Thursday, March 31, 2011

Enthusiasm

Snow's on the way again and it's no joke this time. These Nor'Easters are pretty fickle so we probably won't know how much snow we'll get until tomorrow afternoon. In the meantime Ken and I braved the school buses and morning commuters and had a lovely walk along our country road. It was nice to meet up with the early morning dog-walking crowd. This is Sophie and she's the one responsible for many snow angels in our yard (guess they're more like dog angels) . Seems our front slope offers one of the best roll-in-the-snow opportunities ever. I would like to adopt her enthusiasm for winter. I'll get right on that...

This morning the snow is falling lightly and the birds are as exuberant as I've ever heard them. I can still hear the cardinals now even though I'm inside with all my windows closed up tight. Seems the transition to spring is going to be leisurely this year.
I plan to enjoy the ride.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Lighten Up

Stick a fork in me, I think I'm done!

It was another outrageously busy week but the sun's been out and that makes everything all right by me. Spring is definitely in the air if for no other reason than we're all talking about how much we want it to be here now . Sunbeams are pouring already this morning and P is taking full advantage.I'm still pretty sleepy but at least I'm doing my civic duty by drinking coffee from a proper mug...
Ken and I are off to auction for the day. Too bad someone sneaked in last night again while we were sleeping and filled our downstairs with furniture. We've really got stop them from leaving their stuff here...

We picked up some lovely primitive farmhouse furniture on Friday and brought it straight to FOUND. As luck would have it one of the pieces sold Saturday afternoon. Woohoo! I love when that happens. Among our purchases was a simple china cabinet with glass sides and fronts. It'll get a fresh coat of white paint and live in our dining room as a new home for my Fiestaware.

My best purchase of the week - a viola which is small enough for me to play comfortably. A bow rehair and a new bridge and I'll be all set!

Week IX of the semester is just about to begin. Once we get over the hump of Week X then the pace really starts to zoom forward. I am continually amazed and inspired at my students. Their resiliency and resourcefulness keeps me inspired in my teaching and in my life in general. It's been especially wonderful to see them have so many affirming successes this past week.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Vernal Equinox

Today marks the start of spring. I'm weary of winter and this is a time of new beginnings. Bring 'em on!

After our big expotition yesterday we're moving a little slow today. We intend to get to FOUND to redo our walls in the front booth but at the rate we're going so far today I'm not so sure that'll happen. It's beautiful outside - sunny and almost warm (provided you're sitting in the sun, bundled up with a cat asleep in your lap). I feel a nap coming on.

There's still a little ice at the wood's edge and in the ditches but the thaw seems to be continuing right on schedule.

A 'creek' is running in our driveway,

under the last bit of ice. It's nice to hear the sound of water
accompanied by woodpeckers and cardinals.

It's just amazing how verdant the growth is under the snow. The rhododendron is covered from top to bottom in buds, and it looks like it's going to put on quite a show this year.

Okay, time to face the mountain of stuff in the living room.
Maybe I'll make a cup of strong cup of black tea first...

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Why

Why?
I guess I have to wonder "why not". It was snowing after all and I hadn't really cleaned up the grill after using is on Friday night. I had no idea red squirrels like chicken...

Any day that begins like this
and this is bound to be good.

We saw our first robin andand our first crocus!And because today was our first Saturday off in a while we decided to venture out of town just to be sure we didn't park ourselves at the computers and work all day!
Fortunately in our neck of the woods you don't have to drive very far in order to feel like you've really gotten away. Our first stop took us up north on the east side of the lake to the town of Aurora.Aurora is a beautiful bustling touristy town in the summer but in the winter it's sleepy and quaint. We had a great time at the Aurora Arts and Design Center where we discovered the owner is a BIG fan of FOUND! The homes in town along the lake are just amazing but it was the grand old farmhouses out in the hills that made us swoon. Yes it's true, we still occasionally pine away for an estate...

Even the ones obviously past their prime were appealing.
Along the way we just had to stop and wonder
WHY?

It wouldn't be a bona fide Ken and Deb expotition if we didn't end up poking around antique shops. Undaunted by locked doors
and closed signs,
we eventually found a few stalwart owners who decided to open up on a dreary March day. Ken came home with a framed group shot to add to our growing collection and I labored in vain over a bowl of tiny metal letters hoping to find enough to spell out something meaningful. Sadly there were just too many "J", "U", "F" and "T"s...

We ambled east to Skaneateles where it's also a little sleepy this time of year. They have a less appealing way of dealing with the tourists...NOW GET BACK...okay, I get it. I'll just be leaving now...

The perfect end to a perfect day?
Dinner at Hazelnut Kitchen.
Local red beet salad with avocado, passion fruit vinaigrette, micro greens & reserve sherry vinegar gastrique followed by grilled angus hanger steak, red wine reduction, hand-cut fries, malt vinegar aioli. For dessert flourless chocolate-bourbon cake with whipped cream & dark chocolate sauce. Okay I know, the whole "we've changed our diet" thing didn't hold up well today but hey, you gotta live, right?

Life is so good.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Green

Spring break is almost over and it's turned out to be a bit busier than I'd hoped. Still all in all, there are more than a few things checked off of the to-do list and that's always good!

I was glad to be able to spend a Tuesday at FOUND this week. We're closed on Tuesdays but the parking lot was filled with cars this week - electricians were in, dealers were in, partners were in. Every now and then we'd notice that a customer had snuck in and was browsing totally unaware we weren't really open! Between renovating the last of the available space in the back, sprucing up our booth and getting ready for a new show in the gallery it was a full day. Here's the latest incarnation of our front booth.

It was sunny and warm again today. Warm enough to really get the lilacs showing some serious green.

And speaking of green...I've been painting outdoor furniture the last two days and am almost finished. Can't wait to bring in this sweet wire loveseat and little table. Although first I'll have to get used to the idea that it doesn't live on my porch anymore. I love the pistachio color. We've had a cute little brown rustic wooden table kicking around for more than a year, and since it hasn't sold I decided to spruce it up for spring. This little table was spotted by the side of the road in a free pile a few months ago and today it has been given a new lease on life with some blue paint. I like the nice lines of the top and the snazzy legs. Starting to look like I'm going for easter egg colors. Just wait until I get that astro turf rug in my booth!!!

Tomorrow we go back to winter but what do I care! Ken and I actually have the weekend off together. Don't know what adventures await but I'm sure they'll entail driving to parts unknown, searching for treasures in out of the way places and just enjoying the day together. Countdown to summer begins soon...

Thursday, March 17, 2011

One Year Later

One year ago today I decided to join the great blogosphere in the sky. I can hardly believe it's only been a year. Writing and posting photos about our daily adventures is so much a part of my energy and creative expression I feel like I've been doing it for years. Thank you for taking the time to read it. I'd love to hear from you every now and again. Don't be shy now - make my day!An awful lot of exciting stuff took place over the year. Last March Ken was unemployed and holding down the home front while I toiled in the academic salt mines up at the college. As a result of his layoff we decided to start selling antiques in a brick and mortar venue and this is where we met our wonderful FOUND partners. This time last year we were meeting discreetly to find a space for our shop and hoping against hope that our ideas would come to fruition and that the shop would be successful. We renovated and opened on a shoestring budget and had a simple business plan: If we build it, they will come. FOUND has exceeded our every expectation.

There were losses this year too. One year ago our sweet Franklin kitty was still healthy and sweet, and venturing out for his daily constitutionals near the kitchen door. We happily planned our lives around his every-other-day pills. We lost him in May and miss him still.

Last March I was able to play the viola. I hope that by this time next year I can say I'm back at it again.

Spring was in the air March 17, 2010. The sun was shining and it seemed certain the new season was here for good. As is often the case in March, we were covered in heavy, wet snow within the week. Upper 50's and sunshine are forecast for today and there are big patches of soggy green grass where the snow has melted away.
The daffodils have poked their little noses out of the ground, and the hydrangea buds are starting to swell.

The chipmunks are awake after a long winter nap,and the geese are starting to head back north.

The sun is out well past 6pm now.
We are incredibly blessed in our lives and not a
single day passes where this fact goes unnoticed.

My goals for the coming year
(thank you William Henry Channing):

To live content with small means; to seek elegance rather than luxury, and refinement rather than fashion; to be worthy, not respectable, and wealthy, not rich; to listen to stars and birds, babes and sages, with open heart; to study hard; to think quietly, act frankly, talk gently, await occasions, hurry never; in a word, to let the spiritual, unbidden and unconscious, grow up through the common -- this is my symphony.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Crunch

As I was looking out my home office window this morning I watched Ken back the black car straight into the fence at the base of our driveway. Poor guy. It was sad to see him hang his head so low in disbelief. Rats. He's okay and so's the car (there's a hole in the tire cover) but it brings to mind the fact that it's almost time to find a new home for our aged '97 RAV we affectionately call Flicka. She's approaching the 200,000 mile mark and needs more and more coddling each day just to get her to roll down the driveway. With the price of gas going up and up and up I'm thinking a real live steed might be a more efficient source of transportation to work - hay costs less than gas, right?

Patches of grass have appeared in our yard along with waist-high piles of gravel-covered snow. It is the ugliest sight ever and my least favorite sign of spring. Come April we'll have the unfortunate task of raking it all back onto the driveway...oh joy. On a happier note, I heard cardinals singing like there's tomorrow and tonight there will be light at in the sky at 6pm!

Though we're both very short on sleep and showing signs of coming down with the sniffles we're never the less off to scope out the bottle collector's flea market this morning. Bottle collectors - they're a special breed for sure and I have a special fondness for them I can't deny. My dad was a bottle collector. He along with his buddy John would head out early on a Saturday or Sunday morning to secret spots only they knew about from their boyhood. They knew where the old steamboat landings used to stand until they rotted into the inlet, where the old hotels once stood before the big fires and where houses and farms once thrived before the horrific hurricane of '25. Their bottle hunting trips were always timed to coincide with low tide no matter how early in the morning it came. Their gear included enormous hip waders and special metal poles they made themselves. They'd wade out into the water (sometimes thigh-high) and gingerly poke these metal probes into the sand. When they heard the clink-clink sound of glass they'd start digging. I once remember John holding dad's head and upper body under water so he could use both hands to bring up a bottle.

The eaves of our Florida room were lined with bottles in graduated sizes in all colors and shapes. They were displayed in every nook and cranny of our house. I suspect my mom hated dusting them but I don't remember her ever complaining. I do remember the day dad came home with an intact oil lamp. It even had its burner. On other occasions he'd bring home bone pipes, crocks and suspender buckles. Mom still has most of the bottles boxed up in her attic. There are hundreds of them. My sister and I have a small fraction of them in our own homes. While my own collecting habits don't include hip waders and holding my breath under water they are still none the less obsessive and were likely formed from watching my father. My mother too had a penchant for cruising the thrift shops and antique shops near the big old bridge to Palm Beach. I still have some of the things I collected on those trips with her. The thrill of finding a coveted piece of vintage Fiesta at a next-to-nothing price still gets my heart going and my wallet throbbing. Guess I come by this treasure hunting bug honestly. Thanks dad. Thanks mom.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Grump on a Stick

As you can probably tell, I've taken to blogging from my office lately. It keeps me out of trouble and ensures I won't lose myself in the wasteland that is facebook...not that I have time for that mind you.

Spring Break is finally here and how did I spend the first hours of it this afternoon? Driving through a torrential rain to pick up a bookcase that couldn't quite fit in the car at the last auction I attended. Secretly I was hoping for a celebratory nap but that'll have to wait until Sunday. Tomorrow I'm in the shop all day and Saturday too.

Today I'd like to officially go on record with my request for winter to be over for good. No more of this spring-for-a-day stuff. I've had it!