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Sisko chicken painting

Sisko Chicken Painting

This is a painting I made of one of our hens, Sisko, a black sexlink chicken. She is a real character! Painting is acrylic on canvas and became a birthday present for my dad.

Little Brown Butterfly

Little Brown Butterfly

Sometimes very curious things happen in life — this was one of them. This little brown butterfly feller flew down and landed right by me. I picked him up and he tilted his wings to the side and seemed to give me the side-eye. He made no effort to fly away so I took a picture of him and put

30-minute parking crow

Crow is pushing his parking limit

Occasionally I see something that just strikes me as amusing… like this crow who flaunted the parking rules. One of the last times we visited old town Florence, Oregon, this crow was parked on this 30-minute only parking sign when we arrived. We went about our business for at least an hour… visiting all of our favorite trinket shops, the

Handful of blueberries and raspberries

Harvest Flashback: Blueberries & Raspberries

It’s almost December right now as I write, but here is a throwback to July when the raspberries and blueberries were in full production! In July and August, a handful of raspberries and blueberries is not an uncommon snack for garden visitors. I have 18 blueberry bushes, some of them 10+ years old, many around 5 years old and a

Autumn tree with squirrel

Happy Thanksgiving… SQUIRREL!

I hope you have a happy Thanksgiving, my friends! May you have full plates and bellies and remember all of the things and people that make your life worth living. Much love from me to you! (Also, don’t forget to leave some treats out for the squirrels and birds in your back yard — they deserve a feast, too!)

Glass Gem Corn

Grow Glass Gem Corn for a Lovely Autumn Decoration

If you love decorative corn, you should try growing the variety called “Glass Gem” — the kernels come out in all kinds of wild colors, mixed around on each ear seemingly randomly. They dry well and make a very interesting autumn decoration and conversation piece! Here are some things to know about growing corn: Corn is pollenated by the wind.

Two Tiny Toadstools

Two Tiny Toadstools

These two tiny toadstools poked up through the fallen leaves to bask in the pale, late-autumn sunlight for a bit. They were so fragile that I doubt they lasted for an entire day before they crumbled away to nothing, so I feel very fortunate that I was even around to see them, let alone have my camera there to get

Fuzzy Bee on a Sunflower (painting)

Fuzzy, Buzzy Bee on a Sunflower

This is an original painting by me, acrylic on canvas. I was inspired by a very fuzzy bee that I spotted and took a picture of on one of our wild-colored sunflowers. She looked extremely content, all fuzzy and golden in the warm sunshine, and wandering around the face of the sunflower in a leisurely manner. I hoped to capture

Goldfish painting on rock

Goldfish, Not Rockfish

This is a goldfish painting on a rock, this version original by me, but based on a canvas painting that I did during a guided painting class. For rock painting, I clean and dry the rock, then use glossy acrylic paint to create the art. I coat the entire rock in paint to help keep a seal, then after the

Zucchinis, Tomatillos, Tomatoes, Grapes and blueberries

‘Tis the Season to Celebrate a Bountiful Harvest!

Summer might just be a memory, but this is the time of year that here in the U.S.A. we celebrate the things that we are thankful for, and we celebrate with food and our bountiful harvests from the previous growing season. This year, 2020, may have been a strange year, but one thing that I am thankful for is that

Tomatoes in cook-pot

Making Homemade Tomato Sauce

Ever have those summers where you’ve got so many tomatoes that you don’t know what to do with them and you can’t even give them away? (It seems like that happens to me every year now-days.) If this sounds like a familiar problem to you, you should try making tomato sauce… It’s really easy, takes only a half hour, and

Dehydrator full of raisins

Homemade Raisins

Making homemade raisins takes a lot of work and takes a full two days of running the dehydrator on medium-high heat, but the raisins are so flavorful and different than what you buy at the store! For these raisins, I had two paper grocery sacks of purple seedless concord grapes, a full stack of 10 dehydrator trays, and that equated

Sky Buggy

Sky Buggy?

I was waiting for an appointment in a parking lot that is located several blocks south of a small municipal airport, when I heard what I thought was a helicopter coming in for a landing. When this strange contraption appeared from behind the trees, I was too stunned to take a picture of it. I thought I had lost my

Oregon Berries Painting

Oregon Berries Painting

This is an original painting by me — Oregon Berries, acrylic on canvas. I was inspired to create this painting because I love taking drives up into the mountains in early summer to pick berries. The Cascade foothills in July in western Oregon are full of red huckleberries, red and orange salmonberries, wild strawberries and Salal berries. Not only are

Purple, Thai and Sweet Basil

Drying Herbs: Basil

Basil I have found to be one of the trickier herbs to preserve by drying. It is fragile and has a tendency to mold, turn black or lose all flavor and taste like ash! There are so many times I have wasted a good batch of basil harvest to poor drying results… Blegh! So here is the most reliable way

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