Blogger Glitch, Food & Going Museum


Blogger glitch*
Signed out of blog
Clicked sign in and page goes to the last page I viewed when I was signed into my blog. I can post as if signed in. No other tabs were open. 
I had to erase the browser History to sign back in. Also, the comment box pop up box is where you can delete a comment when that is the comment style you chose. Click Post a Comment for the pop up box to see the delete icon.
* A pop up box was found on my screen when I closed the browser. That may be why the connection wasn't broken when I signed out.


Provolone cheese
Salami
Lettuce
Tomato
Olive oil
Balsamic vinegar
Feta cheese

Looks good. Messy hassle to eat
Better to dice up the tomato and roll it all inside the cheese

Going Museum.
Many museums are closed on Mondays.
After a long weekend, Monday being the holiday, I got to thinking, again. Why not go museum by having Mondays as a holiday year round? The most anxious day of the week can the most relaxing day of the week by just mentally feeling Mondays with a holiday attitude. Turn a negative into a positive.

Foliage, Riprap & Poetry

Looking northeast to Green Mountains
from the meadow
at Robert Frost Interpretative Trail
14 October 2023
Along Rt 125 Ripton, Vermont
14 October 2023
Ripton, Vermont 14 October 2023
Rt 125 RipRap roadside repairs
after July 2023 heavy flooding 


Riprap

There is a lot of roadside repairs being done on Route 125 going up from East Middlebury to Ripton, Vermont. There was heavy flooding last July 2023. One section is one lane with lights to manage traffic.

The peak foliage, I believe, was the Indigenous Peoples' Day long weekend. My photographs here were taken the weekend after. This illustrates how short a window there can be to see the best colors in certain areas. There are places that are just turning. For the most part, the higher elevations are past peak. Again, my opinion. Check your local foliage reports.

One Lane Light Rt 125 Ripton, Vermont

I always remember the name riprap from the title of Gary Snyder's first book of poetry, "Riprap and Cold Mountain Poems, 1965."

Identify Trees by Fall Foliage!



Informative video about autumn foliage identification

Thoughts On Creativity

New brushes in the light, shiny ferrules, clean shafts, leaning like friends chatting about their weekend inspired me to create a blog banner years ago. So long ago that I don't remember when the picture was taken. Maybe 2009ish. 
In those days I sat at my dinning table (2 inch thick old pine) aka my desk, thinking, painting, crafting, blogging. I took photographs of whatever was nearby. I felt comfortably creative there.

Brush & Paint. The image for the series this fall I will post about in progress has been decided, The New Haven River in Bristol, Vermont photograph is the one I will paint from.

New Haven River in Bristol, Vermont

Both banks will extend into the woods for a large canvas. My primary focus is the relationship between hues, water and rocks. The color story flowing as the rivers flows, that connection is what I want to achieve in my painting.
A few pencil sketches, splashes of color, and I will be ready to begin the first session this week.

Here's the thing about creativity.
I believe anyone can be an artist that wants to be, and, puts in the work. There is no such thing as, "I can't draw." You can. You just haven't gone the distance with drawing. 
Composition can also be learned. Even people with natural talent have to sketch, plan, practice. Creating the art is the key to being an artist. How talented you are is another story. As long as you reach a level you like, then that, I believe, is good enough. 

There is always talent at the top, those with a natural ability to create artwork that wows the majority of us. 
However, at the top doesn't mean the artist belongs there. Popularity, especially from trusted art critic voices, has a strong say in who are the artist at the top, collectible, worth investing money into buying their art. I've seen online extraordinary artists, mega talented, that aren't in the news, big sellers, at the top of the high end art community network.

Who is versus What is.
Think Mona Lisa (1503). I've seen just as good if not better smiles on many portraits, old and new. Yet, she is one of the most famous paintings in the world, and, I believe, always will be. She deserves it. But, what about the others? Well, that's the art World, and, there's only one Leonardo da Vinci. 

Ever read about a lawyer, doctor or other professional with a well paying career give it all up to become an artist? If you haven't, then you haven't been reading about the artists. 
They have an edge because they have, I believe, the money to change careers, a following from the get-go, a good resume, and, many have talent and/or develop their talent.

If I had a nice well stocked studio space, there is no guarentee I would paint more than I do because depression doesn't work like that. I have over a dozen unfinished canvases and creative projects. I do the best I'm able with what I have. Trying is doing.

You can do the same if you want to be an artist.

For Hygge

Gray Squirrel Atop a clothes line pole
set into an umbrella stand
He left when his tail entangled in the pinwheels

 There are times when what we see, 
is just there for us to smile about.
Thank you to Gray Squirrel
aka Mr. Pinwheeler

Day 287 of Week 41 for October 2023,
Strolling Down the Old Photograph Lane


Lincoln, Vermont circa 2021
Lincoln Vermont Country Road
Robert Frost Interpretative Trail
Mount Abraham in Clouds ( PC pic)
Middlebury River 
south view from bridge on Robert Frost Trail
Robert Frost Interpretative Trail
Rugged Maple Leaves 
Meadow at R.Frost Interpretative Trail
looking northeast as low clouds
cover mountains
Morning Dew on a Maple Leaf

A strange thing, when I look at old photographs,  I remember more of them than I'm finding. The folders have been checked to locate some photos. I have an uneasy feeling not all the pictures made the transfer to the memory stick.
All of the above images are taken from my Blog archive. Searching online for this blog's images doesn't work well because Google results show more pumpkin seed recipes than this blog's content.

Make a note, if your blog has a food item in the title, then you take the chance of your blog being buried in recipes on Google after the top few search results.

Have a Colorful Weekend!

Bake an apple crisp
Make French Onion Soup
Toast buttery garlic bread for the soup
Tell a pair of socks a story
Memorize a poem about autumn
Call a friend for a phone chat
and recite the poem
Browse novel tee shirts online
Read a Stephen King novel

Pray Long for Peace

Mum, Weather, Drained & One Thing

Middlebury Garden Center

Selecting mums this year was a challenge. In the various stages of blooming, I wanted plants that will bloom into October at a time when I want to see a lot of flowers open. 
The large golden mums bloomed early. If I don't look close, then those mums have nice color.
The golden rust mums have been the most spectacular. The deeper red is a close second on length of bloom and vibrant color.
Next year will be easier to chose using my notes from this year.

Weather. The ambient temperatures are cooler at this lower elevation at 194 feet (59 m) in Vermont close to Lake Champlain. In comparison, Stowe, Vermont is 889 feet (271 m). The highest peak in Vermont is Mount Mansfield at 4395 feet (1339 m) with the lower Stowe nearby.  
In my backyard, I see a lot of green just barely turning colors. Up in Stowe, the foliage map indicates it is peak foliage. I expect with this week's lower temperatures, that peak foliage in the mountains and hollows will excelerate. In other words, this week is good for a leaf peeping excursion.

Drained. Not everything that happens in life needs to by ananlyzed. Feeling drained of energy, for example, doesn't need to reason unless it is chronic. I have no idea why I feel so drained of energy, especially when I love to see the foliage. 
The other morning after getting a take out coffee, I wanted to keep driving up to the mountains. I had on long pants and a jacket. Problem, I was wearing sandals! By the time I got back indoors, I didn't feel like getting ready to go back out. I told myself it is a peak holiday weekend where there are lots of folks out and about. For a few minutes, I thought about why I was so lazy. Two days later, I might go for a short looksee at the foliage. Or I might stare at the fabric foliage I stuck into the window lace curtain.

One Thing. If I don't go out to get a best autumn photo, and hopefully a landscape to paint, then I won't be ready to start the as I go progress painting series this year. My plans depend on my doing that one thing.
Still in my pajamas at noon time, I think laundry can wait. The floors were washed yesterday. The dishes are almost finished. There's a flannel shirt waiting for me to get out and about...sometime this week.

How are your energy levels? Do they fluctuate in the fall?

Indigenous Peoples' Day

 


Held in Stowe, Vermont on 8 October 2023, 
as a yearly event, the celebration has 
next year to plan for. Sign up to 
volunteer, particpate or sponser.

Check you local area for IPD events.


PBS Programing


This is the long weekend of October celebrating on Monday, 
Indigenous People's Day.

Searching the local PBS schedules, thinking I will find programs about the Indigenous people of America, I find nothing being aired today. Instead, one station has an afternoon marathon, for a Black American series, and the other station is airing programs about Elvis.

I'm guessing this is only Sunday. There will probably be programs about Indigenous people tomorrow. On Monday, 9 October 2023 EDT, one station at 10 PM EDT has a program schedule to be aired, "The American Buffalo: A Story of Resilience," hosted by Judy Woodruff. The Vermont PBS station has nothing about American Indigenous people on Indigenous People's Day.

I have no words.

Reflection Monday, October 2023

The Pondering Squirrel

 
Balance

Fair vs unfair
Light vs dark
Heavy vs light
Rough vs Smooth
Wavy vs still
Pure vs sullied
Windy vs calm

True versus false

Of all the contrasts, the opposites, the antonmyms
where does our society presently lean?

Common Sense versus Stupid



P.S. There's an article on the subject in 2022 The Atlantic if you have a subscription