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







Friday, March 16, 2012

Happy St-Paddy's Day


Have fun! Enjoy that green beer!

Shamrock hearts - my esty shop



Hearts for St Paddy's Day
my etsy shop
some sold

antique Irish lace, ecru with violet
 [sold, similar by special order]

beachcombed Irish soda bottle, near mint
marked DUBLIN
 PS This week's slow cooker experiment will be traditional corned beef. I  think I'll make the cabbage and potatoes seprate, somehow cooking them in the beef brine seems, um, ick? Any hints, ladies?
Wish me luck?

detail, lavender heart with hand enamelled
vintage green shamrock charm
my etsy shop

love

              lizzy

~~~gone to the beach


Tuesday, March 13, 2012

The Birds Are Back!


Hi! I am so thrilled!
The shorebirds returned on Saturday---


...a whole week early, as St-Patrick's Day is their estimated day of arrival.


I think my pleasure comes from a childhood filled with nature walks and birdwatching. My mom was not one to have us sit inside after school; she got us out for long walks filled with observation , fresh air and learning. She always watched for, and carefully noted , the first robin each spring [hence one of my nicknames...]; and we watched the brown frozen garden daily for the first daffodil shoots, for the first snowdrops and crocus. And her pleasure never waned, she was as pleased by a late January witch hazel bloom at age, well, whatever---as she'd been when she was a twenty-something stay at home mom.



So....Friday when I went for my walk---not a single bird, not even a gull or two. Then Saturday:



The Oyster Catchers were flying in, in pairs and small groups of three or five.


I love these birds, they are so big and cute, with their black and white tuxedo-like plumage and the comic counterpoint of long orange bills and big pink legs.



The same pairs apparently come each year. The nests are always within a few feet of the previous years' locations...



And also on Saturday, in the high beach near the dunes were telltale little scurry-scurry footprints of the piping plovers. They too return each year and nest in exactly the same spot.


By Sunday the plovers were feeding on the beach. They are not as shy as the oyster catchers who take a few weeks to remember me and my camera. The plovers I think rely on their natural camouflage. Yes, he is here...can you find him?


A closer look, both pix he is exactly in the center of the photo. The plovers are tiny, sparrow-sized...grey and white and chubby, with big black eyes and black neck ring. They are invisible until they run---their mad dashes are an out of synch motion that attracts one's eyes.


Sadly, again, their early arrival is clashing with the sand movers. I feel so sad, because here is already a try-out nest, doomed to be plowed under early today.



 and another...


I marked the nests with a driftwood fence, but I couldn't find the wildlife officers to alert them. perhaps the  huge earthmover avoided the nesting area? I doubt it, but cannot quite see this section of the beach from my windows.


The oyster catchers too were nest hunting in the lower dune areas. Here are footprints, along with those of some chasing animal! The birds's footprints are at the bottom, the line at the top is something following---a fox or feral cat? A Chihuahua? Can't tell for sure....


And ironically, fallen here before the plows...



the carefully posted signs from last year, all about the plowers.


Too bad. Each year there are fewer. Once upon a time we'd have as many as 16 plover nests, last year only three pairs stayed and raised chicks. I noted at least five nests that the sand plows destroyed in early pre-egg laying stage.


But these birds are survivors. As are we all...



love

                 lizzy

~~~~gone to the beach


at the end of my hike,
an early spring fog bank rolls in, oddly from the north...


self porttrait with washed ashore clamshells

Friday, March 9, 2012

Fridays...


Hi, everyone! Have you noticed how much longer the days are now at  the end of the first week in March? It's quite encouraging, quite lovely, to have the sky still be blue at 6.30, isn't it?
I think sunset is around 5.30  ut we have a very long twight here at the beach.
And tonight the planets were out in spectacular array. Here's a link so you can see the awesomeness of Jupiter and Venus together in the evening sky. Too bad the wind is howling from the north at a sustained 40 mph....it kinda puts a wintry chill on things despite warmer than usual temps.


Anyway, I had to go to the big supermarket to shop, and coming home with my loaded Jeep, I took a few moments to enjoy the night sky.
We're making slow cooker Pulled Pork, with maple BBQ sauce, and homemade coleslaw---this week's cooking experiment. I'll let you know how it goes....The big market has things like maple syrup, and lovely whole wheat Kaiser rolls, and staples, like Glad boxes and toilet paper, but it's short on wonderful spring veggies and fine meats...so despite shelling out almost $200.oo, I'll have to hit the Italian market here on my island tomorrow morning, sigh. Because the slow cooker recipe calls for 10 hours of cooking, the day before you plan to serve the food! A new way to plan and cook, since I'm a throw it in the pan or oven, last minute girl myself!
The recipe calls for a lean pork roast and then....? Tapping foot, looking at watch.


The supermarket also excels in flowers, who could resist? Look! RED Parrot Tulips!


And they had , yellow and red stripey ones, pale pink, and school bus yellow! Also big buckets of forsythia and  pussy willows. And shamrocks, how cute is that!
It was hard to choose, but then! I saw the red parrots and they came right home with me.



Lots of pleasure, seeing them here on my table. [yes, the green shutter is hiding my work mess! oops.].


And here are my little adorable hyacinths! They are tiny and stunted but oh so cute!


have a great weekend!



love

lizzy

~~~~gone to the beach