I wiped away the weeds & foam. / I fetched my sea-born treasures home... Ralph Waldo Emerson







Friday, October 22, 2010

Autumn Migrations


The brisk, clear October winds have brought the songbirds to the Beach. My holly bushes are busy with activity! Gangs of tiny warblers, mostly "Yellow-Rumped"---sparrow-like, each with big yellow coin dot on its back. More rare are the kinglets, the flycatchers, the black and white warblers. The skies over the marshes are filled with clouds of blackbirds and starlings and the egrets huddle together like mournful ghosts among the phragmite reeds. If I look up high I see Vs of geese, migratory Canada geese and a rare sighting now and then of snow geese or huge white swans. And perhaps a hawk or tow will pass by, enticed by bountiful fish and game. The small mallard flock has returned to the swale. It's pretty dry, slim snacking for my ducks this year....


The piping plovers leave as soon as their babies can fly. They are gone by late July. The first flocks of shorebirds to gather and go are the assorted terns, in mid-September. Good riddance as they are aggressive fighters, scary when they attack the innocent beachgoers, including me!

One evening, mid-September, we had a huge flock of migrating gulls fly through. They passed by the Beach at sunset, following a dragonfly migration, it seemed.



The gulls were not our local gulls; they were smaller and very white with black heads and grey wings.


Possibly Bonaparte gulls, because the black head caps were small-ish; or the more common, though rare here, laughing gull. Thousands of them filled the sky!

 
My beloved oystercatchers slip away by October first, leaving in pairs and threesomes...just as they arrived on St Patrick's Day in March.
 

The first group of Black Skimmers leaves at the same time.


They surely number in the thousands, tens of thousands?


A second group, whose babies were still unfledged by Oct 2 (I accidentally invaded their nesting ground while beachcombing! So sad, the big babies scurry away, cannot yet fly!)---that group lingers until later in October, but they have now gone too.



This was a small busy batch of Wilson's plovers [below]. They stayed a week or so, then moved on.


And the incredible flocks of sanderlings come and go, feeding and fattening for their  flight to the Antarctic!



I believe they fly the farthest of almost any birds, nesting in the Arctic North, wintering in the Antarctic. I always wonder what makes them move on? Why fly so far, when there is plenty of food here (tiny sea creatures in the surf) and the winters cannot be any colder than their own?



And last, the butterflies and dragonflies. Amazing that they to go so far.
The monarchs arrive as soon as the goldenrod begins to bloom on the dunes.


I know they lay their eggs on only milkweed and that their caterpillars feed on the milkweed. But the migrating adults seem very happy to stop and sun on the Beach,


...then slowly flutter up to the dunes to rest and refresh, to fill themselves with goldenrod nectar.


They always seem so tired, poor things....Mexico must seem very far to a creature so tiny.


My parents in Cape Cod used to see tiny flocks of hummingbirds pass through! How I'd love to see them! I grew a special red-flowering vine for them [mandevillea]...but, no. Not yet.

Late fall and winter will bring more shorebirds, different types: pipers and plovers; sea ducks, loons and geese. Even some seals? A whale? And it seems my little friend here will stay on, waiting for someone! anyone! to bring him a meal.



love

   lizzy


......gone to the beach

PS: a rare autumn rainbow....promising good times ahead?



Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Turquoise Feathered Star

This vintage pin leaped out at me (figuratively speaking of course, lol!) from the rows and rows of stunning vintage jewellery in the booth of one of my very favorite flea market vendors.


It was pristine, perfect...my favorite color! And to me it looked just like a favorite quilt pattern: Feathered Star.


My dealer-friend saved it for me (since I was broke!) and I brought it home this weekend.

The workmanship is beautiful! The stones are flawless matched sky blue turquoise and all are still there, important in a vintage piece.


And much to my delight, in addition to the clearly stamped sterling mark, the pin is signed in hand written engraved script on the back:

Vera Halusewa
  Zuni.


I haven't tried to clean the pin as yet---wanting to be sure to go slowly, to preserve the patina, so the words are not so clear. But they are there!


With that information I was able to look up the artist, a well-known Native American silversmith of the Zuni tribe. The pin probably dates to the '70s and is a Snowflake! Not a Feathered Star....

edit: my friend Lisa adds the information that the pin's style is traditional Zuni, from New Mexico, and is called "needlepoint." (Other on-line sources call it "petitpoint.") And she says the stones are untreated turquoise with no matrix, quite fine! Wow!

I was pleased and amazed to note some of the on-line prices, up to 10 times what I paid, here   and also here . I think my treasure compares very favorably, with large, evenly sized/ shaped stones, don't you?

But despite it being a snowflake, to me it will always be a feathered star!

I also enjoyed seeing all the Feathered Star quilts that appeared on my Google search.


And looking at them all I noted how the placement of the tiny points can change the appearance of the star. The above and below photos are two of my favorite versions, the ones that look most like my pin.


And that perhaps the pattern is not as difficult or as intricate as I had imagined. Good to know since this is a pattern on my someday list! I don't own a Fearthered Star quilt. And I don't think I've ever seen one in person...


...but I can wear my pin and...imagine making my own.


(Wouldn't it be stunning in Southwestern colors...turquoise and coral stars on black, with touches of purple, white or pearl grey! Or turquoise and sand, like my beach and sky? Or, or...the mind boggles!...)

More flea market treasures and some doll clothes later in the week!

enjoy!

love

          lizzy


 ............gone to the beach

Friday, October 15, 2010

Transitions


The Beach is a little bit confused and chaotic these days...one day it's hot and sunny, the next cool and rainy. My turquoise pumpkin is sharing space with the wicker basket full of beach towels on the bench by the front door.


The decor is still blue and white. A large seashell planted with a pretty pink orchid graces the dining room table...but bowls of pumpkins



and gourds


and berries

are sneaking in.


Some years I stay "blue" until Christmas, I just add chocolate and taupe accents, black transferware.


But this year I found this amazing orange-y/coral quilted cotton throw.


With shells! If I get them sewed over the weekend it will turn into 4 big throw pillows! And then I'll have to get out the brown autumn Staffordshire plates from my mom...


I think it will look pretty, just for a month? How do you all decorate for Autumn?

love

               lizzy


gone to the beach