Friday, July 22, 2011

Is it summer yet?

We have been having the most amazingly weird summer! There have been maybe 4 days when the temperatures exceeded 80 F, and more rain in the past week then usually falls for an entire summer, June through September.

While this has spelled miserable conditions for our heat- loving vegetables like peppers and tomatoes, the broccoli, cauliflower and slug crops have been awe-inspiring. We'd like to share these beauties:

 In fact, does broccoli ship well?

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Tree house update

This is the scene of the tree house before construction began:
the two trees, site of future tree house, deck and connecting bridge
Mitch, left, and Mike try out the deck support system.
Mike and Charlie below the main tree house tree supports.
The view of the beginning phase from the deck tree down to the tree house tree.

Friday, July 15, 2011

So Cal trip, at last!

 
Amy and Jamie welcome us to the Village! You will notice that they are wearing warm clothing, as we conveniently imported refreshing Oregon weather all the way to Southern California.
Last month (yes that does make it sound like a long, long time ago, but really time has flown since then, so it's not) we drove down to see "the kids" in Los Angeles, their families, and Mike's Dad, Hank, in La Jolla. Amy, Jamie and their son, Felix, Patrick, Em, and their sons, Finn and Jack, and many of their friends and Em's sister and brother-in-law, live in Los Feliz Village. Los Feliz is not to be confused with Felix.

OK, got that? -  Lots of people who know each other living in one large apartment complex where the kids can run feral, no cars to worry about, a swimming pool, and a little park complete with barbeques and picnic tables. Sort of like a commune, without the existential angst. Or any over-arching "philosophy." Just a nifty way for families who like spending time together to do so. And, we'd like to add, a great way for visiting grandparents to get to see everybody in a relaxed and natural environment. Which makes it sound like a safari park, but it's not.
A friendly spotted dragon smiles - Oh, wait, that's not a dragon, that's Jack! And he's having a picnic dinner at the Los Feliz Village park with his family, aunts, uncle, cousin, and grandparents. No wonder he's so happy.
Em and her equally adorable sister, Bell, at the park/picnic area.
 From there we all went to La Jolla to see Hank. It was warmer and sunnier! We spent time on Saturday at the beach:
Beach boys.
Amy and Felix arrive.
Finn, left, and Jack got buried quite a few times.
While Finn did marine algae research,
Jack observed, kindly holding his grandpa's hand so Mike wouldn't be concerned about all the waves crashing in.
Jack did venture off from Mike, getting in some algal research of his own.
Sunday was Father's Day, and we had a bunch of Dore lineage fathers there for the event - four generations of males, in fact!
Finn on Patrick's lap, Hank, Mike with Jack, and Jamie with Felix. A handsome and happy band of fathers and sons, all a-Dore-able and a-Dored.

Finally, a stop at the playground to run off the ya-yas and then back to LA.

Mike unleashing his Ya-yas.

Felix doing the same.

Monday, July 11, 2011

It's a Burl! (Amy, BEWARE!)

En route home from So Cal, we stopped at the highly quirky roadside attraction between Grants Pass and Cave Junction, OR - It's a Burl! Beyond myrtle wood bowls, beyond chainsaw art, beyond even the Treesort, "It's a Burl!" offers a wood working extravaganza - a Disneyland of burls in a cornucopia of sizes, shapes, functions and levels of handiwork. Take a gander:
This is one of two treehouses on the premises. Note that the windows are framed by burls taken from branch scars.
This is the front of the show and sales room and much more! If you have the ability to click on the photo and see things more clearly, check out the carved face hanging at the back building's gable peak. Then scan through the porch miscellany.
A chair built from burls. The staff here were involved in many stages of the construction of various items of furniture, all from burls and other rough-hewn tree parts: benches, tables, chairs, love seats, lamps, you name it.

The resident carver seems quite skilled and possessed of a tendency to whimsy.  And far better at rendering than your average Oregon chain saw artist!
This is tree house #2, or maybe #1, considering its size and scope. There's a spiral staircase to get up into it, three floors of progressively grander square footage, and a final impressive view of It's a Burl-ville.

Another great face.
And another, on the post as one enters the show room. Again, check out the porch if you can enlarge the view.
"Burl-esque" is the display area for burls of all forms and origins. Each of the slabs of wood on the pallets is a burl, usually cut to 3 or 4 inch width.
 Finally, for the unenlightened, this link for the Wikipedia "burl" definition. And for the truly brave, "It's a Burl!"

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Tribute gardens in full bloom

When we started landscaping our new home in earnest, maybe five years ago, we incorporated two areas specifically dedicated to honoring our moms. A "Pat garden" and a "Nelly garden." Our moms were pretty different women, yet similar in interesting ways. For instance, Nelly was born on May 1st and Pat's birthday was May 2nd. Both loved a good social gathering, but while Nelly's social world was more family, friends, tennis, bridge and party centered, Pat's was family, Art League, Girl Scouts, the family church and its school of fine arts. It has been fun to interpret each of these vibrant women in our choices of plants and colors.

This is an azalea right under the window. The coral color was one of Nelly's favorites in her wardrobe and in her home. 
The Nelly Garden is out our kitchen window, gets a lot of sun, and has more fancy flowers in it - lilies, azaleas, gladiolus, and a large, lovely lavendar pentstemon, 'Catherine de la Mer'. Nelly was a Southern California woman, had an impeccable sense of style, color and fashion, was an absolute social queen, and loved beauty.
Nelly Garden from the kitchen window, back in June.
And just today, as things progress.

Lilies and pentstemon.

The Pat Garden is on the northeast corner of the landscaping and much of it is shaded some part of the day by either a large walnut tree or that side of the house. As she was devoted to native wild flowers, we have incorporated many of those in this area - trillium, wild iris, violets, Oregon grape, and her favorite, foxgloves.
Columbines in the June sun.

A view from the east side with yarrow, lamb's ear and the foxgloves in the rear.

More Pat garden.






Saturday, June 18, 2011

Happy Father's Day, Dad/Bud!


Dad, here's hoping you have a great Father's Day! All the Dores send their best wishes, too.


We stopped at a great place in Southern Oregon that is a resort composed entirely of treehouses. This was strictly a research visit, of course. We hope to end up there with either the grandsons or with Owen and Adrian. Any kid would go crazy there, but these boys in particular would love any place with treehouses and ziplines.


We got a lot of great ideas for our treehouse project, and some impressive important hardware. More later on this topic!

Today's weather was forecast as overcast and partly sunny, but the weather gods relented and allowed Mike and Molly the finest day of sun and breezes and warmth that we'd seen all year. So we made the most of it and took the grandsons - and their dads - down to the beach in La Jolla. Lovely!!

Finally, we all went out to eat at the beloved Mexican restaurant here and finished off with your favorite, Dad, Ice Cream! However, I would bet good money that you never even thought to try a scoop of "Bubblegum" with one of "Cotton Candy," topped off with a healthy (?) sprinkle of gummy bear candy.

Lots of love, Dad!

Monday, June 13, 2011

More Birds and a Bear

We said it before and can say it again - this must be the year of the bird. Several new avian episodes must be reported, and one sad demise. Let's get that one out of the way.

We have three cylindrical seed dispensing feeders that all hang from one central metal post, each on a separate arm. The feeder is under a young maple located 20 - 30 feet from the house, in the hope that while it's close enough to be able to watch the action, that the main flight paths will be clear of the house. However, this latter hope has proven not to be. Our house is only 24 feet wide and there are large windows on either side, so it looks  like there's a clear shot through to the average bird brain. Window? What's a windo---Crash!

Last year, after several heart-breaking (or, from the birds' viewpoint, neck-breaking) fatalities in a row, I hung a series of bird-diverting old CDs from string attached just under the eaves. This has worked wonders - until this spring, and either the birds are acclimated to the CDs or don't believe in their scariness or something, but impacts have increased once again. I'm open to remedial suggestions.

Yesterday, I heard a small thump, and being accustomed to gauging the severity of the impact by its sound level, judged that it was a non-fatal hit. Later, though, we discovered the body of a young female rufus hummingbird just below the glass door. No CDs hang there. The tiny bird must have hit at pretty high speed to have made any sound at all.

I have always been astonished at the miniature size of the hummingbirds. To hold that small body and see the exquisite detail of coloration and form was moving. She didn't weigh much more than a cicada. The legs are smaller in diameter than grass stems, and each contain tiny veins, arteries, little bitty muscles, and networks of nerves as well as the delicate, hollow bones. So small, so perfect, and now so dead.

The wing feathers interlock to create a more air-resistant surface, and yet are translucent due to their thinness. I put my finger behind it to show how one can see right through. 




Let's all take a moment of silence for her, and for all the wee birdies that die every day every year against human windows.

Since I started writing this, two different evening grosbeaks have hit the dining room window, and neither died. We have stopped feeding the birds. In addition to the injuries and fatalities, the little ingrates have been shredding our garden plant sets. Today I discovered that new brocolli plants had had delicate leaves just snipped off, allowed to fall, not even eaten.

Other bird lore: I watched a crow chasing a hawk and as they neared the tops of the cottonwood trees, the hawk did a roll and presented its talons - upside down, mid-air! The crow immediately fled.

There is a young hawk who makes a bunch of noise as it flies, probably to let Mom know where it is. Last Friday, it landed in the top of a fir tree above the barn, and the adult hawk flew up to it, but did not land, dangling a snake in its talons. It seemed to be enticing the youngster to follow, and eventually it did, the two spiraling quite high before heading off.

On yet another occasion of dog ball throwing, Charlie had completely lost his blue ball and I was trying to help. We were down in the portion of the lawn near the creek, and the male bald eagle flew up-creek, using Mosby as its flyway. It was maybe 20 yards away and I could see it more clearly than I had ever seen one in the wild before - white head, steely eye, white tail. Very awesome.

And for our final story, one morning at 4 am, Charlie was barking like crazy. Usually when he gets worked up about some nocturnal event, we turn on the back light and he happily trots in to sleep in the bathroom. In fact, sometimes I suspect that he goes into the barking act just to wrangle a night inside. This time was quite different. When I turned on the light, he did come, but he kept at a distance, continued barking and springing around, and then went charging off again.  Mike succeeded in making him cease and desist. Now we recognize that he was yelling, "Code Red!" The next morning, Mike awoke to find that the birdfeeder was bent to the ground, all the hanging seed cylinders were stripped off their arms, and the one that would not open easily had massive teeth-made holes.

One neighbor up our back hill has had his beehive marauded by a bear, and another neighbor's shed door was ripped off by - probably - the same bear in order to access their trash. I called Fish and Wildlife and spoke to a biologist who was very enlightening. He says that this cool wet spring we're having has kept the normal bear fare from ripening - the wild strawberries and thimbleberries, etc. Bears subsist on grass and ferns until these come in, but don't really get much nourishment from the greens and start looking for grubs and insect hives to supplement some protein. Or, as our resourceful local bear has done, start moving into human environments to check out the potential.

Yet another reason to cease feeding the birds - which was the biologist's recommendation, saying that they don't need it any longer. I'll miss all the shows and the cheerful racket, but can do without the drama.