welcome

I HOPE YOU ENJOY OUR CREATIONS
AND FIND THE ARTIST IN YOU
AND IN YOUR KIDS RELEASED TO CREATE AND HAVE FUN.

Tuesday, 3 September 2013

LIFE AT TURTLE POINT

RED SLIDER TURTLE

FIND:
2 turtles, snail, dragonfly, 2 ducks, spider,
2 lady bugs, water bug, kinglet bird, caterpillar,
 moth, frog, ant, Swallowtail butterfly

The following poem reminds me of summers
at my Grandparent's home. Their large property
included a sandy bank near a pond where turtles laid their eggs
in the warm sand. My Grandfather would carefully remove
a leathery egg, allow for a short moment of wonderment
and awe, and then gently return the egg to its safe and 
 sandy nest. (not too many miles from Robert Frost's farm)

Turtle Poetry
The Egg and the Machine
ROBERT FROST

He gave the solid rail a hateful kick.
From far away there came an answering tick,
And then another tick. He knew the code:
His hate had roused an engine up the road.
He wished when he had had the track alone
He had attacked it with a club or stone
And bent some rail wide open like a switch,
So as to wreck the engine in the ditch.
Too late though, now, he had himself to thank.
Its click was rising to a nearer clank.
Here it came breasting like a horse in skirts.
(He stood well back for fear of scalding squirts.)
Then for a moment all there was was size,
Confusion, and a roar that drowned the cries
He raised against the gods in the machine.
Then once again the sandbank lay serene.
The traveler’s eye picked up a turtle trail,
Between the dotted feet a streak of tail,
And followed it to where he made out vague
But certain signs of
buried turtle’s egg;
And probing with one finger not too rough,
He found suspicious sand, and sure enough,
The pocket of a little turtle mine.
If there was one egg in it there were nine,
Torpedo-like, with shell of gritty leather,
All packed in sand to wait the trump together.
"You’d better not disturb me anymore,"
He told the distance, "I am armed for war.
The next machine that has the power to pass
Will get this plasm in its goggle glass."

                               

                                                               

Friday, 14 June 2013

WHEAT FREE GLUTEN FREE BANANA CORN BREAD


4 to 6 bananas depending on size.
(this recipe is very forgiving with
variations in amounts still producing
a happy outcome)


2 cups corn flour
2 cups corn meal
1 cup ground flax
1 tsp salt
4 tsp baking powder
4 Tablespoons olive oil
caraway seed
BLEND TOGETHER WELL


Have an additional 1/2 cup of ground
flax soaking in water. This will be your
egg substitute.


Mash bananas


1-2 cups of butter milk. I keep adding until
I have the consistancy I'm happy with. Thick,
moist, not runny. I mix my banana, buttermilk and
soaked flax together before mixing with the
dry ingredients. Gently stir the wet into the dry.
Add more buttermilk as needed.


Ready to bake
360 oven for about an hour.


Best served right out of the oven


Refrigerate. . .serve toasted


Good with marmalade.

Thursday, 13 June 2013

BLACK AND WHITE GYOTAKU TOTE BAGS


I made several of these gyotaku
tote bags last year for gifts.



I used acrylic paints.



My brother caught the fish for me in Oregon.
They reside in my freezer and can be used
multiple times.




Lots of room and pockets. Good for
shopping, diaper bags or work totes.


These would make a nice keepsake of a special
fishing trip.

Wednesday, 12 June 2013

COTTON FLUFF CRAFT


For the past month this lovely cotton fluff
has been floating through the air like a
gentle dry snowstorm.
There is an abundance of it everywhere I
can't help wondering how I might make use of it.


In just a couple of mornings I have collected
plenty to experiment with. I need
to keep a mesh screen over the box as it
is so light. With the slightest movement of air it
starts to float all about my house.


I collected my cotton from the park near my house.
The cotton congregates along the edges of pathways and waterways alike.


A fairyland on a still spring morning.


I have removed all the cotton fluff from the
seed pods. The pods are from the Black Cottonwood trees.


I mixed the cotton with water in a small blender.


I also added some crushed dried roses that
my husband had given me for valentine's day.



I added blackberry juice and white glue to
the wet fluff I had placed in cookie cutters.


Mixing blackberry juice with white glue.
I always keep blackberry juice refrigerated
as I like painting with it.


I also made some of my project plain,
 heart shaped and uncoloured.


I dried them in a low oven. They come out
 light and fluffy.

I also tried making some fluff into "paper."
It didn't hold its shape. "scrapped" that idea!

 

A lovely fluffy blackberry heart.


Already for a craft project.


Friday, 7 June 2013

HANDCRAFTED PAPER


Mix shredded paper and "cotton" from the
Cottonwood trees in a blender with water.
When well blended you have your slurry.



I've collected a whole box of cotton from the
Cottonwood trees.


The cottonwood seed pods cover the ground like snow.
The bits of fluff picked up by the wind swirl about
like a gentle snowstorm.


I mixed more cotton into the slurry.



Once well mixed I poured the slurry
onto a mesh screen.


We pressed the slurry into place covering
the entire screen.

We pressed flower petals, leaves, dandelion seeds
and dried tea into our wet slurry.


Once we have completed our design we placed
our "paper in a low oven to speed the drying process.


Once dry it is ready to cut into whatever
shape you like.





These paper hearts are made by putting the
wet slurry in a heart shaped cookie cutter.


I've incorporated this paper in a mobile.



Wasps are masters at making paper.







Friday, 31 May 2013

HANDCRAFTED BUTTER


Creamy yellow butter.
This was a great science lesson for my
homeschoolers.
We learned about emulsions, fat globules 
and suspensions. We learned the difference 
between "milk" and "cream" and that when
I grew up it all came together in the same bottle :)


We started with whipping cream.


We filled our jar to just over half way 
 with the cream. We took turns shaking
the jar for about 15 to 20 minutes.


We had a peek after about 10 minutes to find
it thick and creamy turning in whipped cream.


Soon we could see the fat globules starting
to clump together on the sides of the jar


The butter has separated from the liquid.


Pouring the buttermilk off the butter.


Scooping the butter out into a dish.



Delicious on hot homemade cornbread.