The
Asiatic lilies are in bloom. They’re one
of my favorites. The bees and
butterflies like them, too.
Once upon
a time, when I was a little girl, I was traveling somewhere out west with my
parents in the late spring. We stopped
at a rest area for lunch. Daddy opened the
back of the Suburban and started the generator, which powered the Airstream’s air
conditioner, 120V electrical outlets, various lights and fans, the refrigerator
(after manually switching it from propane to electricity), and also charged the
camper’s battery. We rolled the windows
down in the Suburban so that the generator had good ventilation.
Here’s
that Airstream camper and the Suburban.
This picture was taken at my Uncle Don and Aunt June’s farm near
Shelbyville, Illinois. In the photo are
Daddy, Uncle Don, my dog Sparkle, Aunt June, and Mama.
Back to
the rest area out west.
While we
were eating, a truck pulling a flatbed loaded with beehives pulled
into the space in front of us. (Photo
from Loop Logistic Freight Brokerage Co.
That’s most assuredly not a 1973 or older Kenworth.)
It seemed
that the netting covering the beehives was not secured well at all. And the bees were not pleased with their
present circumstances. “Must get
out! Must travel! Must pollinate!”
And get
out they did, quite a large swarm of them.
However,
the day was cool and breezy, and the bees were soon in search of a warm place
to rest.
They chose
the Suburban.
The ceiling
of the Suburban, to be exact.
Meanwhile,
we finished our lunch, put things away, and Daddy turned off the generator with
a remote switch in the camper. (He was
pretty proud of that switch he’d rigged up.)
We exited the Airstream and headed to the Suburban.
I’m not
sure who saw them first. Perhaps we were
alerted by the pulsing, vibrating ‘hummmmm’. But one of us looked up – and, to our
amazement, discovered that the entire ceiling of the Suburban was a fuzzy,
black and yellow mass of wriggling, murmuring honeybees.
Mama and I
backed away.
Daddy
pulled off his Fedora dress hat and began swinging it in a ‘Shooo, begone!’ attitude.
The bees
took umbrage and launched.
In near
unison, they abandoned their warm refuge and took off on a buzzing, whining
offensive.
Daddy,
looking with alarm at this imminent skirmish, turned and ran.
The
honeybees kicked in the afterburner.
Daddy ran
faster.
The bees
flew faster.
Daddy
headed across the parking area and into the grassy lawns of the rest area,
running for all he was worth.
Now, since
it was lunchtime on a nice spring day, quite a number of people were sitting at
picnic tables around the rest area, eating lunch. (Remember, it was 1973, not 2026. That translates to ‘a lot less fast-food
joints; a lot more roadside picnics’.)
There they
were, calmly lifting fork or sandwich to mouth, when along came Daddy, running
like a contender in the Olympic 100-meter dash.
Paralyzed
picnickers could be seen at tables all around the rest area, paused dead with
burgers or forks halfway to their mouths, eyes wide as they watched,
astonished, while Daddy raced past, an angry swarm of honeybees hot on his
trail.
Daddy had
not yet turned 57, and he could run fassst. Still, bees can usually fly faster than a
person can run. The thing is, though, while
bees are very agile and accelerate quickly, their maximum straight-line flight
speed caps out around 15 mph. A running
person sprinting at full speed will usually quickly put distance between
themselves and the swarm. Even
particularly aggressive swarms like Africanized honeybees generally only pursue
a target for about a quarter of a mile, half a mile, tops. If you can cover that distance to reach
shelter, why, you’ll likely be safe!
Also, bees navigate differently than humans do. If you sashay around large obstacles, this
way and that, you might give them the slip.
They’re liable to get sidetracked, too, if the ringleaders spot any
bright flowers along the route.
In any
case, it wasn’t long before Daddy was tearing back toward us, yelling as he
came, “Get in the car! Get in the
car!!”
I’ll
betcha people at the rest area on the opposite side of the Interstate ran and
leaped into their cars without at all comprehending why they were thus
compelled.
Mama,
who’d been laughing ’til the tears ran down her face, gathered herself
together, and both of us, after taking a quick look in the Suburban to make
sure the bees were gone, jumped in and began rolling the windows up with all
haste. Daddy came running, shut the
tailgate and rolled the window up on the back of the Suburban, and then leaped into the
driver’s seat.
We all
looked around for stray honeybees, but found none. Nor would we.
They were gone, every last one.
Nary a one of us had gotten stung, either.
We carried
on with our journey.
Daddy’s
method might not have been conventional or advised, but... well, it worked,
now, didn’t it?!
Tuesday morning, a new 8½” ruler from
Creative Grids arrived. I don’t have a
whole lot of cutting rulers; just a couple I bought for specific blocks, and
half a dozen a friend gave me. (Maybe
that sounds like a lot; but I know people who have two or three dozen!) I do have two June Tailor slot rulers, a 12” x
12” and a 12” x 18”, which I use all the time. Well, I needed to trim the embroidered Belle
blocks down to 8½” x 8½”. I thought, My
8½” ruler will make it easy to get the embroidery placed right where I want it –
and then, !!! I don’t have an 8½”
ruler!!!
I looked at the slot rulers. Yeah, I
could use one of those. I’d be more
likely to make a mistake, but I could use it.
But... I hadn’t bought myself a ‘tool’
for quite a long while. I needed me a
new ‘tool’! (Didn’t I?) (Well, didn’t
I?!)
So... I ordered a Creative Grids 8½”
ruler. And you know what?! It’s a good thing I did that, because I was
about to cut those blocks at 8”, rather than 8½”! 😦 It only occurred to me, Oh. Yes. Seam
allowances. when I tried to buy an 8” square ruler, and they couldn’t be
had. 🙄
I ordered the ruler Saturday evening
through Amazon Prime, and it arrived just in time; trimming those blocks was
the next thing I needed to do. I spotted
the package out on the front porch, trotted happily out there to get it,
brought it in, – and dropped it on my toe. 😬
Fortunately, it was still in the
padded package. I still wound up with a
slightly colorful toe, but nothing like it would’ve been if I had’ve already
extracted the ruler from the package.
Creative Grids rulers have exclusive
grip circles embedded on the back of each ruler. The ruler slides easily over the fabric until
pressure is applied, whereupon it then holds the fabric in place while cutting,
eliminating slippage. The measurement markings
are accurate, and are printed on the ruler in both black and white so they are
easy to see on any color of fabric.
After trimming all the embroidered
blocks, using the new ruler, I began attaching the central borders to the center
panel. I finished this middle section
that day.
At 6:30 p.m., we met Andrew and Hester
and the children, Keira and Oliver, at Pizza Ranch to celebrate Hester’s
birthday.
A friend got a new vehicle, and was remarking on how she felt a bit reluctant trading in an older vehicle that she was sentimental about. That reminded me of the following:
When I was 4 years old, my father traded in a
cute little red Saab that I absolutely adored for a bigger vehicle that I
cannot at all remember. I told someone
(who duly reported it to my father), “Daddy just gave that nice car away,
because it had a little dab of rust on it!”
(First, I had no idea what ‘rust’ was, though
I had a vague notion it could be red in color. Second, none of Daddy’s cars
ever, ever had rust on them. Also,
I apparently did not know the difference between ‘trading’ and ‘giving away’. 😄)
I do still have the little matchbox-sized red
Saab someone at the dealership gave me when Daddy purchased that car. At least I think I do. Where is it? That thing is worth several hundred dollars
now! – I kept my toys in near-pristine condition.
I don’t have any pictures of Daddy’s little
red 1963 Saab, but it looked just like this one.
Wednesday morning, it was 80° by 10:30 a.m., on the way up to 92° on that sunny
day. I refilled and rehung the bird
feeders, tidied the bedroom, showered, cleaned up the bathroom, played the
piano, and made myself a mug of Baklava-flavored cold-brew coffee. I blow-dried and curled my hair, ate breakfast,
cleaned the kitchen, and then headed upstairs to my sewing room to start on the
52 blocks that go around the central section of the Crinoline Ladies quilt.
Thinking I might not have enough of
the Michael Miller’s Fairy Frost (shiny white) background fabric, I thought I’d
better order more from Marshall Dry Goods – but they no longer have it! I tried to find it elsewhere, first calling
the quilt shops in town and the big one in Fremont, and finally looking
online. I found that there are multiple
shades of white, and there is not a defining number/name/code on the selvage. Is it ‘silvery white’, ‘pearlized white’, ‘silver
on white’, ‘white on silver’, ‘white on white metallic’, etc., etc.? Furthermore, it’s almost twice the
price anywhere else than it was at Marshall’s. I eventually purchased what I think and hope
is the correct color from a seller on Etsy.
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Buckhorn Lake State Park, Wisconsin
She’s selling it in half-yard
increments. It sounded cheaper that way
– but of course it wasn’t really.
I purchased from her because she had the best picture of the fabric.
I sure hope she doesn’t do what a
young kid at Walmart did one time some years ago: We’d gone there during a blizzard, because...
why not? 😅 We needed stuff, and they were open. But they were seriously understaffed, and I
wound up with a kid from the electronics department to help me in the fabric
department.
I needed two yards of a very fancy
trim, the kind that comes unraveled at the ends if not properly secured. There were barely two yards left on the roll.
The boy carefully measured the first
yard ------ and then, before I could stop him, he grabbed the scissors and cut
it. Ker-CHOP! I had not expected that at all.
I cried, “No, don’t!” – too late.
He looked thunderstruck. If a person wants multiple yards of anything,
he thought he should measure a yard... cut it... measure the next yard... cut
it... and so on until he’d cut the right amount.
I felt sorry for him. He was trying so
hard to do the right thing! Poor dumb
kid. 😄 I assured him all was well (though it wasn’t),
and said I’d make it work.
I did, but it wasn’t easy.
Anyway, the fabric should be here
tomorrow. Let’s hope it’s not in
half-yard chunks, and let’s hope it’s the right shiny white!
Oh – I did explain to the boy
how one cuts trim or fabric when a customer requests multiple yards, so if he
had to help anybody else in that department that snowy night, they’d wind up
with their yardage whole.
That morning, Hester sent pictures of the
pretty cabinet in her living room where she put the candleholder we gave her. See it there behind the starfish?
I told Hester that I think possibly,
maybe even probably, Claude Duperron is the name of the artist.
Here’s another vase by him. That small vase sold for $119 at
a secondhand store online.
Claude Duperron has a glassblowing
studio on Vancouver Island in Canada.
Somebody wrote to the person who
bought this vase, “If you paid less than $200 for a Claude Duperron, you got a
smashing deal.”
I found this paragraph written by Claude
Duperron, telling of the inspiration behind some of his pieces: “When I was a lad growing up in the northern
Alberta town of Peace River, I would walk by ‘Moccasin Flats’ on my way to
school each day. This was a swampy area
where the cat tails and the reeds grew abundant. You could hear the call of the Red-Winged
Black Bird. In late fall when it was
twilight, you could look through the reeds at the hills and the reddish sky in
the background.”
This made me want to know what Peace
River looks like. Here’s a picture on the
old road to ‘Twelve-Foot Davis’ Grave’. Peace River is in
the background.
Once I read that, I needed to know if ‘Davis’
was 12 feet tall, or... or what.
It turns out, Henry Fuller Davis, a trader on
the Peace River, struck gold on a wee twelve-foot claim. He earned roughly $30,000 – and that was in
the mid-1800s.
According to the Inflation Calculator,
$30,000 in 1880 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $979,470.59 today.
Oh, look, look!!! He is 12 feet tall!!!
Or at least his statue is. 😆 There’s a wooden statue of him at Riverfront
Park in Peace River. 12 feet tall. Just like I said. haha
Henry Fuller Davis placed his 12-foot
land claim during the Cariboo Country gold rush in British Columbia. He took his $30,000 profits and staked it all
on a trading post close to where the town of Peace River stands today. The town of Peace River is sometimes referred
to as ‘The Land of Twelve-Foot Davis’.
Twelve-Foot Davis’ gravesite is
designated a park and is located on the top of Grouard Hill a little bit east
of the town.
My pursuits of Important Bits of
Intelligence lead me onto many reindeer trails (which are much smarter
than ‘rabbit holes’). I larnt all that,
just trying to find out information about the candleholder I got for Hester!
Okay, one more piece of info, and then
I’m done. Really. Maybe.
That blown glass candleholder might
very well be part of Claude Duperron’s ‘Tranquille’ collection. It does look a lot like the other pieces I’ve
seen. Here’s what he wrote about the
collection: “This series is about the
peacefulness of the morning. I enjoy
feeding the birds and I love to appreciate the colors of the early morning
sunlight. In this imagery, you see the
unfolding new growth reaching for a new day. You can feel the quiet joy of a serene scene. The black glass that I have formulated is a
deep blue-black that also has the potential for fluorescence as the ultraviolet
from sunlight excites the cobalt molecules. The pieces start with the black glass overlaid
with dark colors, as ‘before dawn’, and progressively get lighter until they
have the bright blue of a morning sky.”
Here’s one someone else found at a
thrift shop. She wrote, “I paid waaay
too much for this, but it’s a Claude Duperron!”
Because it’s glass and not pottery, he
did not etch his name into his pieces, but, rather, painted it on. So if, as I suspect, someone glued a piece of
felt or something onto the bottom of Hester’s candleholder and then removed it,
that might very well explain why the name is gone.
“Somebody make me stop!” I wrote to
Hester after giving her all this information.
I thwacked my downstairs laptop shut
(gently, mind you!) and hurried upstairs to my sewing room to see how much I
could get done before time for church.
I printed templates, then cut pieces
for several of the blocks. I got one 8” block
sewn. This isn’t a quick block to make,
because of all those tight curves.
Hannah had a tooth extraction and root canal
reversal done Tuesday. It took almost 5
½ hours, an hour longer than expected, not including the fillings at the
beginning of the procedures. She kept
running out of anesthetic. It lasted
around 30 minutes before they would have to redo it.
Wednesday, she couldn’t keep anything down. Probably the extra medicine made her
sick.
She can’t take much of anything for pain, as
she’s allergic to most pain medications.
So she’s been in quite a lot of pain.
I worry about her.
It’s tough when you need medicine – but the
medicine makes you sick. ☹
Thursday was a pretty day, 70° at 10:00 a.m.,
with an expected high of 77°. I should’ve
been outside working in the flower gardens. The rains have energized the weeds! But... I’d already showered and was blow-drying
my hair. One doesn’t go work outside
after one has already showered! Besides,
the wind was blowing steadily at 17 mph and gusting up to 28 mph. That’s a good excuse for staying indoors,
right there.
Anyway, I needed to do some laundry, and I
hoped to spend the majority of the day working on the Crinoline Ladies quilt.
I got three blocks done that day, even while
listening to – and occasionally watching – meteorologist Ryan Hall tell of
tornadoes in Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan.
Friday was another nice day, 74° by 10:30 a.m.,
heading up to a high of 83°. I spent a
good part of it piecing four more blocks for Violet’s quilt.
I timed it, and it took me an hour and
fifteen minutes to piece one block, which consists of 32 pieces, or 16 units,
each with a curved seam. I’ll time the
cutting of pieces for a block next time I’m at the cutting table, if I can
remember. The cutting isn’t fast,
either.
That afternoon, Victoria sent pictures of the
new décor in Carolyn and Violet’s new room, along with a video of Carolyn, Violet, and Willie laughing
uproariously at an animal documentary with a frog ribbiting and a bearded dragon
running with its front legs up in the air.
There are a lot of entertaining animals on Planet Earth!
I got four more quilt blocks done that
day, making a total of eight. The way I
sew each unit: I put the concave piece
to the bottom, the convex to the top, hold the edge of the top piece with a
handy-dandy pair of rubber-handled tweezers, and go along one or two stitches
at a time, lifting the presser foot and readjusting often, in small increments.
Thank goodness for the knee lift – but
an automatically-lifting presser foot would be even better!
At 11:00 a.m. Saturday morning, it was
69° and felt like 80°, or so said my weather app. When I went out to refill a bird feeder (Larry
kindly rehung them for me, including one that was plumb empty) (??), it felt
more like 90°, to me. It had rained
hard, with accompanying lightning and thunder, through a good part of the night
and early morning; but it was sunny by 11.
I cut the pieces for several blocks that day,
and pieced three together. That makes a
total of eleven blocks done, with 41 yet to go.
The two curved pieces, one concave and one
convex, that make up the units for this block are the same ones used in all the
varieties of the Drunkard’s Path quilt.
This particular variation is called the ‘I Wish You Well’ block. It is often interpreted as a ‘meandering’, ‘healing’,
or ‘wish’ pattern, and is sometimes used in ‘healing’ or ‘encouragement’
quilts.
Some say the design was created and made by
ladies supporting Prohibition, way back when.
There’s also another story which might be more accurate, since
Prohibition was only in the 1920s-1930s, and this quilt block has been found in
quilts dating back far longer ago than that.
It may have been a silent signal to initiate the journey toward freedom
on the Underground Railroad, giving coded direction to runaway slaves. It may have acted as a preparatory message,
often associated with gathering supplies, signaling the time to begin the
escape, or telling what direction to go.
Its function coordinated with other patterns such as the Log Cabin, the
Bow Tie, and the Flying Geese.
There are many quilt blocks that had special
meaning, and the runaways knew how to interpret them when they’d find quilts
hanging on clotheslines, lopped over garden gates, or displayed in
windows. These stories, however, have
been debated for years.
There are over 80 historically documented
varieties and thousands of mathematical combinations of quilt blocks that can
be made using the Drunkard’s Path unit.
Yikes!
I just discovered a tutorial on Drunkard’s Path units. Look at this picture. There are ten pins in that one small
unit! I don’t use any pins at all when
putting this together. Whatever works, I guess! 😄
At 7:30 a.m. Sunday morning, it was 55° on
the way up to a sunny 75°. I sipped the
last of the Baklava cold-brew coffee as I blow-dried and curled my hair,
getting ready for church.
Larry made his yummy waffles for lunch when
we got home from church. He usually
makes enough that we have waffles for a couple of days thereafter.
We picked up an order of groceries after
church last night. I was evidently
feeling the need for chocolate when I placed that order, because I got a small
package of peanut butter chocolate fudge.
It was precut into small pieces.
After we ate supper – cranberry almond salad, corn chowder, cottage
cheese, and strawberries – I had a couple pieces of fudge. Why didn’t I stop there?! But noooo, I had to eat one more – and
promptly got a stomachache.
This is exactly why I very rarely buy any
kind of candy, desserts, or junk food: I
can’t stop eating the stuff! 🙄
I made a fresh gallon of cold-brew
coffee before going to bed, this batch from Tiramisu-flavored coffee beans.
At a
quarter after ten this cloudless morning, it was 69° on the way up to 81°. I made myself a mug of the Tiramisu cold-brew
coffee, which had brewed overnight. This
is a new flavor for me, from the Grindhead Coffee company, as was the
Baklava-flavored beans.
Eeek, it’s
too strong!
...
...
...
Okay,
now I’ve poured a good third of it into another mug, and filled the first back
up with water. There, that’s a little
better.
Is
this what that stuff is supposed
to taste like??
It’s not
going on my list of favorites. Here’s a
description of the dessert itself: Tiramisu
is a popular Italian dessert made of coffee-soaked ladyfingers layered with a
creamy mixture of mascarpone cheese, eggs, and sugar, and dusted with cocoa
powder. Its name means ‘pick me up’, and
it’s a no-bake dessert that requires chilling to set.
Time to
get back to making blocks for the Crinoline Ladies quilt. I have 51 ½ hours in this quilt already, with
25 of them in the cutting and piecing of blocks alone.
Look at all the Asiatic lilies that are
blooming!































































