Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Discovering Grandmother Ila


Grandmother Ila lived before my time. Her second son, my dad, was born during WWI; by the time I was born, the United States had survived the Korean Conflict, and was about to enter the Vietnam War. Wed to the Postmaster of Washington, DC, Grandmother Ila was a full time parent to three. While I know very little about her, I imagine she valued art, literature, and music. After all, my parents were both highly literate (their home library housed works in English, French, German, and Japanese), and my dad grew up singing in a choir. That his parents sent him off to study at the Saint Albans Choir School for Boys, of the National Cathedral, speaks to their appreciation for the arts.

When preparing my parents' home for sale, in 2008, I unearthed a twine-wrapped package that had evidently
been in the drafty old farm house's library closet since my parents had arrived in 1956. A torn brown paper bag bore a pencilled note in my father's hand indicating that the package contained paintings by his mother--one in the manner of C.C. Cotton, and one a river scene that was possibly unfinished. The photos accompanying this post document both canvasses as well as the material used to separate each canvas.

I had no idea that my grandmother had such artistic talents. Not only did she paint with a mastery far beyond what I might dream of accomplishing, but also she developed sewing patterns. The package separators were pieces of a pattern she had produced--directions for sewing a stuffed giraffe that she labeled "Hi-Boy: An Ilabeestie, copyright 1926." The label leads me to suspect that she had developed other stuffed animal patterns, in addition to Hi-Boy. The whimsical giraffe brought a smile to my face and I had to piece the pattern together and photograph it before such evidence of her talents vanished entirely.

The river scene, while well detailed, is not signed (which is why I believe it to be unfinished, that and my dad's note), and is very dark. The colors show up better in the digital image than they do on the actual canvas. Unless the paints darkened over time, I can only assume that she was very depressed when she painted this scene. (It's a reasonable conclusion considering the high incidence of mental illness on that side of my family tree.)

But it's the copy of C.C. Cotton's painting that impresses me the most. The painting shows some signs of age and wear. What first appeared to me to be a flower beside the subject's face is in fact two streaks of white canvas where the paint has fallen away. Even so, the painting is evocative of our current life, where the farm surrounds us in natural beauty. Several days before opening this package, I, too, had been wandering in a field and picking goldenrod, among other flowers, for the house. In my grandmother's painting, I see the remnants of a story I was never told about a talented, accomplished woman, who lived in a time when women wore skirts and bonnets out into the fields when picking flowers.

My housemate has decreed that this canvas will be hung over the mantelpiece, and I am quite pleased with that decision.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Parisian adventure

Vidalia in Paris Vidalia in Paris by Sasha Watson


My GoodReads review


rating: 5 of 5 stars
A delightful Parisian adventure for teen readers. Buy a copy as a gift. Give a copy to your local library. Set aside an afternoon to savor this title. Vidalia in Paris is Watson's gift to readers. Enjoy!

(Note: a more detailed review will appear in an upcoming issue of VOYA magazine.)


View all my GoodReads reviews.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Dreams of a "retired" teacher


This is the first fall of many that I've not been in the classroom teaching. This fall I'm a student of agriculture and local geography, shifting from my identity as a classroom teacher to that of a small farmer. I love every day of this physical work, and I revel in the wonderment of a child as I watch geese bathe and drink, find chicken eggs for the first time, and learn to converse with little goats.

Even so, I still have the occasional teacher dream. After awaking from a classroom management nightmare (monitoring a study hall of students with whom I was unfamiliar and being assaulted by one--he managed to pick me up and spin me around on the soles of his feet while I watched the hard desk corners and such circle below me), it took me several moments to remember the high point of the dream.

Riding on a school bus, again with students unknown to me, and listening to some students banter with the long-haired bus driver, when the content of one exchange surprised me.

"Remember, Kevin," enthused an adolescent girl, "the time you stopped at the library so we could get books for the ride? That was so cool!"

"Yeah, yeah," the driver replied, and chuckled.

I was left thinking, wait a sec, he solved the chaos of a long school bus ride with reading books? Wow! Upon looking more closely at this unfamiliar driver, his features became suddenly recognizable.

"Er," said I, eloquently, "you were a student of mine, weren't you."

"Yeah," he agreed, smiling the boyish smile I recognized clearly as that of a former eighth grader, one I recall as being a reluctant reader. I saw his eighth grade visage emerge, nearly obscured by maturity, that freckled face and impish smile, and felt that thrill of recognition of former students-all-grown-up.

It took some moments to process: here was the embodiment of successful teaching. Sometime after I'd had him as a student, the requirement of carrying a free choice reading book with him at all times translated into the lesson that books provide desirable entertainment...and became a lesson that he passed on to others as a fun way to beat the boredom of long bus rides. Whoo hoo!

As I remembered this kernel of my dream, the nightmare that had woken me faded and I was suffused with that glow of success felt well beyond any Ah ha! moments (rewards in and of themselves) to that of a lesson taken to heart by an unlikely candidate and carried forward into his life where he passed it along to others.

My pride in this dream-driver's accomplishments was so great that I've stumbled up to my computer instead of returning to bed for the last minutes before heeding the crow of yon rooster.

Cockadoodledo! There's PrettyBoy now, calling me to feed his hens and loose the fowl from the night's captivity to roam upon their barnyard for the duration of daylight hours. Ta ta, I must be off as duty calls!

Please note: image acquired from www.mikelynchcartoons.blogspot.com

Monday, October 13, 2008

Mason Bees

My mother used to keep honeybees in her backyard. I loved the honey, but disliked the bees who would choose to sun on the white bed sheets hung out on the line to dry. I don't recall ever being stung by one of her bees, but as a teenager I was fearful. Now that I'm an adult the fear is gone; however, as a new farmer I'm not keen to set up and manage hives of my own. Enter mason bees.

Christopher O'Toole's handy publication The Mason Bees: Taking the Sting Out of Beekeeping provided me fascinating reading this weekend. His "practical guide for gardeners and fruit growers to the propagation and management of Osmia lignaria, and its relatives, docile and efficient pollinators" is a highly informative, quite readable little book. From the opening chapter "Blue Orchard Mason Bees as pollination pets" through to the colorful illustration plates at the end, this little book got me all fired up for spring and eager to invite these bees to our little farm. We're starting with fruit trees and bushes, high hopes, very rocky soil, and our resident redworms. With the worms processing the compost at ground level, if we can encourage pollinators to settle here--we should be in fine fruit come summer & fall.

I highly recommend O'Toole's book for growers wanting to manage the pollination ecology in their gardens and orchards.