29 years ago tonight…

…we became parents. And these were the most beautiful baby photos I had ever seen!

Our sons were born 5 weeks early, but we all survived and thrived.  As I was coming out of the fog of an emergency C-section for Robin, our second born, Bruce handed me these photos and all I saw were 2 boys, each with 10 fingers, 10 toes, and pink healthy skin.  I did not get to meet them in person until the next day.

Robin came home after a week, and Cameron(the Fritzer) came home 4 weeks after that. And they grew…

…and grew. And became the best sons any parent could ever want to have.

 

Happy birthday Fritz and Robin. You have made being a mother the very best job in the world!

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Off island Tuesday

I wish I could have captured the exact look of the sky this morning as I prepared to board the mailboat for a day off island. A snow/rain squall was going by between Islesford and Mount Desert Island. The light was beautiful.

The pavement onto the pier in Northeast Harbor was there this morning and gone by this afternoon! By the time we boarded the mailboat for the ride home, Ted’s mail truck had found yet a new parking spot, right on the dock. (As indicated by its official cone.) Construction continues…

Home with a fire in the wood stove by 4:30, and a reminder from my friend, Susan White, to back up my computer. I admit to having this external hard drive for almost a year without unwrapping it and putting it to its intended use.

Thank you Susan. Thank you LaCie. Thank you Time Machine.

 

 

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I love/hate writing!

I spent the day today writing my upcoming column for the WorkingWaterfront. Whether I have an idea in mind or I’m staring blankly at the computer screen, it always takes me all day to finish the job. I just can’t sit still and write for any length of time. I get up and eat something, I play a few games of Text Twist, I check my e-mail, check Facebook, read blogs. It’s as if I really hate writing. Until I’m done. Then I read my column aloud to Bruce to hear what I need to do for my final edit, and then presto-chango, it’s off to my editor. Two weeks later, when the paper comes out, I think, “What was that all about? I really like to write!”

There you go. A love/hate relationship for sure. When I sent the column tonight, before dinner, my next thought (or dread) was that I needed to post something on my blog. That post a day commitment thing really does help me make friends with writing…eventually…  For tonight I’m going to post something I wrote 2 years (20 columns) ago. A little piece about the 5 island township where I live.

The ABC’s of a Cranberry Winter

At the height of the busy summer season, there are hundreds of daily visitors to the Cranberry Isles, along with hundreds more who own or rent houses to stay for their favorite vacation of the year.  We are inundated with faces we don’t know, and frazzled by trying to catch up with all of the people we do know because they are only here for a week or two. In the midst of this frenzy, islanders are often asked,  “What do you do during…” or “what is it like in…” or “how do you get through the winter out there?” In July and August, this is the last thing on our minds, but the questions about winter are legitimate. Lest we be caught actually voicing a snarky remark, here is an alphabet of choices for next summer’s response:

Always have a plan B. High winds can cause the ferry to be canceled resulting in islanders stranded off the island, or workers on the island, and appointments to require rescheduling.

Badminton, bread baking, keeping a bird list, and butt-walk racing!

Cadillac Water Taxi provides the first winter taxi service to the islands. It is especially great for times when you can’t catch the last Beal and Bunker ferry at 3:30 p.m.  Cranberry General Store, where people congregate to catch up on the latest island news, and church services on each island.

Duck stamps and Dip of the Month Club. Rick Alley is working on a painting of harlequin ducks for this year’s duck stamp competition, and 5 members of the club will brave ocean dips for three months of water temperatures in the high 30’s.

Eat! (What else? Isn’t this universal in winter?) Eileen Richards, a friendly face  at the Cranberry Post Office. Etsy.com, a commerce Web site used by some island crafters. Electricity, yes we do have it out here.

Flexibility (see A), food, friends, and Facebook.

Generators for when the power goes out. If the outage lasts for more than a day, some generous people will actually drive around with their generators in a truck to provide a few hours of power for those who don’t have them. Gratitude for a slower pace of life at this time of year.

Henry Isaacs has been plein air painting in the snow. Hilarity. So many things are just a bit funnier at this time of year. High definition TV.

Ice is prevalent in the gravel pits for skating, on windshields for scraping, (only a handful of people between the two islands actually have a garage) and on the float at the Fisherman’s Co-op where it has to be pounded off to get to the lobsters in the crates below. Islesford School, a center of activity for grades K through 8.

Joy Sprague, a welcoming presence at the Islesford Post Office.

King cake. A New Orleans tradition for Epiphany, recently served at a pot luck dinner on Islesford. The one who gets the baby in their piece of cake will have good fortune for the rest of the year.

Libraries. Thanks to the hard work of our librarians Ruth Westphal and Cindy Thomas, the libraries on Great Cranberry and Islesford are consistently in the top ten for per capita circulation in the state of Maine. Always plenty of new books.

Meetings. Fire meetings, Selectmen’s meetings, meetings of the minds. Movies, and the time to watch them.

Netflix. Movie rentals and returns without leaving the island. The red Netflix envelopes are a daily sight at the island post offices. New recipes and time to try them.

Olympics. Many of us will be watching the Winter Games in February. (Oops. I guess the Winter Olympics date this piece!)

Poetry workshop with Rick Benjamin on Islesford in January. Potluck suppers. Painting lobster buoys.

Quiet.

Reading. Lots of reading.

Shrimp season. Weekly shrimp purchases are a delicious way to support a local winter industry. Snowplows. Thanks to Blair Colby and Cory Alley, our island roads are usually plowed and sanded before those on the mainland. There is never a snow day at the Islesford School. The only cancellations are caused by power outages.

Travel. Many of us have more time for it at this time of year. Islanders have been all over the world, and run into each other there!

Upstairs at the Islesford Neighborhood House. The only room that really heats well there in the winter. It is where Town Meeting will take place this year in March.

Varnishing boats at the boatyards on Great Cranberry.

Warrant for Town Meeting and the Annual Report get their final touches before going to the printer. Our award winning town publication looks back on 2011 with photographs and reports from all town officials, and looks forward with the school and town budgets for 2012. Walking.

X-country skiing. A great way to get around the islands after a snowfall.

Yahtzee. People tend to play more games in the winter.

Zeroing in on all the things we put off until there is time in the winter to do them; including Zzzzzzz…lots of naps!

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A scene unseen so far this year

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Halfway paid

Does anyone remember this floating around FaceBook last year?

Pay it Forward 2011
I promise to send something handmade to the first 5 people who leave a comment here. They in turn must post this and send something they make to the first 5 people who comment on their status. The rules are that it must be handmade by you and it must be sent to your 5 people sometime in 2011.
 

When I saw it on my friend Thom’s FB page last January, I was psyched to be one of the first 5 to sign up. I then had 5 people sign up on my FB page after I posted the same message…..and then I forgot about it since I had a whole year to send my handmade items. Out of sight, out of mind, until this item showed up mysteriously on my front porch last week:

I do believe I own the world’s only Diana Ross Wand of Wonder. Thanks Thom! It is way cool and it graces our dining room wall, ready to be taken down and waved around at a moment’s notice.

I promised handmade items to 6 people. My plans were to make something other than jewelry, since that was so predictable for me. Here it is a year later, and I am just remembering to “pay it forward.” I sent three items away today, so I am halfway there.

(I won’t let it take me another year to finish paying.)

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A blue afternoon

I like to wear scarves. With colder weather, I am often digging into my scarf wardrobe and finding some old friends I haven’t seen since last winter.  I have several large squares that I like to just fold in half on the diagonal and drape around my neck without getting too fussy about tying them. I started thinking before Christmas, that it might be fun to add beads to the corners of these scarves to give them just that little bit of weight to hang easily and effectively without being tied.

After a stupid morning, where I had trouble getting out of my own way, I thought, “Well, I’ll just go find that blue scarf, find some beads that work with the color and sew them on before lunch. I can then take some photos and have a little blog post written before dinner.” It sounded so easy.

I knew I wanted weight at the corners, but that’s about all I knew. I’ve strung thousands of beads on necklaces, but have never sewn one on to anything. My first attempt was kind of gaumy. I tried the beads in opposite corners, then ripped them out when I didn’t like how they looked or how they hung.

It was actually starting to get to me, how long the whole “little” project was taking, as I tried various combinations and then ripped them out. I finally ended up, (after dinner!) adding 4 beaded wire dangles that I sewed in place with a few extra fresh water pearls sewn on either side.

I’m not sure I like the final look, but it hangs the way I had imagined. This is a project I didn’t like, and would have abandoned if it weren’t for my challenge to myself to blog every day. It was my planned post for the day. I’ll wear the scarf  at least once to see how I like it and to see if it’s a project to repeat with any of my other scarves.

Meanwhile, I love this little youtube video about tying scarves. It makes me realize I need to upgrade my blog page to be able to include videos rather than just posting a link. Enjoy!

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If you’ve been away from the Cranberry Isles…

…you have been missing some action in Northeast Harbor. Get ready for a whole new look when you return. A new Harbormaster’s building is being constructed which means that for weeks on end,  the walk to the parking lot is never quite the same from day to day. Just when we got used to walking around the back side of the tennis courts to get to the parking lot,  a big ditch appeared in the middle of the path. Forget trying to walk from the parking lot to the 5 p.m. boat in the dark. Take a flashlight or risk your neck! But hey, we’re islanders and we adapt. Just be ready to wonder where you are the next time you show up to visit your favorite islands. (By the way, our town parking spaces have not changed at all; all the action is taking place by the waterfront.)

Below, view from the Cranberry Isles lot. Arrow indicates bathrooms by the Harbormaster’s office.

Walking the path behind the tennis courts to catch the 3:30 boat today. Good times!

Ruh roh! Where’s Ted going to park? Where’s the road? How am I going to get over to my parking lot?

 

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My little red buddies

I’ve kept my bird feeder full all summer, fall, and into winter in hopes that the cardinals who showed up in the spring would stay around.

My plan worked. (All of the cardinal photos are from  Google images.)

“My own” cardinals show up around dusk every night. I don’t have  a good zoom on my camera and the light is pretty low, so I don’t frustrate myself by trying to capture them in my own photos.  It has been enough for me to listen to their variety of songs all spring and summer, and to watch the male and female bring their 3 youngsters to my feeder all fall. I’ve watched the three juveniles grow their feathers out to become two adult males and one adult female.

I look for them every late afternoon as I start to fix dinner, and they always show up right on time for their own evening meal. Tonight, though, they surprised me by letting another pair of cardinals join them. 3 females and 4 males. It was quite a sight!

Although I still cross my fingers when I say it, I think they are here to stay. We have not had any snow yet this winter, but I’m sure we’ll see a storm or two before it’s over. I’m keeping stocked up on black oil sunflower seed so that when the ground is covered in white, I’ll still get to see flashes of red.

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When I don’t know what to do first…

…I start with drilling rocks. After a good two weeks away from my studio, there are so many things I want to do, I am paralyzed by indecision. The best thing I can do is drill holes in rocks. I can never have too many to choose from, and it calms my mind to make slow but steady progress on something. There is not much creativity in pressing the lever of a drill press, peck after peck after peck, to work my way through a beach rock. But with each and every pebble I think about how I will use it, or what colors I have to combine with it, or how happy I’ll be to have so many drilled and waxed rocks to choose from when I am sitting down to make new necklaces. By doing something uncreative, I am opening my mind to ideas.

 

Sometimes there is even a reward to just leaving drilled rocks hanging around on the counter overnight.

 

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It’s time

2012. A fresh start. How will I challenge myself  this year to continue growing and improving as an artist?

I’ll start by looking back at my goals from January 2011:

1. Get some professional photographs of my work, and have a consultation with a professional on how to best  store and maximize my own photographs.  I did not do this one, and have kicked myself every time I wished I had some recent professional photos of my work. 

2. Take better care of my Etsy shop; add items to it on a regular basis. (Which means taking more photographs.)  This referred to taking more of my own photos to use on Etsy, and I started out strong, only to let my attention to my shop slip away as summer brought total craziness into my life.

3. Add to blog daily. Yup. Did this until about mid May. Can’t say I actually achieved the Post a Day status after that, but I met some great new people through blogging more often, and I missed the discipline of daily posting.

4. Take a lampworking class to see if making glass beads is a feasible addition to my silver work. (I sure like to buy them!) Did this one with my friend Holly, in March. Definitely want to keep learning more about lampworking.

5. Learn to make and use rivets for cold connections.  Did it!

6. Drill more rocks, and make many more silver and beach rock necklaces. Did it!

 

On to the creative resolutions for 2012:

1. Get some professional photographs of my work, and have a consultation with a professional on how to best  store and maximize my own photographs. (This will involve designing, making and keeping some of my best pieces until after they are photographed. Also, setting aside some $ to be able to pay for it.)

2. Post something new on my blog every day of 2012. All 366 of them. Even if it’s a photo with no words to accompany it. I will post a piece of myself, my world, to share as a counter balance to my introvert energy.

3. Add something new to my Etsy shop once a week. Frankly this idea scares the pants off me. But if I don’t set it up as a goal, I   am inviting a continuation of the stagnation I’ve experienced for too many months.

4. Learn more about branding and achieve a more cohesive way to present my work. Time for a new logo. (Did I ever have an old one? Yes, but it’s about 25 years old and the only place I still use it is as a metal stamp to sign my work.) Time to freshen up!

5. Start making my own enamel and glass headpins. I use these more and more in my designs and I have books to learn from and even some experience on how to do it. Such simple little elements. But I usually end up buying them. This should be an easily achievable goal. I just need a different fuel source and torch. (Acetylene and oxygen are great for soldering and fusing, but too dirty for glass and enamel.)

6. Enter the 2013 Saul Bell Design Award Competition. It’s been over 3 years since I entered something in this competition, and there is nothing that challenges me more to believe in myself and my possibilities than striving for a spot among international finalists.  Check out this year’s finalists and see if you don’t feel inspired to try it.

That’s it. 6 goals. And now 364 days to achieve them.

 

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