Sunday, May 11, 2008

Just stuff . . .



~Mother-Daughter team~

Allyson Knapp and her mom Susan Weathers in the midst of their restoration efforts at Selle Grange. Yesterday was open house, and lots of folks stopped by to see the fruits of their labors since January.

The grange is exquisite, and soon the grounds around it will offer more beauty for anyone wanting to get married, celebrate a reunion, or just put together any special event in a lovely country setting. Allyson loves to plan, so she's happy to offer her ideas.

More information about "Enchanted Events" can be found at (http://www.eventective.com/USA/Idaho/Sandpoint?244988/Enchanted-Events.html). So check 'em out.

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~Practical application~

So you've got a shot put circle in your back yard. Whaddya do if you've given up your sport? Plant flowers, of course.

By the way, a special thanks to Kathy at Seasons at Sandpoint, who gave me a batch of last year's bulbs from the resort. The results are beginning to show.

I'm still figuring we may be one of the few families in Bonner County or even Idaho with their own shot put circle.

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Still no leaves popping out on deciduous trees, but we're getting there. Looking north on the Lovestead lawn.
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Saturday, May 10, 2008

Saturday Slight


Oh, what a beautiful morning! If I had my way, every day would have temperatures ranging from 40-70, the grass would be green, the flowers blooming, and the birds, chirping. That's what we're experiencing here now that spring has finally arrived.

I looked out the kitchen window and commented to Bill about the one remaining snow bank in the far field next to Casey's grave. It should be gone by Monday, I'd guess.

This morning brings a bit of concern. Our kitty Festus did not come when called last night, and there's still no sign of him this morning. The Taylors from across the road came over last week looking for their kitty. Don't know if they found it, but I'm sure hoping to see Festus running across the yard with Kea and Kiwi on his tail. Fingers crossed.

I think I'm going to take my mother to the open house (10-5) at the restored Selle Grange today. Then, we may go to the Flower Farm so she can pick out some posies. Selle Grange No. 313 has a phenomenal history here in Bonner County, dating back to June 14, 1932, and definitely having the Meserve touch from next door.

In fact, I think I'll do my next column about its historical highlights and the ladies who bought it and turned it into an events center. I stopped by there yesterday, and they were doing the last minute spruce up, hoping to be finished by evening when a private party would enjoy the fruits of their labors, which include two gorgeous crystal chandeliers. They're Coeur d'Alene ladies---one's the Coeur d'Alene City Clerk. Betcha know her, Helen.

They've done a lovely job of restoration, and like Brad and Lynda Scott did with the old junior high, they've given a gift to the community, specifically to the Selle folks who are delighted to see that ol' grange hall continue on.

Stay tuned for the next "Love Notes" in The River Journal, and I'll tell ya more. In the meantime, if you're local, take a drive out through our Heavenly Selle Valley and check it out.

You can even take a walk through the Lovestead, if we're home. It's getting pretty again. I've got a long ways to go with the gardens and such, but that lawn just blows me away, as does our peaceful forest. We'll also induct any visitors into the Lodgepole Society today

Bill and I dined at Jalapenos last night and enjoyed a scrumpdelyishious reunion at dessert time. We skipped the sweets in exchange for a wonderful visit with Dave Dillon (Class of 1964), his wife and my classmate Linda, his twin sister Betty and his youngest sister Mary June.

I hadn't seen Betty Dillon since junior high (let's estimate nearly 50 years). I remember when she and Bill Barlow (another twin) were an item. Betty is as lovely as ever; she's a nurse in Denver.


I'd never met Mary June. The family moved to Helena and Dave stayed behind to graduate from SHS. Mary June is a nurse in Baltimore, associated with Maryland's top varicose vein center. She also loves horses and has read the Appaloosa Journal, so she earned her medals with me.

We could have gabbed and caught up all night, but they finally had to leave. It's definitely a treat to enjoy such spontaneous reunions of faces from the past----even better when you discover they're the same nice folks you thought they were way back when.

And, speaking of folks from way back when, I must wish a very happy birthday to Andrea Venishnick and Laura Delamarter. Laura and I go back to at least age 1, while I got to know Andrea back in those junior high days. Hope you ladies are enjoying yourselves today. You deserve it.

To all mothers, may you have a wonderful weekend, as you experience love extending your way from the greatest joys of your lives.

Happy weekend. Off for a gorgeous day in May.

Friday, May 09, 2008

Herd increases


Not the best of photos, but my horse herd multiplied a bit yesterday, and NO STALLS TO CLEAN. Actually, before I get on with this herd, it's nice to announce that I received a good report from the Spokane Equestrian Center boot camp Wednesday evening.

Both Lily and Lefty are doing okay. Both have learned a few pointers about "my space - your space," and Lily fetish for pawing the surface while tied is meeting with resistance. Monty says both are "legging up" on the horse walkers, and Lily has been instructed that five rounds is not sufficient. She must do more. No surprises. Monty says it's boot came, and they're both working hard. The dogs and I miss 'em a lot.

Now for the herd above. The Painted Ponies were already there. My cousin Barb from Phoenix introduced these wonderful equine collectors' items to me with the horse on the right. I bought the Appaloosa a couple of years ago in Phoenix Airport. Since then, I've been buying them for my sisters.

The rest of the herd showed up yesterday, thanks to my dear friend Shirley. And, of course, there's a story to tell. When we moved to the Lovestead here in Selle, we left our home of 30 years over on Great Northern Road near the airport. That place, with its beautiful classic red barn, once belonged to a man named Ed Senft. His wife was a teacher.

My mother first got to know Ed over the fences, when she moved us out to the North Boyer farm in 1950. Ed's place bordered our 40 acres. It got split up over the years after Ed and his wife moved to town and lived out their years in a home near Shirley's. We always referred to our place as either the Senft place or the Crape place. Calvin Crape, a horse logger, owned it before us.

Anyway, both Ed and his wife are gone now, and I've had the pleasure of serving on a committee which awards healthy scholarships to SHS grads who want to go into teaching. The fund comes from Mrs. Senft's estate, and Shirley oversees it.

A while back, Shirley called and said she'd found a box of horse figurines among the Senft belongings. She wanted it to go to someone who would appreciate it. Yes, I told her, I would very much appreciate it because I do love all things horses---and to have something of additional historical significance to me and my family would be an honor.

So, Shirley hauled the horses in their shoebox container to Slate's yesterday and handed them over. I'm guessing they have to be at least 60 years old. Long lives for horses! And live they will forever among the Lovestead menagerie of critters and collectibles. Thank you so much, Shirley. I guarantee you'll never have to call out the human society or PETA, cuz I'll take good care of these horses. And, I'm sure Annie will afterward---especially cuz she won't have to shovel up after them.


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Thursday, May 08, 2008

Morning has broken . . . .










Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Wednesday witter and wumble


I kinda liked the concept last Tuesday of letting laziness take over and allowing myself some flexibility with my posting. So, on this rainy Wednesday, I'll witter and wumble again.

I'm sitting in Annie's bedroom looking out onto the front lawn where I can see a clump of baby pink hyacinths standing out among the darker shrubs in the middle flower bed. The lawn is almost a solid green with slight hints of quickly disappearing dead grass. Bill annually observes that the grass is always greenest during the second week of May.

The flowering shrub next to the driveway entrance is gradually letting a few yellow blossoms pop open. Last year the blossoms came on gradually too. I wish they'd get their timing down cuz to see the whole bush alive with yellow would be pretty impressive this morning when everything is so clean thanks to the rain.

There's a solitary daffodil enjoying its independence just below the shrub, just like this sentence, which will stand alone.

Regular readers will guess that I'm happy this morning. My guy did okay yesterday. My disdain for Hillary will soften a bit if she shows the good manners to step aside and let the political show go on without her. I guess time will tell on that one, but I am glad that the electorate generally saw past the political ploys in this week's elections.

Some of the tactics I've watched in this Democratic primary have seemed grossly unfair and in some cases downright disgusting. They say it's the game of politics, but there are still a few of us old fogeys with notions toward the ideal rather than a continual negative and often unsavory cloud over every aspect of getting elected.

It would be so nice if the rest of the Presidential election could be limited to spirited, thoughtful discussion of philosophies and the issues that do affect every aspect of our American way of life. I've been amazed at how frivolous statements can be thrown out in the air, gobbled up, digested, spit out, gobbled up again, spit out again and regurgitated, regurgitated, regurgitated, vomited, barfed. Sick of that yet?

Well, that's how one gets to feel after hearing the same burps of bad wording worked to death. I hope Sen. McCain and Sen. Obama tune in to this and keep a high bar as they claw their way toward the Presidency. It would be refreshing. Of course, we have the media who depend of advertising dollars to blame for a lot of what's dished out, so I might be tilting at some tall windmills.

Yesterday I played Farmer Love again. This time the Kubota and I dragged the dry parts of the hayfield. We doubled its size last fall by taking out a fence. If all goes well with hay harvest weather this summer, we should not have to buy hay. That will be nice.

There's a great feeling sitting on top of a tractor, an even greater one when I don't feel like I'm sneaking to do so, like I used to do as a kid. My most famous tractor incident took place one day when Mother and Harold were gone for the afternoon, and I was home alone.

Of course, that old Ford (the one we now own) sat there inviting me to give it a spin. So, I fired it up. Like my experience with the old Ford sedan, I still didn't know much about shifting gears. The tractor had the side hay mower on it. When I got it to move, it went backward really fast.

Knowing right away, that I probably shouldn't stay on board too long with my lack of skills, I shifted, and it moved forward. Only problem was the more I moved forward, the more those blades in the mower dug into the wooden gate where the tractor had been parked. This was not good.

My dad guarded his equipment with his life. For him to find that mower deeply ground into a gate would not be a pretty sight. I tried a couple of times to dislodge the mower, but failed. My only recourse was to run to the road and flag down whatever farmer man happened to drive by.

A red pickup came. It had two men with no facial expressions. I summoned them into the driveway and directly to the tractor. Still, they said very little, got out of their pickup, and sized up the situation. They must've been twins, both wearing dark green work ensembles and fedoras. While one watched, the other got on the tractor and began to move it carefully so those mower blades wouldn't break.

The job was just about finished and I was about to feel a wave of relief as I looked out to the road and saw Mother and Harold turning into the driveway. Their eyes were intent. Who were these strange men fiddling with Harold's tractor? The men didn't stay long. Harold thanked them for helping his daughter out of another fix, but he sure didn't thank me for anything.

I was banished from driving tractors for life.

Well, until we bought our own. Still, I feel a tinge of guilt every time I push that starter or turn that ignition key on the old Ford and the Kubota, respectively. Yesterday, the tinge was momentary. I had received Bill's blessing to get out there and drag those fields, and that made all the difference in a totally carefree Farmer Love experience.

Today I'll go to Co-Op, buy some more timothy seed and scatter it about in a few bare areas out there. With the rain and upcoming warm weather, we should have hay aplenty.

Well, that's enough twitter. It's a rainy day in May, and all is well.

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Morning sights

Now with extra time in the horses' absence, I can fill that a part of my day strolling the Lovestead, taking in morning sights and sounds. What's a spring day without a daffodil sighting!

Though I love cleaning the barn stalls and playing with my ponies, I think I'll be enjoying this substitution. Each morning will bring new awareness of the subtleties of nature's annual show. Not a bad way to start the day, especially in May.



Just a pretty shot of Miss Kiwi on the run and the back runs of Schweitzer in the background. This is our hay field, and when it dries a bit more, I'll be out on the tractor dragging the field with the harrow to re-distribute that dead grass and the horse piles. Note that it's May 6 and still no leaves popping from the deciduous trees and bushes.



The swale still has water. The fences are ready. Yes, we have two fences between us and the Meserve's. This area was where a couple of Bert's calves came visiting daily for a few weeks last summer. So Meserves and Loves re-enforced the fences a bit. Maybe calves will stay home this summer, but actually we kinda enjoyed them. Just worried that they might go trotting down the lane and then out to the road.


Not exactly a typical Border Collie pose, but then it's a goose that Kea is staring down. So what's good for the goose isn't always good for other critters, at least in Kea's mind.


Looking north into Stan and Geneva Meserve's pasture land. A closer look will reveal part of Jack and Colleen Filipowski's house. Soon, Bert Wood's cows will keep the geese guessing where they ought to land. Today, the honker had the field to itself.

Monday, May 05, 2008

Monday minutiae


Filling up time is hardly one of my normal challenges, but I found myself doing that yesterday and today. After all, when one follows a pretty strict morning routine and suddenly a major portion of that routine no longer exists, one has to fumble around a bit to fill the slot. I didn't fumble too long.


Yesterday, rather than going to the barn to feed my horses (who now reside temporarily in Spokane) and clean one stall before getting the morning papers, I locked the dogs in the garage and took off for a walk down South Center Valley Road. It actually felt a bit liberating because I normally don't have that option and because it was one of the first genuine days of spring.

Though Annie and her friends were still sleeping, I could feel electricity and expectation in the air for all of us. While listening to birds twitter and admiring the vast green expanse of Taylor's pasture, I thought about the Bloomies and their plans for the day---driving to Spokane, giggling over their Gomez Girls ensembles, running to do their best, celebrating with lunch at Cyrus O'Leary's Restaurant, driving back to Seattle and Missoula and collapsing into bed.

Annie wrote this morning and told me she won first place yesterday. I know that nobody read about it in the paper or saw television footage of her crossing the finish line, but she did get first----first place for runners with the last name of "Love." I think she's done that two years in a row, so if there are any Loves out there who'd like to give her a run for her money, ya'd better start conditioning. Rainier Girl is a force to contend with.

Here are the rest of her statistics for yesterday's performance:

Finish Time: 1:07:37

Overall Place: 4,667 out of 42,697

Ran with a pace of 9:03 per mile

The average pace for 29-year-olds was 14:25

Placed 111th among people the same age

Placed 149th among people from Seattle, WA

Placed 3,437th among people from the State of Washington

Placed 1st among people with the same last name

Placed 1,274th among females

Placed 39th out of 479 among 29-year-old females


It's my best time so far. Kelsi beat me by about 20 seconds or so. It was a nice day for the run.
*******

So, I'm figuring all expectations were met.

During my morning walk, I also thought about my day ahead with lawn and garden work. It turned out pretty well: three beds for plants cleaned out and replenished with 2006 decayed horse apples ; one filled with three cabbage plants from the greenhouse, the barnyard and one pasture dragged---i.e., a pull-behind harrow to break up the clods of manure, hay and old grass from the winter. I also finished my Appaloosa Journal story, washed off some of the white board fence, mowed a little lawn, spread wildflower seed around the place and thought about my horses all day. After all, it was the first day in more than 30 years without a horse on our place.

I wish that we could do with horses like we can with our kids---call them or send them an email to see how they're doing. I have to be patient, though, and wait a few days before calling Monte to see how they're behaving and to hear if Lily has kicked the side of the barn out yet. Just before we took them Saturday, Lefty mysteriously rubbed out another huge patch of hide from his neck. Little twit!

This morning, I'm slowly adjusting to the new routine but missing the horses. This time I took the dogs with me and walked through the woods. I noticed that Bill has done a fine job of tidying up areas out there with low hanging limbs removed, brush piles nicely organized and neat little stacks of wood here and there. The chickadees were also doing a fine job of scurrying around, searching for goodies among the pine needles. The walk out there, now that it's truly spring, is an invigorating way to start the day.

Unfortunately, sounds of country radio don't waft out that far; instead, the birds are singing their country songs. There are definitely a few Carrie Underwood's and Vince Gill's among the warblers, so I'll be okay.

More fun outdoor stuff today, so I'm gonna get going.

Before I do, however, I must acknowledge the passing of one of the great and grand ladies of Idaho: Louise Shadduck from Coeur d'Alene. She lived 92 phenomenal and amazing years. During that time, she touched thousands of people across Idaho, the country and the world with her genuine, down-to-earth friendliness and eternal zest to learn the facts, then tell the stories.

What a story teller she was, and what a great example of humanity! She wrote several books, and I'm guessing it would take multiple volumes for someone to chronicle her lifetime achievements.


RIP, Louise. I always admired and appreciated knowing you.