Turkey Tracks: Dead Diva

Turkey Tracks:  January 12, 2014

Dead Diva

I have not posted for a few days.

Mostly because I knew I had to tell you that one of the two Divas is dead, and the remaining one is very sick.

Winter in Maine is harsh, and this winter has been particularly difficult for us, with the ice storm at Christmas with all its power outages, and for all the animals.  We have had sub zero temps and wind chill factors way below zero.  The weather has taken a toll–and the Divas have suffered it.

One of the Divas was dead last week–dead in the coop as I opened it in the morning.  She had terrible frostbite on her neck and around her head and her wounds were open and bloody.

Perhaps the others killed her.  Birds will do that.  And, given the Diva’s condition, it was a mercy killing, if so.  Here is where “Nature” is “red in tooth and claw.”

The frostbite and open bleeding explains why the Divas were refusing to join the others in the coop at night.  (Chickens will attack and peck at other birds with open bleeding.) And, by staying out, were risking more frostbite.  The other Diva was in terrible shape as well, but living.

The remaining Diva is hanging in there.  I am feeding her high protein foods and fats as much as I can.   Some of her wounds are better; some are still fresh.   She looks terribly bedraggled and has lost all her vibrant color.

I have such mixed emotions about her.  Should I put her down or help her to live?  Is she in pain?  If so, how much?  She is eating.  As long as she is eating, I will not act.

I will keep you posted…

Turkey Tracks: “Songbirds in My Grandmother’s Garden” Quilt

Turkey Tracks:  January 6, 2014

“Songbirds in My Grandmother’s Garden” Quilt

 

I began to realize sometime during making this quilt that it reminded me of my grandmother Louise Phillips Bryan of Reynolds, Georgia.

Although she had fabulous gardens with flowers of all colors, Grandmother loved the color brown best.  She had brown eyes and fine, curly dark hair.  Her laugh was HUGE–a belly laugh from deep inside.  And she knew how to have fun and to laugh.  She loved life and loved her life.  She sewed and she knitted.  She gardened, as I said above.  She put up food and set a nice table.  She welcomed guests.

I am named for her, and I spent a lot of wonderful time with her at all stages of my life–especially as we were an Air Force family and moved a lot.  When my father had an overseas deployment, mother took us back to Georgia, to Grandmother and Pop.  And, as I make this description of her, I am realizing how much of her ways I have adopted and believe are good ways to be in this world.

I had a lot of fabric pieces left over from the “Earth” quilt–and I wanted to keep them together as I was enjoying how they played with each other.  And, to tell the truth, I have enough for one more quilt besides “Songbirds,” especially as I have lots of fabrics that will work well with this bunch already cut up in my stash.  I am working on Bonnie Hunter’s current  “leader/ender” project with what’s left of these earthy fabrics–a block with light and dark sides–allowed by strategically placed half-square triangles.   Here are four of these blocks–and they can be combined in countless ways.

Bonnie Hunter's LeaderEnder Project

(A leader/ender project lets you work on two quilts at once–the one you are piecing, and when you need to cut your thread, the one that’s your “leader/ender” project.  You always have blocks for the second quilt ready to stitch so you do not break your thread but just keep on chain piecing.  Sometimes I make the half-square triangles and when I have enough, I make a few blocks as I sew along.)

Well!  here’s “Songbirds”:

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It’s another “Dancing Nines” from Bonnie Hunter’s web site, quiltville.com, where she has tons of free patterns.  I made this one with 2 1/2-inch squares though, as that was the size of the strips I had.  Bonnie’s pattern starts with 2-inch squares.  The piano keys border though is from 2-inch strips.

Here’s a close-up so you can see why Bonnie says these blocks “dance.”  They are off-set.  The pantograph is “Check and Chase” by Lorien Quilting.  I ordered it from Urban Elementz which has a huge selection of pantographs.

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I love the borders on this quilt.  the binding is a very, very dark muddy red.

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And, here’s where the  “songbirds” came from.  I fell in love with this very contemporary fabric–and think it works with the more traditional front of the quilt.  These little guys make me want to cup them in my hand.

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Here’s a block close-up:

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I loved making this quilt–which reminds me so much of my grandmother.

Turkey Tracks: The Divas: Two Ancondas

Turkey Tracks:  January 4, 2014

The Divas:  Two Ancondas

I have two beautiful chickens of the Anconda breed.

Here’s an image:

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It’s an Italian breed, and like my Italian friend Gina Caceci, they talk with their whole bodies and souls!

They also lay beautiful white eggs.

Unlike my friend Gina, the Ancondas are having a hard time building up any trust in me as a caregiver, food bringer, coop cleaner.  Everything I read says they are very cautious and prone to extravagant emotion, but will settle down eventually.

At the slightest wrong move–oops–off they go flying up, while screaming at the top of their lungs.

Their names are Annabelle and Queeny.  And I can only tell them apart when I see them together, though Queeny  is darker and larger than Annabelle.

Last week one of them flew out of the coop as I went to fluff the bedding with my trowel one morning.  She landed on the roof, and when I went to shoo her back inside, off she went down the snow path to where the turkeys hang out.  It was clear she was not going to come back inside until she got ready to.  As I didn’t want to leave the whole roof open in the bitter cold, I dug out and pried open the lower coop door–thinking she would go home when she got cold or hungry.

The lower door is the flap at the bottom of the coop in this picture.

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And here’s why I would not want to leave the roof open for very long–the heat loss is too extreme.  I am cleaning out the coop here–thus the red buckets at the side of the coop and the open egg box door.

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By the time I got to the kitchen and looked out the window, the other Anconda had joined the first.  One sat in the limb of the pine tree, watching the turkeys below her.  The other sat on a snow bank, sunning herself.  I was too outdone to go out and take more pictures.  Besides, I did not want to spook one of them into a snow drift that I could not get to easily.  Or drag on my boots, mittens, hat, coat, etc., again.

Here’s what my friend Toni Venz wrote me from California after I told her about these babes:

Not only are Annabelle and Queeny emotional, I do believe they are divas, too. There is proof with one above on the lower branch and the other catching some rays. Next you will be supplying sunglasses and SPF 30. With more snow there or coming, no wonder they are emotional. I would be. Actually I am thinking of all you are doing.

So, the DIVAS they became…
When I went out to lock up the now exposed coop at dusk–which is about 4 p.m. these days, I could not find one of the Ancondas.  One had returned; one, it seemed, had not.  I did not see any evidence of violence in the snow.  And it was so bitterly cold–well below zero–that by the next morning, the remaining Anconda had bloody feet, likely from frostbite. I installed a red lightbulb in the coop, which I’m leaving on day and night.  I am never sure where the line is between the weather being too cold–beyond the birds’ ability to cope–and letting them sleep in the dark as they hate being lit at night.   (I have seven chickens to up the body mass and warmth in the coop in the winter.)  And often, it is the moisture the chickens generate that causes the frostbite, rather than the cold itself.
There was no way I could check outside of the shoveled paths as the snow is thigh deep and we live on a hillside.  I gave it up for the night, and spent the night thinking of a documentary I watched years ago where a Maine woman found her missing chicken (she had a nice flat yard) in the cold, frozen, brought her inside for some reason, and was startled to have the “frozen” bird wake up and to recover–which took a few days.  I wondered if my chicken would miraculously appear in the morning.
When I checked the chickens two days later in the morning, Queeny and Annabelle were both in the coop.  ???????  How did that happen?  Then I realized that I had opened the door to the cage and had gone back in the house for fresh water as the faucet was frozen, and I didn’t want to stress it too much.  My missing chicken had been hanging out in the cage!
Last night, both Ancondas were choosing the cage over the coop.  These  DIVAS are sleeping in the heavy mat of bedding at the very back of the cage–which means they are mostly safe, but not entirely.  Here’s what I wrote Toni:
The divas are now refusing to go into the coop at night.  I think they don’t like the red light bulb.  They are sleeping in the piled up bedding at the end of the cage–and the cage is covered with four or five tarps for protection from the elements and heat retention and banked with snow, top and sides.  I locked the other chickens into the coop, after four trips out in the dark to see if the divas had relented, as I didn’t want to risk the safety of all.  Chicken coops are often breached by predators and everything inside killed.  A determined animal could get into the cage…  But not likely into the coop itself…  One hopes…
Today there was more drama as I took advantage of the break in the weather to clean out the coop.  It gets dirty much faster when the chickens are so confined.
It didn’t take long for one of the Ancondas to fly out of the coop.  And she landed in a snow bank, feet down.  Stuck!  And at least a stride or two into thigh-high snow for me to get to her.
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Here she is before she decided to depart the coop–half in and half out of an egg box.  She was planning escape all along as she was the only chicken present as I shoveled out old bedding .  And I had thought she had just been visiting with me, in the way chickens do.  Or, maybe, wanting to lay an egg.  (They are starting to lay again, and I’ve had to throw out about six frozen eggs over the past few days.)

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And here you can see the fresh water bowl with a heat warmer in it and the red light bulb burning.  John put the cage over the bulb as the chickens attempt to get close to it and break it off–which is a real fire hazard.  Remember that I am no where near a fire hydrant so not presenting fire hazards is always an issue.

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I am adding these pics so you can see what the inside of the coop looks like.  Here’s the doorway into the cage.  You can also see the two roosts–one across the coop and a lower one in the corner.  I pile a lot of fresh bedding into the egg boxes and behind the lower roost/perch as some of the chickens like to sleep in those spots.  You can also see how wet the inside of the coop gets–which is from the chickens’ moisture.  That’s why I leave that little vent window open.

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I was able to lift the DIVA up with the flat of the shovel from the lower side, and she flew to this shrub–where she sat and observed as I finished cleaning out the old bedding:

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Meanwhile, the starving turkeys were gathering in hopes that I would be putting out some food.  The bedding is full of food “billed out” while feeding and…other nutrients.  As soon as I dropped the first load, they closed in.

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Once the coop is cleaned out,  I put in clean bedding.  Here’s what a “bale” of bedding–pine shavings in this case–looks like.

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These pine shavings are a local product from a lumber mill not too far west of Camden.  And these shavings are really good absorbers of anything wet.

I pried open the lower door once more and, after moving the Anconda up and down the snow paths a few times quietly, in she went.

And now that I am finishing this post, it’s dusk and time for me to lock up the chickens for the night and to make a cup of tea and quilt a little.

My friend Gail Nicholson says we have picked up seven minutes of daylight since the solstice.

Books, Documentaries, Reviews: Alice Munro’s RUNAWAY

Books, Documentaries, Reviews:  January 4, 2013

Alice Munro’s Runaway

 

Alice Munro is from Canada.

She is the 2013 Nobel Laureate for fiction.

Munro writes short stories.

Here’s a link describing her work, etc.:  Where to start with Alice Munro, the newest Nobel laureate for fiction · The A.V. Club.

The third book I downloaded from the library and am listening to while I quilt is Munro’s Runaway.

I’m a bit into the story of the title and am really impressed with how Munro writes, what she says, and the characters she draws.

She has been compared to Chekov.

Personally, I think so many good writers come from Canada because they have a real winter.

That winter gives them time to reflect and to think.

Oh my goodness!  What they dream up!

 

Quilting Information: Red Flannel Pantry Blog’s Modern Table Runner

Quilting Information:  January 4, 2014

Red Flannel Pantry Blog’s Modern Table Runner

I’ve not been drawn to making a table runner.

Until now.

Take a look at Red Flannel Pantry Blog’s hostess gift for the family who will host the family’s daughter (in Ireland, lucky girl) for a semester:  hometown gifts for out-of-town hosts | red flannel pantry.

And what a terrific gift!

I can see myself making a table runner like this one…

Yes I can.

I would choose different colors–though I LOVE these colors together.  They just would not go in my house.  They might go in someone else’s though–as a gift.

This table runner lies in the “modern” quilt movement:  bits of piecing combined with big sections of plain fabric that can showcase quilting.

If I could start all over, I would move in this “modern” direction:  spare lines, different colors than I’ve surrounded myself with my whole life, pottery, candles, woven rugs, simple, simple, simple.

I do love red and green though…

And blues and oranges and reds…

I am a true Pisces it seems…

 

Quilting Information: Sew Me A Song, Etsy store

Quilting Information:  January 4, 2014

Sew Me A Song

Becca Babb-Brott’s Etsy Store

I love the connections in a small community.

Neighbor Susan McBride of Golden Brook Farm told me her friend Becca Babb-Brott, who lives on a nearby street where other people I know live, has an Etsy Store of quilting fabrics.

Here’s the url she sent:   http://www.etsy.com/shop/sewmeasong.  (I can’t get this url to “take,” so you may have to copy and paste it into your search engine.)

I took a look at it and loved how Becca is putting together fabrics.  In particular, I loved her unusual neutrals–which can be hard to find.  I, for instance, have looked for neutrals in five (aren’t we lucky) of our local quilt shops.

As an official  Bonnie Hunter groupie, I need lots of neutrals–especially for the quilts I have planned for this year.  Bonnie’s world divides quilting fabrics into neutrals (nothing darker than a brown paper bag) and colors.

What’s also interesting about Sew Me A Song is Becca’s collection of contemporary and Japanese fabrics.  And she has since told me that she is a “modern” quilter. 

Take a look?

Becca is putting together a collection of neutrals for me.  And I look forward to meeting her next week some time.

Thanks, Becca!

Books, Documentaries, Reviews: WATERSHIP DOWN, Richard Adams

Books, Documentaries, Reviews:  January 4, 2014

Watership Down

Richard Adams

 

The second audio book I streamed from the Maine library system was Richard Adams’ Watership Down.

I’ve always been a prolific reader, but I think this book fell into a period of my life when I was working a lot and had small children.

I think I was working retail, which included some nights.  And I think I was tired as I was juggling a lot.

So, it was really fun to circle back and “read” this book while I quilted through this daunting Maine winter.

It’s kind of fun to see some of the many Watership Down covers that this wildly successful book has had:  Watership Down cover – Google Search.

It’s even more fun to listen to the introduction where the narrator describes how difficult it was to get the story–written for the author’s two children–published.

I really enjoyed the book.

Why wouldn’t I?  It’s one of those stories we in what we call “Western Civilization” tell ourselves over and over.

There is a foretold life-threatening crisis, and only a few of the “rabbits” take heed when the rabbit with second sight warns.  There is a leader who is wise, thoughtful, and brave.  There is a warrior who puts himself into situations where his life (and the good of the tribe) is threatened over and over.  There are timid rabbits who rise to the occasion.  The wisdom of tricks, not always brute force, wins out in the end  Freedom is an issue here.  Freedom and a safe “home” ground.  The sacrifices of these few and brave “rabbits” ensure the well-being of countless generations that follow them.

What there is NOT is a female rabbit with more than a slightly supporting role.  This society is fun by males, but males who cherish their females.  Hmmmmm.  And this story was written for two little girls.

I told my oldest grandson, who is already a deep reader, that I thought he’d love this book.

And he would.

And I plan to discuss the lack of a female role with him after he’s read it.

Turkey Tracks: Bonnie Hunter Reveals “Celtic Solstice”

Turkey Tracks:  January 3, 2014

Bonnie Hunter Reveals Celtic Solstice

Wow!

Needless to say, I can hardly wait to start sewing my “Celtic Solstice” together.

As of last Friday’s Clue, I had all the needed parts.

Here’s the revealed quilt plan:

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It’s made from two blocks:

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And:

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And here’s Bonnie’s quilt:

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Is this quilt gorgeous or what????

Bonnie Hunter is one talented woman.   And generous and lovely.  Imagine designing a quilt like this every year for people to make altogether.  It has been such a fun, fun effort.  And I’ve loved the special Facebook group that came together around making this quilt.

I can’t wait until next year!

Turkey Tracks: “My Little Blue Book” from Red Flannel Pantry Blog

Turkey Tracks:  January 3, 2014

“My Little Blue Book”

Red Flannel Pantry Blog

I loved this blog post from Red Flannel Pantry:  my little blue book | red flannel pantry.

I’ve always journaled for most of my life.

Journaling has gotten me through some tough times and helped me work through to the “bottom” of things–to the bedrock where I can see what the issues really are and what I really think about them.

If you’ve never done the journaling in The Artist’s Way, Julia Cameron, I highly recommend trying it.  That journaling got me to Maine where I have been so happy.

But keeping a daily “quick” journal is kind of different.  I’m on my second ten-year journal–the first was a gift from Yoshi Hazen, a former neighbor in Falls Church, Virginia.

Here’s what a page in my ten-year journal looks like:

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Each day has space to jot down significant daily events.

I can’t tell you how many times I have gone back to the journal to ferret out what happened when.  From a repairman’s visit to a doctor’s appointment to a major life event–it’s all there.

I gave my oldest grandson a five-year journal on his tenth birthday this fall.  He is maybe the kind of person who will keep it.  If so, he will treasure it down the road of his life.  I wish I had my earlier journals or had had someone start me on this type of journal when I was young.

For 2014, I wish you good journaling of all kinds!

 

 

Turkey Tracks: Bright Quilt

Turkey Tracks:  January 2, 2014

Bright Quilt

The snow is flying outside.

The predicted storm is coming on in.

It’s been bitterly cold for the past three days, and I have stayed home.

But I have been quite happy inside working on a VERY BRIGHT quilt for the past two days and listening to the last of Watership Down, which I downloaded from our library’s collection of audio books.

The setting inspiration of setting simple 9-patch blocks into a BRIGHT fabric:  Bonnie Hunter’s “Sisters Nine Patch” found in her Adventures with Leaders and Enders.

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The middle rows are being sewn together at the sewing machine.

Here’s a close-up of one block, because I LOVE the neutral fabric I’m using and wanted you to see it.  Flags Flying…

 

 

 

 

 

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Here’s the focus fabric and two other fabrics I will use.

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Loved on sight these bright boat sails.

The bright cherry red will be a narrow border.  I will use the boat sails both as a front border and as backing.  The blue stripe will be the binding and will be cut on the bias.

I think this quilt will be called something like “Sails Up and Flags Flying.”

And now I’m going to eat some lunch and make some soup for dinner.  Then I can sew, sew, sew!