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JUST LIKE LITTLE HALF CHICK

Remember the folktale, Little Half Chick?

Well, meet Little Half Egg.  That’s right, Little Half Egg.

You see, its creator (yours truly) was experimenting with decorative cement recipes and failed to mix the correct amount needed to fill the mold.   Nothing to show for the effort but half an egg.  A frickin’ half-a$$ed egg.

See?

Wait, let’s flip it around.

Look any better?  Nope, not really.

Even Little Half Chick ended up with a permanent and dignified position living atop a cupola.  One such as that is useless to Little Half Egg.  Perhaps he’ll have to settle for a desk job.

As a paperweight.

Enjoy the rest of this beautiful weekend, folks.  And remember, laughing at oneself is the greatest form of flattery AND the best medicine.

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A STORY AND A CACTUS THAT ARE BOTH SHORT AND SWEET

This little cactus bloomed for the very first time this past July.  It is twenty years old.  I’m certain of that because my son propagated it from seed that long ago.  And, as I’m sure it would be no surprise to you, I’ve been taking care of it ever since.

It was one of those “Mom, I’m bored” afternoons.  I suggested a little gardening activity, and off we drove to the garden center to purchase some seeds.
Fast forward to this past July…… ta-dah!

Fast forward to today…… ta-dah, again!

The end.

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A GARDEN IS LIKE A DELICIOUS NOVEL

©linda nelson 2014

I have been working, it seems, round the clock since early April, as the intensity of preparatory gardening tasks fall into a certain window of time.  Punch lists still exist, but I foresee things leveling off in the near future.  I’ve managed to steal a moment to just enjoy the beauty in my own garden, and timing it with the peak of my German irises in their glory.  Sweet.  I’m so grateful that gardens do not perform all at once.  I need the intermissions.  I embrace the anticipation.  A garden is like a delicious novel that can’t be read all at one sitting, and I love the flirtatious unfolding of a story that grows.

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HOME AND THE LITTLE HAIRPIN

©linda nelson 2014

Living as an adult in the house that I grew up in has it’s pros and cons.  The positive side is that I don’t have to work at making it feel like home.  It just is.  Decorating and redesigning is simply icing on the cake.  On the negative side, well… I never left home.  I’m sure that I have missed out on some of life’s interesting challenges.  Anyway, I’m invested, established and running a business.  Beloved pets are buried here; a pony, a goat, a rabbit, a parakeet, a cat, a dog and numerous guinea pigs.  As for my daughter’s salamander…… I wish I could say that he(or she) received a sacred burial.  One day we noticed that it was not in it’s tank.  Need I say more?

So, this is where my heart is.  This is why I stay.  And because every so often I unexpectedly unearth a childhood “fossil” that thrills me so.

©linda nelson 2014

I dug this little demitasse spoon up about four years ago while doing some planting in one of my garden beds.  I remember using it to make mud pies when I was little.  It’s all scratched up, but in my eyes it’s perfect.

©linda nelson 2014

And just last fall I found one of my grandmother’s hairpins.  She used to have this cushioned side chair in her cottage.  Years after she passed away, the chair eventually ended up in my garage. I had been holding onto it for about twenty years with the best intention to refinish and reupholster it.  It became laden with musty mold, and a mouse had decided to nest in its horsehair stuffing.  Sadly, it had to go.  I accepted the fact that I was never going to put this project on my to-do list.  “But the springs…… maybe I’ll gut the chair and save the springs.”  So that’s what I did, and out fell the hairpin.

©linda nelson 2014

Then there was the old railroad spike.  I can’t seem to recall when I dug that up, but I certainly do remember “harvesting” them with my dad.  This would be after we would put a penny on the track and let the early evening train flatten it.  Now that there wouldn’t be another train coming for a while we’d walk along the tracks looking for tossed railroad spikes.  Then we would proceed to a specific spot on the shoulder of the road and pick wild blueberries.  Upon walking back home we’d stand on the highway overpass and wave to the cars below, keeping count of how many people would wave back.  On a really lucky evening the Good Humor truck would come by, but that didn’t happen often enough.

So, why would I leave home when there’s more digging to do, and possibly, more sweet memories to find?

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