May 2023 – Flowers along sidewalks and trails; knitting and quilting

Flowers blooming in the neighborhood:

IMG_8180

Pink petals from the cherry trees

IMG_8185

Dogwood

IMG_8262

Iris and a neighborhood chicken

IMG_8287

Cactus

IMG_8272

Rhododendron

We planted our garden:

IMG_8319

Tomatoes and basil

IMG_8317

Zinnias and snapdragons

IMG_8241

First local strawberries (Hoods!) from the Farmer’s Market

Hiking during prime wildflower season:

5/2 Camas at Camassia –  Camas blooms in rocky meadows. We visited this preserve at the height of bloom!

DSC07535

Rocky meadows of camas flowers

DSC07548

Camas and rosy plectritis

DSC07526

Camas

DSC07570

Buttercup and rosy plectritis

DSC07578

Saxifrage and rosy plectritis

DSC07522

Blooming madrone tree – a first for me!

DSC07590

Pacific trillium

DSC07594

Wake robin trillium

5/3 Full Balsamroot at Memaloose/Tom McCall –  Back to the Memaloose Hills for the second time this spring, this time with our daughter, and with the balsam root on Chatfield Hill in full flower mode.

DSC07605

Many more flowers blooming in the lower oak woodlands

DSC07616

Chocolate lilies

IMG_4335

Starting up Chatfield Hill in a sea of yellow

DSC07630

Lupine and balsamroot

DSC07673

Balsamroot

DSC07649

Mt Hood and oak tree

DSC07652

Paintbrush

DSC07662

Looking west from the top of Chatfield Hill

DSC07663

Looking east toward Mt Adams

DSC07664

Same view through Emily’s purple sunglasses

After this hike we went to Rowena Crest to see the flowers and views from the lower Tom McCall Point Trail.

DSC07697

Looking back toward Rowena Crest

DSC07692

Balsamroot along the trail to ‘Parsley Alley’

DSC07691

My favorite, fern leaf parsley!

5/9 Bitterroot at Catherine Creek –  Bitterroot is one of my all time favorites, and the bloom window is short. We heard they were out at Catherine Creek, so off we went, hiking the loop up the Bitterroot Trail, then back down Rowland Wall.

DSC07800

Bitterroot blooms scattered all over the basalt outcrops; looking east up the Columbia River

IMG_8198

Bitterroot

DSC07711

Meadows full of cluster lilies, looking toward Mt Hood

DSC07797

Balsamroot, paintbrush and lupine at the edge of Rowland Wall

DSC07825

Cliff penstemon on Rowland Wall

DSC07808

Cliff penstemon

DSC07830

And of course, oily red leaves of poison oak lurking…

DSC07842

Bitterroot and monkey flowers

DSC07856

Bitterroot looking toward Mosier

DSC07726

Bitterroot!

5/17 White River – no flowers, just snow –  This area is usually melted out by May, but not this year. On a hot day we decided to check it out.

DSC07872

Mt Hood from the trail head.

DSC07881

White River and Mt Hood

DSC07886

We were able to walk about a mile up river, until snow conditions became unsafe – deep postholes and tree wells melting out, so we turned around.

DSC07889

Mt Hood

DSC07890

Close up of Illumination Rock, and a potential avalanche bergschrund on the near slope…

DSC07891

Mt Hood summit

5/17 Corydalis along the Old Salmon River – Same hot day, since it was too hot to do anything too strenuous, we decided to walk along the lower stretch of the Old Salmon River trail, which we hadn’t visited before.

DSC07892

Down into the shady, mossy, ferny forest…

DSC07913

We walked along the river for about a mile and a half.

DSC07896

Blooming Corydalis was abundant, in large clumps along the sunnier banks of the river

DSC07907

Scouler’s corydalis

DSC07914

Also, fading trillium and pioneer violets

DSC07916

Hooker’s fairy bells

DSC07918

River running fast and cold from the melting snow

DSC07920

Sandy beach

DSC07922

Sparkly reflections

5/23 Late season flowers at Mosier Plateau  – It was too windy farther east, at Rowena Plateau, so we took this shorter hike, which starts in a more protected side canyon before emerging onto a plateau above the Columbia River.

DSC07929

Mosier Creek Falls

DSC07940

Looking down at the top of Mosier Creek Falls, Washington skyline in the distance.

DSC07944

Bachelor buttons turning the grassy slopes purple,

DSC07957

And beautiful California poppies, reminding me of the “golden rolling hills of California’

DSC07959

A few winecup clarkia (pink) along the path

DSC07964

Panorama across the Columbia River to Washington from the plateau, looking directly at the reverse ‘S’ curve of Coyote Wall. Buckwheat is in full bloom; balsam root have faded.

DSC07970

More buckwheat meadows, looking west on our return hike.

DSC07976

Ookow

5/30 Rocky gardens at Hamilton Mountain – Now that the lower elevation flowers are fading, it is time to look higher…

DSC07997

A few honeysuckles in the foreground; view of the top from the power line corridor

DSC07998

Tiger lily in the power line corridor

DSC08001

Rodney Falls and Pool of the Winds

DSC08008

Stonecrop on the lower cliffs

DSC08009

Penstemon and rosy plectritis on the lower cliffs

DSC08015

Mt Hood beyond the desert parsley and death camas on the lower cliffs

DSC08031

Columbian lewisia on the upper rocky switchbacks, with a view to Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River

DSC08034

Panorama from the top, Table Mountain and Mt Adams

DSC08039

Looking across the gorge to Oregon – Mt Hood behind clouds now, beyond the brown fringe of burned forest from the 2017 fire.

DSC08038

Down river, westward view from near the summit

DSC08044

And looking back on the summit from the northern saddle, as we circle round on the 8 mile, 2200 feet loop.

Knitting – I finished two blankets and a pair of socks.

IMG_8350

Malabrigo Slip Stitch Blanket – for me, still needs to be blocked, but I won’t need it until next winter

IMG_8303

Sliding is Fun – for the Guild Service Project

IMG_8194

Striped socks

Quilting and sewing – I finished the back for the Modern Mystery Quilt –

IMG_8210

Modern Mystery Quilt 2023, Front

IMG_8289
Back – Using stash fabric and scraps from the front …I like to think of it as Mt Hood and the Northern Lights.

And I sewed a little book bag for my one year old great niece –

IMG_8243

Meanwhile…Emily walked a labyrinth near the Pacific Ocean…

A4B689D8-030A-48AB-927B-4360CC040E6E

April 2023

In April, there were neighborhood walks, wildflower hikes, knitting, and quilting – both before and after our trip to Pennsylvania and Connecticut, described in the previous post.

Neighborhood walks –

Spring blooming trees and flowers…

IMG_8128

Crabapple

IMG_8005

Cherry

IMG_8008

Cherry

IMG_8127

Forget me not

Sidewalk cracks and shadows…

IMG_8014IMG_8010IMG_8131

Birthdays…

IMG_8043

A friend’s tea party

IMG_8101

A stranger’s brass band in the park

Knitting –

I made progress on these two blankets – I keep one downstairs and one upstairs, as they are both getting big!

IMG_8211

Slip Stitch Blanket

IMG_8221

Sliding is Fun blanket

Quilting –

I finished piecing the top for the Modern Quilt Studio 2023 Mystery Quilt, and started piecing together the scraps plus other fabric from my stash into the backing.

IMG_8210

Modern Mystery Quilt 2023 Top

IMG_8112

Piecing the back with scraps.

Hiking –

We found lots of wildflowers in April, from the earliest trillium in the forests to the beginnings of spring balsamroot fields in the eastern Columbia River Gorge – all the wildflowers are late this year.

April 3 – Tryon Creek, Portland – A rainy day with intervals of hail. We hiked for a couple of miles, and found the earliest trillium blooming along the Cedar Trail:

DSC06678

Indian plum

DSC06679

Hailstones on the bridge

DSC06683

Salmonberry

DSC06684

Trillium

DSC06688

Moss

DSC06691

Trillium

April 20 – Memaloose Hills and Rowena Plateau, Oregon – Checking the wildflower bloom in the eastern gorge – we saw the beginnings of the balsamroot bloom, and some of the last of the early flowers.

Memaloose Hills:

DSC07271

Lower Trail – buttercups in the oak woodland

DSC07280

Blue eyed Mary

DSC07281

Glacier lilies and buttercups

DSC07284

Pacific waterleaf and buttercups

DSC07292

A few balsamroot blooming on Chatfield Hill

DSC07309

View to Tom McCall Point from the top of Chatfield Hill, with desert parsleys, balsam root and paintbrush

Rowena Crest:

DSC07372

Desert parsley on the plateau

DSC07341

Columbia desert parsley on the cliffs, view toward Lyle Chery Orchard trails

DSC07348

Vultures on the cliff

DSC07358

Vultures

DSC07370

One of the last grass widows of spring…

April 25 – Upper Cape Horn Trail, Washington – We walked over the top of Cape Horn to the Nancy Russell Overlook, and back. Lots of trillium in the forest, and snow on the mountains to the north…

DSC07402

View north across the Columbia River from Pioneer Point

DSC07403

Looking south toward Cape Horn

DSC07400

Silverstar Mountain

DSC07413

Trillium in the forest

April 27 – Crawford Oaks, Columbia Hills, Washington – We hiked the Lower Vista Loop, with friends. Balsamroot beginning to bloom out here at the lower elevations – beautiful!

DSC07422

Horsethief Butte and Mt Hood

DSC07431

Eightmile Creek Falls with balsam root and desert parsley

DSC07434

Fleabane and biscuit root

DSC07441

Balsamroot, Dalles Mountain Ranch

DSC07451

Reflections in the Columbia River

DSC07468

Large head clover

DSC07474

Lupine

DSC07496

Showy phlox

DSC07483

The panoramic view across the Columbia River

March 2023 – Back in PDX

We returned to Portland from New Zealand on the 18th of March. Our daffodil and crocus bulbs that had just started to bloom in February were still blooming because Portland was unusually cold while were gone. Spring flowering trees and bulbs continued to emerge, sprinkling the neighborhood with color.

We took one hike, on March 22nd, at one of our favorite winter season hiking trails, Catherine Creek, WA, and it was the same story out there. I had predicted tons of grass widows while we were gone, but instead, the area had been covered in snow again. By late March, the grass widows were re- or just blooming, and other early spring flowers were out – gold stars, Columbia and pungent desert parsleys, and yellow bells…

DSC06638

Grass widows and gold stars, Columbia River, and the orchards of Mosier

DSC06573

Catherine Creek Falls

We made a short visit to the Oregon Historical Society on a rainy morning. I focused on some of the textiles on display.

Knitting: I made just a little progress on a sock while traveling, but then immediately cast on a toddler sweater for the knitting Guild service project when we returned. This is my first ever knit raglan sweater. I used the same Caron Cotton Cake yarn I am using for the Sliding is Fun Blanket, also for the Guild challenge. The blanket will take much longer, and I realized I had way too much yarn, so repurposed some of it into this little sweater.

IMG_7985

Flax (Tin Can Knits) toddler sweater

Quilting: I attended an online ColorMixer quilt seminar on the Creative Spark platform this week, and got lots of ideas for future quilts. Next month, I plan to sew the blocks together for my Modern Mystery Quilt that I had made before our New Zealand trip.

Poetic ode to sunlight from a neighborhood Poetry Post:

IMG_7978

Early February 2023, hiking, quilting, knitting…

This post updates my activities for the first part of February…

Knitting: I’ve made progress on two blankets – one for me, and one for the Puddletown Knitters Guild Service Project:

I had planned to crochet the guild blanket, and tried my hand at a sample, but I’m not quite ready to commit to such a big crochet project yet. Maybe the next one.

IMG_7642

Practice crochet swatch

Quilting: I’ve worked through all the clues on the Modern Mystery Quilt, and pieced the blocks. We were asked not to share the finished look until March 3rd.

IMG_7698

Modern Mystery Quilt 2023 tentative layout…

In bloom: Our first crocus emerged from the mostly dormant garden beds on February 9th. Just about the same time as the first grass widows were blooming in the eastern Gorge.

IMG_7667

Our first crocus

Hiking: Both hikes were in the eastern Columbia River Gorge, Washington:

Eagles again!  Bitterroot-Rowland Trail at Catherine Creek, WA – February 8th:

Lots of water here today – in vernal pools, and oozing out of the grassy slopes. No actual flowers, but plenty of emerging foliage – just waiting for a bit more warmth and sun.

DSC02819

Catherine Creek/Sunflower Hill

DSC02820

Fairy pools

DSC02827

Up the Bitterroot Trail,

DSC02832

The Arch

DSC02835

Mt Hood with fresh snow

DSC02836

Mt Hood close up

Meanwhile, as I was admiring these plants at the edge of Rowland Wall, a juvenile eagle swooped by at eye level.

DSC02838

View west from Rowland Wall

DSC02843

Bald eagle…

DSC02846

circling back,

DSC02850

and around again.

Then the entire eagle family circled its way up Rowland Wall, juveniles and mature adults – perhaps the same flock we saw a couple of weeks ago over Lyle.

DSC02852

Adult bald eagle

DSC02853

The whole family is here.

DSC02861

We continued down the wall, and back to the trailhead, imagining the flowers that will be blooming soon.

DSC02870

Looking back up Rowland Wall.

DSC02875

Another vernal pool. The frogs were really loud, but became instantly silent as we approached.

Crawford Oaks-Vista Trail, Columbia Hills, WA – February 14th

A cold, slightly windy day – fresh snow on the Cascade Peaks. We walked the five mile lower loop and were rewarded with seeing the first grass widows – next week there will be a purple bloom here.

DSC02885

View west from near the trailhead – Mt Hood and Horsethief Butte

DSC02886

Mt Hood

Eightmile Creek Falls was fairly full…

DSC02890

Eightmile Creek Falls

DSC02895

Rainbow and plunge pool

The view from the waterfall to the east across the Columbia River:

We continued up the road, across the creek, then south on the Vista Loop, to our usual stop near the power pylons, where we often see the first flowers blooming, and the first grass widows were just beginning to open in the cold breeze…

DSC02899

grass widow

DSC02901

A few purple buds opening in the grassy slopes

We continued around the loop, to the high point, then back around to the view of Dalles Mountain Ranch. A good walk on a brisk day.

DSC02904

West from the high point

DSC02907

East from the high point

DSC02908

Dalles Mountain Ranch

There will be more hikes in February – in the next post.

January 2023

Quiet and cold in Portland this month. I went on four hikes (see next post), met a few times with my knitting group at the local coffee spot, and walked in the neighborhood when it was dry.

IMG_7478

Alameda stairs

IMG_7479

Moon, January 1, 2023

Knitting:

I thought I was done with knitting gnomes for a while, but then a request came in for a long time friend, so I made one more. I knit myself a new travel mug cosy, and finished my holiday socks. And made progress on my slip stitch blanket.

Quilting:

I am actually quilting again! I joined the Modern Quilt Studio – Mystery Quilt, as I have learned so much from Weeks Ringle and Bill Kerr over the years. I’ve finished the first four clues. I have no idea what the final quilt will look like, but I had fun picking two contrasting palettes of fabric from my existing stash. There will be two more sets of instructions before the big reveal.

IMG_7622

Blocks for the first four clues.

Family archeology:

While relearning crochet, I was looking through a collection of my mother’s knitting and sewing books for useful material. These are very outdated craft books that I keep for sentimental reasons. As I was leafing through one of them, a piece of thin note paper covered in my mother’s beautiful cursive handwriting fell out. It is just a notation of a crochet pattern, but my heart filled, and I felt her here with me, advising me in her future, playing the role of a ‘time being’. (Credit to Ruth Ozeki, author of A Tale for the Time Being, which I read recently, and which gave me a whole new definition of the expression ‘time being’.)

IMG_7614

Sad news: In January, more racist violence shocked us all…as a mother, daughter, sister, friend, member of the human race, my heart is pierced each time.

IMG_2215

With reference to Tyre Nichols, Memphis, TN (photo from the internet)

Meanwhile, an anonymous someone in my neighborhood is trying to spread good wishes…

Looking back on 2022…

Hiking, reading and crafting, goals and accomplishments, life in pandemia….

We begin 2023, adapted to the new ‘ordinary’ life. We are injected with as many booster shots as we can get, and masking whenever in crowds of people. We will probably go on this way for a while. With the best of intentions we move on in our world, acknowledging privileged survival and a relatively easy life here, now.

TRAVEL: We returned to international travel in 2022, hiking in Scotland and Iceland during long summer days. We also traveled to Joshua Tree and southern Utah for hiking, and went twice to Washington DC, to see our daughter, and other east coast relations.

HIKING: My 76 hiking and walking adventures added up to 332 miles, and 52,272 feet in elevation, many of these while on our travels. New notable local hikes: finishing the last few miles of Portland’s 39 mile long Wildwood Trail, a pandemic project; the return to fire-scarred Bird Creek meadows on Mt Adams; and our first time to walk around Bayocean Spit on the Oregon coast.

DSC00776

View from Pittock Mansion over Portland after finishing the Wildwood Trail.

DSC00875

Bird Creek Meadows, Mt Adams

DSC09573

Sand pipers and plovers on Bayocean Spit

Our many repeat hikes were satisfying for monitoring seasonal changes, exemplified by these views of Mt Hood:

DSC02712

March, White River

DSC00614

August, East Eliot Moraine

DSC01039

October, Vista Ridge

READING: I finished 88 books last year. I learned the most from nonfiction and memoirs (red stars), written by diverse authors, mostly women: a thru hiker, a mountain climber, a senator, musicians, writers, and even an astrophysicist. My favorite fiction books were: Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus, Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver, and Shadows on the Rock by Willa Cather. I also enjoyed rereads of classics and old favorites.

QUILTING: I made one baby quilt.

IMG_5171

Baby quilt for a new great niece, March

KNITTING: I knit my way through 9933 yards of yarn, the largest quantity into 15 hats for our guild service project. I also knit at least one gnome every month, for the Year of Gnomes. I made hats and socks for family, and a couple of scarves and gift critters.

Image 1-22-23 at 3.26 PM

Ravelry 2022 project thumbnail pictures

Image 1-11-23 at 8.56 PM

Ravelry 2022 knitting stats

IMG_7421

12 gnomes, for the Year of Gnomes

FAMILY: Both of our sons, who had been temporarily living at home, moved out: one nearby, the other to Philadelphia. So we are fully empty nest for now. We were able to visit our daughter in DC twice last year, and she came home twice. She is in a gap year, and may be relocating to a new city for grad school next year. We were able to see some extended family members for the first time since the pandemic, but they live far enough away that regular visits are not easy.

DSC00557

A favorite garden in Eugene, OR, August

More of my favorite photos from 2022:

Portland cherry trees:

Scotland, June:

DSC05233

New Zealand Tree Fern in the Glasgow Botanical Gardens

DSC05548

Climbing Stob Dubh

DSC05639

Solstice near Glencoe

DSC06764

On the slopes of Stac Pollaidh

Iceland, July:

Street Art in Reykjavik:

Waterfalls and puffins:

DSC07681

Gullfoss

DSC08159

Dynjandi

DSC08112

Kirkjufellsfoss

DSC08559

Latrajbarg cliffs

Plans for 2023: I am relearning crochet so that I can make a blanket for the Guild service project, and a coral for the Coral Reef project. I am midway through knitting a slip stitch blanket. I have started the Modern Quilt Studio Mystery Quilt, and am having fun using my stash again. I hope to see more of family, but that is not always up to me. I plan to continue monthly blog updates, with expected travel interruptions. I am working on about a dozen posts from our 2020 New Zealand trip, and from 2022 Scotland and Iceland trips, and quilt documentation posts. I have to resize pictures in older posts to fit storage limits, adding a layer of time consuming work.

We will continue weekly local hikes, and expect to hike almost daily on our upcoming trips to New Zealand and Italy.

My general wish for the New Year is for good health, and for living in a way that honors diversity and contributes to ecological repair, with kindness, honesty, and generosity.

IMG_6396IMG_6576

December 2022 Recap

What do I want to remember about December? A freak snowstorm the first week. A lot of grey, rainy cold days which I spent counting down to the winter Solstice. I only went on two hikes this month:

12/6/2022 – Catherine Creek, WA –

We drove through the snowy Columbia River Gorge, and found the early snow at Catherine Creek.

DSC02428

Ice on Rowland Lake

IMG_7206

Snow covered slopes on the Lower Trail

IMG_2136

We saw a fox run up the slope.

DSC02437

Looking across the Columbia River to Oregon.

DSC02445

Catherine Creek Waterfall

DSC02458

Then we walked up to the snow-covered fairy pools,

DSC02456

and looked across to the Arch.

DSC02467

While eating lunch and warming up in the car, the sun came out, so we decided to walk the trail above the Arch.

DSC02474

Bridge over the creek

DSC02486

I saw a few predator birds in the tree tops – a hawk

DSC02501

American kestrel

DSC02487

Looking up toward Sunflower Hill

DSC02507

We turned around at the top of the Arch, not having adequate footwear for deeper snow and ice.

DSC02509

Eastward view

12/13/2022 –  Portland Arboretum –

Another day, we found a slightly dry weather window, and took a 2.5 mile walk through part of the Portland Arboretum.

DSC02516

We found the most color in the Holly Garden.

DSC02519

Bare deciduous trees and grey skies.

DSC02522

Mahonia in the Winter Garden

DSC02526

Cedar

Meanwhile…

I took plenty of walks through the neighborhood looking for cheerful holiday decor.

I remember willing the Solstice and longer days to arrive. For a few days each year, the sun is so low, it shines through our front door windows onto the stairwell wall.

Later in the month, the east winds swept through and pounded our neighborhood, blowing down several very tall fir trees, including one across the street that we had been worried about for years. It fell on the neighbor’s house. Fortunately no one was in the room that was crushed at that moment. Then we watched the street drama of tree removal for several days, front row seat from our living room.

IMG_7315

December 22nd, tree down

8A113934-87FA-43B6-A473-28C06427D9FE

December 23rd – a thin layer of icy snow over everything…

IMG_7377

December 26th – first they removed the other standing tree,

IMG_7380

Then used a very tall crane to remove the fallen tree.

IMG_7386

Rainproofing the roof; reconstruction and repair will take a while….

Elsewhere in the neighborhood:

1BF7034B-15C9-4945-99C4-6B52CA98EE04

Over in the park, Henry Huggins lost his shade tree,

IMG_7284

and the tall fir to the left of this nutcracker…

IMG_7452

blocked this street for a few weeks until it could be removed.

Fortunately, nobody was hurt an any of these local incidents.

What else…one son moved to Philadelphia at the beginning of the month and was not here for the holidays. We began to settle into our next phase of empty nesting, with no sign of any of the kids living here in the near future. We were glad to have our daughter home for the holidays. Luckily, she moved her flight up one day, and missed the travel craziness that happened this year. We were amazed that our other son arrived home from a business trip on a delayed flight from Denver, at 3 am on Christmas morning…for some reason not cancelled. We enjoyed setting up our tree, admiring the ornaments and the memories they bring; lighting Hanukkah candles, baking cookies, having a lovely Christmas dinner with some of our oldest friends.

Portland Art Museum – 12/28

My daughter and I went with friends to see a few of the current exhibits.

The golden brush strokes on this special exhibit Botticelli painting drew me in.

IMG_7394IMG_7393IMG_7392

Very different from the rectangular smudges on this Impressionism work, which I also loved.

IMG_7397IMG_7398

The Japanese woodblock prints of Mt Fuji were much more intricate and detailed, also beautiful!

IMG_7404

A large retrospective exhibit of the Native American artist, Oscar Howe, was so interesting. His style evolved from representational to fractured, and was very colorful. These paintings are both dancers, with one arm raised, and feathers hanging down. I loved them!

IMG_7406IMG_7405

Other December news:

An artist friend gave me a small painting of Mt Hood that we hung in our kitchen adjacent to one of my husbands’ photos of Mt Hood. We love the mountains!

I knit my way through the month, completing a few gifts, and finishing the year of gnomes.

IMG_7450

I made three of these Warm One Hats in Knit Picks Mighty Stitch yarn held double, as gifts for each of my kids.

IMG_7420

I made the 12th gnome, Gnova, by Sara Schira, for the December Year of Gnomes.

IMG_7228

I made three Little Tigers that have new homes.

IMG_7509

I continued knitting the Malabrigo Slip Stitch Blanket after all the gift knitting was done. This one is for me.

I plan to write one more post for 2022 – hopefully soon.

November 2022

Catching up on November at home and in the neighborhood…

We had lots of rainy, cold weather, brightened by leaves beginning their color changing and falling,

DSC02066

tupelo and katsura

DSC02068

sumac

IMG_6989

gingko

Leaves staining the cement, and other sidewalk art…

A rainy day with magical sun breaks…

IMG_7127

Looking across the Willamettte River to SE Portland from the Marquam Bridge

IMG_2893

Meanwhile, the neighborhood is lit up with the western sunbeams pouring in beneath the clouds…

And more leaves glow along the streets…

We had some delicious meals shared with friends:

IMG_6984

A beautiful eggplant curry with pomegranate

IMG_7154

Thanksgiving pies

Meanwhile, I continued my knitting…

IMG_6997

I finished one pair of socks,

IMG_7159

and started a Malabrigo slip stitch blanket,

IMG_7160

and another pair of socks.

IMG_6980

November gnome (Nice to Gnome You by Sarah Schira)

IMG_7025

And a Tiny Gnome for gifting (Anna Hrachovec)

We voted at the beginning of the month, with mostly satisfactory results, though there have been some setbacks.

IMG_6866

We went on three hikes in November, and to the Maryhill Museum, all to be described in the next post…

October 2022

Autumn comes to the neighborhood:

Witches, ghosts, and jack-o-lanterns:

I finished knitting hats for the guild service project, socks, and a new witch gnome for the Halloween decor:

IMG_6785

Witch gnome, for the October #YearOfGnomes

IMG_6768

Back, showing her hair

IMG_6879

Joining the local coven

We flew to Washington DC to visit our daughter and hike in the Shenandoah Mountains (next blog post). We returned just in time to greet our neighborhood trick-or-treaters from our porch for the first time in a few years, in the pouring rain this year. I even carved a (two-sided) pumpkin.

DSC02060IMG_6892

And I took note of the annual witch paddle in the Willamette River (photo credit to the Oregonian online). Someday I hope to see it in person.

IMG_2104

September 2022….

A transition month: one son moved out; after a hot and smoky spell, the weather turned to autumn, but it  hasn’t rained much yet. In Scotland, the Queen died; in New Zealand the albatrosses fledged. Meanwhile, we harvested tomatoes, basil and cucumbers; our other son moved back in (temporarily?..), and we have had more post(?)-Covid social meetings – with new neighbors and old friends – that feels good. New vaccines, a new clothes dryer, some new knitting and three hikes (in the next blog post). 

Knitting…

I finished four more hats for the guild service project, a Musselburgh Hat (Ysolda Teague) for a family member, and the Choose Your Gnome Adventure mystery gnome by Sarah Schira for the September/Year of Gnomes.

Neighborhood and garden…

The Queen and the albatrosses…

I have no particular relationship with the Queen, except that she has always been there my whole life. She modeled devotion to duty, and lived a life of extreme privilege, but seemed to learn from her mistakes. She represents some part of the fictional world where I have spent so much of my reading time, as many of my favorite authors are British. I feel compelled to remember her here.

IMG_6533

Family friend, meeting the Queen in BC about 20 years ago.

IMG_2069

Working until the end…

Image 10-6-22 at 3.35 PM

Inspirational message during the pandemic lock down.

Britain Prince Philip Funeral

Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II sits alone in St. George’s Chapel during the funeral of Prince Philip, April 17, 2021(Jonathan Brady/Pool via AP). A heartbreaking image depicting what many experienced during the pandemic (though in less posh surroundings).

IMG_2071

Rainbow over Buckingham Palace, from News media

IMG_2070

And I continue to watch the albatross web camera, from Dunedin, NZ. The chicks were fledging all month – this one in the pouring rain.

IMG_2068

September 3rd, 2022. The Royal Cam chick, 220 days old, fledging. She has been named Lilibet in honor of the Queen.

Inspirational thought:

IMG_6592

Blog note: I am trying to resize my photos to address storage issues on this blog. There is so much I don’t know about how it all works, but I will try, as I want to keep the blog going.