More Town Meeting photos….

….taken by Henry Isaacs, artist citizen. I almost never have photos of myself on my blog. (Probably because I don’t take them.)  But Henry put these up on his FaceBook page, so I thought I would put them up here for my post. I missed the day yesterday due to a writing deadline and another migraine. After 14 hours of sleep, and completion of the column just one day after deadline, I had a quiet afternoon at home and I’m looking forward to a fabulous day in the studio tomorrow.

I am proud to swear in Denise McCormick, who was just re-elected to the position of Town Clerk. She is fabulous at her job. High five!

Responsible citizens and students from the Islesford School:

“Is there a motion to put article 17c on the floor for discussion?”

Denise and Barb at 6:15. Relieved that the meeting was finally finished!

 

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9 hour town meeting (with 45 minutes off for lunch)

The day was off to a weird start as we boarded the boat to Great Cranberry. Buckets of mystery meat. Eeewww.

 

The mystery meat was identified as coyote bait. (Which is still pretty mysterious if you ask me.) It did not get off the boat with us at Great Cranberry.

 

A boat full of voters from Islesford heads to the big island.

A lot of people took the 10 minute walk to the Fire House where the meeting was held. A good chance to stretch the legs.

Our Town Clerk, Denise, gets ready to start the meeting, then asks for nominations for Moderator.

When we vote by written ballot, we use this cool old wooden ballot box. I wish I knew the history of it.

We finally finished business and adjourned at 6:15 p.m. Even though I want the hour back that I gave up yesterday for Daylight Saving time, the light was beautiful as we walked back to the boat.

And, we saw a barred owl.

All in all it was a good day. A good one, but a long one.

 

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There is nothing quite like a case of nerves…

..to bring out my “inner Martha.” You know the one I mean. The creative one.

Tomorrow is our town’s annual Town Meeting. A wonderful form of local government where decisions are made about things like town ordinances and next year’s budget.  A moderator is elected to run the meeting and voters will nominate candidates for Selectmen, school committee, Town Clerk and Tax Collector. They vote to authorize Selectmen to enter into contracts for snow removal, trash removal, all kinds of maintenance, and engineering studies for future town projects. Do we need a new Town Office? Does the town dock at Islesford need to be extended? Do we need to look into building a drive-on dock in Manset, the property our town purchased on the “mainland” for extra summer parking? It is a LOT to go through and discuss. And, in March, after everyone has been somewhat cooped up, the discussions can become heated and long.

So why should I be nervous? Because for the last 5 years or so, I have been nominated to moderate this meeting and I have run totally unopposed. If anyone else wants to do it, they are not speaking up. Tonight I will sit down with the town warrant, the annual report, and the Maine Moderator’s Manual, (thank god there’s a guide for this!) and I will be prepared to say “yes” if I am elected tomorrow. If so, I will proceed to try to run the meeting smoothly, trying to call on everyone who raises their hand, trying to keep discussions on track of the motion on the floor, and keeping track of the priority of motions. ie. “A motion to amend takes priority over the motion to put an article on the floor.”  So, if someone makes a motion to amend the article, you have to vote on whether you’re going to amend the article before you can vote on the article. Also, most articles can be discussed after they are on the floor, but a nomination or a motion to call the question allow for no discussion. If I can’t remember these things off the top of my head it’s okay. I just need to know where to find the answers in the manual to keep the meeting flowing.

Getting ready for this makes me nervous. And we have a house guest coming today. And we will have 10 people for dinner tonight. I’ll wait for everyone to go to bed and then cram for tomorrow’s “test.” In the meantime I’m cleaning the house, getting the table set for dinner, making bread, making salad, and making dessert. My body responds to the anxiety about tomorrow by going in several directions at once. It’s not enough to just set the table for dinner. I want to create a little springtime centerpiece. Next thing I know, I’m making my own grass out of green paper.

I realize that the urge to be unnecessarily creative when stressed is one of my coping mechanisms. I start to engage my right brain as much as possible, so that the left side of my brain can slow down and put things in order while I’m keeping my hands busy. I never thought about it that way until today when I literally asked myself, “What are you doing that for?!” It would explain why the other day, when I was totally troubled by coming up with an idea for my next Working Waterfront column, due Tuesday,  I started cleaning my shower. (It needed it, but I had not scheduled any specific time to do it.) It took longer to clean than expected because as I was scrubbing, my mind was writing. I had to keep running downstairs to the computer to write down my ideas.

My sons used to tell me that they knew whenever I had a lot on my mind, because I would be in the kitchen baking several different things at once.

Yup. Doing that today, too.

 

 

 

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Stupid migraine

This day was not conducive to spending much time on the computer, or adding a post to the blog, or doing much of anything. But these things always pass. And as one of my friends used to say, “No brain, no headache!”

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Afternoon at the movies

The matinee was “Made in Dagenham” about striking female machinists at a Ford plant in England in 1968. They wanted equal pay as men for their work. At a time when women did not strike, these women who sewed the pieces for car interiors, effectively stopped work for everyone at the Dagenham plant. Without seat covers, headrests, armrests, etc. the rest of the car assembly could not move forward.

I have to admit that the accent for this particular area of Great Britain was very hard for me to understand. So, right at the beginning a lot of dialog was lost to me. Mom didn’t bother trying to understand it,  she just took a nice little nap! Before I knew it, I had slept through some of the movie too. We both woke up at the intermission and discussed whether we wanted to stay for the second half 0f the movie. Why not? The 60’s fashions were fun to see, all that eyeliner and false eyelashes, short skirts, even hot pants.  The soundtrack was great. How can you not love a movie that opens with dozens of people riding to work on bicycles while Desmond Dekker is singing, “The Israelites.”  I was a sophomore in high school when it was the first reggae music I had ever heard. The closing shot was of the same group, more bicycles, (almost equal pay) and more reggae, “You can get it if you really want” , written by Jimmy Cliff.

Half of the movie was still better than none, though Mom was actually up for watching “127 Hours.”  She said, “We could have looked away when he had to cut his arm off.”

 

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Out of the kiln…

…and into the tumbler.

I’m pretty happy with how the slump beads turned out. The fine silver PMC polishes up so nicely, that I’ll take these beads one step further by polishing them on the buffing wheel. I’ll most likely do the buffing on Friday since tomorrow is a day off island for me. I have my fingers crossed that the weather won’t be too bad and there will be a 5 p.m. boat back. (Crummy weather will mean coming home on the 3:30 boat, which does not leave enough time to see the matinee.) The movie at Reel Pizza tomorrow could be “Made in Dagenham” or “127 Hours.” (R.P doesn’t list the winter matinees on their web site.) I wouldn’t mind seeing either one, and I think Mom would go for either one, though we could probably get through the day without seeing someone cut their arm off!  Considering that the median age at this matinee is 70, they’ll probably show “Made in Dagenham.”

The wire that the beads are on is temporary. It makes them easier to fish out of the tumbler. Putting wire through beads before putting them in the tumbler will also keep that pesky steel shot from getting inside and turning the bead into a rattle.

The two beads below, without wire, had holes that I thought were too small for the steel shot to get in. Wrong! Two of these are now rattle beads.  I think I remember something about tumbling beads like this in water without steel shot to get the shot out from inside the bead. I can’t understand how that would work but it’s worth a try. (Okay. The obvious pun: It’s worth a shot.)

 

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The beads have not moved

Which means I have not quite finished that paperwork….

But it was a good day, with a visit from my friend Sember who brought delicious squash soup to share for lunch with our friend Ashley. Last night I mixed up some walnut raisin sourdough bread to rise.

So I could contribute bread to go with the soup.

 

Hmmm….I just realized the only difference between bread and bead is the letter “R.”  I really love making both! (I really love making broth?) Today was bread day, tomorrow is bead day, and somewhere in between I’ll finish the paperwork.

 

 

 

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The thought of engaging the left side of my brain…

…gives me a headache. Would the fact that I shunned my planned paperwork for today be the opposite of a creative block?  I was going to get up and get right to work organizing the papers for my mother’s tax accountant. Instead I found it easier than ever to get right to work on finishing up some metal clay beads in my studio.

Plan B was to start in on the piles of medical receipts, charitable receipts, assisted living receipts, etc. after lunch, so I would be on my way to getting this task completed and off my mind. I don’t even have to do hard math to figure it out. I just have to organize it to get the figures I need to record.

I like using my computer for the ease of taking photos from my digital camera, looking at them, cropping them, and sorting them.  I spend a few hours at night adding to my own blog, checking e-mail, reading other people’s blogs, feeding my creativity. What I do NOT do, and have never been good at doing, is organize receipts and numbers. Excel is something I hope to do at my craft. Computer program? Online banking? Spreadsheets? Eeeek! They all terrify me. Or maybe they bore me. For some it’s an “easier way to do it” but I have yet to come out of my right side shell and embrace the left (dark) side when it comes to keeping track of figures on the computer. I know. Call me a luddite.

Tomorrow, my plan is to get up early and get this little paperwork job done, before I look at the beads I finished and fired today. If I had a digital display on my forehead tomorrow, maybe it would look just like my kiln did this afternoon:

 

Job finished. And in less than 3 hours.

 

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Reflecting on melting snow…

…or melting snow in reflection.

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Satisfying and sleepy Saturday

Today was the perfect day for catching up on rest. Not that I really needed to, but I pretty much did nothing, and it felt great.  It was one of those gray, almost rainy days, with temperatures in the 40’s. Warm enough to let the fire in the wood stove go out for a while. Bruce called at 9 a.m. to say he was coming home on the 11:00 boat, a few hours earlier than originally planned.  I decided that I would soak up my last hours of solitude by reading my book. I could head into the studio in the afternoon, right?  Well, I didn’t. After lunch, both of us hit the couch for more reading and naps, happy to be together in our companionable silence. A late afternoon walk,  a mushroom omelet for dinner, and a movie from Netflix made for the perfect end to a pretty easy day.

 

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