me that question.

Once I looked up from my book and saw the female Anna’s hovering a few feet from Harvey’s nose: “Are you dangerous? Will you chase me? Is it safe to hover in the flowers by you?” Harvey answered with a blink.

The Anna’s love my hummingbird feeders, but they also love the flowers currently in bloom in my yard.

The cerinthe retorta (above) and the salvia “hot lips” are both big hits with the hummers, along with the fading Russian sage and the gladiolas. I’m very happy the hummers are happy.

The bees are happy, too. I think I have mentioned it here before, but we love bees. All kinds of bees: mason bees, sweat bees, honey bees, bumble bees and all the bees no one ever notices in their yard. Wasps are tolerated as well (except I am not too fond of yellowjackets in August). Hornets can be tolerated as long as their nest is in someone else’s yard. We usually have a dozen mud-daubers hovering around the garage, but I haven’t seen them this summer.

There are so many kinds of bumblebees. They are not usually very shy, either. This one stayed where he was on the fading blossoms of oregano for several photos. He was a small bumblebee and pale yellow. Just look at his eyes! he seems to be taking in the camera as much as it is taking him in.

In the limited space allotted to Bees, Wasps, and Kin in the Audubon Field Guide to Insects of North America, I think this might be a “Digger Wasp” but I can’t be certain because the definition of their territory is more southern. Whatever it is, it loves the Pearly Everlasting  (Anaphalis margaritacea) that I transplanted to my garden from the mountains. Pearly Everlasting is a favorite flower of mine, too. The wasp is not an aggressive wasp but is certainly a bright color addition.

I like this black-and-white striped bee.

Honey bees are not native to the North Americas. They were introduced by homesick Europeans – one of the few invasive species that have done us a good turn rather than a bad turn. I would love to know where the hive is: which park? There’s one to the east of us, one to the south of us, and a wild one to the north of us. Or is there a bee-keeper in the neighborhood?

I don’t know if this is the same black-and-white bee as in the former photo. I don’t think so: I think this one is a larger bee. But I could be very wrong.

In other random garden news, I paid $35 for this. I did not splurge on it, but gave it a lot of thought. I saw several interesting wind chimes by this artist at the Oregon City Farmer’s Market a couple weeks ago. She had a sign posted on her booth:

Sure, you can make it yourself. But be honest: you won’t. But I will.

I thought about that for two weeks. I would make it myself. But in the interest of helping a fellow artist along, I decided to buy a wind chime from her.

And promptly lost her business card. But if you live near Oregon City, just go to the Farmer’s Market. She’ll be there.

I bought this from my cousin at last year’s Family Reunion. She bought it somewhere and regifted it at the reunion. I would have a hard time putting all that flatware out in my yard except some other artist drilled it, hung it, soldered it and created art out of it.

But I have no problem with china.

I do not usually get a photo of this. Don asked me about it the other night: did I ever see bees on it?

No, because it is only open when it is night or heavily overcast. It’s an Evening Primrose. I do not know how it came to be in my yard – I didn’t plant it – but I am not going to weed it back out now that it has drifted here. I remember the Evening Primroses from my childhood in Nevada, bright stars of color in the fading sunlight.

I have seen moths gathering around it. In Nevada, we often caught Hummingbird moths by the Evening Primroses.

Have I mentioned that we did not plant a vegetable garden this year? It was too cold and wet for the months when we should have been planting and then we were off on vacation. So I was surprised to find this volunteer in my back shade garden. And look: now I even have a couple small tomatoes! Wonder if they’ll ripen or not?

I almost forgot to share this! The neighborhood cats have discovered that there is a fresh source of water in our front yard. Apparently their owners do not set out water dishes for them and so they find our birdbath a welcome addition. Hmmm – the guilty owner is even in the background! One of four of their cats can be found in our birdbath at different times.

Of course, if she has water in a dish for her cats, I apologize. But by the frequency in which I find cats in the bird bath, I doubt it. I do not go out of my way to chase the thirsty animals off but they are afraid of me and run, anyway.

Speaking of bird baths… this is what Donald convinced me we needed to do with my wrought-iron planter: a bird bath in the back yard for the small birds. The ceramic dish was a Goodwill purchase.

My buddy. Despite the dehydration and cramps, we went on two walks this weekend and we hung out in the back yard together. I even took him out into the front yard for awhile when I was cleaning out from under the rhododendrons.

Remember those neighbor cats? Well, one came around the corner of the fence, unprepared to meet a big dog in the front yard. And Harvey? Harvey managed to flip himself over when he hit the end of the tether I had him on. It was actually rather funny, but I expect he wasn’t amused.

Just me.

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Listening to the Muse

This morning when I put the dogs out, I noticed the moon.

I wondered what planet was up so early on an August morning. And I ran inside to fetch my camera in the hopes I could capture the elusive moon.

I have been thinking a lot about creativity lately. I have been in a creative slump. Unfinished oil paintings sit on my easels. I haven’t sketched in ages. I found ink pen nibs in a business card holder on my desk and thought about the last time I used them.

It was a very long time ago.

Drawing is like a best friend. You can spend years apart but when you meet up again, you pick up the friendship right where you left, as if time had never intervened.

The only creative thing that I have done in recent months has been to experiment with glues and ceramics.

But this post is not about the success (or lack thereof) that I had with different ceramic glues ad the weather.

It is about the stirring in my heart and soul that draws me back to the roots of who I am. Who I was created to be.

I set myself aside for so many years that I hardly remember who I used to be or who I wanted to be. I do not regret that: my children were the greatest part of my life and I miss them horridly now that they have grown and are forging their own lives far away and without me. That is as it should be: the sacrifice, the growing apart, the mourning.

I am suddenly in a place where I can rekindle my dreams.

I find myself walking down the halls at work and admiring the lighting. It casts strange shadows on the walls and I imagine myself as a little girl trying to walk with the light: stretching up when it reaches for the ceiling and squatting down to walk under the shadows where the light fades and back up again.

I find myself staring out at the trees and seeing a green dragon curled up on the limbs, blinking its warm golden eyes and me before smiling and disappearing into the leaves.

I remember the girl who danced in the rain. That was in a place where rain – and warm rain, especially – was an oddity. Barefoot on warm asphalt, in jeans and a smock top, but my memory makes it a white cotton dress that billows around me as I twirl to some unheard song in the background. And laughing, I look up to see my parents in the front door watching me, slightly amused.

It’s a favorite memory.

At Faerieworlds, I felt myself begin to tap into something I had not sensed in a very long time. Something primal that I had buried under a lot of adult rules and mores about growing up. It teased at me, like the out-going tide. And I knew if I waded out too far, it would carry me off like the rip tide and I would be helpless against its flow.

I resisted.

Why did I resist? Because I am an adult? Because I am a Christian and the images I see in my head are not exactly outlined in the Bible, and being so cannot be from God? Isn’t the litmus test whether or not they do harm, not whether or not the Church approves?

The Church painted clothes on Michelangelo’s masterpieces on the ceilings of a number of churches, including the Sistine Chapel. Michelangelo did not clothe his images. I believe to this day that the artist heard from God; the Church heard from Man.

But that little political rant aside, I have been trying to listen to that voice. The voice of the muse.

And little images have begun to float in my mind. Projects. Ideas.

Colors.

Tonight, I saw a vivid arrangement of colors in my mind’s eye, stuck in traffic on I-205 and trying to stay in the moment so I didn’t drive into someone’s bumper. I saw a vivid blue back ground and an open hand. Millions of lights flashed out of the hand, like seeds being sown. I saw a painting I did a very long time ago on a trunk that has since been destroyed and I knew that I needed to return to that moment, to that person, to that art.

I allowed the trunk to be destroyed in a bizarre moment of conformity.

God did not create me to conform. He created me to create.

And as I turned the last corner before pulling into my drive tonight, this song came on the radio. I don’t even particularly like Aerosmith, but this song is timeless.

It was also very timely.

 

 

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3rd and Washington

Could have been 2nd & Washington. I wasn’t paying attention to what the cross street was: I was intent on yard sale find. The day was Saturday, August 11. The big McLoughlin Historic District Annual Garage Sale was on and I was cruising. I parked my car on 4th and Washington, by St. John’s Catholic Church and private school. I was headed toward the second cluster of yard sales in the oldest city on the West Coast and the End of the Oregon Trail: Oregon City.

The sidewalks are mean. Tree roots have grown under the concrete and pushed it up. Years of ice storms have eroded the concrete. You have to keep one eye down on the ground to walk, otherwise you’ll catch a toe on an edge and tumble.

Here, along Washington Street, it is quiet. The main traffic runs up 5th Street or south on Center Street, one block to the west. The houses are smaller and the yards tinier, but they are still bungalows and Queen Anne style, and ringed with picket fences. They tend to be one-story homes here.

I turned west on the side street. I think it is 3rd, but it could be 2nd. Oregon City is odd in that 7th St is the main east-west thoroughfare, followed closely by 5th and 10th. 1st St is lost somewhere to the south, a narrow little street.

Main Street is on the river level of town; the McLoughlin District is on the first bluff level of town. I live on the next tier.

I crossed the street, jay-walking because there is no traffic here. I can see a yard sale on the corner of Center and whatever street I am on. The street seems to close in on me. I step up onto the sidewalk in front of the garage one house over from the corner. The house it belongs to is a yellow bungalow with a low porch and a 3′ tall chain-link fence in front. The yard is overgrown, the windows closed tight and the yellow shades all pulled as if the house has closed its eyes and lips. It exudes an unfriendly quality.

Next door, to the west, is a low brick building with a quaint picket fence out front. Dry rot has eaten away at the pickets. The whitewash has eroded away. It is old, lonely, sad.

The yard sale on the corner is desolate. No one is sitting outside minding the wares: old VHS tapes, size 10 women’s shoes, mildewy clothes on racks.

I turn and retrace my steps along the sidewalk back to Washington. I wonder about the people who live here and wish I had a camera to capture the worn picket fence. Someone would probably come out and yell at me for taking photos. The pickets hang and the nails rust.

Walking this direction, I can see into the back yard of the sleeping yellow bungalow. Blackberry vines reach up into the air like the vines in a scene from a Tom Robbins’ novel about Seattle. Someone lives here. S0meone old and lonely. A witch from a Harry Potter novel. The trees throw Hallowe’en shadows in the mid-morning summer sunshine.

Around the corner, I pass a set of one-story apartments in disrepair. A tall bush-cum-tree presses up against the building. An air conditioner has been placed in the window and pushed out against the limbs of the bush/tree, anchoring the unit in place. A stuffed brown pillow fills the gap between unit and wall.

As I examine this set-up, I feel as if eyes are on me. I smile to myself.

This is fodder for a very good scary story a la Ray Bradbury. I make a note to myself to revisit this street in the autumn, when the leaves have changed and October beckons.

All I purchase is a pair of black Naugahyde boots for $5.

Tonight, I watched bats swoop into the dimming light. snatching up to pine beetles and mosquitoes.

I want to revisit that street with a camera.

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Yard Sales Finds

I have begun to think yard sales this summer are a bust. I have only been to a few before today and it seems that people put too much value in the stuff they want to get rid of. So I haven’t purchased very much.

I am also maxed out in the junk department and I really need to purge my home before I start adding too many more trinkets. That has a tendency to put the kabosh on shopping for junk, too. Where am I going to put it? What am I going to do with it?

A couple of weeks ago, I picked up this vase for twenty-five cents. I am a sucker for funky vases and this one is funky.

Funky, but utilitarian. Now that’s the kind of bargain I like to find when I’m out “shopping” other people’s junk.

There’s a story behind Captain Jack here. I have a couple Internet friends who are in love with Johnny Depp. And this (cheap) (but excellent condition) poster made me think of the pair of them. I still have to package it and ship it, but it is going to one very pleased Internet friend in the very near future.

I bought this darling blouse last weekend. Paid a dollar for it.

After I got it home and really looked at it, I found this. Actually, there are two red greasy stains like that on it. Why do people sell the stuff they know is stained? Just throw it away or make a rag out of it!

I liked that blouse enough that I decided to try dyeing it the same color as the little stains.

New life! I’ll get a little bit of wear out of it for my dollar + RIT dye.

Today was the big “McLoughlin Historic Neighborhood Garage Sale” which is a sweet small town event where many of the neighbors in the older part of Oregon City (the oldest city on the West Coast, by the way) sell their stuff. There’s a traveling antique dealer who sets out all the stuff he couldn’t sell on the road, a church that throws a rummage sale, and a myriad of folks who just want to get in on the fun and make a few bucks. The sales tend to be clustered together, so it is best to park your car and wear comfortable shoes. You can walk five or six blocks and circle around, return to your car and move to the next cluster. That way, if you buy something bulky your car is never too far away.

One busy street slices through the neighborhood, but in Oregon City drivers are polite: when a pedestrian steps off the curb, everyone stops. Most of the time, anyway. It’s a small town and folks are friendly.

I did find a few things today that I wanted enough to pay the prices asked.

The tiles came from one sale. I have no idea what I will use them for, but they were cheap and I know I will use them. I will probably use them as pavers in one of my garden beds.

But the plant stand… I went out looking for one. I have a little project in mind. I wasn’t actually picturing a wrought iron plant stand. This one had a big, ugly vintage 1960’s planter sitting lopsided in it. And a price tag of $15. I told the seller (that antique dealer I mentioned) that I did not want the planter.

He said he’d sell the whole thing to me for $12 *if* I would take the planter, too.

I took the vintage ceramic planter. Remember that.

I also bought this cast iron bird from him. $5. About 6″ long. Not sure what it used to go on top of, but am very certain I will find a new use for it soon.

Some sort of use like this (I just put this together for the photo – the ceramic tiles are definitely not going to go there but the little bird feeder most certainly will go there).

I found this mirror at one sale ($3). The boots were at another sale ($5). The boots aren’t much until you remember that I have nifty little Faerietoes from Faerieworlds.

Those boots are perfect! And the vintage mirror? Well, I definitely have a place for the mirror – and a use.

But that was IT. All that walking, and that was my haul. I threw up my hands and went to the grocery store to get the next week’s installment of food. And on the way home from the grocery store, I said to myself, “Just ONE more stop…”

If you know me at all, you know what a great find this is! Hardbound. The entire set of Cornelia Funke’s Inkheart series plus a bonus book. $4. Plus, the two women running this yard sale were witty and well-read. We stood and critiqued a number of YA popular novels (Twilight, Hunger Games) and our insatiable need to read.

And I inquired about the little secretary dresser. $5. And they would help me load it.

I pulled forward (which involved double-parking because just as I was going to pull forward, someone else stopped at the yard sale and parked in the way).

Unfortunately, I had all the junk from all the other yard sales plus my groceries in my car – and the seats were up. I had to unload to lay the seats down in order to put the secretary in there. And that meant setting out the plant stand with the vintage 1960’s planter.

“Oh! You found a vintage planter!” shrieked one of the women in delight.

I left the planter with her.

I got the secretary in the house and up the stairs, but I have to clear a space for it in my studio. It’s a bit beat up, but quite functional. 39″ tall, 30″ wide, 16″ deep (before the desk is opened).

This is how it looks when the shelf is up. My mother had one (hers was more of a desk below) but my brother inherited that. I like this one, too.

And for the money I spent at the last yard sale – it was the very best one.

Now I am going to go sit out in the shade of the Hawthorne tree and reread Inkheart before I get started on the rest of the series. I may even watch the movie tonight.

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Summer came! Summer will be gone by the end of the week, but it arrived yesterday with the first triple digit temperature we have had in over three years. Today was the first time in over 1,000 days since we had a day in the 90’s (Farenheit).

The humidity will probably kill me, but I am absolutely *not* going to complain that it finally got hot enough to complain. It’s too hot to sleep, and that is wonderful. I have missed you, Summer.

In celebration, I took several photos around the yard today (I did nothing today and it was wonderful, too).

 A bee taking flight.

  A slug trail across a spider web.

Fireweed.

Oregon Grape. Somewhere I have a recipe for Oregon Grape jelly. It requires a lot of sugar but no pectin. T have never tried it out. Oregon grapes are not sweet by nature, but I bet they make awesome jelly.

Guess I should try out the recipe.

Nightshade.

It’s such a pretty flower.

The tree paeony after I watered.

I love the play of droplets on leaves.

A bee and a beetle on the Pearly Everlasting. I was so focused on the bee when I took the photo that I was surprised to have captured a beetle, too.

I love Pearly Everlasting.

A bumblebee on the lavender.

My volunteer tomato plant (that still has no blossoms).

The blackberry canes growing over our fence from the neightbor’s yard. Loverly.

(The fuschia in the foreground is mine. It’s kind of a pain, but I love the tube flowers.)

Our big dog run.

OK – it’s still a work in progress. Don doesn’t get into any big hurry. he cut the holly tree down. Now we have to pull the stump, dig out our blackberries and all the nightshade before we can even pour a foundation…

The broad-tailed hummingbird at my new hummer feeder.

And the following are from another day:

      

An Osprey circling overhead. I could hear it calling from a long ways off. I put the 75-300 mm lens on and attempted to capture it in flight as it circled over the bluff.

Look at those wings!

That is one awesome eagle.

And the “nothing” I did today:

        This time I kept copious notes on what glue I used so I will remember to use it next time. I used four different glues. I do not intend to attempt to sell these. i just want them for my garden. For me to enjoy.

And maybe the birds if I put water or seed in them.

*If* I can keep cats out of them.

Happy Summer.

We get it once in a Blue Moon around here.

Our Blue Moon is August 31 this year.

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