Friday, September 9, 2011

The Most Dangerous Place In The World


I cried when I watched this.

I ask anyone who doesn't agree with this video to either come up with some logical argument or contradictory evidence (if you can find any), or else keep your defense of your 'choice' to yourself.

This video does not belong to me. I did not make it. I do, however, agree with it.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

I will write something wonderful...tomorrow...

What ever have I been doing lately? Lets see shall we...


"Calvin: You can't just turn on creativity like a faucet. You have to be in the right mood. 
Hobbes: What mood is that? 
Calvin: Last-minute panic." 
 Bill Watterson

"It is awfully hard work doing nothing. However, I don't mind hard work where there is no definite object of any kind. -Algernon" 
— Oscar Wilde (The Importance of Being Earnest and Other Plays)


"If it weren't for the last minute, nothing would get done." 
 Rita Mae Brown

"Never postpone until tomorrow what you can postpone until the day after." 
 Raoul Wallenberg (Letters and Dispatches 1924-1944)


"As a writer, I need an enormous amount of time alone. Writing is 90 percent procrastination: reading magazines, eating cereal out of the box, watching infomercials. It's a matter of doing everything you can to avoid writing, until it is about four in the morning and you reach the point where you have to write. Having anybody watching that or attempting to share it with me would be grisly."
— Paul Rudnick


All quotes courtesy of goodreads. No idea is wholly new, all things have roots in something else. These do however belong to the people who originally conceived them in this form. As most people are, at least at times, a trifle vain I have hopes that no one will mind me spreading their word-children about.

I wish you well on all of your projects for 'tomorrow,'
Rita

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

A Bee-autiful Day

While I was geting photos for my last post, a couple of bees found their way into my shots. I rather like bees I think, so long as they don't try and land on anything that isn't a flower. ;D  Any way I hope nobody gets stung this spring/summer! oh and forgive the puns if you can, I'm feeling silly today!
 

'Here's a dandy looking flower! And all mine too!'

'I havvve alwayzzz lovvved lilaczzz....'

'I zhould go tell the otherz...hmm, maybe it can wait a minute or two...'

Monday, May 23, 2011

Spring is like a Child

    Spring is like a child, new and fresh and alive. She wants to do everything at once and the world lights up with her efforts...
      When you walk out the door you can smell the lilacs, every time you just want to bury your face in them. The ditches are turning gold with dandelions and all their yellow heads. A soft mist of violets is spreading in the cool shade. Apple blossoms and those of the plums are turning the orchard in to a white garland' fairy hall. The sky seems bluer each day as the rain washes the fading of winter away. A green mantle slowly settles over the trees and new planted fields. The mushrooms are popping, drawing hungry searchers from their daily tasks; they bring their bounty home to join asparagus and chives in bringing new flavors to their tables. Windows are thrown open to the sound of birds and children rejoicing in this season so filled with life.  

~*~*~*~

Lilacs are one of my favorite things about May

Follow the yellow bordered road!


Apple Blossoms


'Goldfinch in the Birch,' taken by a friend

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Complete and Utter Nonsense: A conversation from the editing room

Tip tap. Tip click click. Clack tap tip tap. Tipcalckclicktaptaptipcicktip.

“You can’t post that!”
“Why ever not? It’s better than your suggestion anyway.”
“Why not! Because it’s complete nonsense that’s why not! And what is the matter with my idea?”
“Your idea is boring! Who wants to read about the most common causes of head-aches?”
“It’s useful and interesting! Lots of people get headaches; don’t you think they want to know why?”
“Only people like you would find that interesting! If they want to know they can look it up on a medical or  self-help site like,medicinenet, sixwise, or who.int/mediacentre, not on my blog!”
“But what-“
“NO!”
“Well you still can’t post that.”
“Why the dickens not?”
“It has no point for one thing!”
“What do you mean it doesn’t have a point? It has a point, you’re just missing it!”
“If I’m missing it I seriously doubt anyone else is going to get it!”
You’re just being obstinate! You won’t admit that my idea is better than yours.”
“I won’t admit it because it isn’t true! You can’t expect to post that and still have readers by this time tomorrow.”
“I won’t have readers if there is nothing to read! I have to post something today!”
“Oh come on! You can’t tell me that that’s the only thing you can come up with!”
“Well it is alright….I just can’t think of anything today.”
“Why can’t you just wait ‘till you come up with something better?”
“If I wait I’ll never post. You know what a procrastinator I am. Besides it’s not that bad… is it?”
“You know that dream you told me about, with the bear cubs and the peanut butter.”
“Yeah…what about it?”
“That made more sense.”
“Oh…”
“You know maybe you could just add ‘you’re nuts’ to the options at the bottom of your posts. You might actually get some feedback that way.”
“Is it really that bad?”
“Yes. But post it anyway. I want to see how many people agree with me on the state of your mental health.”
….….!
“I’m kidding alright! Just post it and stop moping. You’re giving me a headache!”
“Really? Am I on that list of yours?”

Bang thonk bump. Thump thud clunk……

Thursday, May 5, 2011

On the Wall Sat a Cat...

     On the back courtyard wall of a long-standing town house, sat a calico cat. She surveyed a flock of sparrows, scattered on and below a little black feeder (set there for their use,) with the detached interest of her kind. She was Cook's favorite after all, and needn't worry about catching sparrows for her supper; besides mice were much fatter and the rewards ever so much nicer. (The last time she caught a sparrow she had been jabbed severely with the broom. Whenever she caught a mouse she received a fine dish of buttermilk and the choice leavings off the humans table, they were rather wasteful creatures weren't they?) 
     Her pastime was interrupted quite abruptly when, with a beating of many small wings, the sparrows took off all together in a cloud of brown feathered bodies. The cause of this disarray continued running, completely disregarding, (as humans are wont to do,) the disturbance he had caused.
     Now what is that human kit' up to now? wondered the cat as she stretched contemplatively. With a final twitch of her tail she set off along the wall to where, in a corner behind the little wagon cook used for market goods and such, the human child had stopped.
     Curling her tail around her paws, she settled down to observe this careless intruder to her domain: He was a breathless boy of seven or eight with sun faded brown hair and a jam stained shirt.  

Free domain photo from http://en.wikipedia.org
     This was a writing exercise I set myself a few months ago. The first version was a very boring run of sentiences:There was a cat sitting on the wall. Below the wall there was a bird feeder. The cat watched the birds. Then a boy came running by. The boy stopped at the corner of the wall. The cat walked to the corner and watched himVery dull, but it did serve to jump-start my imagination. I have no idea what comes next but I liked the way it came out. Who knew writing a cat would be so much fun? Any way I am trying to write something on here instead of always posting photos. There is nothing wrong with only having photos I suppose, but it was not what I intended to do to begin with and I rather feel as though I am hiding behind them. Any way I thought I'd see what you all thought of this little snippet. 

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Raspberry Shoots and Such

More spring photos for you all. I have some ideas for some more creative posts that I hope to get done this week. Until then I thought you might like these.


The raspberries are coming back, these are new shoots but many of the old canes are reviving as well. Last year they were bent over with dozens of berries each. I can almost taste them...


In the spring I always find myself devouring whatever color I can find in the world. When the land changes from dirty white to faded brown and gray, repeatedly between November and May, it is little wonder we crave something more vibrant. 


The cattle panels are still up from last year's tomatoes, waiting for their new charges. The tin man looks a little worse for having stayed at his post the winter through, but then he never complains. 

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Magnolia Buds

When People think of  magnolias they mostly think of the southern states, at least I aways used to. But we live in south-eastern Minnesota, hardly the sunny south, but as you can see this one doesn't seem to mind. Mom always wanted one and a few years ago we finally got one. A friend has one in her yard that is gorgeous in the spring, we used to get a branch or two when they were at their peek. Now we have our own, though it's not very tall yet. ...

This one is set as my desktop background 








Have a lovely day everyone!

Friday, April 29, 2011

Spring Fever Photos

I love our new camera! It was so nice out the other day that I just had to get out and take some photos...
This one was a friend's idea (he took a photography class not too long ago.) The birch tree looks so cool this way and the sky was such a spring blue too!

 Lilacs! I can't wait!


Tiger lilies, they're always among the first to come up!

   I love watching the bulbs come up in the spring. These Tiger Lilies were poking their heads up when the ground was still frozen! 



   This limestone wall is part of an old building that dad and the boys are tearing down. When we first moved here, around fifteen years ago, it was still fairly stable but then a few years later a bad storm past through. It did a lot of damage and knocked some of  the mettle sheets of the roof down inside. Since then, it has been slowly crumbling. As I said, they finally started to tear it down. We're planning on building something with all the old limestone. If it ever gets finished I'll have to post pictures. 


  It was built into the side of the hill,with the roof almost level with the ground on one side. The cats always used to climb along top of the wall to get away from the dogs.

They say that a treasure is hidden somewhere around here...
    I love the way old brick and stone walls fit together. They have such a different feel than modern concrete and such. They look as though they have so many stories they could tell...

    
'What next Magpie?' 'Lets take a picture of wood!'

   A friend's five year old daughter was over and came with me on my ramble. This one was her idea. I thought it was rather interesting, I never would have thought of it myself!

hmm...a fair sized beetle...perhaps a little snack is in order...


Eulalia and her momma, Amy, our milk cow



    I don't have the specs on the camera right now; it's a Canon I believe. I'll have to do a separate post on it and add it to my list of toys at the bottom. I was also thinking of moving those notes to a separate page, what do you think?

   Also, these are all straight from the camera, no touch-ups! 


Wednesday, April 27, 2011

I Have Not Forgotten

'sub-zero temperatures and snow that could reach over a child’s head...They’d go on picnics or just lie in the grass and watch the clouds....eating the pickles as a treat all summer long...'


So far all of my posts have been pictures. I suppose that this is, in part, due to the fact that I am unsure of what to write and nervous about posting something for the entire world to see. But the fact is that I like to write. I make up stories all the time (though getting them completed seems to be a problem.) But I can’t very well post them here, not if I want to have anything published someday ;). But I thought that maybe I would post some of my old papers here.

This one is an Interview Essay I did for my College English class in the fall of ’08. I did it on my Grandma, she has many stories and some day I’d like to write down more of them. The first draft gave me a B-, I’m not sure what the revised version (this one) received. I made a few more changes before posting, mainly changing her name from the formal last name required for school, to the more comfortable (and anonymous) Grandma.


I Have Not Forgotten

Grandma Helen B. was born in 1924 and is the youngest of nine; she had four sisters and four brothers. Her dad died just after she turned eight. She has not forgotten the way it was back then.

“We had to share everything,” said Grandma. Her life was harder than most because for the greater part of her life she didn’t have a dad working or even looking for a job. Her mother, like many others during the Depression, turned their upstairs into a boardinghouse and the yard into a garden. Her brothers and sisters helped out as much as they could; the older ones quit school and went to work. Being the youngest, Grandma got a lot of help from her siblings: one of her sisters would make clothes for her, her brothers would pitch in to buy her a coat when she needed it, and of course there were always hand-me-downs.

Grandma grew up in South Saint Paul, Minnesota, where at the time when she was growing up, winter meant sub-zero temperatures and snow that could reach over a child’s head. “It was cold,” says Grandma: sometimes she used her coat as an extra blanket and when it was really cold she’d wake up it would be frozen to the wall. Her mother closed off the rooms that they didn’t use because she couldn’t afford to heat them. There were times, Grandma told me, when cars had to pull far out into the street to see around the piles of snow; they were too high to see over.  


Grandma talked about how one sister who owned a grocery store where she’d (the sister) let people open charge accounts, “They weren’t thousand dollar charge accounts like they have now,” said Grandma. It cost five cents to buy a loaf of bread, but a lot of people didn’t even have enough for that. “Some of those people never could pay,” said Grandma, thinking of the people to whom her sister had given credit. Her sister lost a lot of money from those accounts; I wonder if she knew that so many would never be able to pay?

Grandma told me that there was a farmer they knew who couldn’t always sell everything he’d brought in to town so he would often give the leftovers to her mother, friends like that helped a lot. Many people had to go to soup kitchens, places that charity organizations, like churches, had set up to give out free soup, bread, or groceries to those who needed it the most. Those who could afford it would often donate food items or money to support the kitchens.     

If her mother couldn’t pay the bills, someone might come out and turn off the power or water. If the lights went out, “we’d just haul the candles out,” Grandma said with a smile.
           Grandma’s dad taught her how to write on the flat boards he brought home for the fire: “I made either straight lines or circles,” she said: Grandma could write her name almost perfectly by the time she started school.        

Grandma and her friends found many ways to have fun that didn’t cost them much more then the time they had to spend. They loved to skate, winter or summer, ice skating in the winter and in the summer roller skates were the thing. They’d go on picnics or just lie in the grass and watch the clouds. Or sometimes they’d play baseball with the boys for a change. Sometimes Grandma’s brothers, and their friends would play a game in which they’d all hunt for treasure, they’d have her hide the jar of dry corn that served as the treasure so they could all look for it together. They all played jacks, cards and other games that sometimes used a lot of imagination, like pretending old corn was money or treasure.

Grandma remembers her mother keeping a barrel of brine all summer and as the cucumbers got ripe her mother’d throw them in the barrel to pickle. Grandma recalls the neighbor kids, as well as her own siblings, eating the pickles as a treat all summer long.

Grandma learned a lot from growing up during the Depression, and what she learned to this day affects the way she lives. When she had a garden she canned food as her mother did, and now that her children are grown she teaches her grandkids to write the way her dad taught her, with sticks and circles. She saves plastic bags even bread bags, and uses everything until it wears out. She clips coupons and watches the ads for specials. She hates to let food go to waste. Grandma would never buy something she didn’t really need on credit, for she knows too well what can happen: before the Depression a lot of people bought things on credit and took out loans or mortgages on everything they owned often to invest in the stock market, and when the stock market fell some people lost everything, and if they couldn’t pay back the money they borrowed they could be evicted from their homes, and many were. Why, after all these years does she still live the way she does? Grandma told me, “I have not forgotten what it was like.” And there is much to be remembered.


Thursday, April 14, 2011

Lines For Color

I haven't posted in awhile so here's a few old coloring-book style pics I did a a few years a go...

They are both done using photos of our miniature horse, Pippin. I'm not too happy with the second one but oh well. These were done before I got my tablet and Corel painter (see end of page) and I have done a lot since then.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Ice Cream anyone?

While looking for something else I found this, tucked away in an old file. So I started to play with it, I mean how am I supposed to leave it alone? I have several versions of it now, but I thought I'd just post a couple of them, at least until I finish the others up. I used both Corel Painter and Corel Paint Shop (see bottom of page) on these.
We'll put it away mom!


I hope no-one sees us...


What are spoons for anyway?

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Farewell Dear Winter...

After posting that first picture I thought maybe I'd keep going with it, after all we may be tired of winter now, but in another 8 or 9 months we'll be thrilled to see that snow. Winter is beautiful, and now that we don't have to worry about blizzards so much, we can admit that winter has it's fun points as well...



        ...Anyway this is the original photo, taken after a gorgeous frost last year. It's cool on it's own, but I never can leave a photo alone...


....I didn't change much in this one, I mostly just wanted a little more contrast and color....


... I wanted to emphasize the contrast between the snow and the tree for this one. The frost really looks cool here too...


...For this one I used the brushstrokes affect on the one above. I like how the tree turned out...







 ...I used Coral Paint Shop Pro Photo X2 on all of these. I usually try several different looks on a photo, I thought it might be fun to post them all together instead of just picking one!

Monday, March 28, 2011

Frost and ink

I thought I'd start with some pictures. This one I did using Corel Painter 11, working over a photo one of my sisters took. The snow isn't quite gone yet so I thought I might get away with it till I can find some of my spring pictures.
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