We were so excited when the twins appeared.  Now they are turning a beautiful red.  They were also joined by some nice neighbors.  Our garden has really struggled with production this year so we are really celebrating the small victories.  We now have at least a few tomatoes on each of our five plants, but it is pretty sparse.  The twins’ plant is showing the greatest potential for bounty.

Last year’s tomato plants ran out of nutrients just as the tomatoes were transitioning to red.  We only got two zucchinis and no peppers.  We did not know there was a problem until it was too late.  This year we have been adding soil amendments on schedule, but the summer squash and peppers are still lagging.  All our hopes are tied to the tomatoes right now.  I am so hoping to have enough tomatoes to make my favorite summer soup from Bryant Terry’s Vegan Soul Kitchen.  I fell in love with it last summer and have been dreaming about it since then.

I hope that you have been enjoying delicious food from your garden or, that you are still holding out hope for what is still to come.

After hours of cutting, piecing and sewing and hours of driving to Spokane, the baby quilt has finally been delivered to my niece, Annaliese.  She had just turned two months old when we met her.  I think she dressed to match the quilt.  Henrik was fascinated with her and she was equally fascinated with him.

The whole process started at one of the PMQG Sewcials at Modern Domestic.

I did a lot of brainstorming and a little sewing.

At home I slowly started building the blocks.  I had a few false starts and started over again.  I finally started to like the way the blocks worked together.

I planned on ending with a square, but the elephant block was longer than it was tall and I had to started building vertical space.  I also added more space to the top and bottom heart blocks to make them the same width as the elephant block.

All the vertical strips are sewn together.

All three vertical strips sewn together with the vertical sashing.

I must have either lost or didn’t take a photo of adding the border sashing.  It all came together at that point and the white polka dot fabric broke up the dominance of the pink fabrics in blocks.   I thought long and hard about how to quilt the top and I even asked for suggestions at one of the PMQG meetings when I brought the quilt for Show & Tell.

I ended up stitching around the elephant to highlight that block, which was my initial inspiration for the whole quilt.  I considered doing more detail work in the other block centers, but I just ran out of time and after I completed the rest of the quilting, I decided that it wasn’t really necessary.  I used the polka dots as my guide and zigzagged all the sashing.  It gave just enough depth that seemed to both highlight each individual block, as well as the sashing itself.

Here is a close up of the elephant block.

Here is the elephant detail on the back.

I embroidered Annaliese’s name and birth date on the lower left corner of the border on the back.  I put my initials on the lower right corner.

I was so excited to finally have completed my first quilt that I took pictures of it everywhere.

The quilt had spent so much time in our house that Henrik wasn’t sure that he wanted to let it go.  As Annaliese was being packed up into the car Henrik wanted one more picture with the quilt.

This isn’t exactly a post with instructions on how to make a quilt, but it is a nearly step by step summary of how I started and how I ended.  I feel so much more knowledgeable and skilled now than I did at the beginning.  I wasn’t really sure at the beginning that I would be able to finish the quilt on time or at all.  I am very happy with the way the quilt turned out.  It is mostly what I imagined, but it also took me on its own creative journey.  It warms my heart to know that Annaliese loves to hang out on the quilt and it is where she rolled over for the first time.

I hope that you are inspired to bring to life the creative ideas that may currently live just in your head.

I just watched and then retweeted the link to this video on twitter.  It is really worth a watch.  It is very well done and it takes only a few minutes.  I was so inspired by the video that I wanted to write about it immediately.

The movement toward cleaner, greener, safer products in “our homes, schools, neighborhoods & parks” starts with small steps by a few people, which will grow into many steps taken by a community of people.  We need to make these changes to protect our children (not just those in our own families, but all children) and ourselves.  It is not acceptable for babies to be born prepolluted.  Children should be free to “eat, live, learn, play and dream” in a safer world.

“Small changes you make everyday add up.”  What change will you make today?

We all spent a weekend in Seattle in March.  I attended the Radiant Relationships 201: Basics workshop with Holly Eckert.  The workshop was based on Marshall Rosenberg’s principles of Non Violent Communication (NVC).  His book, Nonviolent Communiction, focuses on how we communicate, whether as individuals or as nations.

The NVC approach includes an observation of the situation, the expression of a feeling and a need and a request for an action to resolve the situation.  I read the NVC book twice before attending the workshop.  The concept sounded great, but it was really hard to put it to use it in daily life.  After taking Holly’s workshop I feel so much more ready to use NVC.

Holly just wrote an NVC-based book called Graduating from Guilt.  She is an amazing workshop facilitator.  Holly physically embodies NVC.  She generously shared her own personal successes and challenges with NVC and she graciously supported everyone’s progress with learning and integrating NVC during the workshop.

Rob took the workshop last November and now we can use NVC at home.  It is very helpful that we can now “practice” NVC with each other and strive to maintain a little more peace around the home.  As a result, we are both much more comfortably with and confident in using NVC outside the home.  Of course, now that I have learned the basics, I want to move on to the next round of workshops with Holly….

While I learned a whole new way to communicate, Henrik and Rob explored Seattle on a tour inspired by Larry Gets Lost in Seattle, which is from the Larry Gets Lost series.  We checked the book out from the library last fall and we still have it.  The book features Pete and his dog, Larry.  They get separated and each travels past the major Seattle landmarks.  We had been to Pike Place Market and had seen the Space Needle on previous visits to Seattle.  But, there was one especially fascinating landmark that was introduced in the book that captivated Henrik’s imagination: The Fremont Troll.

Larry jogs past the Fremont Troll on his search for Pete and as soon as the words had been uttered, Henrik had been introduced to a whole new entity.  What was a troll?  Did it move?  Did it live under other bridges?  This line of questioning went on and on.  During the day it was fine, but then the troll questions crept into nighttime.  Could the troll get into his bedroom?  He started losing sleep.  We added a new step to the bedtime routine that involved going to the basement and getting a “nice” monster to spend the night in the living room and keep any bad monsters, or trolls, away.  We started planning a trip to Seattle to visit the troll.

Visiting the troll answered many of Henrik’s questions and it also introduced a few new ones.  Henrik took a lot of pictures of the troll.  He walked a complete circle around the troll and took pictures from every angle.  There are more of Henrik’s photos on Flickr.

(henrik's photo)

(henrik's photo)

He was really fascinated with the VW Beetle the troll holds in his hand.

(henrik's photo)

(henrik's photo)

Henrik also got to see the Hammering Man at the Seattle Art Museum, the Waiting for the Interurban sculpture and the Ballard Locks just like Larry.

(rob's photo)

We checked into our hotel that evening and realized that Henrik had come down with a cold.  I think he slept about 5 hours that night and I slept even less.  I had packed a few homeopathic options with me, but he was so mad that his nose was stuffy that I knew we needed more help.  I wished we had a neti pot.  I wrote about using a neti pot with Henrik here.  The following night we had dinner on Capitol Hill and we walked past Rainbow Natural Remedies, which is in the former Rainbow Grocery space.  They were open and they carried neti pots from Baraka.

Rob’s neti is from Baraka and it is really nice.  Mine is from the Himalayan Institute.  We did have a run last winter when we were all sick and were having to run boiling water through the netis between uses because there weren’t enough to go around.  I was feeling pretty desperate with the prospect of facing another night with no sleep.  They had a beautiful green color I had never seen before.  We bought the neti and splurged on their Infused Salt Rinse too.

The neti helped Henrik sleep with limited interruptions.  And, the salt with its essential oils helped clear up his cold very quickly after we got home.  I had really thought that the Infused Salt Rinse was kind of a hoax.  I have seen the tangible result of the mechanical action of flushing congestion out of the sinuses.  I didn’t believe that the essential oils would actually further improve the neti’s work.

I got sick a couple weeks after Henrik and I tried the infused salt.  My congestion cleared in about three days when it usually takes me about seven days to clear out when I am sick.  I still put a few drops of eucalyptus on our pillowcases at bedtime when we have colds, but I am now also a total believer in the Infused Salt Rinse in the neti pot.

I learned about new ways of clearing out congestion in relationships through NVC and in our sinuses with the neti and the Infused Salt Rinse.  The next time you run into congestion, whether in your sinuses or your relationships, reach for the neti or NVC to help you move through the obstruction.

I signed up for a giveaway at the recent Laura Gunn night at Modern Domestic.  The drawing was held after the event had ended so no one knew who had won.  I turned out to be one of the winners.  The goody bag included a gift certificate for an hour of sewing at Modern Domestic a Laura Gunn quilt pattern, which can be downloaded for free here and a six pack of beautiful fat quarters of Laura Gunn’s Poppy Collection.  Thank you again, Modern Domestic.

Here are the three fat quarters I bought at the Stitchin’ Post during the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show.  The Dogwood Stripe in front is part of the Poppy Collection Aqua Combo I won at Modern Domestic.

Here are all the the Aqua Combo fat quarters together.

Here are the other two that are also from the Poppy Collection, but from the Grey Combo.

I think I have a plan for the some parts of the Aqua Combo that will involve hexagons.  I had received this potholder from Jen at the potholder exchange at my first Portland Modern Quilt Guild (PMQG) meeting.  The hexagons were so detailed.  I assumed that hexagons would be years off in my quilting journey, but the theme at last week’s PMQG meeting was All About Hexagons.  It seemed like many people already knew how to make hexagons, but it was new to me.  We actually got to make hexagons!  It was so fun.

Here is the start of my first hexagon.

Here it is all done.

Now there are three hexagon friends.  I used fabric from one of the bundles I won at the PMQG Modern Domestic Open Sew.

Thanks to Christina from The Sometimes Crafter for leading the hexagon presentation, to Terri from Sew Fantastic for the small group tutorial and to Jill from Made on Main Street for bringing the laser cut paper hexagon templates.  I got so hooked on the hexagons that I ordered a few hexagon templates from TabSlot (Jill’s Etsy shop) and I am looking forward to putting them to use.

There are lots of great hexagon tutorials available online.  If you have wanted to try out making hexagons, don’t wait.  It is fun and really quite simple.  I am not sure how to integrate the hexagons into a quilt yet, but I have taken the first step on that journey.

It’s a broccoli baby.  I had no idea this is how broccoli grows!  Henrik isn’t the only one learning a lot in the garden.  We also got to harvest and eat our own lettuce tonight.  I have never had a garden (except for our amateurish attempt last year) and I can barely keep houseplants alive.  This is such a great adventure.  We are participating in the consulting program with Your Backyard Farmer (YBF).

So far, we have had our dirt delivered.  Henrik would be thrilled if we did this every year.

We covered the grass with cardboard.  The slice of dirt in the middle is from our planter box from last year.  We definitely biggered our garden space.

Lots of trips with the wheelbarrow

We formed the beds

And tucked them in with straw

We uncovered the beds for planting.  I did a lot of research on hoses.  We picked soaker hoses from Mr. Soaker Hose and we bought them from mr.drip.com.  The hose is lead free.

Our seeds and transplants from YBF.

Henrik planted the peas.

Our happy lettuce

Hope you are having fun in your garden this year!

Anna Lappé spoke at Powell’s last night about her latest book Diet for a Hot Planet.  I haven’t read the book yet.  I decided to start back at the beginning and read Diet for a Small Planet and then move on to Hope’s Edge.  I did read Grub when it came out.  I was thrilled to be introduced to Anna’s coauthor Bryant Terry.  I love his Vegan Soul Kitchen cookbook.  I will be raving about his Chilled Heirloom Tomato Soup when our tomatoes ripen this summer!

I especially liked the section in Grub on acquisitions and mergers in the organic industry.  It was really useful to see how some of the companies I support, when I thought I was supporting “the little guy”, had actually been acquired by much larger, and often not-so-organic, corporations.  If the options are equally delicious, I will always try to support the smaller company.  Diet for a Hot Planet has a similar section called Spin.  Anna goes offers more current examples of the greenwashing of the organic industry.  McDonalds has actually released an Endangered Species Happy Meal in Europe as part of their green platform.

Anna spent a lot of time speaking of hope.  The subtitle for her book is; The Climate Crisis At The End Of Your Fork And What You Can Do About It.  Halting the current climate change crisis depends on everyday choices of everyday people.  We have participated in CSA programs in the past, but this year we decided to grow as much of our own perishable food as possible.  Our vegetables will travel zero miles to get from garden to plate.  This type of commitment to decreasing the carbon footprint of our daily food is happening all over the world.  What is at the end of your fork?

Earth Day is this Thursday.  There are lots of events planned all over the country.  In addition to more interactive activities, I would like to propose that you spend a few hours in front of the TV (who would have thought???).  There a three great programs on PBS this week in celebration of Earth Day.  Check your local station or PBS for times in your area.  In Portland, the movie Earth Days will be on American Experience tonight.  On Wednesday, Food, Inc. will be P.O.V and Dirt will be on Independent Lens.

Earth Day is a great opportunity to start taking positive steps toward a more conservationist/environmentalist approach to life.  People all across the country will be taking their first step or their hundredth in solidarity.  “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step”—Confucius

Dr. Leopold's Slide

We went to Olympia, WA last Saturday to celebrate the 25th Anniversary of the MES Program at Evergreen, from which I graduated in 2001.  The event was held in conjunction with the annual Rachel Carson Forum, which honors Rachel Carson and features a prominent environmental leader.  This year’s event also featured breakout session.  We participated in one workshop on how to build bike panniers out of recycled buckets, which was co-led by one of my professors from the MES program, Gerardo Chin-Leo (left).

We also went on an Ethnobotanical Garden Walk, which highlighted the native plants around the Longhouse where the event was held.

The project is being overseen by Marja Eloheimo.  She was the Ethnobotany professor who co-taught of one of my undergrad classes, Plants in Human Life.  I still have the plant journal I made in the class.  The botany professor of the teaching team, Al Wiedemann, nearly locked up the brakes on the van  during one of our amazing field trips to the Olympic Peninsula when he spotted a rather large stand of Cow Parsnip on the roadside.  In case you were wondering, I loved being a student at Evergreen.

The keynote speaker at the Rachel Carson Forum was Dr. Estella Leopold (daughter of Aldo Leopold).

She spoke on “Upon Becoming a Conservationist”.  She remarked that, “Before Earth Day we were all conservationists, now we are all environmentalists.”  I have spent the last few days pondering this distinction.  I can see how the definitions have divergent meanings, but they also overlap.

As wholeheartedly as I would admit to being an environmentalist, I do think that there is sometimes a stigma attached to the word itself.  As dedicated as many conservationists have had to be in order to achieve successful protection of a species or a piece of land, their work typically takes a quieter approach than that of many environmentalists.

Rob and I held a mini Evergreen style seminar the other night about the two words.  He brought up Julia Butterfly Hill.  Was she a conservationist or environmentalist?  I think that she is definitely an environmentalist, but in her heart, as she sat in Luna, she was trying to conserve a tree, a forest and an ecosystem.  Maybe the use of the word conservationist should be brought back to create space in the movement for those who do want to protect the environment, but don’t want to be labeled an environmentalist.  We need letter writing campaigns and civil disobedience to bring about change in our world.

Aldo Leopold and Rachel Carson are both conservationists and environmentalists according to Wikipedia.  I wonder how they would describe themselves today.  Dr. Leopold began her talk by sharing her reverence for Rachel Carson and her work.  She included the quote on the slide at the top of this post.  It was new to me, but I am so glad to have learned it.  It is especially poignant to think of Rachel Carson finding strength in those words when she was enmeshed in so much ugliness while writing Silent Spring.  She was challenged both professionally and personally.

Ms. Carson left her first love, the sea, to focus her work on the terrestrial landscape and demise of songbirds.  I read The Edge of the Sea, which predates Silent Spring, to Henrik at bedtime around the time he turned two.  The vocabulary surpassed his comprehension, but the book was so lyrically captivating that he never asked for another book.  I often sat in his room long after he had fallen asleep and kept reading.  There is never a shortage of grim news headlines.  It is so important to remember that there is beauty everywhere and by seeking it out, we can be renewed.  Ms. Carson’s love of the sea came through clearly in The Edge of the Sea.  I would highly recommend reading it.

Dr. Leopold highlighted many successes in protecting the Earth’s ecosystems.  Then she launched into her main topic, which was about climate change.  She said that “glaciers had formed over geologic time, but are melting in our time”.  Dr. Leopold spoke through the lens of her experience as a botanist and a paleontologist.  She shared her recent observations that the plants in her yard in Washington were blooming 2-3 weeks earlier than last year.

Dr. Leopold's Slide

She also shared her sister’s data from Wisconsin, which also included Aldo Leopold’s data from the same piece of property.  This year’s plants bloomed earlier than any previous year over a 70 year period.

Dr. Leopold's Slide

Dr. Leopold spoke of the Cascade Effect when the animals and plants fall out of synch.  The pika is coming out of hibernation before the vegetation is ready for their feast.

Dr. Leopold's Slide

Henrik just picked out this cute pika note card at Jill Blisscurrent gallery show at Pushdot Studio.

It is also available from her Etsy shop.

The earth’s climate is changing.  Whether we are the cause or just contributors to this change may never be known.  We do know that at no point in geologic history has one species inflicted such widespread environmental degradation on the Earth as during our current history.

Earth Day is this Thursday.  Climate Change is listed as one of the Core Issues for the Earth Day NetworkAnna Lappé will be at Powell’s tonight.  I am really looking forward to the event.  She will be introducing her new book Diet for a Hot Planet.  There is a great video about her new book on her blog.  She states that, “Our food system is responsible for as much as 1/3 of all green house gas emissions.”  I am looking forward to hearing her speak and getting fired up (no pun intended) for Earth Day.

It was renewing to once again be encircled by so many people at Evergreen who are interested in protecting the earth, whether as conservationists or environmentalists.  I also had the opportunity to debut my latest project……

Hint: Henrik is wearing it.  More to come….

We love your books!  I have read all of Beverly Cleary’s character books to Henrik.  We started with Henry Huggins before Henrik turned two.  Now that more than two years have passed we have started the whole series again.  I read to Henrik from chapter books before his nap/quiet time and again before bedtime.  I also read board and picture books to him throughout the day.  Rob reads to Henrik for an additional 20-30 minutes as part of the evening wind down routine.

Henrik and I went on the Walking with Ramona neighborhood tour today.  It poured all night and there was still heavy cloud cover as we started, but the sun soon popped out and the weather turned out to be perfect.  The tour was lead by Portland author, Laura Foster.  We started at Beverly Cleary Elementary—Fernwood Branch.  The school was called Fernwood Grammar School when Mrs. Cleary went there, but she renamed it Glenwood School and Ramona, Beezus and Henry all went there.  We walked by the house where Mrs. Cleary’s lived when she went to Fernwood.  The house and the school are on N.E. Hancock Street, which she renamed Klickitat Street in her books.

We traveled through the neighborhood that inspired Mrs. Cleary’s fictional characters and storylines.  We also learned about how many of the fictional stories in Mrs. Cleary’s books were inspired by similar real life events.  There was actually a boy who was turned green by dye (paint in Henry Huggins) and got out of a part in the school play as a result.  There was also a real football that ended up in a passing car (and was not returned in real life).  I am so thankful that Mrs. Cleary turned her life’s events into so many wonderful fictional books.  There is no shortage of good books anymore like there was when Mrs. Cleary was growing up, but I am glad to know that I can turn to any of her character books for a great read.

The walk ended at the Beverly Cleary Sculpture Garden in Grant Park that features statues of Ramona,

Henry

and Ribsy.

Henrik took a full complement of photos of each statue.  His photos are on my Flickr site.

Thank you, Laura Foster, for spending your morning with us.  We both enjoyed the walk and your stories.

These alphabet letters spent way too long in the brainstorming phase.  I am finally getting down to crafting them.  Henrik started sounding out words a while ago.  I thought that this alphabet would help give him a more tactile feel for letters and words.  Hopefully, X,Y and Z will arrive soon…..

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