Wednesday, July 27, 2011

The Best Kind of Company






We love having company, but one kind stands out from all the rest. 

Kids and grandkids!!

Sally,  Finn ( 8 ),  Max ( 12 ),  Asha ( 3 ) and Sully are here with us now and we’re all having a grand time at the beach, the strawberry fields, on the property and all sorts of other places. 





Above, we’re at Cape Jourimain and that’s the bridge to PEI  in the background




                                Popsicles they made.  Mint chocolate chip with chocolate coating.  



                                 Next came fresh strawberries and pudding with chocolate coating. 
                                                                                     



Asha in the strawberry fields. 




Monday, July 18, 2011

Tantramar and Jolicure



  I left early on Saturday morning to visit with a friend who lives in the small college town of Sackville.
A mile from home, a deer leaped across the road in front of me, reached the edge of the pavement, then turned and stood to take me in.  I had stopped easily, but we were very close and we visually visited for the few minutes before she moved on into the woods.


Around the bend, I watched a pheasant hen and her five young ones picking at something they found to eat at the end of a farm lane.



I had no choice but to take the TransCanada Highway next, but veered off as quickly as I could, heading to the little village of Jolicure ( just a crossroads and a sign, really ) to visit my favorite flock of sheep, and then on to the Tantramar Marsh.


The road quickly turned to dirt, and in the Marsh, the view expands to “forever”.  




It’s a sacred hayfield, peppered with old barns that are slowly falling down.  I mourned the latest one that was kneeling into the ground, and breathing deeply, drove through the covered bridge and into my day.
At home, I have paintings I’ve done of the marsh barns and the Jolicure sheep as gentle reminders of their beauty...........but they’re without the smell of the grass, the bleeting of the sheep and the sound of the tires rolling over the old wooden boards of the covered bridge.

Monday, July 11, 2011




Christmas in July


July 10, 2011



We’ve just come from the Annual Christmas in July Party we’ve been attending for 16 years, so we’re full of the spirit and in the mood to wish everyone season’s cheer.  
All those years ago, we were adopted by a large family of Nova Scotians and folded into their yearly summer Christmas celebration. It comes complete with a tree and stockings filled to the brim with gifts for everyone.  The house decorations are red and green from kitchen to bathroom. 







The feast includes a fresh turkey with all the usual side dishes, and dessert features everyone’s specialties. It’s a lot of tasty food!  

When the children in the family were small, Santa came in 
full suit and beard and gave out all the stockings.  Bud even played the starring role one year.




One of the highlights of the day is a competitive cribbage tournament with a trophy and the winner’s names engraved on the side.  




Three of us have never won.  The 16 year old who just started playing won this year.






“ Aunt Judy” has been hosting the celebration ever since we were adopted.  She and sister Helen shop all winter in Florida and we’re the lucky recipients of their gifting and all around generosity.  
As in all families, as in life ... there are  bittersweet parts.  The kids are growing up and we’ve lost some treasured people.  But the merriment and joy is still there.
It feels good to be part of their family.  It feels especially good to revive the Christmas Spirit in the middle of a beautiful Nova Scotia summer.

                                                   Merry Christmas!























Sunday, July 3, 2011

Seeing the Place You Came From





I spotted our dog, Louie, while volunteering at the Humane Society in Boulder, Colorado.

Or it seemed he spotted me while I was making a grand sweep through the back room where newly arrived dogs are kept for a few days before they move to the public spaces where they can be adopted.

He’d come in on a van with thirty dogs from Bartlesville, Oklahoma. These Pet Smart sponsored vans go to over - crowded shelters in low population states and bring dogs back to Boulder ( and three other locations in the U.S. ) for adoption.

So there he was -- coming from Oklahoma to Colorado, picked up as a stray in Bartlesville - and with body language and personality, telling me, “ I’m the one you’re looking for.....take me.”

“But I’m not looking for a dog,” I told him. We had just lost Fundy and I was grieving deeply. Still, he danced, and flipped over, flapping his paws and pan handling me for belly rubs.

Our granddaughter Ava was volunteering in the next room. “Come and see this dog,” I said to her.

She took one look at all his corgi and cairn terrier cuteness and said, “Oh Grandma, that’s your dog. That’s YOUR dog.”

And so he left Colorado and moved to the Arizona desert with us, and thrived.

When it was time to return to Nova Scotia, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, was directly en route to friends we were going to visit. I was curious to see this place where Louie had come from.
Over the years, Bartlesville had given us two significant gifts. When Bud was in graduate school, Phillips Petroleum (then known as Phillips 66 and headquartered in Bartlesville} gave him a lucrative scholarship..... and now Bartlesville had given us Louie.

We arrived in the city in the late afternoon and set out to find the shelter. In spite of our GPS, we got lost and had to phone for directions.

“We’re closing in four minutes,” the director told us when we said we were having difficulty. “Oh, that’s o.k.,” I said. “We adopted one of your dogs in Boulder and we just wanted to see where he came from.”

“You want to see where your dog came from?”
“Yes, we just wanted to see where he came from,” I told her.

“We’ll stay open and wait for you,” she said. And when we arrived a few minutes later,
she and a co-worker were there at the door and the local animal control officer drove in at the same time.

“That dog looks familiar,” he said, and when he heard Louie’s story he said he was sure he’d picked him up as a stray.

Babs, the director, took our pictures ( that’s the animal control guy on the left ), Louie went back to the car, and we were given a grand tour of the place. Especially meaningful was seeing the group of dogs waiting to be driven to Boulder the next week.

So that’s Louie’s story. Babs emailed us the picture she took and Louie will be sending an annual contribution to the Washington County Animal Shelter, along with his regular gift to the Boulder Humane Society.

It’s always important to recognize your roots and honor the people who have helped you along the way.