It has been a long time since I made a barn quilt for the side of our house. I have one for Thanksgiving (fall), one for Christmas, another for winter and this one for spring.
gesso) on the canvas.
Life is a highway.... I am living a dream as I travel and explore our world. What will I find around the next corner?
It has been a long time since I made a barn quilt for the side of our house. I have one for Thanksgiving (fall), one for Christmas, another for winter and this one for spring.
Just under a month ago I wrote about the "Comfort Table" that I have for my long arm. It has been wonderful. It allows me to easily raise and lower the table at the touch of a button. I have been working on a quilt for a while (years, actually!) and chose to use micro-quilting for much of it. For those who aren't quilters, micro-quilting is very dense, tiny quilting stitches used in the background. It is slow going, and I chose to move the table low enough so I could sit in a chair while I worked on the quilt. It was perfect! It surely saved my back some ache!
I replaced that black box back under the frame on the sticky part of a velcro strip, where it had resided previously. All was good.
And, on a positive note, a representative from APQS called me later in the day. Even though I had not contacted them, my selling dealer had forwarded my email to them. Now, that's wonderful service! 😁
Previously I wrote about damages many of our plants sustained from our colder than normal winter.
Our Pygmy Palm was one such victim.
I trimmed the dead fronds off in March, hoping that the wee bit of green I could see near the heart of the palm would sustain it and produce new fronds.

This may take you back a few years; but the song and the singer!
On our recent trek to NC I noticed something on the road up ahead that didn't look....normal!
It wasn't!
This pear shaped vehicle turns out to be a moped with a pear shaped covering made from 2 x 4's and aluminum cans. The owner/designer/driver is on his way across country. We passed Glubbey on US 301 just before the GA state line. I found a recent article at Road & Track, where they interviewed the owner/designer/driver in Chattanooga, TN - so he is making progress! If you are an instagram user, you can follow him @glubbey.
We Dreamers recently returned to Florida from NC. We were towing a trailer with a tiny tractor and a few other implements on it. Neither of us prefers traveling on the Interstates in SC, as in most areas the roads are substandard. They have not been enlarged to 3 or more lanes and traffic is horrendous. For too many years the state has failed to acquire enough funds for its roads and maintenance and/or new development so improvements are lagging or severely lacking. (We lived in SC for 34 years...we kinda see/understand what is/has happened!)
So, we often opt for traveling on the by-ways. The highways of times gone by. We usually take State 321 out of Columbia to US 301, all the way to Ocala, FL. These roads were some of the original major thoroughfares for travelers in the past.
Sadly, the opening of the Interstates was a death knell for the small towns on the former major thoroughfares. In areas where no manufacturing existed, or those without colleges/universities that brought young folks into the area, the towns slowly shriveled up....and died.
![]() |
| From the Internet |
I had the occasion to visit a Veterinarian's practice this weekend. Kaitlyn stepped on something while we were out for our morning constitutional. The poor girl squatted to pee when her paw encountered something. Something that really bothered her. She began to hop on three legs, stop, lick her back paw vigorously, get up, take a step, hop a few times, stop, lick and repeat. I checked her paw, numerous times. I felt in between her to toes. I checked the pads, I could see nothing, I could feel nothing. Her behavior persisted. I had to call The Mister to come pick her up - she only weighs 25 pounds, but having one dog on a leash, and another in my arms just doesn't seem to work.
I went back to the scene of the incident. I didn't see any ground bees (yellow jackets) or ants. I didn't see any bugs. I brushed my hand through the area and didn't get poked by anything.
Kaitlyn continued to fret about her foot. Examining it under lights we could see no reason, nor feel anything that might cause her to have such discomfort. She paced from one end of the motorhome to the other, sometimes putting weight on the foot, sometimes hopping. She was panting and wanted to chew and lick her paw. I held a towel with ice chips on it, then soaked her foot in cold, icy water. Nothing was easing her anxious behavior and obvious discomfort.
We called the closest vet, and emergency service in Flat Rock, NC, about 35 miles from us. Off we went. About half way there Kaitlyn finally settled down. She stopped her pacing, licking and panting. Of course.... isn't it good news that whatever it was, perhaps a sting, had resolved itself and was no longer causing discomfort. We continued on to the vet planning to assess her behavior upon our arrival, and hopefully, let them know we didn't need their services.
When we pulled into the parking lot I noticed a young woman sitting in the back of an SUV with a sweet, hound dog's head in her lap. The dog had that skeletal look of a very old, faithful pup. She never lifted her head, nor made any other move. While we walked around the parking lot, checking Kaitlyn's gait and watching her behavior, brief glances at the SUV began to fill in the story.
The woman was soon accompanied by a Veterinarian. She came and sat with the woman and her hound dog. They talked a bit. The Vet pet the old gal, and placed a tourniquet on her leg. We turned the corner. I found it hard to hold my emotions in check. Too many times I had been in that situation. Each story was a bit different; a story of a dog with its own tale to tell. Each time I felt such depth of sadness, while still realizing what a gift I was giving to let my best friend go peacefully.
When we returned to our car the woman remained in the back of her SUV. Hunched over her dog, cradling and stroking its head, tears running down her face and falling on the pup. My heart was with her. My heart knows that pain. It is so hard. It hurts. But soon I hope the happy memories she has of her hound will help push away the sadness.
It has been a long time since I made a barn quilt for the side of our house. I have one for Thanksgiving (fall), one for Christmas, another...