Thursday, July 16, 2009

Flower Planters

Don't you love planters and containers? They are the perfect way to highlight a few plants. They can also be rotated. If you have a low light situation where you want a plant, rotate the plant with one on your porch every few days. That way your dark spot is filled with no harm to the plant. This is a begonia in a basket. Easy to move wherever you need a touch of color.

Downtown Mercersburg, PA is the location of this planter. This coleus is perfect for this shady spot.

My former neighbor Joan is a genius with containers. This is a picture of her back porch.

This planter is sitting on the path in my garden in Pennsylvania. Marigolds and star zinnias combine for a great look in an old coal bucket.
I'm hooked on planters. Check on the Friday blog party at Hooked on Houses.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Special Pet Photo

This is my pet photo for the Week 27 photo challenge
@ iheartfaces.blogspot.com, the photography blog.

My cat Paws asleep on the back of my recliner. He curls around my head, puts his paws on my shoulders and wraps his tail around my neck. He loves it when I rock and doesn't even mind when I recline. He just hangs on and purrs!

Pedicure sandals!

My new Maryland Square shoe catalog arrived. While I was going through it to find the few shoes that would fit me (very few come in a AAAA width) I found these pedicure shoes. Amazing aren't they? Just the thing to wear while you paint your toenails! With black dots on white, you wouldn't loose these easily.

This is how they are described in the catalog -
Pedi Couture Women's Pedic Sandal
Cushy foam toe separators
Enjoy smudge-free, effortless pedicures
Color coordinating mesh bag
Great for yoga sessions
$24.95 a pair

Looks like a fun gift! Going to put it on your wish list?

Thursday, July 9, 2009

My Craft Room

I'm hooked on having a craft room! Join the Hooked on Houses Friday Blog party and post about one of your favorite things. These pictures are from my craft room. It is wonderful to have a place to work where I don't have to put it all away every time. I am rather undisciplined and I like to work on several projects at once. This shelf unit is great because it is so deep and sturdy. Stacks of fabric really need more than a twelve inch deep shelf.
Here is my Fabric Fairy guarding my fabric collection. I love to buy fabric and just look at it and I swear that one day I will use it all! I am inspired by seeing all my materials so I l keep them out in the open.
I like to group my fabrics loosely by color. The basket is full of ribbons and netting.
Just like you can never have enough fabric (and craft supplies in general) you can certainly never have enough thread. Even with several drawers like this, sometimes I don't have the right color!

Do you have a craft room? Even a shelf unit in a corner of the dining room or bedroom is a good start. It is easier to work when your materials are all in one place.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Is he the one?

Is this my "pot digger" and "flower destroyer?" See my post with pictures of the pots. It started innocently enough. We decided to add a suet cage on the deck pole that holds our "squirrel buster" bird feeder. That was going well and we had three different types of woodpecker couples plus cardinals, nuthatches and others. After seeing bluebirds (!) in the yard we added the tray feeder for special bluebird food and meal worms. Then this raccoon decided to join the free lunch party and bring all his friends and relatives. At the same time, the squirrels found they could reach the suet and the tray feeder. With the four-legged critters pigging out the birds never got a turn!

It takes a lot to scare away the raccoons and squirrels. If I run out hollering and stamping my feet they will do a dive off the deck and outsmart me by going just far enough that they are eating again by the time I sit down! They are so cute and fun to watch but we had to stop putting out the suet and filling the tray feeder. And if my flowers are dug up again they better watch out! We have threatened to electrify the pole to give them a mild shock but we haven't a clue how to go about it. Just as well. We would probably only shock ourselves!

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Historic Garden

More photos from the duPont enclosed garden at Montpelier, the home of James and Dolley Madison in Orange, Virginia.




Friday, July 3, 2009

July 4th

This flag was at the end of a driveway when I took my walk this evening. I'll be watching fireworks from the dock across the street as they burst over the lake. Have a happy July fourth and stay safe.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Hooked on Historic Properties

I love history, historic houses and gardens. So a visit to Montpelier was perfect for Julia's Hooked on Fridays, blog party. I admit I have lived not far from Montpelier in Orange, VA., home of James and Dolley Madison, for four years and had not been there - until today! Sometimes inertia takes over and I need a real push to get out and do something. Luckily my friend, who used to work there, agreed to go with me and share her knowledge.

James Madison's grandfather, Ambrose, acquired the land in partnership with his brother-in-law, Tomas Chew, in 1723 and moved his family there in 1732. Six months later Ambrose was dead, poisoned it was thought by three slaves. His wife Frances managed the estate and eventually was assisted by her only son, James, later known as Colonel Madison.

Colonel Madison's son, also James, grew up at Montpelier and it was there in the second floor library that he wrote the Constitution of the United States. James married Dolley and became the fourth president of the United States. He and Dolley eventually retired to Montpelier and both are buried on the property. For pictures of the house and detailed information go to the official site of the Montpelier Foundation.
This is the view from the terrace looking west toward the Blue Ridge Mountains.
The Madison property was bought by the duPonts in 1901 and extensively enlarged. Annie duPont turned the vegetable garden into a two acre walled formal garden.
The walled garden is surrounded by a brick wall and has brick and gravel paths. When I was there today it was abuzz with bumble bees and butterfiles seemed to be everywhere!

Monday, June 29, 2009

Vacation in Nova Scotia

For years we have been going to Nova Scotia to visit family. This is last summer's trip to the Annapolis Valley and the Bay of Fundy. We like to eat lobster at Halls Harbour Lobster Pound. See the red umbrellas in the picture? That is where you sit by the water and eat while watching the boats. When the tide goes out in the Bay of Fundy (the highest tides in the world) the boats are left high and dry.
This tree is growing out of a cliff on the beach. It is difficult to walk along the beach as it is all round rocks. Where there is sand it is very red/orange like the soil.
Nice window box at the lobster pound!
This is the Wolfville town Library. Wolfville is home to Acadia University. A great restaurant in town is the Blomidon Inn which is a lovely Victorian building. Just a few miles down the road is Grand Pre National Historic Site where the Acadian settlers were forcibly removed by the English. The story was later immortalized by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in his his epic poem Evageline.

The Wolfville Farmers Market is a lively place on Saturday mornings in the parking lot in front of the library. It is full of locally grown produce, crafts, flowers, meat, eggs, baked goods and coffee. They even grill locally produced sausages and I can tell you they are delicious! If you go, plan to have breakfast or lunch there - or both!
These are cherries grown in the Annapolis Valley. Aren't they gorgeous?
Here is a view of some of the vendors at the Wolfville Farmers Market.
I highly recommend a trip to Nova Scotia. The people are friendly and the pace is slower. It's like going back in time about twenty-five years.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Help! Advice for a discouraged gardner?

It stared with a severe thunderstorm Friday night that turned into marble sized hail.The plants didn't seem to be suffering too badly and I couldn't move them all. So I left them in place.
Next morning this is the sight that greeted me. Every planter had been dug up! It wasn't enough to fight the bugs and slugs but now some four footed critter is doing severe damage!
Remember those lovely begonias? This is the same plant.

I've had squirrels dig up a plant every now and then but nothing like this! I suspect raccoons. But why would they do this? What are they looking for? They have been emptying my little cans full of beer that I put out for the slugs. They have developed a taste for slugs marinated in beer. It was getting expensive to buy that much beer so I switched to water with sugar and yeast. So if it was raccoons, they weren't drunk!

I have heard mothballs to discourage squirrels and moles but what can I do here? Both the squirrels and raccoons have been pests about eating our bird suet. Many days we give up and bring it in. The raccoons will even come during the day. Of course we bring all the bird food in at night. Last night we forgot the squirrel-buster seed feeder and found it off the hook and on the ground! Maybe I should borrow a dog and tie him near the flower pots for a few nights. Tonight I am leaving the back light on.

Any suggestions?

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Hooked on Painting/Collage

I'm hooked on painting and collage, something I have always wanted to try. I just finally said, "Now is the time!" After seeing a painting I liked on exhibit, I checked out a book about painting with acrylics. I bought five tubes of paint (primary colors of red, blue, yellow + white + black. Thought I could mix all the colors but learned it is difficult to mix a good brown. So here are the results after spending hours painting and repainting. It was great fun and I definitely plan to paint some more. The best thing is if
you don't like the results - just paint over it! On the right is my tubes of paint, brushes and palette knife. The second picture is my makeshift palette of aluminum foil. It worked great. I discovered you can buy art supplies- BASICS ACRYLICS SET/6 4 oz-
from Amazon. This will save me the one hour drive to town!

Here is my first effort "Flight." It is 20 x 16. Materials are acrylic paint, onion bag, thread, newspaper, ribbon, buttons, dryer sheets.

This is a closeup of "Flight." You can see the buttons, netting, textured areas done with used dryer sheets.

This is "Browns" 20 x 16. Acrylic paint, netting, threads, used dryer sheets, newspaper, and wool roving.


Detail of "Browns." You can see newspaper, thread, netting and the wool roving in the top left corner.
If you have any advice for me, please leave a comment!

Monday, June 22, 2009

A Worthy Cause - Kiva

One of my sons is an active Kiva lender. He gave me a Kiva gift certificate for Mother's Day so now I am a lender. What is Kiva? It is a loan program that lets you choose the person/entrepreneur you want to make a small loan to. Loan amounts range from $25 (in $25 increments) up to $1,025. The loan is repaid and you may take the money or loan it again. These are real people who are working hard and need help to expand their business.

"Comfort Afum is just one of the many people needing loans. She is 38, married and has given birth to seven children. All are currently in the junior high and the primary schools. She lives with her husband and children in a rented apartment in a commercial town called Dwenase in the Western Region. Dwenase is a suburb of Sefwi-Wiawso, the district capital. Her husband is a farmer. Comfort is a food vendor. She prepares and sells groundnut toffees. She sells on a tabletop by the roadside from morning to evening. Comfort wants a loan to buy bags of groundnuts and other ingredients such as sugar in bulk. She buys her goods from Kumasi. She has been in business for twelve years. She aspires to expand her business and give her children a good education."

Kiva is the world's first person-to-person micro-lending website, empowering individuals to lend directly to unique entrepreneurs around the globe.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Hooked on Begonias

I’m hooked on Begonias. While everything in the garden is being munched on by bugs or slugs, the Begonias aren’t being bothered at all. They just keep blooming. Visit the Hooked on Fridays blog party at Hooked on Houses.

This begonia is still wearing rain drops from a night shower.


One little white bloom nosed into this picture.


Could this guy be protecting the flowers by eating some of the bugs?



Gorgeous, pure color!

Sweet Thursday - Super Quick Chocolate Cake

Hello everyone on Sweet Thursday. I have been looking at all the yummy cakes on Jerri’s Blog, Simply Sweet Home.

This cake mixes in the pan and needs no icing. And who needs the extra calories of icing? Just put ice cream on it!! Very quick to put together.

Wonder Chocolate Cake or I call it Dump Cake
1 1/2 cups flour
1 cup sugar
3 tbs baking cocoa
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
6 tbs melted butter or cooking oil
1 tsp vanilla 1 tbs vinegar
1 cup cold water
Mix the dry ingredients together & sift directly into the pan. No need to prepare the pan.
Make 3 holes and pour in the butter/oil, vanilla and vinegar.
Pour cold water over all.
Stir with a fork until well blended.
Bake at 350 for 25-30 minutes. Cake will be dark brown.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Coastal Living Beach House

In keeping with the beach theme of the last post, here is Coastal Living's 2008 Idea House on Galveston Island.Inspired by Galveston's rich architectural past, this house on was designed in the Carpenter Gothic-style. Notice the number of windows which allow for natural light and ventilation and take advantage of the ocean views. The house survived the hurricane of fall 2008 with minimal damage while its neighbors were destroyed.

Wonderful tall windows and great built ins in this room. There is lots of texture with sheers, a wicker table and an unusual rope chair.


This is the other side of the living room. This soothing color scheme lets the emphasis be on the ocean views. Plaid rugs unite all of the colors. One of the decorators, Susan Bozeman said, "We used sand tones, soft blues and greens, and a little pop of aqua on the lamps for contrast...."

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Perfect Chapel at the Beach

Don't we all dream of living in a cottage on the beach? While I was looking at beach houses online I found this photo.This is the "Chapel by the Sea" on Captiva Island, Florida. The color of the pews is the exact color of the water in the photo below. The whole effect is cool and calm. Just lovely! Can't you imagine a wedding in this chapel using shades of teal and white with a pink accent?