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Friday, July 17, 2020

News Trend Blackberry Adventures|Actual

Here in the Pacific Northwest, we are enjoying the height of wild blackberry seasons. Along any sunny strip of untended earth shoot cascades of prickly, thick-leaved vines. All summer long, the tiny clumps of berries have been ripening, first tiny and green then slowly softening red and eventually rich and decadent deep purpley-black.

It's quite a common sight to see people pausing along the walkways to pick and devour these wild tidbits, eating them as fast as they can pick them. And some forward thinkers even bring along a container to pick enough to take home.

My fourth-born and I occasionally fall into this latter category. The other day, we headed off to the most remote part of my daily walking route, along an unkempt section of forest behind a building I think of as my secret place. There the berries were flourishing and with Gracie tied off on her long leash where she could conduct a leisurely inspection of her favorite squirrel-hunting grounds, we set to work.

Picking blackberries is not for the faint of heart. In order to actually get your hands round a clump of ripe berries, one must navigate safely past the long thorny tentacles that grow out onto the sunny ground. Other vines arc down from the top of the plant; together, these unproductive obstacles slash and snag at shoe laces and sweatshirt hoods and heaven forbid, bare skin. Spiders spin their webs here and there among the vines, and an unaware outstretched hand can just as easily grab at an innocent arachnid as a cluster of fruit.

But the best berries are always worth the effort, and in the late afternoon sunshine, we stretched and stooped, twisted and turned in pursuit of the ripest and juiciest morsels.

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After a steady half-hour of picking, my daughter and I snapped the lids on our full containers, exhaled with satisfaction and relief, then turned to head towards home.

And at that instant, an unholy racket rent the skies.

A screech.

A scream.

A rasping riot of noise.

We stopped dead in our tracks.

As a wave of fear rippled over me from head to toe, my daughter said, "It's an owl."

Yes.

Several times during my twilight walks, I've seen owls soar through the darkening skies right in this little patch of woods. The experience has moved me deeply.

But seeing an owl fly silently overhead and hearing one at close range are two very different things.

In this same split second, I saw a flutter of grey through the trees. The owl was no more than ten feet away, flitting from one perch to the next around the perimeter of a small pond that lay just beyond our blackberry brambles.

We stood frozen in place, waiting for whatever might happen next.

All was quiet and still.

And so we continued toward home.

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2 C flour

dua/tiga C shortening

A few tablespoons of cold water.

Use a pastry cutter to blend the shortening into the flour, then add the water and lightly mix together with your fingers until the dough holds together.

Flip the ball out onto the counter or a floured breadboard, and gently roll out to a circle larger than your pie plate.

Delicately fold in half, and then half again. Pick up the resulting triangle and lay in one corner of the pie plate.

Gently unfold the pastry and voila! Your pie has been born.

My daughter baked us a pie full of the blackberries we had picked, and when I took my first bite, I was reminded of all we went through.

I saw the clusters of berries hanging tantalizingly just out of reach.

I smelled the earthy late summer smells of the forest, leaves beginning to drop and decay.

I felt the thorny vines snagging my skin.

I heard that wild owl screeching down at us.

I tasted the sweet tang of the berries, bursting with summer sun.

And I savored every delicious bite of our blackberry adventures.

* * * * *

Here are a few other stories about my adventures in the woods

Camping: It's All About The Memories

My Secret Place

The Woods

Adventures In The Woods

Wilderness Adventure: Part 1

I Heart My Secret Place

News Trend Adventures At The Pond|Actual

My husband?S youngest sister has lived in the same lovely Cleveland-area suburban neighborhood for twenty years now. We?Ve visited many times and strolled often along the sidewalks and around the community pool.

But it was only this past weekend that the thought dawned on me to walk my dog over to the neighborhood pond.

Gracie quickly went all in with my idea. As usual, when she is presented with any body of water larger than, well, her body, she rushed right in, lay down in the shallows and began lapping up the water with gusto.

She doesn?T really care to swim per se, but boy, does Gracie love to lie in water and lap.

Now this particular pond is well populated with ducks and Canada geese. For the most part, the water fowl kept their distance from us. Each day, they waddled out from under their shade tree as Gracie happily approached, and paddled off to the far side of the pond.

But on one of the days we visited, a small contingent of female ducks organized a counterattack. Almost in military formation, they pursued my amiable redhead, quacking their indignation and clearly attempting to scare her off their turf.

You can see the effect of their intimidation campaign on Gracie.

Ha.

Because there is nothing - not even a fleet of angry mama ducks -  that is going to ruin my dog’s happy adventures at the pond.

News Trend Gracie’s Field|Actual

Behind my daughter’s apartment complex is a field.

Once upon a time, it was most certainly part of narure’s Great Hardwood Forest; later most likely a farmer’s corn field. Eventually, this place will probably be developed into some kind of space for suburban living.

But for now, it’s nothing more or less than a field. Butterflies flit among the grasses and. birds swoop just above them. Rabbits may run in the longer bits of grass, and deer come out of the nearby woods at dawn and dusk to graze.

Gracie loves this field. We took her there multiple times each day and every time, she leaped and pranced and strutted with delight.

And it makes me happy that I can make her happy with such a simple thing as a field.

Thursday, July 16, 2020

News Trend Third Bird|Actual

And then there?S this girl who promises to never sail away.

Today the third of my four baby birds flew out of the nest.

This time it?S my first-born who is moving out. I can hardly wrap my head around the fact that she?S moving just a few miles away; with my third-born in Asia and my second across the country in Ohio, it?S a new experience for me to have a daughter living close by.

And while I tell myself that this is not a monumental life change, I can’t deny that my nest is down to just one fledgling - and the fact that she’s currently vacationing in Seoul means that  for the next six days, this nest is altogether empty.

But here?S something I have realized. My home is not an empty nest, abandoned and devoid of any future purpose.

My three daughters go out into the world not as birds but as sailing ships, plotting their own courses and bending the winds to their purposes.

This house - my house, our house - is a safe port in a storm, an anchor to which they can always return for security, serenity, and a safe place to rest.

And I am not a mother bird who pushes out her brood and then flies off to an unknown future. I am a harbor master, an anchor. My job is to stand ready, strong and steady, keeping my heart and my home as a safe haven for my adventuresome daughters.

News Trend Winds Of Change|Actual

Look, here's the truth, when your kids move out of the house, emotions run wild.

And rather than drowning in a sea of bittersweet tears, I am determined to forge ahead into a beautiful new season of life.

I quickly realized that the epicenter of my sadness was my older daughters' now-empty bedroom.

Well. The room wasn't completely deserted. Left behind was a hodgepodge of unwanted furniture, bare walls, and cast-off belongings that did not make the cut to be packed up and moved out.

My challenge is to keep those old things in place while inviting the winds of change to transform this room into something beautiful and new. Here's what I've accomplished in a week.

^ First, new lamps. Dark rooms are depressing rooms and neither Siruis nor I are down with that.

^ New pillows. Gracie takes them for a test drive. She approves.

^ New plants and sheepskin rugs. Check and check.

^ I found this watercolor cactus at IKEA over the summer; and it spoke to me. I didn't know it at the time, but it was announcing its intention to serve as the inspiration for this makeover.

And this sturdy old student desk has announced its willingness to be upgraded from childhood to a chic and stylish new purpose that has yet to be envisioned. The base of the ancient black lamp, just so you know, still bears the outlines of some glow-in-the-dark star stickers.

^ A mash up of old things and new things breathe a hint of life into the trusty old Expedit.

And while I work through these changes and imagine how to shape this room for the future, Luna and Gracie nap in a comfortable heap on my bed. They remind me that when I'm willing to embrace the winds of change, anything is possible.

News Trend Autumn Garden|Actual

^ The weeds are finally gone.

^ Fresh mulch has been laid. And resulting splinters have been pulled.

^ The furniture cushions have been pulled though they are still at close hand in the garage for any remaining warm and sunny afternoons.

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^ The fall bloomers are enjoying their slow and steady fade.

These are the ways you can be sure that autumn in settling into my garden. What with all my unexpected travel this summer, I fell far behind in my usual gardening chores. But now, in October, I'm making up for lost time and finally content in my autumn garden

^ A pair of pumpkins adorn Gracie's dinner table and she shares my satisfaction with the season.

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

News Trend Succulent Season|Actual

In winter, when the extravagances of Christmas have all been spent and spring is still a good long way off, I often need a breath of fresh air.

There is nothing like a parade of fresh-faced succulents, in all their sweet geometric precision and tender green perfection, to cleanse my spirits and set me right again.

I don't need to buy them. It's enough just to rest my eyes on their humble, hopeful selves, and I'm ready to march on.

* * * * *

I wrote this snippet months ago but, for reasons unknown to me now, filed it away as a draft and forgot all about it till I stumbled upon it today.

Winter is long gone. Spring and summer too. Autumn is in full swing and we are mid-way through October.

And while my original thoughts still ring true, I would add now that there is no time of year - no season, no frame of mind - that is not enhanced by a tidy row of leafy geometric perfection.

The simple truth is that succulents make me happy every single day of the year.

* * * * *

In my opinion, you can never have too many succulents, and you can never have too many stories about succulents. Here are a few to choose from:

Court And Kylee's Succulent Party

Succulent Season

Franklin Park Conservatory

Confessions Of A Crazy Plant Lady

Pallet Possibilities

Another Rainy Day

Growing Things

This Is War

All In A Day's Work

Design Dilemmas

Wait For It

Shopping Spree

Saturday Spring Satisfaction

Sprouts

Tiny Tinsel Tree

Biology 101

Little Things