Drifters’ Cove

Drifters’ Cove created by Marvin Haltzer
photos by Barbara Rodgers

Ebb & Flo, a brother/sister faerie team live in this riverside home made of driftwood.  These faeries control the tide waters of the Lieutenant River.  Every six hours, Ebb is busy pulling the salty waters into the marsh and then it’s Flo’s turn to push them back out into the Sound again.  This keeps the water always in motion and the marsh a dynamic and beautiful ecosystem for birds, fish, insects, and more.  The many shades of green keep the painters busy mixing their vibrant and sunny hues.
(Wee Faerie Village: Land of Picture Making)

Today I baked spaghetti squash for the first time, and served it with a grass-fed ground beef marinara sauce.  Mr. Logic thought it tasted good, and so did I!  And so the paleo culinary adventure continues…

Zoë and Olga, sweet little carnivores, are on a grain-free diet, too, and seem pleased with it for the most part, as pleased as cats will allow themselves to admit.

Olga is still giving Zoë a wide berth, and hissing occasionally to remind Zoë about how things stand between them.  She spends her evenings close to Tim on the couch, purring loudly.  We’re being patient and encouraging with her.

Zoë provides us with morning entertainment – playing with and pouncing on pony-tail elastics, preferring them to all other toys.  And she talks to us all the time.  :)  My little shadow.

Fourth Day of Christmas

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…we heard it was snowing in Connecticut, but alas, we were in Georgia…

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Our car ride from Virginia to Georgia was long and grueling, but we finally made it to our destination very late Thursday night.  It was so wonderful to see Nate & Shea again, and the rest of their multigenerational family: Shea’s mom, Angie, who so generously gave us her room for a few days, and Shea’s sister Sarah and her two little boys, Julius and Dominic.  It is a full house, but a big house, and we thoroughly enjoyed the hospitality we were shown.  Angie is a fabulous cook and kindly catered to our food quirks!

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We brought the little guys some Lego bricks sets as a gift.  Dominic adores his Uncle – and the feeling is mutual – so we got a kick out of watching Nate help him build his little Lego helicopter.

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Dominic loves bugs and animals and I enjoyed reading his dinosaur book to him.  Thankfully it had a pronunciation guide.  Little ones have so much energy!!!

On the fifth day of Christmas Nate, Shea, Tim and I drove into Florida and ate lunch at Bahama Breeze, a Caribbean seafood restaurant in Jacksonville – the food was great and the atmosphere was tropical.  Then the four of us went to see Life of Pi in 3D – it was the 3rd time for me and the 2nd time for Tim, but not in 3D before.  The 3D experience was better than I thought it would be!

After we returned to the house we were treated to a spectacular sunset, Georgia style, which kind of made up for missing our snowstorm…

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On the sixth day of Christmas the guys watched football while Shea read her new Nook, a Christmas gift, and I read my old Kindle.  Later Tim & I sat up late (late by my standards anyway) into the night with Nate, talking about the movie, interplanetary travel, quantum physics, gun control, and assorted other existential and scientific topics.  I am always amazed by these conversations because Nate seems to have gotten his logical side from Tim and his sense of wonder from me in perfectly balanced proportion.

On the seventh day of Christmas we started the long journey home, from southern Georgia to northern Virginia.  Lady Zoë was looking for me and let me pet her again, but still was not ready to sit on my lap.

On the eighth day of Christmas we drove from Virginia to Connecticut, resisting the urge to stop by Dima & Larisa’s, but thrilled to find snow still on the ground in Connecticut!  Winter is finally here and I hope it plans to stick around for a little while this year.  And our Christmas tree was still standing and looking as pretty as when we left – we had been afraid that a week without watering would be the end of her.  All in all, it was a wonderful trip!

Happy Christmas!

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My new reindeer ornament!

We will be doing a lot of celebrating this holiday season, planning to enjoy family and five different Christmas trees, including our own.  Tim has a vacation this year so we’re off to visit our children and siblings soon.  But first we had our winter solstice gathering here, enjoying candlelight dining, music and good conversation with dear friends on the longest night of the year.

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On Saturday Tim & I and Dima & Larisa went to celebrate with my sister, brother-in-law, aunt and father at their little house in the Connecticut woods.  My sister has been dreaming of a boxwood Christmas tree and this turned out to be the year she found one!  Isn’t it pretty?  So simple and sweet.  I think she may be planning to plant it outside in the spring.

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The ancient ones were delighted to see Larisa and seemed to be enjoying the festivities, but we didn’t stay too long because they do tire out from all the bustling excitement of having company.  The four of them will be having a quiet Christmas dinner on the 25th.  We’ll be heading for New York, Virginia and Georgia.

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Auntie and Larisa

I brought Dad some clementines and fondly watched him enjoy peeling and eating one.  Sometimes I hesitate to share pictures of him because part of me wants to remember him the way he looked when I was a child…

12.22.12.dadAfter my mother died Dad and I used to drive up to Cape Cod to visit her parents, my beloved grandparents.  He always brought along a little supply of fruit.  As I was the driver, he would cut the fruit into bite size pieces with his pocket knife and share them with me, popping mine into my mouth so I wouldn’t have to take my hands off the steering wheel.

Most of the time Larisa was with us, riding in the back seat, and sometimes Auntie would come, too.  One summer day when we were using the air conditioning in the car, Larisa had brought some chocolate with her.  We stopped at a rest area to use the facilities and she left her chocolate in the car.  When we returned to the car she was very disappointed to find her chocolate melted into a gooey puddle.  But not to worry!  Grandpa took that glob of chocolate and held it out close to the air conditioning vent in the dashboard for many miles until the chocolate had hardened up again.  If his arm got tired he never mentioned it.  That’s grandfather love for you!

We write these words now, many miles distant from the spot at which, year after year, we met on that day, a merry and joyous circle.  Many of the hearts that throbbed so gaily then, have ceased to beat; many of the looks that shone so brightly then, have ceased to glow; the hands we grasped, have grown cold; the eyes we sought, have hid their lustre in the grave; and yet the old house, the room, the merry voices and smiling faces, the jest, the laugh, the most minute and trivial circumstances connected with those happy meetings, crowd upon our mind at each recurrence of the season, as if the last assemblage had been but yesterday!  Happy, happy Christmas, that can win us back to the delusions of our childish days; that can recall to the old man the pleasures of his youth; that can transport the sailor and the traveller, thousands of miles away, back to his own fireside and his quiet home!
~ Charles Dickens
(The Pickwick Papers)

First Thanksgiving

Our harvest being gotten in, our governor sent four men on fowling, that so we might after a special manner rejoice together after we had gathered the fruit of our labors.  They four in one day killed as much fowl as, with a little help beside, served the company almost a week.  At which time, among other recreations, we exercised our arms, many of the Indians coming amongst us, and among the rest their greatest king Massasoit, with some ninety men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed five deer, which they brought to the plantation and bestowed upon our governor, and upon the captain, and others.  And although it be not always so plentiful as it was at this time with us, yet by the goodness of God, we are so far from want that we often wish you partakers of our plenty.
~ Edward Winslow
(Mourt’s Relation, 1622)

Happy Thanksgiving!

Branch Ranch

Branch Ranch created by Robert Nielsen & Billie Tannen, Billie Beads
photo by Barbara Rodgers

Lief Falldownsoon is the king of the leaf fairies and is in charge of the legions of leaves that cover the trees.  Busy all summer helping the leaves turn sunlight into food for the trees, Lief and his kin at Branch Ranch, enjoy the fall the best when the leaves can all start to rest.  Although the green leaves inspire the landscape artists all summer, Lief knows that the real show happens when they begin to change color, turning from green to red, yellow, or gold before leaping into the blue sky for the twisty, twirly, gusty, blusty, ride to the ground.
(Wee Faerie Village: Land of Picture Making)

Nevergreen Caverns

Nevergreen Caverns created by David D. J. Rau
photos by Barbara Rodgers

Tym-Brrr is the faerie of tree stumps and dead wood, a subject often depicted in the foreground of landscape paintings.  Twisted and broken trees suggest the awesome power of nature; the aftermath of a lightning storm or strong winds.  Tree stumps, on the other hand, humanize an otherwise wild scene.  Tym-Brr eats and plays in one cave, sleeps in another, and stores his sailboat for seeking out driftwood in the third.  Clues to how trees become “never green” are burned into the outer walls.
(Wee Faerie Village: Land of Picture Making)

Fairies are invisible and inaudible like angels.
But their magic sparkles in nature.
~ Lynn Holland
(A Faerie Treasury)

Mihashirano’s Tea House

Mihashirano’s Tea House created by Anita Walsh
photos by Barbara Rodgers

Mihashirano, the faerie goddess of green-growing things, works hard alongside her mom, Amaterasu, the Sun Goddess, to help things grow along the river.  The plants work hard purifying the air and water as well as supplying food and shelter for many creatures.  Their work also benefits the artists in many of the same ways, including natural beauty that inspires their paintings.  The location for Mihashirano’s tea house was chosen by a bird.
(Wee Faerie Village: Land of Picture Making)

Janet, all bundled up to brave the elements, located the mystical bird and Mihashirano’s sailboat at the tea house out on the water by using binoculars provided by the fairies on the shore.  It was a very wet, raw and windy day especially down by the river.

We didn’t feel anything here in southern Connecticut, but last night at 7:12 pm there was an earthquake centered in Maine, 4.6 on the Richter scale, which was strong enough to shake homes as far south as northern Connecticut.  Auntie is supposed to come home from the hospital today – I wonder if they felt the tremor up north there last night…  And today would have been my mother’s 81st birthday – Happy Birthday, Mom!