The last couple of weeks have been, physically, challenging. In between the necessary chores of living, I calculate an average of two hours a day I can devote to making things like meals and books. This week I have two doctors' appointments that make me hopeful for some answers.
I continue to collect materials and arrange my instruction sheets from the Handmade Book Club--tangible signs of hope for better back and foot days. I continue to spin ideas for when my body says yes again.
Thanks to my wonderful daughter-in-law Bonnie, my yard is now planted for spring! She chose and arranged beautiful plants and Will helped with the unloading and arranging. Then a couple of days ago, Orlando dug the holes, spread the mulch, and got those babies into the softened earth. I couldn't be happier with the results!
I love flowers but neither of my thumbs is green. Bonnie loves and knows plants like I know paper. She picked dianthus, sage, salvia and other native plants that will require less attention once they get settled in. In the front, we filled a pot with petunias and pansies, more sage and purple in the flower bed.
Orlando spread poppy seeds and strung solar fairy lights from casita to the house and wound a string of tiny ones with jasmine around the gate. Before going to bed last night, I looked outside and saw a wonderland of twinkles.
Dozens of goldfinch feast at one feeder of Nyger seed, along with cardinals and doves. It'a feathered peaceable kingdom and queendom right outside my window. We added a hummingbird feeder and hope that the ones I've' seen in the front yard's pomegranate blooms will soon find it.
It's a cool cloudy day today, so I'll wait until these plants grow a bit bigger before trying to capture the beauty of them in a photo.
For now, just picture pink, purple, yellow, and white along with all the greens of grasses and leaves. The colors and the constant chirping of birds--it's already enough to take my breath away!