Monday, June 23, 2025

Turkey trot


We've had untypical weather in central Washington this past weekend, with cloudy skies and cool temperatures. 

A break from the summer heat is appreciated, but unfortunately the heavy cloud cover brought hardly a drop of rain to the parched valley. Twisp is notorious for being in a rain shadow. You can see it coming down all around but it often misses us.

On Friday morning I walked up Mill Hill trail above town, but the cold, dry wind tuned me around before I got to the top. That showy flower grows out of dry gravel along the road. It is aptly called "Giant Blazing Star." 


I've enjoyed watching the turkey flock come through, a group of several hens herding dozens of poults running hither and thither. It looks chaotic but somehow they keep the gang safely together.


 

The doe brings her frolicking fawn to the yard every morning about the time the sprinklers go on. Aw. 

 

Amanda and I picked Nova up from work yesterday (in a few weeks she will be driving herself) at the nice clothing shop (above) where she works in Winthrop most weekends. She lifeguards weekdays at the pool in Twisp. So capable and mature for her age, we are really proud. 


While we were waiting for Nova  to close the store (she does everything there) we browsed at Trails End Bookstore next door. With windows overlooking the river, it must be one of the prettiest bookstores in the world.

This morning I'll close up the house and head back to Seattle. We'll be back for the big 4th of July weekend.

My neighbors just invited me over for homemade sourdough waffles on the way out of town. Can't turn down a kind invitation like that!  

 

Friday, June 20, 2025

Summer Solstice

 

Hot summer weather is expected across much of the country, but as usual, we are the contrarians in the Northwest. In fact, a rare winter storm watch is in effect for parts of Montana, with heavy "summer" snow in Glacier National Park.

Looks like wet in Seattle (yea) and here in the Methow Valley, the Summer Solstice dawns cool, cloudy and dry. It is pleasant laying in bed with the window open, listening to the river and breeze in the cottonwood trees. Last week was very hot here. 

The Summer Solstice occurs 7:42 pm. It's hard to believe (and accept) we now start the long, slow process of declining daylight hours until December rolls around. But as usual I'm getting ahead of myself-- one day at a time.

Speaking of that, I have the day to myself. Amanda and Tom are at work. Nova is busy with life-guarding (she loves it) and horse chores. Maya is in soccer camp, and both girls are in swim team again. What a relief to the community, having the community pool open after the closure last summer.

 A doe just dropped by with her new born Bambi-- sweet sight. 

The turkey families are around, and I hear the hens and poults talking to each other in the grass along the river. They communicate like that even before hatching, so they imprint quickly once out of the egg. Each hen knows her own offspring and vice versa, but they move around in large flocks as mutual guardians. 

They say dinosaur mothers did the same thing. What an image. 

 

Thursday, June 19, 2025

North Cascades

 




Amanda, Tom and the girls went backpacking last weekend in the North Cascades. This is their family tradition, celebrating the end of school and Fathers' Day. 

They hiked back to Martin Lakes, about a 15 mile round trip, which is an easy-peasy walk for them. The elevation is almost 7,000 feet, hence the snow in June.

I'm heading over the mountains today. I might take the northern route over the North Cascades Highway, but it just depends on traffic. Getting north of downtown in rush hour traffic can be tough, so it's usually easier to hop on I-90. Not as interesting a drive, but the car knows the way and I have my regular stops so I don't have to think about anything but the road. 


Wednesday, June 18, 2025

International Panic Day

 


Sorry, but June 18th really is "International Panic Day." And there's plenty of fuel for the panic fire right now.

Anyway, life is too short to waste on worrying about things we can't control. Spend some happy moments with your loved ones instead. Along those lines, I'm heading to Twisp tomorrow for a few nights at the house. 

Interesting weather ahead this weekend in central Washington, with some rain (always welcome) and thunderstorms (in fire season, not so much.) 

 Thought for the day:

“Only 8% of our worry will come to pass. 92% of our worry is wasted. DON'T PANIC”
Mark Gorman  

 


Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Try something difficult

 

Bearded iris are hard flowers to draw, like roses. This took a couple of hours and isn't bad, although you're probably thinking it could use some color. 

I like plain pencil drawing, because the tools are so simple and you can do it anywhere. My iris was copied from this how-to-draw-flowers book. 

Maybe that's not as creative as drawing from life, but I find copying engaging, because the concentration quiets down the busy right side of the brain. For a few minutes, at least. Anyway, the hardest part of any drawing is staring at the blank paper and getting started. 

We've passed the halfway mark of June, and not a drop of rain has fallen in Seattle so far this month. We might get a touch of wet over the weekend, which will be welcome. 

An old farmer saying: 

"A good rain in June sets all in tune." 


Monday, June 16, 2025

Make that two, please

 

We heard the super star violin virtuoso, Hillary Hahn, play the Beethoven Violin Concerto yesterday. It was an amazing performance, especially from our excellent 4th row seats. The packed Benaroya Hall audience went crazy, and then she played two encores! 

Including this haunting Bach Partita: 

 

Anyway, in decades of going to the Symphony, we've never heard more than one encore, and even those are getting few and far between. What a treat. 

The second half was Prokofiev's Symphony No. 5. His ballet music is good (at the ballet) but I'm not a huge fan of Mr. Prokofiev's big orchestral works. The loud crashing music sounds like the end of the world has arrived. Well, the Russians didn't have much to be happy about when he wrote it in 1944.

Other than the concert, it was just a weekend of cooking and eating at home. 

Homemade corned beef hash and Amanda's wonderful eggs on Saturday...

Strawberry crepes on Sunday...

A big vegetarian pizza on Saturday, then beef stew from the freezer when we finally got home from the Symphony. 

Downtown was jammed with cars and crowds of people, having fun in the blinding June light. The Solstice is just around the corner, and sunset after 9 pm in Seattle. 
 

Friday, June 13, 2025

Memory lane

 

Precious memories pulled from deep depths of the blog. That's Amanda and my horse Sizzle, right before Nova was born, almost sixteen years ago.


And months later, the delight on Baby Nova's face watching Sizzle munch a carrot. Sizzle was such a sensitive mare, spirited and fun to ride, but incredibly careful and gentle around children. She especially liked little girls and they loved her. She took a big piece of my heart with her.  

Downright chilly this morning. We turned the heat on! The dark clouds might burn off by late afternoon topping out at 65 degrees-- typical June gloom weather in Seattle. 

Happy Father's Day weekend. We are looking forward to the Symphony Sunday afternoon.  

 

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Simplify

 

I should have taken a before picture of that messy window. Yesterday I threw out some struggling plants that no longer "sparked joy." Then I transplanted and drenched the cactus in those bright yellow pots. They had not been watered for months, and sucked it up like a sponge. Now the window is about as carefree as it gets with houseplants. 

And not my favorite job, crawling up in there to clean out all the dead flies and poor lost bees from the neighbor's hives across the street. 

We are chipping away at the summer projects. John primed the peeling and chipped front steps, which need to be touched up with paint every single year. The joy and charm of old houses. Always something to clean or fix. 


 “How does dirt find its way into old houses like it does? Sometimes I think it's the house itself, old and disintegrating by degrees, breathing out sighs of itself, sighs longing for a little bit of notice.”
 

Lisa Samson, A Thing of Beauty

 

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

National Corn on the Cob Day

 

Corn today? When our sweet corn came in season on the farm, there were times when it was all we had for dinner--just a big platter on the middle of the table with butter and salt. 

The housewife's trick was to get the pot boiling then head to the garden and pick the corn, so it stayed sweet as candy. In retrospect, that was lots of carbs and sugar, without any protein on the side. 

Well, nature's air conditioning came on last night when the marine clouds rolled in, just like someone flipped a switch. On this grey morning a big sigh of relief went up over Seattle.

 

The heat gave the old jasmine vine a boost, and I'm happy to see it struggling back to the land of the living. 


Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Some like it hot

 

The tomato pots are going wild on the baking hot south side of the house.

And roses adore strong sun, as long as their feet stay damp. But they are whipping through their first bloom way too fast. More typical June weather in Seattle is morning clouds with afternoon clearing, which shall return tomorrow, to everyone's relief. 

I've enjoyed the mini hot spell though, sitting on the side of the house, moving the sprinkler around and getting some vitamin D on my eggshell white arms and legs.  Yes, yes, the sun should be avoided like the plague, but we rarely have that kind of bone-warming heat. It feels so good.

 

I'm happy with how this big project turned out. That evergreen was growing in a low bonsai-type pot for years and became completely root bound. I managed to wrench it out and transplant into this beautiful Vietnamese pot. 

It needs light pruning to reveal the interesting old growth structure, but I'll give it time to recover from the harsh treatment first. 



Monday, June 9, 2025

Warm here

 


And many would say, too hot. Seattle could reach 85 for a few hours this afternoon, so a heat advisory is in effect. 

Ask anyone from the Sun Belt, the Deep South or the East Coast, and they’ll tell you we are weather wimps in the Northwest. 

Anyway, heat never lasts very long here, because the big ocean just over yonder keeps our climate temperate year round. 

 

We drove to PowellsWood Garden in Federal Way, a nice place for a quiet walk in the fecund Jurassic Park garden. 


Getting there not so peaceful in the mad rush of speeding cars on a Saturday afternoon.  

I know you're thinking, "old lady slow driver" holding busy people up, but even consistently going 5-10 miles over the speed limit makes you an irritant on the roads these days. 

Sigh. I’ve driven in the same way for 60 years now, just getting from point A to point B without an accident or a single ticket (knock wood.) When did people become so impatient and aggressive?

What to cook in this warm weather. In the NYT cooking section, I found a cold soba noodle salad with spicy peanut dressing. That sounded simple and easy. Ha ha. The dressing alone had about 8 ingredients, including a half cup of peanut butter and quarter cup of soy sauce. Too heavy for delicate buckwheat noodles! 

Like many of those NYT recipes, a little too much of everything. No photo this time, it turned into a big sticky mess. Back to simple grilled meat and salad. 

 

Friday, June 6, 2025

National Gardening Exercise Day

 

 

We're headed into to a nice stretch of weather, hitting the mid-80's this weekend. 

"June gloom" is more typical here, and there's an old saying that summer doesn't start in Seattle until the 5th of July. But not this year. The times (and the climate) they are a'changin.

Yes, today is Gardening Exercise Day. The Apple watch lets me log credit from dozens of different categories I'll never do, everything from archery to ping pong, but the folks in Cupertino apparently don't consider gardening as exercise. Ha. Ask my back. 

Anyway, the heavy spring work is done so I'm in puttering mode until fall: weeding, watering, deadheading. There hasn't been any rain to spoil the first bloom on the roses. 



 
Lovely in the early morning light...

Have a good weekend.  

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Plume Poppy

 


Everyone asks about this great brute of a plant when they see the garden. We acquired it during the pandemic at a public garden, one of the few safe outings. 

Back then it was an innocent looking thing with pretty leaves in a gallon container, sold at the outdoor mini nursery for a few dollars.

 It is called Macleaya, or Plume Poppy, native to Japan. 

From Wiki:

"The individual flowers are insignificant, but the combined effect of multiple stems four to six feet high (make that 10-12 feet here) can give a striking architectural effect. (No kidding.) The plants are unsuitable for small gardens (duh) because of their invasive tendencies, but can be very effective as features in large gardens. They spread both by underground suckers and by seeding, so can be difficult to get rid of in some situations."

Irresponsible planting, the story of my life.  

All is well and the doctor said my eyes are "stable," which is the best possible medical news at this age. I'm bleary-eyed though from the drops and strain of the flashing tests. I was in and out fairly quickly (time is money) and eye medicine has become high tech, low touch. I suppose an improvement, but those old fashioned chatty exams were more reassuring. 

The sun in June is blinding! I was exhausted and crawled in bed with my book at 8:30, still broad daylight outside. I felt like a child being punished for something. Then it started getting light this morning about 3:45. Not a great time of year for sleeping.  

“Outside, the sun was crackling.”
Juan Rulfo, from "Pedro Paramo" 

 

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

No fuss

 

I walk past this patch of thriving poppies along the side of a street near our house in Twisp. They come back every year like weeds, and no one fusses with them. 

I had an easy drive yesterday, leaving early on a weekday, the way to go in summer. I was only gone 5 days but my garden sure needs a tidy up. 

 

Speaking of needy plants, the iris are looking ratty. Some of these fancier varieties are actually re-blooming. The means if you fuss over them all summer with enough water and  fertilizer, they just might send up another flower stalk in the fall. Is it worth it? Like the second bloom on roses, it can never match the first.

That's about all the news. Karen is in Seattle visiting her mom, and might have time to drop by this morning. That is always fun, because everything here is so different from our wild patch in Twisp. 

This afternoon, I have one of those icky eye exams where they flash lights into the back of your brain. I pulled a pan of enchiladas out of the freezer for an easy dinner.

 

Monday, June 2, 2025

Another pleasant Valley Sunday

 

 

After the hustle and bustle of the Saturday market, Sunday is always a quiet day in Twisp.  We took an early walk up at the property, then I sat on the porch for a while watching Amanda and Tom do yard work. The girls were inside working on their end-of-school projects. 

In the fall, Nova goes to 11th grade and Maya is 7th. That means she moves from the portable into the big high school building. She is "NOT looking forward to that!" Seems like yesterday when Nova was saying the same thing.


Then I took a bike ride around town, and even caught a glimpse of Nova doing life guard training at the pool. 

Karen came over for a chat and glass of wine in the afternoon. She is headed to Seattle tomorrow to visit her mother, so I won't see her again this visit. 

Amanda and Tom had dinner plans last night so I found some frozen ham and beans in the freezer. I must have made it in the crock pot last winter with holiday ham. Too salty but a good end to a lazy day.

Back to Seattle tomorrow. 


 


Sunday, June 1, 2025

Quiet times

 

The river is running high, but nothing like we've seen in previous years. The climate is perfect here before it gets hot, although early summer always comes with an undercurrent of worry, as to what the fire season brings. 

The snow pack in the North Cascades was below normal this past winter. It hit the high 80's yesterday when a wind storm blew through, the combination that makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up. 

There's been an occasional fishing boat drifting by, but otherwise all quiet on the western front. Not even any dog walkers so far in front of the house. (Well, one in particular probably won't be back after I "scared" her dog.) Maybe people finally noticed the trail rules sign propped on the chair. 

There's a few young deer hanging around peering in the window, but no fawns appearing yet. And the turkeys must be brooding their eggs, because I haven't seen a single one. The parade of poults will start soon. 

Needless to say, friends and family are super busy. This is like vacation for me, but routine life for them. The short summer season is packed, trying to juggle recreation, activities and work. 

School gets out and the Twisp swimming pool opens in two weeks, wonderful news. Nova was hired as a lifeguard, and spent all yesterday training. Those girls are so grown up. I saw Maya roaming around town with her friends yesterday-- market day is always hopping. It's great the kids have that small town freedom. 

A touch of Seattle in Twisp. Those peonies popped open instantly in the warm house.