That said, this has been a great day for birdwatching in my own yard. I have seen both male and female Hummingbirds without any doubt, and had Red-Winged Blackbirds earlier this morning. If that wasn't enough, Mr. Raven allowed me to approach within twenty feet of him to deliver his breakfast to the crow board. I am sure he must be one of my resident pair or he would not be so bold.
This is the 15th year of continuous daily publication for 365Caws. All things considered, it's likely it will be the last year as it is becoming increasingly difficult for me to find interesting material. However, I hope that I may have inspired someone to a greater curiosity about the natural world with my natural history posts, or encouraged a novice weaver or needleworker. If so, I've done what I set out to do.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Red Light District
That said, this has been a great day for birdwatching in my own yard. I have seen both male and female Hummingbirds without any doubt, and had Red-Winged Blackbirds earlier this morning. If that wasn't enough, Mr. Raven allowed me to approach within twenty feet of him to deliver his breakfast to the crow board. I am sure he must be one of my resident pair or he would not be so bold.
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Salmonberry Pollinator
Highest Point In Pack Forest
Was that where I picked up my passengers? While I was sitting on the rock? I hadn't gone bushwhacking, although I had gotten down on my hands and knees for a few photos. In any event, I only discovered them on my way home when I felt a sharp pain on one shoulder blade. Tick! Aaaaagggghhhh!!!
I hate ticks. We never used to worry about ticks in Washington, but times are changing. Every year, I manage to pick up at least one and usually find it before it attaches. Not today! The big one (and there were three in all!) was firmly embedded and came away with a hefty POP! I checked to be certain I'd gotten the head, and thought I had, but the spot is still sore.
Maybe I don't like hiking in Pack Forest as much as I did before. I had fun, but I'm not sure the tradeoff is worth it.
Friday, March 29, 2013
Don't Wanna, Don't Hafta
I got an email message from my boss-and-friend Kevin a few days ago asking if he could stop by on his way home. "I have something for you," he said. Well, gosh! That's pretty good bait! I certainly wasn't going to say no. When he arrived, he got out of the car with something held behind his back, something he adroitly kept out of my line of sight even while I was showing him the new heat pump. He has two kids so I think he's had plenty of opportunity to practice, but I was not allowed even a sliver of a glimpse of the object until we went indoors. With a big grin, he then handed me an Angry Birds coloring book! His wife had found it in a shop, and of course I immediately came to mind because it was at his home that I first became acquainted with the game.
Some months ago, I purchased a "crayon tower," 150 colors in a telescoping container for a photo shoot. Today, I decided to put it to use. I was shocked and dismayed to discover that you just can't get the vibrant colors out of these modern ones like you could from the ones of my childhood. I suppose they're made with synthetic wax or something it wouldn't hurt a kid to eat. Maybe crayons have gotten "all growed up" and are taking themselves too seriously these days...unlike me.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
I Love Presents
Yesterday a small box arrived from Canada. I knew it was coming and I knew what it contained, although I didn't know the specifics. When I opened it, out tumbled eighteen beautifully turned bobbin lace bobbins. I've spent this morning attaching the spangles (beads) which help keep the bobbins in place on the bolster.
These will count among my most treasured needlecraft tools because they were made especially for me by my wonderful friend Di Bédard. Thank you so much!
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Heating Head
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Mr. Slim
It has been an all-day process to get Mr. Slim and his smaller brother ensconced and, as is so common in any type of home improvement, there were a few unexpected obstacles which had to be surmounted, including a reluctant transplant of my best patch of wintergreen. There were fittings which didn't fit, couplings which didn't couple, wires which didn't reach and level spots which weren't, but each issue was overcome in turn. Emissaries were dispatched, envoys were sent with packages of parts, and when ten hours had elapsed, Mr. Slim gave forth a joyous blast of warm circulating air which brought me up to "toasty" in no time at all.
I'm sure as our friendship matures, there will be some learning experiences for me, but one thing I can assure you: I will not have a moment's regret at putting aside my reliance on oil as a heat source.
Monday, March 25, 2013
Crochet A Bead Daisy
Sunday, March 24, 2013
The Craft Of Quilling
The name derives from the fact that originally strips of paper were rolled around an actual feather quill. Later, use of a bodkin or quilling needle allowed quillers to have finer control over the dimensions and tightness of the coils. Once rolled, a coil is set aside to relax and open before being shaped. If accuracy is desired (like for making the white snowflake), coils may be put in a quilling frame with holes of a specific dimension. After the coil has relaxed, the loose outer end of the paper strip is glued down and then the coil is ready to be pinched into shape. A variety of different shapes can be made: circles, teardrops, ellipses and so on, or they may be loosened to form leaves or stems. Finished coils are glued together to form flowers or patterns, and the finished piece may then be affixed to paper or cardstock for display.
Quilling supplies are readily available on line and paper comes in a wide variety of colors and widths. Some craft stores carry paper and basic tools, but if you want to try it with little monetary outlay, just cut 1/4" strips of colored computer paper and use a tapestry needle or large sewing needle for your quilling tool. The only other items you'll need are tacky glue and some cardstock for mounting your artwork!
Saturday, March 23, 2013
The Gardner Years
Booth Gardner was Washington's 19th Governor. At the time he was elected, I was a young harper who had just gotten her first serious engagement after a few years of performing at dinner events. As I was packing my equipment away, a woman approached me and asked if I would be interested in playing at the newly-elected Governor's wife's Inaugural Tea. I jumped at the chance. That fortuitous event led to another engagement at an inaugural dinner, and then to more invitations to play at the Governor's Mansion over Gov. Gardner's eight years in office.
Booth Gardner was a humble man, a philanthropist and as genuine a person as one could hope to see in public office. He was clear in his politics, firm in his convictions, and a champion of the working man. If he had a personal agenda, it was only to be admired and respected by his constituents, and his every action spoke of his commitment to that goal. He brought the state to the forefront of environmental legislation early in his career despite family ties to one of the largest timber companies in the region.
However, it is not for his politics that I remember Booth Gardner. It is for our first meeting when he offered a handshake and I, in my mediaeval garb and persona, placed my hand daintily in his and gave a curtsey. It was hard to keep in character when he responded with a curtsey of his own! Later that evening, I took him aside to explain that a gentleman bows. He was not the least bit embarrassed by the gaffe, and we spent fifteen minutes practicing the proper etiquette before I went home.
Friday, March 22, 2013
Eagle Peak
Warning! Do Not Leave Camera Unattended!
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Daffy Spring Weather
In a couple of weeks, I'll have white drifts of another sort in my garden. The narcissuses (or "narcissi," if you prefer) are getting ready to open! But for today, Spring's gone back to bed beneath a blanket of snow, reluctant to get up and go about her business.
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
One Of Those Days
I've always wanted to do a personal version of my mascot, and I can't help but think I'm starting to look like my mother. She was the spittin' image of the nebbish on the mug.
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Danger Zone
Just sayin...
*****
Okay, I'm sure they meant "blackbird" rather than "black bird," but it made me laugh to think that my fame preceded me all the way to the State Capital which was where I found this sign. The only black birds I saw were some very friendly crows who walked along with me for a ways. Blackbirds of the one-word sort (Red-Winged, Brewer's and their relatives) can be very territorial during mating and nesting seasons. Perhaps it wasn't the brightest design idea to install a man-made cattail pond in the midst of office buildings!
Monday, March 18, 2013
Daisy Chains
Sunday, March 17, 2013
A Feast Fit For A Pirate
Between bites, the Captain gave into reminiscence and, in a moment of deep reverie, she spoke of her mother's love for the Isle of Skye. "'Twas frae there that me grandfer come," she said, and added under her breath, "Wrong side o' th' blanket, that one." When I assured her that most of us have bastards somewhere in our history, she gave a coarse laugh and intentionally misconstrued my meaning, saying, "Aye, an' there be a bloody lot o' them in th' Corbyes, 'tis no denyin'."
Peeke interrupted us then by placing a large bowl of neeps (turnips) in the center of the spread. Captain Corbye had gone so far a-woolgathering that she passed over the opportunity to reprimand him for the late serving. As if from the instinct of some half-remembered social convention, she pushed the vegetable across to me with the point of her knife. The moment gave me pause to wonder: who might Morgan Corbye have become had she not turned to piracy those years ago when she enlisted with Edgar Service?
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Back When Shakes Were Shaken
Today, I got down the old shaker, filled it with vanilla ice cream, milk, caramel syrup and a healthy helping of the powdered malt a local burger joint owner graciously orders for me once a year or so. I had forgotten how the aluminum iced up on the exterior during the shaking process, but unlike my dad, I didn't forget to hold the small lid with my finger. No restaurant can top a home-made malted milk shake!
Friday, March 15, 2013
Happy First Day Of Skunk Cabbage!
Thursday, March 14, 2013
A Few Of My Favorite Things
We share our stories in email and on the phone. We laugh and joke and sing. We help shoulder each other's griefs and miseries, and though we sometimes argue, we love one another as dearly as blood family. Surprises are found frequently in the mailboxes we maintain, particularly around holidays. I received one such treasured box of goodies today. Pirates, a marvelous marble and the best-ever tart grapefruit candy you could ever hope for! Can you tell my sister-of-the-heart Finchy knows my preferences? Thank you!
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Alpenstock
Despite the frets of friends and recommendations by authoritative bodies, I hike alone. You can't experience wilderness with someone chatting in your ear. When a bit of tree bark appears to move upward, you have to freeze in place instantaneously without worrying about someone running into you from behind, or you'll never confirm that yes, it really was a Brown Creeper. Sure, there are risks in hiking solo (and especially at my age), but they have to be balanced against the rewards. I generally let someone know where I'm headed, although all too often, that's no guarantee that I'll keep to the flight plan I've filed.
Today, I borrowed an alpenstock from the office and with no particular goal in mind, wound up on the snow-covered Eagle Peak trail. My time was occupied in close observation of lichens and sporophytes magnified by water droplets, heedless of the rain. It might not have been the most exciting adventure I've ever had, but it was nevertheless quite fulfilling, as only time in the solitude of the forest can be.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Scientific Exploration
Monday, March 11, 2013
Huck Embroidery
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Do Not Leave Pets In Car
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Proof Against Merchandising
Except Angry Birds. No, I am not buying every Angry Birds item I see, but I do have an Angry Birds stuffie and some fridge magnets and...well...when it came time to buy Easter candy, I went for Angry Birds without giving a single thought to what the candy itself might taste like. It claims to be "fruit flavored," but a strong odor of bubblegum filled the room when I opened the package. Gack. And yes, I'm going to save the Golden Egg for last. Sheesh, did you have to ask?
Friday, March 8, 2013
Special Friends
Our next meeting with the species came following the eruption of Mount St. Helens. The birds were in migration in the area on May 18, 1980 and thousands were killed in the blast. Others were blown off their flyway. Disoriented, burned, blinded by ash, one flock found its way to our feeders where an ample supply of food encouraged them to stay throughout the season. The following year they returned to introduce their brood to the territory. We were on the map from that point on, and not only did hundreds of them come to our feeding stations, they invaded the neighbors' feeders as well. When I moved here, one neighbor promised to keep up the tradition and does so to this day.
My encounters were not limited to watching them at a distance. Several years ago, I discovered an injured bird on my back step, his wing badly broken. With some experience in bird rehabilitation behind me, I brought my patient indoors and kept him in my back bedroom for six weeks while the wing healed. Flying lessons followed, and when he had regained strength in the wing, I released him, and none too soon because he was becoming habituated to the point that he would hold "hands" with me. For at least the next two years, Friend (identifiable by a growth on his leg) returned to the contorted filbert. I never saw him with a mate.
The porchies are back in force now, and I take my daily entertainment in watching them whether I am inside or outdoors. Like many of the birds in my yard, they show little fear of me or the camera.
Thursday, March 7, 2013
A Basket Of Pysanky
Pysanky are made using whole raw eggs. Melted wax is applied with the kistka, first covering all areas of the egg which the artist wants to remain white. The egg is then put into the lightest-colored dye bath (usually yellow). The next waxing covers the areas which are to be left yellow, and so on down the line, the egg steeping in progressively darker dyes until it reaches the final bath (usually dark blue or black). When the egg is removed from the final dye bath, it is lightly heated over a candle and the wax is carefully wiped away. Then it is varnished. Once the varnish is dry, the tricky task of removing the white and yolk is initiated. A small hole is made in either end of the egg and a metal stirrer is used to perforate the yolk. Some artists blow the "middles" out by mouth, but it is much safer to use an egg-blowing bulb such as the one shown to the left of the lathe. Care must be taken not to exert too much pressure because eggs do occasionally burst during the removal of their insides. Once the interior has been rinsed with water, the eggs are left to dry out for a couple of weeks before the holes are sealed with wax. The dyes used in making pysanky are generally not light-fast, so these remarkable "Easter eggs" should be kept out of sun or bright light.
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Corax The Magnificent
Ravens are fairly common around Mount Rainier, and now is their nesting season. My resident pair at home are setting up housekeeping somewhere close by. This will be their third year together. I am fairly sure that this bird is one of the pair I've often seen together around Longmire.
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Smocking Pleater
Here, I'm only gathering a narrow width of muslin for demonstration purposes. Three toothed rollers force the cloth onto specially designed needles, gathering it into very uniform pleats. If you were gathering a shirt-length of material, the excess would hang from the device beyond the ends of the rollers. Pieces of a garment are generally gathered separately and construction is done before smocking begins.
I've made dozens of baby garments, shirts and pillow tops. This wide-yoked midriff top has raglan sleeves, and is the only example of pleated smocking I still own. Might have to do something about that!
Monday, March 4, 2013
Fiesta!
Four jalapeños, four Serranos and one Anaheim for sweetness are stewing in the slow-cooker with a pound and a half of cubed pork loin and assorted other vegs and spices. Chili verde is one of my favorite Mexican entrees, and the aroma filling the house is making my stomach growl already. Just prior to serving, I'll thicken the juices with flour to make a light gravy which will be used as the topper for meat and peppers rolled up inside steamed flour tortillas, and then it will be fiesta time!
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Blueberry Bead Bracelet
The project has been sitting next to my weather station since Christmas Day, a spot where I knew it would remind me that it needed to be made. Each morning, I would see it there and say to myself, "I have got to work on that today," and after entering weather data on the chart, I would promptly forget all about it until the following day. Last night, I took a firmer stand and put it atop the bobbin lace pillow. It took about ten minutes to complete with a minor adjustment to the instructions to shorten it to fit my tiny wrist. The blueberries would fool you into thinking they were real if someone slipped them into your breakfast cereal!
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Seventh Veil
Friday, March 1, 2013
It's Not Just My Imagination
Spring has sprung,
The grass has riz.
I wonder where
The daisies is?
Spring has definitely sprung! It's not my imagination. My garden seemed to sprout clusters of daffodils and grape hyacinths overnight. The ones closest to the house have buds already. Oh, Spring is here!
The Harbourmaster's Error
To say that Captain Corbye and Harbourmaster Beale were on less than friendly terms would be to put it mildly. Long had the captain known that the exorbitant tithes on incoming and outgoing goods were but in part governmental greed, and that only marginally more than half the docking levy ever reached the village coffers. Though Morgan Corbye was a pirate of the high seas, the worse villain was Beale, dry-shod landlubber he, with his permits and taxes and penalties slipped in substantial part into his own pockets. The very inn from which Captain Corbye had been ushered with such incivility was in fact foundering under Harbourmaster Beale's own avaricious and self-serving piracies.
A few days earlier, Captain Corbye had learned that a shipment of rum had been brought into port, a shipment on which Beale intended to capitalize. Initiating a surcharge of twenty percent above the official liquor tax, the government agent placed the goods marginally beyond the innkeeper's financial reach; thus the desperate proprietor, his cellar nearly empty, sought a loan from one of the village's more wealthy inhabitants. Harbourmaster Beale's wife's brother, no less mercenary than the Harbourmaster, set extortionate terms in regard to interest, terms which the innkeeper found so unreasonable that he was forced to turn down the contract and return to his place of business to make shift as best he could. When the pirate captain subsequently offered good gold for an evening's libations, the barman was compelled to inform her that no rum was to be had until Beale's greed was satisfied. Ever the champion of the downtrodden, Morgan Corbye listened raptly to his tale, her mind racing. In the next few hours, her plans to settle old scores with Harbourmaster Beale had been formed.
Thus it came about that upon the next evening while feigning insobriety, she allowed herself to be pushed and shoved and verbally abused as the bait she knew Beale could not resist. At the same time, her crew was hard at work to offload cases of liquor further down the docks, delivering them to the back door of the pub, untaxed save for an honorarium of bottles with which to supply the Winged Adventure's galley. Beale, however, had committed another insult against her in the kick he delivered to her hat, an offense which could not be let stand unavenged. Returning with her crew that same night, the pirate assisted the proprietor with relabelling his fresh stores as ale, and a crudely penned note was found upon the stoop of the local constabulary the following morning, informing representatives of civil law in the matter of the Harbourmaster's black-market trade in liquor. With an outbuilding on his property filled with empty rum cases, the evidence against Beale was singularly damning. Their tongues firmly in cheek, Captain Corbye and her crew pledged his good health in a toast of excellent rum as the Winged Adventure sailed out of port.