Trowel Flower Garden Art

Today, I picked up my completed Trowel Flowers from the Marshall Community Center where I've been taking pottery classes. I simply couldn't wait until tomorrow to pick them up! I carefully placed them on my car seat with the seat belt over them. Barnaby behaved and stayed in the backseat. Good dog!

Aren't they gaudy in a fun way?

And here are the trowel flowers tucked into the raised juniper bed on the back patio. So, what do you think of my beginner sculptures? And do you create art for your garden?

I've always wanted to take a pottery class and I'm so glad that I did. What classes are you putting off? 

Wednesday Vignette: Collapsed Flowers

The blooms on the Star Magnolia have flopped over, fully saturated from the rain. A wind storm is tousling the garden. And I feel like a crazy person, out photographing her collapsed flowers in the pouring rain. The Crony Brothers worry about me.

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But, isn't this bloom simply marvelous?!?

All the flowers look like porcelain sculptures. I'm dazzled by their beauty and disarray. On Saturday mornings, I take a pottery class and I push a piece of clay around with my clumsy fingers attempting  to create sculptures. My sculptures are thick humble masses and make me appreciate the dazzling array of shapes and sizes of the plants in my garden, even the beauty of a rain soaked Star Magnolia blossom.

Anna's posting about the whole picture today.  Take a look and a deep breathe. 

Wednesday Vignette: Saying Goodbye

My Crazy Sadie, nicknamed The Assistant, crossed over the Rainbow Bridge, one month ago. She lived to a cranky ol' 13 1/2 years. We are all grieving her loss including Barnaby. 

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From the first moment that I looked into her puppy eyes at the Humane Society, I was hers and she was mine. I named her Daisy, but she quickly earned the name Satan. I split the difference and renamed her Sadie. She was a trash sorting, plant throwing, and hole digging menace.

But she also kept me on time with my daily schedule and snuggled up against me and helped me heal from four knee and ankle surgeries. 

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She adored bread and butter and would steal it off the counter when I wasn't looking. I never once caught her in the act. It simply disappeared. 

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Sadie's favorite toy was the red laser. She would chase it around the whole yard while I laughed. It was a great party trick. Once she saw the red eye flash on my camera and from that point on she hunted the red light while I took pictures. The tip of her tail is in most of my back garden pictures.

One year, Sadie helped us with our Christmas pictures. If I set a camera timer, she was always in the way.

This shot captures Sadie's Corona beer smile. She adored a sip of cold beer on a hot summer afternoon. 

She had a wonderful last day. I allowed her to steal Barnaby's food, fed her 2 McDonald's cheeseburgers, snuggled with her, and baked her a butter cake. I even let her lick the butter wrapper. She snorted with delight as we fed her warm bites of butter cake. And she died in my arms, while being told she was a good girl. 

Sadie was my constant companion for 13 1/2 years. She helped me through surgeries, remodeling a Portland bungalow, a move, raising My Kid, holidays, parties, projects, countless cooking adventures, and helped me in my new garden. And she kept my toes warm whenever I sat at my computer. My toes are cold as I write this. I miss my friend. I'm so grateful for the time we spent together and for her patiently teaching Barnaby the basics like how to select a stick and chew on it. 

I am including this post in Anna's Wednesday Vignette meme. Stop on by and get inspired.

Wednesday Vignette: Taking Flight

This morning at the Heritage Farm, I filled six pack trays full of planting mix and my friend, Barbara, planted Showy Milkweed, Asclepias speciosa, seeds into each square. (We'll be selling them at the Mothers Day plant sale!) The warm greenhouse and the smell of soil felt heavenly. When I stepped out of the greenhouse back into a January afternoon, I realized that my gardening season has taken flight. 

A female Anna's hummingbird taking flight off of a torch holder.

A female Anna's hummingbird taking flight off of a torch holder.

The Dictator, the bossy hummingbird that had claimed dominion over my garden and den has also taken flight. The garden feels empty without him. The demure female Anna's hummingbirds continue to sip at the feeders and birds feast at the seed feeders. But, Dick isn't around to kick the bushtits off of the suet feeders and to threaten other hummingbirds that dare come into our space. I wonder what happened to him. Did he find greener pastures? Perhaps a garden with a mister and a swing for him. Or did he get hurt in the ice storm? Wherever he is, I hope that someone took him in and is enjoying the ruckus.

Please stop by Anna at Flutter and Hum to see her latest Wednesday Vignette and all the other blogger participants.