Woodstock, VT 2018
Autumn Gems
My husband and I grew up in similar surroundings and yesterday as we patrolled the fields surveying fence and weeds and flooding issues, the scent and crunch of fallen leaves underfoot reminded us both of our youth. So much joy was found in the simple things – like raking leaves into a pile out in our postage stamp yards, and then jumping into and out of those piles repeatedly. Trick or Treating was enhanced by the crunch underfoot, the jewel reds, oranges, yellows, brown hues all around and the earthy smell of fallen leaves, the crisp air carrying that scent as we trudged door to door to door.
We’ll have the traditional Thanksgiving meal next month with family who are available to join us – and each year in the month of October I start hunting for a recipe or two that will add a little twist to the usual menu – Turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy are forever, but the other sides can be jockeyed around without too much angst from the husband, we always hope. (six blueberries, you might recall). I found two recipes that seemed compatible and I gave them a try last week – Delicious! And they’ll grace our table this year. For the first, I combined several recipes –
When I’m cooking in the kitchen, the dogs are usually underfoot. If it’s a decent weather day, I open the sliders to the backyard and they sit in the sun patches, catching the breeze. They are the best company, truly my other set of kids.
We The People
Purple Mushrooms
Our Circus, Our Flying Monkeys
Show Glow
Photos below are of a few of our friends – what a great group of people to spend five days with – all supportive of each other, even when competing in the same event – a welcome camaraderie we all need to see more often everywhere in life.
It’s looks all glittery in these photos but the truth is those jackets are worn for about 15 minutes – the rest of these people’s time is spent cleaning stalls, filling water buckets, sweeping isles, cleaning tack, feeding horses, exercising them, brushing them, practice practice practice and some sitting around waiting for classes too. By the end of each day, it feels as if we’re wearing as much dirt as we are clothing.
It’s all worth it, though – every penny and every bead of sweat equity. The lesson in showing is it takes hard work and dedication. It takes caring for another living thing who depends on you to do so, it means disappointment as well as triumph, building relationships, elbow grease, determination. It means learning the art of losing gracefully as well as celebrating the win. The friendships along the way are the icing on the cake – an important icing.
At the end of the show we were so ready to get home – we missed the dogs, we missed our people. The gorgeous sunset behind us and rising moon ahead were the perfect cap on a successful week.
30 years and 6 blueberries
For example… just last week on a work morning at 5:30 a.m. I finished up a batch of blueberry pancakes and set it before him with plenty of extra syrup and butter, which he likes. What came out of his mouth instead of thank you was “How many times do I have to explain I want just six blueberries in my pancakes, not a whole handful. Seriously, is six such a hard thing to remember? Six blueberries?” Now, you gotta laugh at such OCD foolishness, not to mention the rudity. Laugh I did, only to irk him more… That one string guitar, ya know. And then I told him off. Because seriously?
Fall Classic
After a few fall-like days, the humidity has returned, most likely due to the storms out in the Atlantic. Wishing all in the storm’s path safety and no damage to properties, hoping it is not as bad as they have predicted. Our storm surges down at the cottage have been big already, and it’s not even hitting us directly. We’ve pulled in the kayaks and seat cushions and umbrellas and closed all windows. This picture was taken yesterday after a rain shower – Stella (our cottage) is just under the rainbow’s end on the left, tucked in the trees. Notice Filbert the flamingo, now a little droopy – still out there to weather the .. weather.
I’m admiring the tenacity of this lone sunflower too. The pot sits beside the gate to the horse barn, and this one flower decided to stretch for the sun as tall as it could muster, as the pot is mostly in the shade.