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







Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Summer Trip to the Flower Nursery



Hi! Warming up a bit here so my friend Elle /  L and I make the trip over the bridges to the flower store. I'm growing my deck pot plants from seeds and bulbs this year, cheaper and easier for me but I used the need for organic potting soil as an excuse to take a look around.


I mentioned it's chilly here but of course somehow we picked the hottest day so far to go, and it was pushing 80-something there on the mainland. A bit of a shock to our oceanfront breezy systems!
Pretty things greet you on arrival.


The old farmhouse is decked out with hanging baskets and a lovely birdbath and flowers in front. (I looked and still cannot see where that funny little window actually is. Inside is a dropped ceiling, so maybe  the window is just in a nowhere spot?This is a working nursery that also does a lot of home and business landscaping. The folks are pleasant but busy and not chatty, so I never feel I can ask about the farmhouse.)


Hydrangeas.





Astilbe. Man, it's hard to make astilbe look good. This is lovely, isn't it.


Indoors filled with traditional flower bed plants.



Lots of gorgeous turquoise coastal pottery, for deck planters.





I loved this casual vignette, the turquoise pot and deep blue petunias. Sadly the petunias won't survive on my deck, or I'd have brought this beautiful idea home.


More ideas, pre-planted deck pots. $$$$$$






Cute signs and garden fence decor.


This is the shop that specializes in fairy gardens---


The photo was too blurry but they have garden gnomes smaller than the end of your thumb!


This was very cool. A big vintage jar laid on its side, inside a scene with a shoreline garden and light house; blue glass pebbles for the water, with a sailboat.



And kitschy cuteness, fun for a summer window.


Outside more lovely ideas. Many beautiful shrubs, heavy on the hydrangeas which do so  well by the ocean, plus sweet garden benches and gazebos. Woodland, not seashore though.




L got mosquito repelling citronella and I got a few tiny succulents for my terrarium which has been moved to a shady spot on the deck. Last chance for it, nothing seems to grow in my terrarium.


And she and I discussed a project we're working on--a secret, to be revealed later this summer if it works.  I also want a small solar powered bowl-type fountain, the kind that burbles over river rocks? L suggests Lowe's.--next on out list.

PS Remember my Dollar Days Sidewalk Sale is still going on in my etsy shop, thru  4th of July week. Lots of fun things for a dollar, plus I 'll take offers on anything else in my shop. Come visit? link in right sidebar here>>>>

Have a great week,

love

lizzy

gone to the beach....











beach photos - same day, two years ago....

Friday, June 23, 2017

Summer Solstice



Hello, friends! Yesterday, June 21st was the summer solstice, the longest day of the year. Such days seem special to me always, days that mark beginnings and ending, days that will never come again.
What will this summer bring? I'm afraid to hope, but hope anyway.
Mo and I will spend our afternoons on the deck.


Ship watching is always fun. Last week I could see a beautiful huge white cruise ship, out among the tankers and cargo ships.
I look the boats up on Shipfinder. It's the blue icon off New Jersey. The black icon above it is a cargo ship.


It was this ship. It looked a lot bigger in person! And brilliant glowing white.


Now back to sewing. Whatever shall we work on? I have two ongoing projects to finish: all the fussy binding, beading and sewing on of 68 yoyo buds, onto Summertime. [and actually I need at least 20 more yos! Sue? Did we make extras? I must count the ones Sue made for me.] And I have the top border/ banner of Fall Festival to complete though I won't then sew the top together until winter, unless if we have some long rainy summer days. Summer is too beautiful, to rare, to spend the hours indoors, behind a clattering machine.
But the advent of summer cries out for a new project or two. or three! Two mostly pieced quilts from Jan Patek. I'll do the hand applique of the moons, stars, pumpkins over the summer, then again do the piecing during indoor time, next winter.





Yes, it's the border vine from FF, sigh. I decided to make this before Lori announced the FF sewalong. At least it's cool, with acorns and bittersweet. It will be made with thrifted pale greeny white plaid shirts, and red and black calico.



I thought this so-cute fabric might be fun for labels on Fall quilts? Not sure how yet.



I love this mostly blue and white winter quilt by Jan P. The simple patchwork Stars in blue and white are something I can actually use in my house. I love the snow scene at the bottom, even don't mind the Patek Saltbox house with Kitty and Doggy. They're used differently here, I like them. The Stars should go fast [hahaha, yeah, right] as they're really made with Flying Geese blocks, which I learned to make fast this past winter.


I planned to use many random dark blues, but --what do you think?--I am thinking the white stars should be this so adorable Snowman print!? Or some of the Stars?

Snowman Gatherings III Blue on Tallow Snow Friends Yardage SKU# 1210-14

And this is a little project, sheer indulgence in something sweet, a small prim quilt by Minick and Simpson, called Bitty's Quilt.


Sometimes I like to make small quilts/ crib quilts for ''someday''. Who knows when the right baby might come along.


I pulled out stash fabrics.


But also gave myself the treat of some new soft simple fabrics from Fat Quarter Shop.[not all are successful--- the problem with ordering online. But all are very pretty.]





My friend Sue is making Bitty also. It's not a project to divide into segments for a sewalong, but we'll both probably show off our progress as the summer slowly slips by. I plan to do needle turn hand applique, as does Sue, I think. I may cheat and machine sew the stem because it would make it sturdier in case it is someday an actual baby quilt.


....................



Mo and I are doing well with our walks, though I find them exhausting. Soon it will be too hot for Mo and I am thinking hard about his schedule for hot summer days' exercise. We stop in our friends' garden during our long noon walk, for a cool drink and a five minute rest. This is not us being lazy! Pugs cannot tolerate hot weather; Mo likes a long walk but needs a break halfway.


Remember Mr Mockingbird, who sings outside my computer window, in the ugly locust tree? Well he has found a Mrs Mockingbird this year! And apparently they have a nest with eggs or babies. Every afternoon when Mo and I go out for our walk we are dive-bombed by chittering, terrified Mockingbird parents! I have no idea where the nest is. When we come inside and I look out my window, the birds are gone again, only to appear the next time we walk. I have to say my feelings are hurt! I wear a hat and cringe and think, Ha! So ungrateful, Mr Mockingbird? Did I not set out cranberries and blueberries for you, winter after winter, all these years? I'd never hurt your children, you should know that! But of course he does not know that. I can't wait to see the babies learn to fly!
Mo has NO interested in birds whatsoever.




....
And something for the weekend, an idea from Mel a few years ago, quite easy and tasty. Zatarain's Dirty Rice.


Yes it's a mix or kit, but who cares? It calls for ground beef (or chicken/turkey?). I also saute onions and garlic, add sweet peppers, and though I forgot this week, I think  fire roasted chopped tomatoes are a nice addition. The mix is a bit too spicy so I'll add plain brown rice to make it blander and healthier. It's not ''summery'' but I find it so useful to have a casserole in the fridge for those, "Ma, I'm starving?!?" moments. Or if we have torrential rains from H Cindy remnants, as predicted. LOL, how embarrassing for Mother Nature:Hurricane CINDY? Yeesh.
..............

Years ago I had a neighbor who followed olde traditions and every Summer Solstice she and her women friends would don long floaty robes [aka beach cover ups and caftans], and they'd perform an elaborate spiral walk/ dance out on the beach. Drums gently drumming, almost unheard over the crash of the waves.The spiral was always large, maybe thirty feet in diameter? More? No one bothered the celebration, or commented; they never invited us outsiders  to perform. I'd have liked to walk in that circle, it looked so peaceful and joyous.


Have a great weekend.

love

lizzy

gone to the beach...