Friday, July 13, 2018

Things to do, things we do, living in Washington County

People ask me what I do when I am here. "The usual things, shopping , cooking , laundry."" Of Course, they reply"

But I do many many other things. My day generally begins with a quick trip to heaven in the form of a walk . Heaven because I am accompanied but the music of songbirds, the greetings from frogs, and I get to breathe the delicious air around here. Though at this time of the year it can be flavored with the scent of the manure that has been spread on the fields.
I have a couple of rooms in which I can sew, or draw; space that I have here, that I don't have in Sydney.
Michael & I both love to visit thrift stores, yard sales and the like. It is a dangerous pastime.
Michael loves to visit a huge store, near the Supermarket where we sometimes shop. It is called Tractor Supply. ( serious hardware sold here!) Last night, to his dismay , it was shut. But he was consoled by finding, on the side of the road, a shower chair. 'Perfect for me in the barn' And here he is happily seated while fixing a window.
Michael spends a lot of time in the barn, his wonderful Man Cave. With the radio on, regular deliveries of coffee from the kitchen, his needs for a happy day are simple.

But then..... we have visitors. 2 this year..... time to go touring , traveling , sight seeing. This visit we have been to the Bennington Museum ( home to many paintings by Grandma Moses who lived not far from here. We have been to the top of Mt.Equinox  the highest point in this part of the Taconic range.We also visited the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. I love the buildings that house the art almost as much as I enjoy looking and experiencing the art. Read the history of the building. It is a story of so many wonderful old factories along the Hudson. Important in the years when America was great! I had visited an old shirt Factory in Glens Falls a couple of months back, now offering artist and artisanal spaces for a wide variety of creative activities. Its history tells a similar story

Thursday, June 7, 2018

A return after a long break!

A long time between posts, but as I am moving away from Social Media, I’m back to  blogging. 
We arrived upstate on the 25th April. Winter was closer than Spring! There had been a ice storm only 2 weeks before we arrived. But I was happy to escape the ongoing heat of our southern Hemisphere city  , and I find beauty in this place all the time, so bare branches were just the promise of things to come. The air was cool and even the heater woke up in the early hours of the morning. 


But I did discover evidence, quite a lot of it, of some home invaders seeking the warmth of our clothing & linen . Mice had been nestling in drawers and closets. people told me how cold and long the winter had been, so after the first find of mouse poo, I was feeling some empathy for the creatures. Lots of washing, cleaning out . But then I stopped  that to prepare for  a Sydney visitor. I do love it when our family and friends comes to share this amazing place with us. As T. was only to be here a few days , we wanted her to see some of the local attractions. On a cold wet day, when Michael was coming down with a cold, we headed off to Bennington to the museum , where we enjoyed the delights of Grandma  Moses’ paintings  and  a lovely  TV interview with her ( done so long ago it was in black and white!). Followed by a drive to Manchester to visit the Northshire bookshop
The water pump failed , so no water for 30 hours till the plumber arrived, and the internet was dodgy so our guest endured a taste of country life , and seemed none the  worse for it! It was sad to see her go on her next adventure.
The house invaders evidence has been remediated , items washed, patched or even discarded . and textiles will be packed away in future.
So then spring turns up , somewhat late and in a hurry, and suddenly we were in tee shirts and complaining that it was too hot. 
Here is the same view exactly one month later.



The birds are busy, the bumblebees are busy, a few scout Monarch butterflies have visited to check out the state of our milkweed ( tardy) . And it cooled down again! In the first week of summer. But summer doesn’t last too long here so Nature is getting on with business , this week the poppies in the meadow are opening, the irises are out and all is good

For now, we are enjoying catching up with friends  and family, and eagerly awaiting our next guest who arrives in a few weeks.



 


Friday, November 27, 2015

October 2015

Crickets: In my phone, I used to be able to choose the sound of crickets chirping for the rare occasion when I needed to set an alarm. Sometime along the way a programme update hid the cricket option.
Last week, the crickets were still calling outside the front door of our house in Upstate New York. Autumn was dealing out brilliant colour at the tree canopy level, but at the grasshopper level it was still summer.
This morning all that changed as we woke to frost and minus 4 C. Later in the morning on our way to Saratoga Springs, light flurries of snow along with rapidly swirling leaves flew at the windscreen.
We’ve been here two weeks already, cleaning and tidying up, indoors and out. The forsythia, which threatens to take over the whole garden and maybe, the village, has succumbed to my shiny new mattock, and is now contained for a while.
The Village: There has been a major disruption to hamlet life. The Post Office has closed down and there is little sign of hope that it will be re-opened.
It used to be housed over the road from us, in the former railway station. Now there is silence, no longer the trucks making deliveries throughout the day, no cars scrunching the stones on the driveway as people come to deliver and pick up mail. The railway station appears abandoned.
The building did not meet the work health and safety standards of the US Post Office, and the landlord was not available or prepared, I don’t know which, to fix it up. Some people say that the PO is looking for another suitable building, others say if that were the case, the PO would have put in a mobile one until that happened.
There are two other shops in the hamlet, one a small general store with the best butcher in the state of New York, famous for his sausages, the other an antique store. Most days, it seems , there are fewer cars in the street than used to be. This is not good. The PO was part of the social glue; farmers, trades people, town folk met up with each other. Some left their finished-with books, magazines, for others to take home and enjoy. A neighbour used to keep a range of books for children to read, or have read to them. That had already stopped after the previous postmaster retired. He, Rosie, was the newspaper of the hamlet, sharing useful information and updates of people unwell, people out of town for a while, people coming back for the holidays. But always discreet & never gossiping. When we bought our house, he bought a school globe for the counter, to show curious customers how we came from the ends of the earth. We met people who had lived in our house. It felt like we were connected.
The Walks: The walks continue to be my constant joy as well as necessary exercise. The corn fields I pass, I have now seen in each season, the hills on the horizon now changing colours, appearing as a patchwork, autumn golds, reds, greens, and mauves, underneath a blue sky with thick fluffy clouds. The walks are never boring, a pheasant couple skedaddle along the corn rows when they see me; the crows plotting; no deer as yet in the day time, but what is this? A spinal column with tiny scapula attached, down here alongside the road? One of last summer’s juveniles that didn’t see the car coming? I go to pick it up, Michael is into drawing and also studying forensic anthropology, it might make a nice gift for him. I pick it up with gloved fingers, though it is already picked clean by the crows, but the skeletal remains disintegrate and fall softly back to the earth.
Another walk takes me past the pig farm, and the chicken farm, where in summer, they are protected by beautiful white dogs.
That walk also goes past a dairy farm. Photographs cannot convey the rich scent of manure, which seems to be recycled onto the cornfields.
This place moves me, not more or better than the beautiful places in Australia, but in a different way, that maybe hooks memories and memories of feelings of my childhood, growing up in England, often in rural or semi rural places. Smells, sounds, sights seem to reach out to something deep within me that would otherwise lie dormant.

 I open my new collection from Mary Oliver. Her poem “ Nothing is too small not to be wondered about” ends with

“But certainly it doesn’t mean he hasn’t been an excellent cricket all his life”



I go to set the alarm on my phone; I find the crickets in a different folder. The world is right for now.

Saturday, January 3, 2015

River Gems 3

Finally, this video tells me how I think these gems are made


What a perfect walk. What bliss.

River Gems 2

So when I got closer to home, I walked to the beach near the Georgi for a closer view....

 They are so perfectly formed, exquisite

River Gems 1

I took my favourite walk up to the bridge on the Battenkill this afternoon. Its been hard to get out, what with a head cold, chilly winds , and outings. The river has gone down since Christmas, but I noticed these sparkling gems on the river banks.



Little frozen water bottles

River diamonds, I told myself

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Artist magnet

I am not surprised there are so many artists living and painting in this area.
Looking towards Vermont


A bend in the Battenkill river as it journeys towards the Hudson