Detail from "Rain Dance," an original quilt by Sherrie Spangler

Thursday, October 31, 2019

Superb fall color this year!


It's not just my imagination that the fall leaves this year are the most colorful in recent memory. It's true! Local weather guru Cliff Mass did a blog post confirming this and detailing the conditions needed for spectacular fall color:
 puget-sound-autumn-colors-are-best-in.html


Here are some photos I took this past week just on one street in my neighborhood.









The colors are the same as in this quilt block that I did last year based on October colors:


Inside the house, the autumn colors continued with roasted sweet potatoes ...


... and a fall place setting. On the menu was a creamy tomato basil soup and sweet potato-cranberry-pecan salad with maple vinaigrette dressing. Yum!


Have a colorful day


Sunday, October 27, 2019

Woolies, WOW!


At our last Woolies meeting, the show and tells were so many and so wonderful and came so quickly that I can't remember who made what. So I'll just show them to you and let you know that each maker did a fantastic job!

(I do remember that these first two pictures are of a quilt that Pam is making based on a design drawn by one of her son's friends.)









The last picture is a detail 
from the quilt I'm working on.


Have a wonderful day


Monday, October 21, 2019

Rainy wandering in Port Orchard


When the Feet and Forks set a date to walk, we don't let a little rain stop us! Last weekend it rained a LOT, but we unfurled our umbrellas and walked for two hours along the waterfront in Port Orchard, WA. Kandi's umbrella started out with a white design, but after it got wet it turned colors. 


We had most of the walkway to ourselves, including this pier that seems to disappear into the Puget Sound.


We never know what we'll find on a walk. 
This time there was a totem pole,


...  a Navy boat being hauled out of the water,


... brave sailors out in the rain,



... and Nick at the Nostalgia House Bakery, who volunteered to put custard filling into a donut when I was disappointed that the custard ones were sold out. I've never had a bakery do that for me before, no matter how disappointed I look!


On the way out of the bakery,
there was this sign above the door.
Thank YOU!

Here's an article about the bakery's origins: 96564990


Then we had lunch at Whiskey Gulch and I forgot to get pictures. I had a gyro and a salad and Kandi and Joyce shared two kinds of tacos -- jackfruit with fried avocado, and, I think, chicken.

We keep walking to delay that check engine light from coming on.


Have a colorful day


Thursday, October 17, 2019

Getting cozy


It's the time of the season ... 
to turn on the fireplace


and fix hot cocoa


and curl up with some soft wool to stitch.


Here is a peek at the project I'm working on -- wool appliqué on a cotton background. My friend Linda punched out the snowflake, and I punched out the snow circles with a leather hole punch.


Keeping with the night sky theme, I just ordered this bunny fabric to use in a stroller quilt for a gift. The mom likes soft grey and yellow and has a starry night theme going in the nursery. And the bunnies are just the icing on the top for me! 


Here are the bunnies I have in my entry, tucked into fall leaves. Hope you feel all warm and cozy now!


Have a colorful day


Sunday, October 13, 2019

Olympia Farmers Market and Nisqually Delta


Yesterday began at the Olympia (WA) Farmers Market. It was a lazy, overcast morning, but the brilliant colors of peppers, apples, pears, carrots and other produce brightened the scene.




But what really caught my eye were the bakeries and chocolatiers. I got so excited making my selections that I forgot to take pictures, except for this sign. I ended up with a slice of Swedish almond cake, an apple Danish, a chocolate cookie and a Kahlua truffle. Only the truffle remains.


There was laid back music by some old guys -- funny how everyone my age looks old now.


Then I walked off the sweets at the Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge. By then the sky was a soft blue around the clouds and temps had climbed to almost 60 degrees. The tide was out, revealing a muddy estuary bottom.


The Nisqually River Delta is Washington's largest relatively undisturbed estuary. The confluence of freshwater from the river and saltwater from the south Puget Sound has created a variety of unique environments and is home to more than 300 different species of fish and other wildlife. 


The cloudy appearance of the river is from silt in the glacier melt that forms the river. The river starts 78 miles away on Mount Rainier with the melting of the Nisqually Glacier.


I saw a pair of bald eagles perched high in a tree, but they were too far away to photograph. I also saw a Great Blue Heron stalking lunch in the water, but again it was too far away for a good photo.


This naked white tree stood out starkly against the sky, with the Olympic Mountains in the background.


It was a very peaceful few miles of leisurely walking through shady glades and along boardwalks through the wetlands. By the time I got home (after lunch at the Ram), I was comfortably full and tired and had a nice nap on the couch.


Have a colorful day