Good morning, my friends. It's been a beautiful couple of days here at the Three Cats Ranch. It was the warmest day of the year so far yesterday. I took this picture of our indoor thermometer around dinner time yesterday.
There you go...that's what I'm talkin' about. We're expecting at least one more good day of weather before it turns cool and showery again. Certainly, it has that "spring has arrived" feel about it. If the idiom holds true, however, sailors should take warning. There was a red sky this morning.
When it comes to turning a dessert recipe into a dessert "for two," pies are the easiest. You start with a little 6-inch pie plate, available on Amazon. Then...you take any recipe you like and cut it in half. The baking times tend to be about the same, but I always check them early. I used a Pillsbury refrigerated pie crust, rather than a frozen one. You can find the link to the full-on version of the recipe right here.
While I was doing this, the kitties were enjoying a morning sunbath on their respective levels of the kitty tree.
Outside, I noticed this squirrel. He's probably wondering where his brethren went. When I took this picture, we'd trapped five. We got another one later in the afternoon. It might have been this one.
So I picked myself a bucket o' weeds yesterday. I picked most all of them except what's growing in the culinary herb garden. The herb garden next on my list of gardening chores. The whole bed needs to be cleaned up. The tulips at the front door are starting to show their petals.
The vine behind them is the wisteria. It's starting to leaf out. I hope we get some flowers from it this year. It replaced one that died a few years ago, and this one has yet to bloom.
Around the back side of the house, the star magnolia is in full bloom right now. It really needs to be groomed.
Star magnolia is more of a shrub than a tree, but this one has grown so tall it's turned into kind of a shapeless mess. I've seen them all trimmed at the bottom to a single "trunk," to give them a more tree-like shape. Mike keeps threatening to do something to it, but so far, it's continuing to grow its own way.
Okay, so it was time for lunch, and then I was able to get some sewing done. As I mentioned a few days ago, these are the fabrics I could choose from for the donation quilt.
I'd already decided to use the crayon fabric on the right when I came up short with the one on the left. From there, I had to decide which fabrics to use from the fat quarter grouping. Two fat quarters would get me the 15 four-patches I needed, but I knew that the letters would be upside down on one half of the four-patch. Nevertheless, I started sewing strip sets together when I realized I still had more fat quarters to choose from. If I chose two more colors, I could have all the letters facing the right direction. When I was finished, sewing together the first one, it looked like this:
And because I'd used two more fat quarters, I ended up with 30 four-patches...enough for two quilts. I'll only make one for now and save the others for another quilt down the road. I'll need a new focus fabric too. Crayons are what I happen to have in my stash, but I could put any juvenile fabric with these.
For good measure, Sadie purrformed the snuggleability test on the focus fabric, and gave it very pawsitive marks.
When I pick it up again (today, hopefully), I'll add the two borders shown below, and then it will be ready for quilting and binding.
Turning around, the peonies are coming up great guns. The one on the left gets less sunshine than the rest, and so it's a little slower to get started. It does have several shoots, and when it gains some height, it will get more sunlight, and earlier in the day.
Upstairs, I found the kitties sharing the same sunbeam for their afternoon sunbath. Smitty has forgiven us for the insult of the day before.
This morning, I'm heading off to the farmer's market with Erik and Mae. We're going to the big Portland Farmer's Market downtown, which is quite a treat. It is routinely listed as one of the best markets in the country. There's always lots to see there. Sometimes we see the unipiper, which is probably the most Portlandia thing about our fair city.
When I get home, I'll spend a little time broadcasting the wildflower seeds into the bee garden, and then I'll get back to my sewing. Enjoy your Saturday, everybody.
8 comments:
The whole point is to live life and be - to use all the colors in the crayon box. ~ RuPaul
We have little red squirrels here, and they are fast little critters. When we are sitting on our deck, they will run along the railing, stop in front of us, chatter and stomp their little feet. It cracks us up. We apparently are invading their space. Have fun at the Farmer's Market!
Have to laugh at the unipiper! My little sister used to ask for a unicycle every Christmas when she was little, but my parents didn't want her to have one. She wanted to play her clarinet while riding, too. Now that she's an adult and almost retired, I think she has set those foolish ideas aside.
Wow, it looks like you went from Winter, to 1 day of Spring, right into summer. Have fun at the Farmers Market. Sounds like a wonderful day.
That view is amazing!
Glad you've been able to enjoy the pretty weather and get the garden back into gear as well. Love your crayon colors quilt. It's definitely going to brighten some child's life.
That is the first bagpiper I have seen on a unicycle. I have seen other musicians try this, even a "one-man band". The donation quilt is very cheerful.
Seeing the peony plants reminded me of the odd-ball one you've been struggling with - did it survive or did you send it off to the grand-plant-cemetery?
Love the colorful crayon quilt!
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