Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts

Saturday, April 10, 2021

Covid-19 Life: Gardening, New Books, Quilts

Spring has come. Daffodils and hyacinth are in bloom, as is the pear tree. The robins are splashing in the bird bath, the sparrows have a family in the bird house, and the mason bees are finding nooks in the bricks.

About one year ago we went to the local gardening center to buy herbs. It is mostly outdoors, and even indoors, the building is open and has high ceilings. Last year we only had a mask for protection; this year we had our vaccinations, too.

We bought parsley and dill and Nasturtium seeds and some tools and things.

A dozen years ago we pulled the English ivy up from under the apple trees and I put down stones. This spring, we took up the stone and are planting companion plants for fruit trees. Our oregano patch had become huge, so we divided it up and took most to plant under the trees. I sowed Nasturtium in the sunnier parts. In the fall we will transplant our bulbs under the trees. Next spring, we will see the daffodils and hyacinths from the family room patio door!

The stones are now along the house and driveway where we put the Stella d'Oro lilies when the front yard was landscaped three years ago. They have done wonderful there!


It is to rain tomorrow and I can return to machine quilting my Water Lily quilt. It is a lot of work! But it would be even more had I hand quilted it. My other projects are backing up, waiting for me to finish this quilting. But I did the first month block for Barbara Brackman's new quilt along project, Ladies Aid New York Sampler. Being from New York, I 'had' to participate! 

I am not using reproduction fabrics for this quilt. I have loads of that background fabric and need to use it. Truthfully, the fabric was once bedroom curtains in a house we lived in for 17 months! I kept it figuring I would use it some day.

A few more books have been added to my shelf.

  • The Writer's Crusade: Kurt Vonnegut and the Many Lives of Slaughterhouse-Five by Tom Roston
  • Among the Beautiful Beasts by Lori McMullen, the story of the early life of Marjory Stoneman Douglas, known in her later years as a tireless activist for the Florida Everglades
  • Beautiful Country: A Memoir by Qian Julie Wang, about her undocumented Chinese immigrant family
I won A Good Neighborhood by Theresa Anne Fowler from the Book Club Cookbook.

And I purchased some poetry books for National Poetry Month. First to arrive are two books by Joseph Fasano, whose The Dark Heart of Every Wild Thing I reviewed here.


Fasano shares his poetry online, as well as his music, and I have greatly enjoyed both.

We are watching Ken Burn's Hemingway on PBS. I have my grandfather's For Whom the Bell Tolls, printed in 1943, and two 1970 books I bought as a high school senior, and the short stories we bought for our son to read in school.
Here are the grandpuppies at doggy day care, looking very springy.
The quilters are meeting in the park. Most now are fully vaccinated. Years ago, I donated fan blocks I had made to the 'free table' and Bev Olson has been embellishing them with her wonderful embroidery and beading. She has created an amazing quilt from them!

And another friend dove into her fabric scraps to make a double sided quilt; Roman Coins on one side, and on the back is this very cool assemblage.(Sorry, the quilt is sideways!)
We are excited that our son and his girlfriend both received their first covid-19 vaccination this week at Ford Field! The virus is wrecking havoc in Michigan, even in our small town. We have scheduled doctor appointments over the next few weeks, but otherwise are continuing to social isolate.

But, hopefully, in a month we will be able to have a family gathering again.

Stay safe. Find your bliss.

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Summer Lull Activities

I realize that I have no scheduled posts until July! I am working on August published books now, so that won't fill the gap. I will likely finish some non-review books before July, but not enough to keep up my usual 3 posts a week.

This summer lull is when I often get to write about whatever I want to! I have some ideas for the coming weeks.
500 Book Reviews
I gained my 500 Reviews Badge from NetGalley! I joined in 2014 after my husband's retirement. I have reviewed or given feedback on 519 books.

I have galleys added to my shelf:
  • Eleanor, a new biography of Eleanor Roosevelt by David Michaels
  • Once Upon a Time I Lived on Mars: Space, Exploration, and Life on Earth by Kate Greene offered to me by the publisher. Greene lived on a simulated Martian environment for four months!
I am currently reading 
  • Migrations by Charlotte McConaghy
  • The Splendid and the Vile by Eric Larson
  • A Victorian Lady's Guide to Fashion and Beauty by Mimi Matthews
I am trying to finish my UFOs--Unfinished Objects in my quilt room. This week I finished the top for The Great Gatsby, years in the making. The hand applique blocks are all adapted from 1924 magazine ads and fashion illustrations. I had one block that I deleted and called it done. I plan on hand quilting it. The fabrics were created when the last movie version of the novel came out. That's how long I have worked on this idea!
The Great Gatsby Storybook Quilt
by Nancy A. Bekofske
I ordered fabric to make a quilt I have wanted to make since 1993--the Mountain Mist Water Lilies pattern! It will be a lot of work! All of those flower petals...the bias stems in the borders...Yes, I am crazy.


Michigan is also having a 'lull' in COVID-19 cases with the lowest number reported since March 18. Gov. Whitmer's lock-down has suppressed the virus extremely well.

Restaurants and retail shops are opening up with preventative protocols--masks, limited customers, hand sanitizer, frequent cleaning. Next week hair salons will reopen. My husband has scheduled a doctor's and dentist appointment in the next weeks. Gotta make hay while in this 'lull'.

A lull in hot weather had us out weeding and mulching the gardens. We installed the front garden three years ago. The roses and geranium are now in bloom and the coneflowers in bud. On the side of the house, the day lilies are in bud and the Stella d'Oro lilies blooming.

 The little bird house was made by my brother.

In February we ordered an ottoman and it arrived last week. It is from the same company as our settees, Younger Furniture, manufactured in America. We can use it as a footstool, coffee table, or extra seating.

The library is reopening for drop offs only, so no book club yet. The community center where the quilt group meets has not reopened. We were Zooming but with nice weather are meeting in the city park. We bring chairs and social distance, have show and tell and lunch.

Sadly, just after I wrote this I learned that one of our founding members, Shirley Williams, passed at age 95 after suffering a stroke. I wrote a post about her 91st birthday here. A lady who was helping Shirley with a quilt brought it in to share. It includes photos of 36 members of the Clawson Quilting Sisters!
Shirley William's last quilt project features
the Clawson Quilting Sisters

Our grandpuppy Sunny went on an adventure with her momma who is on furlough. To fill the lull, they went camping in Ohio with a group of dog owners. Sunny learned about lake water, played with the big dogs and another puppy, and returned home exhausted and hungry.

Home Again...

Ellie stayed home with our son who works from home. She enjoyed being the only dog in the house again!

My brother takes the most beautiful photos on his nature walks. I had to share these of the Huron River at Mill Creek Park.

Last of all my news is that today is my 48th Wedding Anniversary! What a trip it has been! We are going to order a delivered meal from a favorite Lebanese restaurant.
Nancy and Gary, June 17, 1972