Baby birds and pretty flowers.

I spent the weekend weeding all the gardens – and I do mean ALL the gardens.  I hate weeding, but three straight days of rain last week meant that weeds had completely taken over and when you get down to it, there is something so satisfying about weeding when you look back at a freshly weeded bed.  It just seems so neat and orderly, if only for the time being.

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Nature on top.

Five Photos, Five Stories, #5

IMG_2185 (1024x683)I don’t know why this sign amuses me so much, but it does.  I pass by this sign several times a daily, as it’s just up the street.  It’s had the plummage on top for over a year, so I’m guessing I’m not the only one who finds it amusing.  If only every road sign had a little welcoming flair….

A spare hanky.

Five Photos, Five Stories, #4

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A minivan slowed down as I rounded the corner to  our front gate.  A window opened and a little girl was waving something at me.

“It’s from Venable” her mother said from the driver’s seat, as I realized who and what it was.  A spare vintage handkerchief I whipped out of my purse and handed to the mom friend next to me during our children’s fourth grade ‘moving up’ ceremony  as we collectively became a bit misty eyed over our children’s departure from the sweet elementary school they had attended for the previous five years. A school they had left 3 years ago now – how had it been that long?  It didn’t seem like that long ago they were in kindergarten, telling us how they thought we should befriend each other because it seemed to them we’d get along.  They were right of course, and we’ve been friends ever since.

A voice from the back seat inquired when our next sewing night was – which reminded us it had been way, way too long since we got together to knit which really was just an excuse to drink wine. We used to have a regular night, but then trying to keep up with kids and husbands and jobs and life made it harder to pull off and it sort of fell by the wayside, although thanks in part to those former kindergartners turned eighth graders(!), we still manage to keep tabs on each other, if not occasionally run into each other.  So we set a date and for the first time in a week, I felt okay about the fact that I had failed to line up summer activities for my child, because this particular mom friend hadn’t either and frankly, she was looking forward to the open slated-ness of the season, which I kind of admit, so am I.  I realize this is probably what our kids saw that made them realize we should be friends and why they remind us to hang out.

And while this is not at all why I happen to carry spare hankies – always vintage ones of course – it is awfully nice to know that these sort of quirks of mine are readily accepted, just like I completely understood it took a little while to come back to me.  Sometimes life gets in the way, but like raising kids, sometimes these things are just moments in time.

The back roads of summer.

Five Photos, Five Stories, #3

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Whenever the opportunity to drive a back road presents itself, I take it.  I have a habit of snapping shots like this while driving – it’s far more challenging with my DSLR than with my point and shoot.  The p&s I can pop out the open sunroof and be confident I will get a decent shot if I just keep shooting, but even if I put all my settings to automatic with the big fancy camera, I sometimes have to stop what I’m doing and shoot.  Thankfully, when you have a habit of photographing roads like this, they lend themselves to you stopping in the middle of nowhere to do just that.  I took this on my way to one of my favorite strawberry patches last spring – sometimes just getting there and back is the reason I go.  There’s just something soothing about driving down roads like this one.

Suzicate at The Water Witch’s Daughter invited me to play Five Photos, Five Stories. I invite Patience at Fatuous Observations to participate.  If you wish to play the rules are that you post a picture a day with a story, fiction or non-fiction, or a poem and nominate one fellow blogger a day to participate.

 

The Old Mill

Five Photos, Five Stories, #2

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When Pat’s folks were here in early April, we took a day trip to up Washington, Virginia.  Pat’s dad Jack had been doing some genealogy and discovered his four time Great Grandfather (did I get that right?) Calvert had operated a mill there in the late 1700’s.  While we’ve driven by Washington numerous times over the years, we’ve never stopped off, as it is off the main highway.  We learned it’s only a few minutes off the main highway, much closer than we had thought.  The mill was located just outside of the town proper.  It was only later, when I was looking through my shots did I realize we’ve driven by this mill countless times on the road just above it, thanks to the green sign in the upper left hand side of this photo.  I thought it was just an old barn and definitely did not have a clue as to it once being part of the family. Funny how things like that work out, isn’t it?

Suzicate at The Water Witch’s Daughter invited me to play Five Photos, Five Stories. I invite Melissa at Green Girl in Wisconson to participate.  If you wish to play the rules are that you post a picture a day with a story, fiction or non-fiction, or a poem and nominate one fellow blogger a day to participate.

Captured.

Five Photos, Five Stories, #1

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I like to wander my yard with my camera in hand.  I’ve been teaching myself to shoot manually for the last year or so.  I’ve briefly – as in, sat in the yard one afternoon with a stack of library books and a glass of wine – studied the ins and outs of this.  I only vaguely know the terms, but I have (mostly) figured out how to set my camera to achieve the shots I want.  I learn more by doing than I do by reading sometimes, and this is definitely true when it comes to photography. Thank goodness for digital, which makes learning to play so much cheaper and easier than film photography.  I like to capture light and moods, I love shooting with macro lens and focusing in on details.  My garden and everything that inhabits it, are some of my favorite things to shoot because they are always changing, always in flux.  What’s in bloom today can be gone tomorrow.  Such is the tale of this spider.  I was walking into the basement to check laundry when I saw the late afternoon sunlight shining through the web and ran to grab my camera, as that light can be fleeting. I held my breath as I shot, almost unable to believe I was able to capture so beautifully the streaming sun light through the delicate web.  It’s taken me a good bit of work as well as luck to be able to shoot this photo. Such is life, isn’t it?  You can work all you want, but sometimes, you just luck into things.

Suzicate at The Water Witch’s Daughter invited me to play Five Photos, Five Stories. I invite Cassi at Bad at Being Mom to participate.  If you wish to play the rules are that you post a picture a day with a story, fiction or non-fiction, or a poem and nominate one fellow blogger a day to participate.

 

Spring Insanity

It has been an absolute whirlwind here lately.  I mean, really.  Yesterday was our first unscheduled day in at least two weeks, which is slightly misleading because by ‘unscheduled’ I mean, we’ve got loads of things to do, we just didn’t have any solid commitments before we hopped back on that busy bus  for the next few weeks.

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Blooming this week: April 16

We are at the point in spring where the landscape one sees at dawn is different than the one sees at nightfall.  Case in point – last Saturday afternoon, Pat & I plopped down in the front yard waiting for Edie to get ready for her soccer game.  We noticed the tulips had sent up buds and wondered when they might open.  After soccer, we plopped down in the exact same spot and noticed the tulips had opened up.  Just like that, while we weren’t looking that afternoon. Continue reading

Spring Break, Part III: Appomattox

I grew up near Gettysburg and as a result, have a soft spot for Civil War battlefields.   Sure, it seemed like there were school field trips there every other year, but it was also a popular destination for our family – tired of the pool all summer long?  We’d head over to Gettysburg for the day where we’d find entertainment.

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Springing.

Every year we worry the tulip magnolia tree in the front yard is going to get pinched by frost.  It’s a glorious tree to behold – the magnificent pink blooms can be seen as one approaches our house in every direction for at least a block.  It is the first tree to bloom every year and many neighbors have told us they consider it the first official sign of spring.  Every few years though, Mother Nature gets the last word on the beauty of the tree, for unlike other early blooming trees, the tulip magnolia does not react well to frost.  In fact, frost makes the large pink and white flowers turn brown, definitely not as glorious. Continue reading