Showing posts with label clove's corner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clove's corner. Show all posts

Sunday, September 8, 2013

august snaps

The fury of summer is winding down, sipping less coffee and more wine.  Here and there, leaves are relaxing into the spectrum of autumn.  This week, preschool begins.  As my last hurrah to summer, here are some--chronological--snaps from August (mind you, summer isn't over 'til the 22nd, dammit):      

:: Yanking dinner from the yard.
:: Me.  In a hammock.  Lying down.  Believe it.  
Juniper: Mama, I love the whole round world. 
Me: Me too.
Juniper: Mama, I'm glad we are both loving this whole round world.

:: Morning love for the meat chickens.
:: Of course we did.
:: Strolling through the neighborhood.
:: Slice of life in my house.  
:: How most (too many?) meals begin.  There are always (too many?) greens.
:: Not the best photograph but I love all it represents: the loud, maraca-banging dance, the felted treasure bags made by my cousin sent by my aunt and worn around the neck(?), Juniper's grandma-made skirt, Hazel and her one shoe....  
:: Smokey, wildfire sunsets marking the apex of summer.
:: My favorite hen, Mama Brahma.  She was named early on, and lives up to it.  She's curious, friendly, a leader.  
:: My favorite helper.
:: Um, another slice of life in my house.
:: Our weekly "nature group".
:: Somewhere in the middle of my crappy 36 hours, Juniper offered me a cookie and a drink (I think it was beer).  
:: I ended the crappy 36 hours with a spontaneous camp-out on the upper deck.  We told stories and counted stars as they appeared until there were too many to count and wide eyes slowly closed.  Magic.   
:: And my man sent us flowers from afar.  The card read: Look in "Animal Physiology," chapter F for Feeding.  My note, addressed to Clove, was tucked inside the pages of that old textbook.  (For more on the history of Clove, click here and here.)    
:: The strawberry patch.  Originally, the wire kept out both the robins and the kids.  They are learning to wait until they're red, but not always.  
:: My new coffee mug.  Purchased directly from the hands that made it, my favorite.  
:: My ride into town.  Since April I've been biking...to playgroup, the post office, the library, the Farmer's Market....  I love the ride.  I add an extra mile and ride past this little airstrip, along a paved bike path through an open, undeveloped neighborhood, down to the river, across the bridge and into town.  On a busy day, 6 to 10 vehicles will pass me before I get to town.  On a slow day, 1 to 3.  
:: Dinner and tomatoes at the Farmer's Market.
:: Playdate on the river (with our young friend L).
:: What they do when I'm not looking.  (It's either this or full-body decorating with the markers.)
:: Weird art project they devised themselves after ransacking the craft shelf.
:: Noticing the drive home.
:: Hazel rediscoverd (and loves) the sling.  Especially on the day she pushed that last canine through.  And I love that I remembered what a win-win a simple sling can be: everyone is happy and I can still cook dinner.    
:: My oldest daughter's propensity to decorate garden weeds.
:: Playgroup at the pool.  (And Hazel's too-big swim diaper, mooning the life-guards.)
:: Playing dress up.
Girl with the Pink Plastic Necklace
:: I asked my man to bring home gifts for the kids.  He couldn't find anything local and avoids Made in China like the plague.  So he brought gifts from the desert: juniper berries, juniper sticks and branches, pinecones, acorns, dried cactus branches, joshua tree seed pods....  His desert loot has brought endless enjoyment.  Now, most of the joshua tree seed pods have been busted open and all the seeds picked out, the acorns are down to their funny little elf-like hats, and the juniper berries have been handled right down to the seed.  
C'est tout.  Au revoir.  Bonne nuit.  

Sunday, March 10, 2013

light

My better half has been gone for a week.  On day two just before naptime, Hazel slipped off the mudroom stair and bonked her head.  She screamed while Juniper whined about somethingorother, and the phone rang.  It was the florist.  She needed directions to my house.  Actually, she had to repeat that question five times before I could hear her.  My first thought was, Who in the hell would send me flowers?  And then, Oh.  And I told her, through the crying and whining, "You know, this is why I'm getting flowers."

I can think of only one other time my husband has sent me flowers.  Well, maybe two.  Mind you, he brings me bouquets of hand-picked wildflowers all summer long.  But buying?  No.

I've mentioned once before in this blog how I came upon the pen-name Clove (my real-life name is Gretchen).  To make a long story very short (for the longer version, click here), my man and I have been exchanging love notes since the very first days of our courtship.  I don't think I've ever had a note addressed to Gretchen.  I've always been Clove, but only--ever--in writing.  We were often away from each other in those early days and would slip notes into socks, books, toilet paper, tackle boxes...and the tradition continues.  He has always found the better hiding spots.

The flowers came with a card.  The card read: "Bookshelf.  The Life of Birds."

First thought: Huh?  Second thought: Oooh.  I ran to the bookshelf, pulled out his old biology textbook and shook out my letter.  I didn't notice the chapter it had marked, but later he told me the note was tucked inside "The Care and Development of Young."
I have never appreciated flowers as much as I do these.  Like song, they changed the entire attitude of our household.  We needed flowers.  And I needed a love note.
Juniper chose one hot-pink daisy for her room.  

:: Over the last week or so...
We've been enjoying the waxing sun, the way these almost-spring rays creep further into our home like hopeful pea tendrils.  It's infectious.

:: Bear-love continues.  

:: To date, my favorite of J bug's watercolors.  The work of a wild, free soul.  In her words, "Bear den, bear tracks, and the moon."

:: I finally made Juniper a baby sling which she uses for animals.  The bear, yes, also turtles and big horn sheep.  

And now I need to sew one for Hazel.

::  We started a window box of basil (well, as you will soon see, I haven't poked the seeds in yet).  This was the first time my kids have seen dirt since early December.  I didn't anticipate the reaction.  Talk about infectious.

:: My cousin stopped by!  The last time he stopped by my Wyoming stead was 14(?) years ago.  It was summer, he arrived on a motorcycle and sporting a purple fro.  This time he was donning a handlebar mustache, fresh off the ice of Antarctica, and on his way to paddle the Inside Passage for the summer.  Love my family.  And, like fresh dirt and spring sun, his presence was infectious.  

:: Wyoming's version of a celebrity sighting.  Our resident herd of mountain goats have come down close enough for even my non-telephoto lens.  Typically, you can spot them by the gang of paparazzis on the highway.  Anyway.  They are so fuzzy and cute and often perched precariously on a cliff.  

:: In a fit of pre-spring ferver I shoveled 18 inches of heavy slush off the wrong garden bed.

:: Juniper's favorite play area of late is our loft, where she strips naked and jumps off the futon into a pile of blankets--I mean "the pool."  Hazel climbs atop the chest, dangles her feet and tumbles in with a squeal.  At our last playdate, it took about 2 seconds for Juniper's friend C to strip down and join in.

:: And then, late Friday night, my man returned.  The sun is shining, the snow is melting and we spent yesterday on a warm riverbank, fishing, picnicking, and lizarding around in the sun.
      
^My flowers included irises, of course.