Showing posts with label blue jay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blue jay. Show all posts

Monday, January 31, 2022

Crystalline Entities

The winter is toying with us.  It's almost February, and still no snow to speak of...just a heavy dusting that's usually gone by midday.  


In the most recent "snow," the snowflakes were fantastically large...so much so that you could actually see the crystalline shape without the aid of magnification.  



I need some camera equipment that will allow me to take better, more crisp macro photos, but you can get a sense of them here:


My "winter interest" plants give them a pleasing place to accumulate.



We had just enough snow - briefly - for me to spot a mouse path by the back garden!


The temporary snow is nice.  Better than the frayed dead grass and barren fields.  Clean, bright.




Laura Ingalls Wilder wrote in The Long Winter, "Snow had blown under the door and across the floor and every nail in the walls was white with frost."  It's the same with our porch roof nails!  The frosty spiderwebs make beautiful constellations, too.


Even without snow, it's been so cold that the birds are all puffed up on their branches...


...or eating greedily at the feeders.


We have more blue jays than any other birds here - sometimes big flocks will descend and argue noisily just beyond the front porch.  Their blue color is so vibrant - and welcome! - at this time of year.


Even menace birds like European starlings have a little to contribute.  Their feathers are so beautiful in the sun!


The sky has been blue, too.


Frost makes intricate patterns on the glass of our screen door.


It's not the crystalline entity from Star Trek...

photo courtesy of massivelyop.com

...but still pretty nice!

I finally finished my Funchal Moebius cowl this week. 


It was just a matter of grafting this...


...into a tube.


The graft did not go well.  I wasn't able to distinguish between actual stitches and the "floats," or the carried strands of yarn, on the end of the tube where I'd secured with temporary stitches, and so the join was lumpy, bumpy, and uneven.


I even broke the yarn at one point, so there's a tumorous lump on one side where I tried to weave in an extra two strands of yarn.  I'm bitter, but not bitter enough to unravel the join and do it again.  Close enough, I say, and the back bit will be under my hair.  Happy to have it completed and am already halfway through my next project!

And happy coincidence...the camera strap that I just bought (made from a recycled '70s couch) mimics this pattern a bit!  I love bright colors in winter.


The cats (who still despise each other) are enjoying these sunny days...



...and we're waiting to see if February will usher in some real winter weather.


Have a great week!

Monday, December 21, 2020

snow white

 I had a fairly brilliant idea a few weeks ago.  Someone had once gifted me a Martha Stewart cookie cookbook, and I remembered her bombshell recipe:  one base dough + many varieties of flavorings = a wide selection of different cookies with little effort.  

We're definitely Christmas crazy here.  We've got the tree, the lights, the garlands, the decorations.  Every morning, we have a Christmas music extravaganza while we wake up and move through the daily routine.  We open Advent gifts.  At night, we watch a Christmas movie and do a Christmas reading (since I didn't want to pull a bunch of disjointed selections from the Internet, I decided to use my Little House books.  They celebrate Christmas in each one and they're pure and joyful).  I even simmered oranges and cinnamon in the crock pot for the "Christmas smells."  But what about taste?

There are so, so many things that I'd like to bake for Christmas, but a family of two does NOT need a ton of sweets sitting around.  I love the idea of daily Christmas cookies, though, so I took a base recipe from the Internet, halved it, and winged it.   One dough, split into 6 portions, flavored, and split again.

Daily Christmas cookies for us to eat and enjoy during our nightly Christmas movie...just one cookie each.  No guilt, no regret, and no sugar hangover in the morning.  


I took the 6 portions of the base dough and flavored each differently:  peanut butter chocolate chip, cranberry pecan, chocolate with chocolate chips, pumpkin spice, orange chocolate, and plain chocolate chip.  I split the portions in half so each of us would have a cookie, rolled and wrapped them, and stored in the fridge.  Every night I pull out a different pair, bake for 12 minutes at 350 degrees, and enjoy!

It feels like Christmas inside, but outside, not so much.  We still haven't had snow to speak of.  We had about 3/4" one day, and it was gone the next.  But that one day was glorious!



I got to search out animal tracks in the snow, like these little bird tracks:


Deer:

Coyote?

And, um...cat.



I love seeing our neighbor's bright red barns through the trees when it snows.  They're completely hidden in the summer.


I love the summer/winter contrast, like the front garden...from June and December.



You can see that I left several tall stalks standing.  These are for the birds, and "winter interest."  



These almost look like cotton with the snow!


And so...many...birds.






Even without snow, our heavy frosts make beautiful morning pictures:



We're still hoping for a white Christmas, though.  

Have a great holiday season, whether you're gathering around the tree with a group...


...or spending some quiet time alone.  Here's to a great 2021!  It's got to be better than 2020, right?

Enjoy!