Step Away from the Kitties!

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Chelsea is visiting.  We manage to get into all kinds of mischief when we’re together.  Yesterday we were headed home from running some errands and she said, “Oh, can we stop at the new SPCA center?  I haven’t seen it yet.”

 

I'd recognize that logo anywhere!

 

She was referring to the brand spanking new Placer SPCA Adoption & Resource Center.

 

 

opened a few month ago

“We can stop,” I said, “but don’t even ask to take anyone home.  We have no vacancies.”

 

Meet Thatcher - sweet, lovable, playful

 

We immediately fell in love with 10-yr-old Thatcher.  Uh oh.

 

Quentin also melted our hearts.

 

This facility is set up mainly for cats and there was quite a variety, all with winning personalities.

 

I'm trying to sleep here.

 

We popped in and out of each beautiful kitty room, where cats were delighted to see us (mostly) and welcomed us with open paws.

 

Please come in!

 

Chelsea found the room with the most comfortable chair and her favorite cat.

 

Sheesh. Make yourself at home, why don't you, Chelsea?

 

Who you lookin' at?

 

Sweet!

 

I spy a kitty.

 

Do NOT photograph my butt!

 

I said, "Do NOT photograph my butt!"

 

Chelsea, step away from the kitty!

 

Jabba the Hutt (not his real name)

 

I had to photograph Jabba the Hutt from outside the room (hence through the glass) – he wouldn’t stay away from me when I went inside.  Friendly Jabba.

 

Gorgeous kitty!

 

Chelsea, step away from the kitty!

 

Eyes to die for ...

 

Chelsea, step away from the kitty!

 

Gorgeous color and winning personality!

 

Chelsea, I'm not kidding! Step away from the kitty!

I almost had to use physical force to get Chelsea away from the kitties.  We were in trouble when we got home.  Our dogs knew we’d cheated on them.

First Rain

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Autumn.  I love the first rain of the season.  After a long, hot, dry summer, the first rain is always a most welcome event.  The dust settles.  The leaves are washed clean.   The first storm, however, is often not a gentle one, not an easy transition into a new season. Our gardens are a little worse for wear after the storm.

 

The deck is littered with leaves from the beautiful oaks overhead.

 

The grasses are leaning.

 

Impatiens and coleus can't lift their heads.

 

Storm-battered butterfly

 

Some things, however, seem to flourish in the cooler, wet weather.

 

The phlox still smell wonderful!

 

Elephant ears are thriving.

 

Hyacinth beans are growing rapidly.

 

Hyacinth beans are beautiful!

 

Moss and lichen look beautiful on this rock.

 

It never ceases to amaze me how quickly the moss revives after a long, hot summer.  A week ago it was brown and dry.  After just one storm, it has become moist, luscious and a beautiful green.

 

The birds are busy this time of year, making the most of the flowers that are going to seed.  Not long ago I ran across an article about untidy gardens and the value of leaving many things in our gardens untouched for the benefit of the wildlife.  The author would be very proud of my untidy garden!

 

Gloriosa Daisy

 

Gloriosa daisy gone to seed.

 

The birds, finches in particular, love the gloriosa seeds.  They hang on the plants and eat their fill.

 

Sunflowers seeds are another favorite of the birds.

 

The first storm was just a teaser.

 

Here comes the sun!

 

Praying for a Picture

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The dogs just decided they wanted to take a run outside.  I flipped on the outside light, since it is, after all, the first day of autumn and it’s freaking DARK WAY TOO EARLY!!!!  I will be happy when the cool weather arrives, but I hate that the days are getting shorter.

 

I spied this little gal on the ladder leaning against the deck rail.  I decided she needed to have her picture taken.

 

beautiful praying mantis

 

As you will see, she had other ideas.

 

who you lookin' at?

 

I love praying mantids.  They’re so fearless.  Here was this big black thing coming at her and did she run?

 

Who are you?

 

No, she did not run.  She came right over to check it out.  No wonder I couldn’t focus on her.

 

Hey! Get off the lens!

 

Did you not hear me?

 

Wonder if my camera tastes good?

 

Clearly our photo session was over.  I took her to some flowers and told her to go eat bad bugs.

Treasures

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I’m pretty sure I mentioned to you that while Butterfly was cavorting in Hawaii, my sister, Kathy, and I were busy cleaning her house.  Butterfly was gone for 2 weeks.  Kathy and I didn’t finish the job.  We ran out of time.  Let me put it this way:  Butterfly is a collector of all things bright, shiny, soft, useful, useless and clever.  Or whatever happens to catch her eye.  On top of that, people, all people, feel compelled to give her things.  These things are usually butterfly-themed.  People, I’m here to tell you she does … not … need … one … more … thing.

 

What Kathy and I did accomplish was cleaning everything in plain sight.  We had a huge collection of things for Butterfly to peruse upon her return and she agreed that the vast majority of it could be donated!  She had so many things crammed into a small space that she couldn’t see half of them.  Her house still clearly looks like Butterfly lives there, but now it is a little more manageable.

 

Now we are tackling her cupboards and drawers, which are also crammed.  For instance, she has a kitchen drawer that is full of envelopes.

 

“Look,” I said to Kathy when I opened it, “I found where she files her mail!”  Then I looked a little more carefully.  “What the heck?  Almost all of the envelopes are EMPTY!  Why is she saving empty envelopes?”  Neither of us knew.  These are envelopes that she had received mail in and had tossed out the contents.

 

When Butterfly called me from Hawaii one night, I asked her, “What’s up with the drawer full of empty envelopes in the kitchen?”

 

She laughed and said, “So you found those, did you?”

 

“Not funny,” I said, “tell me why you have them!”

 

“Well, I use them,” she said.

 

“FOR WHAT???”

 

“Each month I write on the back of the envelope what I spend my money on and slip the receipts inside,” she explained.

 

“Ok, so you need what, 12 a year?  You do realize there are more envelopes coming in the mail every day, don’t you?  Why do you have hundreds?” I asked.

 

Again she laughed (apparently she cracks herself up) and said, “Ok, ok, save 2 for me and recycle the rest.”

 

As I said, we cleaned everything in plain sight.  We have just begun to tackle cupboards and drawers.  And no, we haven’t yet gotten to the drawer full of envelopes.  But we will.  Our most recent project was cleaning out beneath her kitchen and bathroom sinks, as well as the storage areas under the stairs (we only got half way with that one – we almost suffocated on the gazillions of plastic grocery bags she was saving).

 

I must share with you the treasures from yesteryear that we uncovered.

 

Far back under the kitchen sink, I was quickly returned to my childhood when I spied this:

 

our old spray bottle - it's glass!

 

Really! It's a Windex bottle!

 

This was the squirt bottle she used for the ironing, and that I used as soon as I got big enough to iron.  I think I’ve seen her iron twice in the last 12 years, so I’m not sure why she hung onto this.  And she came to my house both times to use my iron and ironing board, since there was no way she could have found her iron.  We found it behind all those plastic grocery bags.

 

Another treasure I found under the stairs (who remembered that there we actually shelves behind all those grocery bags?) was this:

 

Food Chopper

 

 

plate #3

 

Made in the USA

 

It's a Keystone #5

 

Butterfly used this for such tasks as making sausage, grinding nuts and making potato pancakes.

 

Only part of the original box survives.

 

Important Info

 

all the parts

 

the various plates

 

When I first saw this I asked Butterfly where the rest of the plates were.  Then I read more closely and it says that the “food chopper” comes with plate #3; the others cost 35 cents each.

 

I found the price tag!

 

Who knew? $1.98!

 

How’s that for a price tag?  Relatively speaking, the plates were pretty expensive, which explains why Butterfly never bought them.

 

Since the original box was falling apart, Butterfly slipped it into a replacement box (as you now know, she never throws away anything).

 

I wonder who ate the Neccos?

 

Again, made in the USA!

 

Next I pulled a crumpled brown paper bag from the shelves under the stairs.  In it was “Handy Hannah” – remember her?

 

Handy Hannah Hair Dryer

 

It even has a temp control!

 

This is from the 50's.

 

I’m here to tell you that this beauty actually works!

 

Last but not least, I found this:

 

Kool-Aid, anyone?

 

This was the pitcher that she filled with Kool-Aid when we were kids.  Cherry was my favorite flavor.  And there was none of that sugar-free nonsense!   The sweeter, the better!

 

And now I must share a current treasure.  Butterfly just trotted down the hill with a plant in hand.

 

“You have to come outside and take a picture of this spider lily,” she ordered.  “It’s the only one we have blooming.”

 

spider lily

 

Yes, ma’am.  Who am I to argue?

It’s 4 O’clock Somewhere!

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You can always tell a true gardener and lover of plants.  They can’t give away their plants and seeds fast enough.  When flower lovers leave our place, their vehicles are always overflowing with bags of plants that Butterfly has helped them dig out of our flower beds, pots with various plants she has started from cuttings or seeds, cuttings from any tree she can force upon them and, of course, little bagsful of seeds.

 

A while back, a friend of mine, Meg, gave us a bunch of seeds from one of her favorite flowers, the Four O’clock.   The seeds look like black peppercorns, so even I can’t lose them.

 

pick a color, any color

 

What’s not to love about this flower?  There are multiple colors are one plant, and those colors are brilliant – so I’m happy!

 

yellow, pink, orange ... does it get any better?

 

Why are they called four o’clocks, you ask?  They bloom twice a day – early morning and early evening.  I’ve taken to calling mine seven o’clocks, which is when they like to bloom – 7am and 7pm.  The blossoms close up in the heat of the midday sun.

 

Another friend, Cindy, tells me that she first saw these flowers in Italy.  There they are called “Buongiorno, Buonasera”, which means “Good Morning, Good Evening”.  Makes sense, no?

 

look closely

 

If you look closely at these pictures, you’ll see that I’ve had to apply my special deer repellant to these plants.  The four o’clocks had grown almost 18” high, were getting ready to bloom and the deer came through one night to “prune”.  They mowed down the four o’clocks along with all of the phlox in the area.  To give the four o’clocks a second chance, I put sections of old field fence over them.  They have since grown through the wire and continued on their way to their full height, but the wire kept the deer away long enough so we could enjoy these gorgeous blossoms.  The phlox are once in again in full bloom, too.

 

delicious color

 

Since it is so dry in California right now, I’m expecting the deer to come through any night now, and gobble up every blossom in sight.

 

so bright you almost have to wear your sunglasses

 

perfection

 

Even though my 4 o’clocks are blooming at 7 o’clock, I don’t lecture them and tell them when they’re supposed to bloom.    I just tell myself, “It’s 4 o’clock somewhere!”

 

 

Moving Boulders

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There are soooooo many things that make delivering Meals on Wheels an enjoyable adventure.  First and foremost, of course, are the people we get to visit, all of whom are delightful.

 

The Rainbow Butterfly with Chinese lanterns

 

Then there are Butterfly’s colorful outfits and the bouquets she takes each week to the Senior Center.

 

Wild Skirt

 

She bought this skirt on her recent vacation in Hawaii.  I’m not sure it has enough colors in it.

 

Another favorite thing of ours is our route, which takes us meandering on the country roads of my youth.  They are the same roads I used to travel on my horse, Gypsy.  I pass the schools I attended as child.  We are used to seeing the normal wildlife of the California foothills: deer, turkey, squirrels, quail, hawks, etc.  But you just never know when you’re going to round a corner and be totally surprised.

 

Field of boulders

 

Suddenly I saw one of the boulders move.

 

“Holy cow,” I said to Butterfly, “those are tortoises!”

 

“I don’t see any tortoises,” she replied.

 

“There in the field – those are tortoises,” I said.

 

“No, those are just decorations,” she said.

 

“Wrong – one is moving!” I insisted.

 

“You’re right!  I saw one move!  Where’s your camera?” she demanded.  I have her so well trained!

 

I flipped a U-turn and got to a spot where I could take some photographs.

 

Munching tortoises

 

Is this a herd of tortoises?

 

Handsome fellow!

 

I have no idea why these tortoises are here, but they look quite content.  Perhaps their owner is a tortoise rescuer.

 

On our last stop of the day, I saw the sweetest sight when we pulled into the driveway.

 

Automatic sprinkler

 

This elderly fellow didn’t hear me drive in, so I was able to take his picture without him knowing.  There he sat, with his one-eyed cat in his lap, watering the plants on the side of the house.  He’s always busy in the yard and if his body won’t cooperate, he figures out a way to get the job done!

 

The lovely tree outside their door is beginning to show the first signs of autumn.

 

Time marches on ...

 

pretty colors tucked among the green

 

Just a few leaves in the tree have begun to turn.   Others that have made it to the ground were spectacular.

 

This one stopped me in my tracks.

 

Do they get any prettier than this?

 

Yes, it’s been another good Monday.  How was yours?

Celony’s Eyes

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Celony is sporting the cone of shame.  She doesn’t really mind it too much because she has had so much practice wearing it.  She is highly prone to pancreatitis, and each time she gets hospitalized she wears the cone of shame.

 

This time she’s wearing it because she had growths removed from both of her upper eyelids.

 

Celony tries to rest

 

One eye was showing signs of inflammation, so I’m putting ointment in it twice a day.

 

sore eyelids

 

She, of course, wants to rub both of them.

 

Not gonna happen on my watch!

Project Completed

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It takes me a while, but I do eventually get my projects completed.  You might remember me teasing you with this blog a while ago.

 

I started with this.

 

I showed you lots of pictures, but only of parts of the objects.  I let you guess as to what I might be up to.  If you are faithful readers of Butterfly’s Diary, you would have found a huge hint in one of her entries as to what my project was about.

 

She gave it away in this particular entry.

 

a "real" screen door - metal screen!

 

pretty touches

 

I had my work cut out for me, but I persisted and now am proud to show you the finished product.

 

What a difference!

 

This is the same screen door as in the first picture.  I bought it for $10 from one of our Meals on Wheels peeps.  She tried to sell it at a yard sale, but no one wanted it!   Can you believe that?  It was love at first sight for me.  Now I smile every time I walk by.  What a pretty garden gate – sure makes that nasty ol’ chain link look better.

 

Welcome to our veggie garden ...

 

After coming up with the idea for the first screen door, I remembered that I had another door in our barn.  I had tried to give it away for years, to no avail.  So I took off the screen, painted it and attached it to the gate going to our veggie garden.

 

... so pretty ...

 

I’m so pleased with myself.  Can you tell?

Where’s Butterfly?

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“Where’s Butterfly?” was all I heard last Monday, when I made the mistake of delivering Meals on Wheels while my mother was on her way to Hawaii.  I probably should have called in sick.  Instead I spent the day explaining to people that my mom was off on a little vacation.

 

I got up early to make sure I had plenty of time to get her work done, as well as mine.

 

flowers and veggies (and watermelon!)

 

Our garden is at a stage where we are getting more cucumbers and tomatoes that we can handle, so I took the extras to the Seniors Café.

 

August flowers

 

I even managed to put together a respectable bouquet, which is quite a feat in this August heat.  Hey – that rhymes!  Maybe I should put this on the poetry page!

 

But as much as people liked the veggies, and enjoyed the flowers, they were mostly concerned about Butterfly’s whereabouts.  At every delivery stop on my route, I was greeted at the door not with, “Hi, how are you?”, but “Where’s Butterfly?”

 

It’s really rather sad.  I used to have an identity.  Then, long, long ago, I became Chelsea’s mother.  And now … well now, I’m nothing more than Butterfly’s daughter.

 

She’d better get home quick, before I become totally invisible.

Another Project

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Welcome to my new and improved website!  I want to give a giant “thank you” to Chelsea and her roommate, Rob, for spending their precious free time with me to convert my site to its new platform.  My goal was to make it easier for me to blog and for you to navigate around the site.

 

There are a few new things that I should tell you about up front.  The first is that I’ve changed my name … back to what it really is.  I learned the art of name-changing from Butterfly.  When I first started my website, I decided to use Tammy as a nom de plume  for lots of reasons that you would probably find boring.  So let me just tell you that my real name is Sallysue.  Honest.  Butterfly did that to me.  And let me warn you that should you dare to call me “Sally”, you will hear about it from Butterfly.  She has been known to make grown men cry after they made the mistake of chopping my first name in half.  “Sal” is ok.  “Sally” is not.  She usually calls me “Kathy” or “Randy” (the names of my sister and brother), and somehow she finds that amusing.  Sometimes she even calls me by the names of her sisters.  Keeping names straight is not her strong suit.  In fact, she calls most people, even those her age or older “Kid”.  You’d be surprised how many people are delighted to be called “Kid”.

 

Next, a new feature on the website is Butterfly’s Diary.  You’ll find the most recent entry on the home page, or you can click on the tab at the top of the home page to scroll through all the days I’ve managed to enter.  She started keeping these diaries several decades ago, so don’t expect any miracles on my part in terms of getting them all entered.  Let me show you what I’m dealing with.

 

This is from June, 2001

 

See what I'm up against?

 

Each year for Christmas I give her one of these photo calendar books, usually from the Sierra Club.  The one pictured above I bought in Provence while I was living there.  I thought she would enjoy “seeing the sights with me” as she kept her daily journal.

 

I find reading her journals fascinating.  It’s intriguing to see what she thought was worth noting, and how she noted it.  Her 9/11/01 entry says, for example, simply “bombings – NY & Washington”, along with all of the other daily activities.

 

Of course, just as I’m starting to feature Butterfly’s diary on my website, she’s taking off for Hawaii for 2 weeks and won’t have access to a computer.

 

I'm sure she'll enjoy more shave ice, like she did last December

 

If I do receive news from her, I will make diary entries.  Otherwise I will keep digging into her archives and putting up old entries, just for grins.

 

Last but not least, I am featuring lots of my all-time favorite photographs.  I’ve taken these over the years while traveling or hiking or just gardening in my yard.  They are available for purchase as notecards or prints.  If you are interested in making a purchase, please email me through the contact page and we can discuss.

 

I hope you enjoy the changes.