Saturday, May 31, 2014

at her ease


I guess it's safe to say she's comfortable here.

Friday, May 30, 2014

some Alabama stitching

After seeing so many beautiful creations on Anna's blog, I am trying the Alabama Chanin techniques for myself. A very basic and familiar a-line skirt pattern I've used many times, cut down the front and back centers to make another seam, which I've hand stitched.


Dark grey fabric and ivory thread. No other embellishment - I'll finish the elastic at the waist and see how I like it.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

FM Dolly

When I headed for the bathroom this morning, my radio was on AM - when I came back, it was on FM.


Hail the day that sees Him rise

Today!

John Singleton Copley's The Ascension



Hail the day that sees Him rise, Alleluia!
To His throne above the skies; Alleluia!
Christ, the Lamb, for sinners given, Alleluia!
Enters now the highest heaven!  Alleluia!

There for Him high triumph waits; Alleluia!
Lift your heads, eternal gates!  Alleluia!
He hath conquered death and sin; Alleluia!
Take the King of glory in!  Alleluia!

Lo! the heaven its Lord receives, Alleluia!
Yet He loves the earth He leaves; Alleluia!
Though returning to His throne, Alleluia!
Still He calls mankind His own.  Alleluia!

Lord, though parted from our sight, Alleluia!
Far above the starry height, Alleluia!
Grant our hearts may thither rise, Alleluia!
Seeking Thee above the skies.  Alleluia!

There we shall with Thee remain, Alleluia!
Partners of Thy eternal reign, Alleluia!
There Thy face forever see, Alleluia!
Find our heaven of heavens in Thee, Alleluia!

                              -  words here a little different from Charles Wesley's, but a wonderful hymn

"The meaning of Christ's Ascension expresses our belief that in Christ the humanity that we all share has entered into the inner life of God in a new and hitherto unheard of way. It means that man has found an everlasting place in God... Jesus himself is what we call 'heaven'."

                                     -  Pope Benedict XVI


Monday, May 26, 2014

so what

After a nice, quiet Memorial day, tonight finds Dolly groovin' to this  -


Miles Davis' So What, on his 88th birthday anniversary.

Friday, May 23, 2014

rain

Today, among the book donations that regularly appear at the library, was a small book of poems by Thomas Hardy. I took it.

This evening, a thunderstorm with driving rain has been taking its time about leaving.

On the Doorstep
     by Thomas Hardy

The rain imprinted the step's wet shine
With target-circles that quivered and crossed
As I was leaving this porch of mine;
When from within there swelled and paused
               A song's sweet note;
       And back I turned, and thought,
                'Here I'll abide.'

The step shines wet beneath the rain,
Which prints its circles as heretofore;
I watch them from the porch again,
But no song-notes within the door
               Now call to me
        To shun the dripping lea;
                And forth I stride.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

the child I never had

Cindy is adjusting to her new home pretty darn well. She has made herself acquainted with every little corner of this place that she's wanted to.

She's got a funny habit, though.


This is what I came home to one day last week. And it isn't the first time. I can't keep a tablecloth on the table for long - she drags one end over into Dolly's water bowl.  The first thing she did here was seemingly try to cover up the bowl.


She does this every time there's a cloth on the table. We first noticed this behavior during her early days here, when she was sleeping in the basement. My brother saw one morning that she'd dragged her bedding into the nearby water bowl. We're still trying to figure out why she does this.


You can see here that she's not really trying to cover it, but she wants to dip it in the water. Why oh why, Miss Cindy??


It's hard to photograph her at any time, 'cause she's such a busy little person. 



So far, she hasn't pitched in with the laundry. She must still be perfecting her game.


Friday, May 16, 2014

I like it

Well, I had a birthday gift to wrap the other day, and I used my wrinkled "kraft" paper -



A bit of ribbon, a sticker - I like this look!

Thursday, May 15, 2014

a bit on Christian contemplation

"We are not asked to acquire new insights, though these are, of course, useful. We are asked rather to expand our hearts by affective prayer and by remaining close to Jesus, as Mary did for long periods, often of silence, and to feed our spirits with the interior affectivity that is so important for perseverance on the spiritual journey."

                               -   Perseverance in Trials: Reflections on Job,  by Carlo Maria Martini

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

zip-up greenhouse

I bought myself a plastic, zip-up greenhouse. Forty dollars on Amazon and definitely worth every penny.


Five feet high with four shelves. You put something heavy on the bottom to keep it from being blown over in high winds.

We have no good place indoors for seedlings, and the growing season here isn't terribly long. Certainly nothing like what I see on the Australian blogs I read.

It has hard plastic pieces on the sides, with metal pipe to keep it all together, and a plastic cover.
The shelves are cheap and don't lay flat, but it was a simple matter to lash them to the piping.



They'll be fine.  There isn't much in there now, but I have plans.


Someone gave us this Tomato Berry.  It's a start.

Monday, May 12, 2014

bog people for dinner

I think it was last year when I cooked a dish with small tomatoes in it. My brother said the wrinkled appearance made him think of the bog people.  So I kind of avoided cooking smaller tomatoes with skins on.  

But it's time for going through all recipes in my box, and finding out what sinks and what swims. And who can resist something called Provencal Chicken and Tomato Roast?  So, it was the bog people once again for dinner.


I didn't follow it exactly, but basically I roasted some chicken thighs with cut-up potato, and later added the tomatoes and olives. With plenty of herbes de Provence, olive oil, salt, and onion and garlic powders.  It was good.

But he did say that the olives made it look even more like the bog people.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

St. Margaret of Scotland

I think I've found a patron for this blog - Saint Margaret of Scotland, a queen.

"Her biographer, Turgot, gives us a sense of Margaret as a woman with a developed sense of beauty and proportion; she transformed every aspect of her environment, from the garments of the priests to the furniture and wall-hangings of the palace." 

                                -   Magnificat, May 2014



Wednesday, May 7, 2014

bluets across the brook


Yesterday Susan lamented not seeing any bluets on her spring nature walks. I am seeing them whenever I look out the kitchen window - there is a "field" of them across the brook.

Here are your bluets, Susan; until you come upon them where you live.


Saturday, May 3, 2014

dinner, courtesy of Pinterest

I finally gave in last week and joined Pinterest. I still have my clippings, but it is incredibly handy - I've accumulated so much gardening information already. And just yesterday I found two recipes which I was able to use today, both of which I found on Margo's pages. For some leftover pasta I got the idea to add yogurt to the spaghetti sauce, which I have done, but would never have thought of today, and to use up rhubarb, cooking it (sweetened) under chicken parts - very nice.

leftovers

Friday, May 2, 2014

a conversation



my brother:  "Dolly has more personality than the other two [cats] together."

me: "She has more personality than the two of us!"



Thursday, May 1, 2014

free wrapping paper

I ordered two good sized things from Amazon, and they came today with so much packing paper that I just couldn't fathom stuffing it into the recycling bin.

And then I noticed that it was really just wrinkled-up looking craft paper, and why would I want to get rid of that anyway?

About two feet wide, and - I don't know - twenty feet long??  And two pieces of it!

My first thought was, Can it be ironed?  You can iron tissue-y pattern pieces, must be able to iron this stuff. I went to Pinterest and searched under brown packing paper. I saw many photos of gifts wrapped in craft paper, but there was one which used wrinkled paper!  It looked cute to me!

 I started folding.

and this is all one piece!

I'll use it on the next gift I have to wrap and report back here.