Monday, April 25, 2011

Easter Past

Image


Image Monday morning-grey and foggy again.
But yesterday, Easter Sunday was absolutely perfect in every way.
Warm sun(it got hot!),
everything in bloom(saw my first dandelions pushing through a crack in a sidewalk),
the sound of what seemed like EVERYONE in the neighborhood outside all day long.
I took a drive down to Westerly again, to deliver the paintings I am entering in an art show(will find out Thursday if they are accepted or not--fingers crossed!).
The image above is a favorite of the bunch of photos I took in Westerly's Wilcox Park--my daughter(looking like a Von Trapp girl in that dress) in among the blossoms.

More later.....

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Old Hippie in the Rain....

Image


I saw this man--long grey, frizzy hair and scruffy grey beard,



wearing a forest green toque and John Lennon glasses,



plodding along in the cold rain today as I drove down a street near my daughter's school(had just dropped her off at noon for her 7 hour rehearsal).



He wasn't really wearing any rain gear other than a blue windbreaker jacket and heavy work boots and the knit cap. He seemed resigned to being thoroughly drenched since he wasn't exactly hurrying along the sidewalk,



just walking with a grim determination as the raindrops pelted him.





As soon as I saw him, I wanted to write a poem about "The Old Hippie In The Rain".





Then, just after I passed him, The Cure's "Inbetween Days" came on the car radio and the lyrics,



Yesterday I Got So Old I Felt Like I Could Die


Yesterday I Got So Old It Made Me Want To Cry




And now, ten hours later , I still remember that and I've tried to draw from what I remembered, what he looked like (instead of a poem).

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Framed Thirteen

Imageacrylic and ink on canvas, Tina Fanning

For this week's Thursday Thirteen(go here to participate and read other blogger's "13's"),
thirteen things I have framed this week(at the frame shop).

1.) The painting at the very top is mine and I was able to frame it in a cast-off "floater" frame(the frame is very basic and actually doesn't cover any of the image) that was being thrown out because of a banged up corner. A few dabs of brown wood marker, and I have a frame for free(a perk of working in a frame shop). I am entering this(with two other paintings) into a show this weekend. This one is kind of the "throw-away" one of the bunch (kind of cartoony, so who knows what the art association will think of it), so not expecting that it will be accepted, but ya never know....


Image2. ) A Low Anthem CD Release Party poster, framed in a simple black frame




Image 3.) Vintage 1974 poster in a black metal frame(I would say 75% of the frames we use are...black)





Image4.) And...yet another black frame, but a blue-black distressed style, with an added silver "enhancer" that I thought perfect for this painting(that the customer found on e-Bay for next to nothing--he collects circus art)
and had to hunt down from a warehouse in L.A.(according to the frame supplier, we got the very last stick of this moulding).



Image5.) Isn't this lady of long ago just gorgeous? She reminds me of Madonna...




Image6.) Have framed this one a few times...




ImageDetail from Australian aboriginal art....



Image 7.) Here's the whole thing(tried to show the frame--which I thought echoed the cross-hatching details in the painting). This one was unusual in that we see and frame a lot of aboriginal art from Australia(seems everyone has been to Australia but me!), but this one has a "cross-hatched" technique and the majority have a "dot" technique.





Image 8.) A detail from an 1895 map of the area





Image9.) Lilacs oil painting by George Furbish










Image 10.) Detail of painting(of the North Lighthouse on Block Island) by Burl Dawson(another local artist whose art we show and sell).





Didn't get to get photos of these:



11.) A boring poster for an event at the U.R.I. College of Business to discuss the state's public employee's pension crisis...framed in a ...you guessed it!--black frame.



12.) another a picture, which I was about to take a photo of because it turned out so well(if I say so myself)--a watercolor of Japanese Maple leaves on a branch with a striking blue grey mat and black and red bamboo frame. Just as I was getting it out to photograph, the owner of the art walked in the door to pay for it and take it home.
That was a satisfying job--a really good design that I and the customer were equally happy with.



13. A moldy old photo print of Mount Washington that I *think* the customer paid too much for in a junk shop, probably thinking it was worth something(just because something is old does not mean it is more valuable). He liked it enough to re-frame it(in a weathered driftwood-y frame) and we got a framing job out of it, so everyone was happy.



Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Alphabetized

Imageimage: stockxchange




A

AGE?
48 ...and marching towards 49..!


B

WHO IS YOUR BEST FRIEND?
Mr. F


WHEN IS YOUR BIRTHDAY?
October 22


C












WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE CANDY?
Goetz's Caramel Cremes


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE COLOR?
shades of orange


D

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE BREED OF DOG?
I have a soft spot for beagles, whippets, greyhounds, Boston terriers, German Shorthaired Pointers


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE DESSERT?
Key Lime Pie



E

WHAT IS YOUR ETHNICITY?
This American "mutt" is a mix of French-Canadian, Greek, and German heritage


F

WHAT DO YOU FEAR MOST?
something bad happening to or losing my husband and/or child


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE FLOWER?
lilies , especially tiger lilies


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE FRUIT?
a perfectly ripe red or black plum


G

WHAT ARE YOUR FAVORITE GAMES?
Board/card games like Pictionary, Taboo, and Apples To Apples



WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE TYPE OF GUM?
Big Red


H

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE HOCKEY TEAM?
Boston Bruins, I suppose, but I am not really into hockey (Mr. F watches the Bruins so the games are on TV and on a LOT lately because of the Stanley Cup play-off's)


WHAT IS YOUR HAIR COLOR?
Brown

I




WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE ICE CREAM FLAVOR?
Pistachio


J

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE JELLY BEAN FLAVOR?
the red kind--cherry


WHERE IS YOUR FAVORITE JUNK FOOD PLACE?
Where? Somewhere on the other side of town, so no one can see me go into one of those places . Oh, the shame .
Seriously, I say I don't like "junk food" like McDonalds and Burger King and if I weaken and eat burger from there I fel like crap for the next 24 hours (even seeing the so-called food on the TV commercials disgusts me), but when I am traveling, I have to have a Mickey D's breakfast sandwich for the road and their coffee(their coffee is actually really good). That sandwich will sit in your stomach like a hard lump for the rest of the day, and you'll have to drink water all day, too, but it is pretty tasty.


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE JUICE?
Cranberry, or maybe pineapple juice because you can make French Martinis with it


K

HOW MANY KIDS DO YOU HAVE/WANT?
This is how it worked out for me and Mr. F....one(and she is a good one)





L

WHERE DO YOU LIVE?
In the biggest little state in the union, baby! ;-) In a very small house(with quite possibly the smallest bathroom in the whole USA)


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE LETTER OF THE ALPHABET?
I have always been partial to the letter L...lovely, letters, lemon drops, la..la..la(wasn't there a Sesame Street bit with Bert and Ernie singing about the letter L and Ernie would say nice L words like lollipop and lilting and then Bert would sing about "lumps" in his oatmeal?




Yes, there is--thanks, YouTube!).




M

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE MONTH?
October




WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE MOVIE?
Just one? Hmmmm...Ones I have watched over and over are..Jaws, The Sound Of Music, A Little Romance, North By Northwest, Chocolat, The Fisher King, Spinal Tap, Next Stop Wonderland, PeeWee's Big Adventure(yes, really!)

WHO IS YOUR FAVORITE MUSCIAL GROUP/ARTIST?
Again--there is no way I can choose just one--see my profile for musical favorites(okay, I'll give you three--Van Morrison, The Clash, Guster to start..)


N

FAVORITE NUMBER?
I gravitate to the numeral "5". I like to write it, I *think* of it as my lucky number, I grew up in a family of five, and a few years I found out that in numerology, I am a..."5".


WHAT IS YOUR NAME?
Tina Sabine


O




ARE YOU AN ONLY CHILD?
No..an Oldest out of three, and often felt like the Odd one


P

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE WAY TO PAMPER YOURSELF?
Well, being a LIbra, I am very good about making sure to pamper myself
A soak in a hot bubble bath
buy myself a bouquet of flowers
buy myself a new book after a good look around a bookstore


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE PIZZA TOPPING?
pepperoni


Q


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE QUOTE(s )?
"The most important thing, darling, is to live a fabulous life. As long as it's fabulous, I don t care how long it is." ~ Freddie Mercury

"I was trying to daydream, but my mind kept wandering..." ~ Steven Wright

R





WHAT DO YOU READ?
Everything...I can't go a day without reading something--magazines, cookbooks for pleasure, mysteries, biographies, memoirs, novels,(no Kindle yet, though), and blogs, of course.


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE RESTAURANT?
Spain --delicious Spanish cuisine and attentive Spanish waiters

S

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE SNACK?
nuts and seeds(almonds and toasted pumpkin seeds are good)


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE SANDWICH?
Tuna on Toast or a well-made hot pastrami on rye (I don't really like most cold sandwiches)


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE PLACE TO SHOP?
Currently, a local consignment/resale shop called Chameleons-- I can spend 50.00 and walk out with Burberry trousers, a perfect-fitting pair of J. Crew skinny jeans, and a pair of fun dangly earrings.

T

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE TV SHOW?
Right now--Modern Family (scroll down.... scroll...all the way down--I am having some HTML Troubles...



























WHO IS/WAS YOUR FAVORITE
TEACHER ?
Miss. Beers, my third grade teacher. She was young and beautiful--she wore mini skirts and had long blond hair she wore tied back with a scarf. She picked me(!) to play Princess Tigerlily in the "Peter Plan" play we did as a class(my first ever play), and read from "The Secret Garden" to us every day after lunch. She also read from "House At Pooh Corner" and encouraged us to write our own poems, inspired by A.A. Milne. She also had a temper and didn't put up with any nonsense, and would slap a yardstick down on the desk of anyone who was not paying attention--never happened to me, though.

U

WHAT KIND OF UNDERWEAR DO YOU HAVE?
the very comfortable kind


WHAT BRAND OF UNDERWEAR DO YOU WEAR?
Whatever is on the rack at Marshall's or Kohl's (and is both sexy looking and comfortable)


V

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE VEHICLE?
one that starts right up, and that takes the least amount of fuel to get me from point "a" to point "b"


WHAT IS YOUR LEAST FAVORITE VEGGIE?
Beets


WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE VEGGIE?
Tomato


WHERE DO YOU WANT TO GO ON VACATION?
Northeast Kingdom , Vermont


W

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE DAY OF THE WEEK?
Tuesdays(have this day off),
Fridays are good, too


WHAT IS YOUR KIND OF WEATHER?
sunny, puffy white clouds, light breeze--around 75*F

WHO ARE YOUR FAVORITE WRITERS?
Again--see my profile, as it is hard to pick just one
(okay, I'll give you three--Jane Gardam , Howard Frank Mosher, Joanne Harris

X

WHAT KIND OF QUESTIONS HAVE AN X?
Some of these questions are xceedingly silly(your favorite kind of gum? favorite letter of the alphabet? And yet, I found an answer to them all....)





Y

WHAT YEAR DID YOU TURN 21?
1983


WHAT'S YOUR FAVORITE TIME OF YEAR?
anytime it is warm enough to be outside without three layers and hats and mittens on

Z





WHAT IS YOUR ZODIAC SIGN



Libra (but my chart is heavy on the Scorpio, too, so there is some serious seething, bubbling and boiling going on beneath my polite and diplomatic facade..heh...heh...)

WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE ZOO ANIMAL?
Well, I never thought I had a favorite "zoo" animal, but the giraffes are cool and I like to watch the otters (I have not been to a zoo in years and years...I think I need to watch some otters soon)




There. I did it. And thank you, if you read all the way to end of this. Please, if anyone one wants to do this , try it on your own blog. I know--it is very junior high(the underwear questions, for example), but a fun time-waster.
C'mon, you know you wanna do it..


Tuesday, April 19, 2011

On the border....

Image



Image ...breakfast.





Or should I say, over the border breakfast?






Image Yes, we actually left the state for a late morning breakfast out today.





The south easternmost town in the state, Westerly, shares a river with the state of Connecticut and we ate at The Primetime Cafe which is just over the border on the other side of bridge(the restaurant is practically on the bridge itself, it is so close to the river).


Mr. F had banana pancakes, R(that's her in the red cardigan, and doesn't she look great in that shade of red?) had the famous Coconut French Toast(supposedly, this is what Conan O' Brien has ordered here--don't know if they still do, but his parents have a house near here and he has been spotted in town in years past when his show was in New York), and I had the Cinnamon Almond French Toast. Plus perfectly cooked home fried potatoes. Talk about overloading on carbs!

Typical April day, it was threatening rain under a grey sky, but warm. We walked back to Rhode Island and strolled through Wilcox Park. Not much blooming and the fountains weren't yet running, but it still looked pretty there. I managed to get R on the much-climbed-by- children-and-photographed "Goodnight Moon Bunny" sculpture. At first she was embarrassed, but then she obliged. When she was three years old, I had to help her up onto it and I was afraid to let go of the waistline of her pants in case she slid off(it is made of a slippery metal). Now I think her legs are as tall as the sculpture itself(or almost as tall).



I also was able to buy some art supplies at a place in Westerly, to restock my depleted supply of acrylic paints. Yesterday, J commented on an unfinished painting I have had up on an easel since....October.

My ghost painting.

In a way, I like how it adds to the ghostly look, being uncompleted. But J was sweet enough to nudge me towards painting again , when he found out I was low on paints. He was the one who suggested I buy some more paints today.


So, that has been my day pretty much--aside from my decluttering and cleaning out my closet and drawers.

And to make the day that much more exciting--I have a 7:30 PM mammogram appointment waiting for me. Whee....



























Monday, April 18, 2011

One year ago.....

Image



..on this date.


Out of curiosity(and because I couldn't get my brain to think of anything to write about tonight), I went back in my archives to see what I was doing/writing about exactly a year ago.




A favorite place to just walk around,


sit and have some coffee or ice cream at an outdoor table,


do some people watching


do some duck and/or swan watching on the bridge


do some real or "window" shopping.


I had wanted to go there yesterday, in fact, but with the gusty winds I decided against it, and ate take-out falafel and drank French Martinis in the backyard instead.




The photo above (from last year's post), shows the corner of Brown and Main Streets. (clicking on it will give an enlarged view)


I have taken numerous photos of this same corner. Something about it--the brick building,


the fact that there is a used bookshop behind the green door,


the iconic "Main Street" sign post,


the red fire hydrant,


that there are almost always pedestrians(two-legged and four-legged)congregating there


appeals to me.




What were you blogging about a year ago? Has your life changed drastically, looking back? Mine hasn't changed much at all. That could be a good thing..or a bad thing.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

What a difference....

Image ...a day makes. Yesterday looked and felt like December. So cold and windy and grey and wet. The sea was churning and absolutely wild. I could hear it all the way from our house all night. I had to bring my seedlings and plants in pots indoors because of the cold. As soon as I got up and looked out the window this morning, though, I saw that it had turned around completely. Sun shining brightly, and when I let the dog out, I immediately felt the warmth. So strange how it could all change so dramatically in twelve hours. I wore flip-flops, exposing my white toes for the first time this year, as I walked Jewel. Supposedly, R is going to quickly clean up her room(although I hear her singing along with Adele behind her bedroom door, so I am not sure if she is actually picking up in there, or singing in front of her mirror), and we'll go do something later on(lunch outdoors by the river in Wickford, or a walk down to the bay with the dog?). I have freshly baked coffee cake to eat for Sunday brunch and the second episode of the new Upstairs Downstairs to watch tonight(for both of these things, I have Rosemary to thank, for inspiring me to bake and to watch). I might write a letter. I might finish cleaning out the garden beds. I might just sit out back in a deck chair and let the sun soak into me. ** update: turns out, it is way too windy out there to sit, unless you don't mind your hair being blown into your eyes every second and the sound of clanging windchimes from every house on the street(maddening), and not even being able to keep a book page open because the wind keeps flipping it.

I did go into the record shop yesterday(and bumped into Mr. F there) and bought the latest CD from Bettye LaVette(my sister has raved about her)--"Interpretations: The British Rock Songbook". Her version of The Beatles "The Word" is the best I have ever heard(it is the first song on the album, and I'll have to become better aquainted with the other songs on it).

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Record Store Day

Image
Image Newbury Comics, Newbury Street, Boston




"dusty violin maker shop small corner record store water holes for dreamers don't stop breathe more”

- The Record Store by Damien Rice


"I was introduced to lots of great music through my local record store. It was a place where people knew music and they knew me, and could make great suggestions and discoveries. Whether it is in the physical world or on-line, the value of a great and knowledgeable record store has not gone away"

- Peter Gabriel


"Growing up in Rhode Island, not really the center of the rock world, Independent record stores were like a community meeting place for kids who looked beyond the Top 40 charts and were open to hearing something other than what the big record companies told you should like. Any of the significant musicians of the past thirty years, I first heard and heard about through independent record stores from the music playing in the store, the true music fans/staff, and the independent magazines and music sold there. Independent stores are the only places where the history of music can still be found along with the next great music not just a few titles from a select few. Thanks to long missed stores like Sam's, Tom's Tracks, Moffat's, and Two Guys to "Still Doing It" Luke's and Newbury Comics. Support the little guy!!!"

- William Chalko



Woke up with the Prince song, Raspberry Beret in my head this morning.

Sort of appropriate since today is International Record Store Day.

I have to work today(eh), and there is a record(and CD) shop right next to where I work(yay!), so I'll definitely be popping in there to buy some new music on a lunch break.

If you are lucky enough to still have an independently owned record shop near you, don't deny yourself the musical adventure and feeling of discovery(which used to be so common to so many, but is now a dying thing...)today!

Support your indie record store.

The above quote mentioned "Sam's" and "Tom's Tracks" in Rhode Island--and it took me right back to those days , buying the latest XTC, The Fall, Julian Cope or Tom Tom Club LP, EP or 45 single. *sigh*

In Boston(I was a student there in the 80's), I used to buy at least one new record a week, mostly at Nuggets on Commonwealth Ave. in Kenmore Square. I wasn't even sure if they were still in business, so Googled them this morning and was elated to discover they are still there! Miraculous!

Of course, Newbury Comics , which started out as a closet size shop selling comics and punk 45 singles on Boston's Newbury Comics(moving down the street to slightly larger accommodations and then into a successful chain with 27 stores throughout New England) is still around.


This is a short blog entry --might have more to share about today, later.


Now, I have to jump into some clothes(maybe the new "old" clothes I bought at the consignment shop yesterday that make me feel like a 50's housewife), eat breakfast and go off to work.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Scented 13

Image

For my Thursday 13 list this time, I have listed 13 perfumes I have pulled out of storage now that its spring. I have packed away the rich, spicy ones since I want to lighten up and wear my more floral and airy scents now.


1. "Ferre" Gianfranco Ferre (starts off with a pineapple note and dries down to a powdery iris)


2. "Oscar Bamboo" Oscar de la Renta (very different from anything else I wear, and just plain "pretty" but I wish it lasted longer on me)

3. "Skin Musk" (my old drugstore favorite--been wearing this since the 80's when it was made by Bonne Bell)

4. " Duende" Jesus del Pozo (I love this one so much, I even wear it from time to time in winter--such a driftingly soft and soapy scent that always makes me happy)


5. Terranova "Rain"(another oldie-but-goodie-a lily-of-the-valley and musk scent that smells green somehow))

6. Terranova "Sakura & Green Tea" (I am wearing this one today)

7. "Max Mara" (sugared lemon and magnolia)

8. "Noa Perle" Cacharel(I like this one on foggy, rainy days--it has a hazlenut note!!)

9. "Always" Avon (tulips and melon?)

10. "Wish Of Luck" Avon (cheap but cheery!)

11. Marc Jacobs "Essence" (creamy gardenia overload!)

12. Cerruti 1881 Lumieres d`Ete (a fresh breeze)

13. Elizabeth Taylor "Violet Eyes" ~~I can't believe I like this one so much and never would have thought I would be owning and wearing an Elizabeth Taylor scent which I always thought of as "old lady"(even though, yes, yes, that is probably the category I belong to by this time), but this is amazing! It actually makes me think I am smelling the color violet(but there aren't any violet notes in this, interestingly enough. Its like wearing a soft, violet hug, actually.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Tuesday Randomality

Image Some random thoughts that have been percolating around in my head today....




****

Today was the first day that really said "spring" to me. Even without the sun out, the atmosphere felt warm and gentle and softened around the edges. The harsh, barren look of winter is gone! The birdsong ringing throughout the neighborhood made me think of a Baroque symphony as I walked Jewel, and I could smell the earth. Finally, you can see a haze of soft pink and red and yes, even green on the tips of the trees. When I get home from work, I hear kid's voices outside--see kids on bicycles.



**



Yesterday at work, I had an illuminating conversation with a customer. A painter who is somewhat well-known in the area had come in to price frames for an upcoming show. She asked if I, too, was an artist and I said I was, b-u-t...really hadn't done much with my art since becoming a parent. She told me she didn't take off with her art until after her last child was away at college. That was inspiring to me and made me think it might be "okay" to be a late bloomer after all.



***



I saw this magazine cover when I was in the grocery store today: Image Why does every celebrity now think they are that interesting when they are pregnant? Do they not realize that millions of other people have, yes, carried babies and the public have seen plenty of bulging bellies. And, Mariah, that is a rather unflattering photo of you and why do you have a need to share it with the whole world? Didn't Demi Moore and countless other copy-cat expectant celeb mothers already do this gimmick?? Why do so many celebrities feel that their pregnancy is so much more interesting than any other pregnancy? "All about the babies"...spare me!



Image Just last weekend, I finished re-reading the second of the two memoirs ("A Girl From Yamhill" was the first, and "My Own Two Feet" the second) written by Beverly Cleary, of Beezus and Ramona, Henry Huggins, Mouse And The Motorcycle, and other books fame. I was so enchanted with her early life in the 1920's and Depression era 1930's that I started to wonder if she were even still alive and I had to look it up. I was relieved to learn she was indeed, still alive and would turn 95 this year. And her birthday happens to be today. This is a woman whose books I discovered in the second grade and I felt I "knew" her characters, especially Beezus and her little sister, Ramona. To walk to my elementary schools when I was growing up in Augusta, Maine, I cut through two yards from my street to a Quimby Street, and that was the last name of Ramona in the book(who actually lived on Klikitat Street--I'll always remember that). I really related to those books, and even though Cleary's characters in her books lived on the other coast all the way over in Oregon, I saw my own neighborhood when I read the books and it felt familiar to me. I got to relive a little of my childhood over again when I read some of the Beezus and Ramona books to Rachel when she was younger, too.




**


Finally, an amazing video showing some intra-species love(or else the fish breath on the dolphin was what was attracting the cat!). This is guaranteed to make you feel all gooey inside...awww...










Sunday, April 10, 2011

Spring Fever with Martinis

Image These pics are from last Sunday, when Mr. F and I spent the afternoon strolling around Newport and had a few martinis at The Red Parrot. All in all, a slightly indulgent, barely warm(cool breeze off the harbor) early spring day. I took these photos, mostly on Spring Street(walking on the sunny side of the street, of course) as we walked back from the Red Parrot.
Image
Image This centuries old house appeared to be vacant and abandoned....


Image
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ImageMasses of purple crocuses blooming in a little square in front of the White Horse Tavern, which at one time was once run by a pirate!--a little history:

Frances Brinley constructed the original building on the site in 1652. In 1673, the lot was sold to William Mayes, and the building was enlarged to become a tavern. The building was also used for large meetings, including use as a Rhode Island General Assembly meeting place, a court house, and a city hall. William Mayes, Sr., obtained a tavern license in 1687 and William Mayes, Jr., a well-known pirate, operated the tavern through the early eighteenth century. The operation was named "The White Horse Tavern" in 1730 by owner Jonathan Nichols.


During the American Revolution, Tories and British troops were quartered there around the time of the British occupation and the Battle of Rhode Island.

After years of neglect as a boarding house, Newport's Van Bueren family donated money to the private Preservation Society of Newport to restore the building in 1952. After the restoration, the building was sold and once again operated as a private tavern and restaurant. As of 2011, it still remains a popular drinking and dining location.


Image


ImageMr. F's white chocolate and espresso martini.


I had a French Martini, made with Chambord, vanilla vodka(yeah, I had no idea there was such a thing, either), and pineapple juice, and I liked it so much I have since made it at home.

**


*1 1/2 oz vodka

(I used vanilla vodka since that was how they made it at the Red Parrot)

*1/2 oz Chambord Liqueur

*2 oz Pineapple Juice

**

Shake this really well in cocktail shaker with plenty of ice--the pineapple juice gets nice and frothy, making this drink almost creamy.

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To end...a Blogthing quiz(haven't done one of these in some time):



You Are a Blue Martini

Image
You may have had a difficult time earlier in life. You are highly sensitive and a little cautious. You are a reserved and careful person, but you don't let that stop you from doing your thing. Old fashioned and conservative, you carry yourself with dignity. You don't embarrass yourself. You are attracted to powerful people who have a good deal of influence. You wouldn't mind some of that rubbing off on you.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Swampin'

Image Pussywillow (Salix discolor)


After dropping R off at here driver's ed. class at 8:00 at the University campus in Kingston this morning, I met my sister for a walk(turned out to be a two hour long one!) through the Great Swamp Management area nearby.


This 3,475-acre property near West Kingston in southern Rhode Island includes 2,600 acres of forested wetlands in the floodplains of the Chickasheen, Usquepaug, and Pawcatuck rivers. Red maple, Atlantic white cedar, red oak, white oak, white pine, and American holly are important tree species. The Great Neck, a higher-elevation drumlin near the center of the WMA, was farmed and pastured before being abandoned in the early to mid-1900s. The Rhode Island Division of Fish and Wildlife manages Great Swamp WMA for wildlife conservation, hunting and fishing, and compatible public recreation. Waterfowl, American woodcock, ruffed grouse, Northern bobwhite, whip-poor-will, osprey, Northern harrier, New England cottontail, Eastern cottontail, beaver, bobcat, river otter, fisher, coyote, red and gray foxes, and white-tailed deer are some of the wild species inhabiting the area.






Image


Swampdog


Lucky Jewel got to come along, and was in all her glory as a true bird dog on the trails and along the shores of the swamp itself, sniffing out waterfowl, deer and who-knows-what-else scents. She also had fun chasing Canada geese into the water . We spotted osprey(fish eagles) overhead, some carrying giant branches to add to their nests. Although, from these photos, not much looks alive and green and growing yet, the trees were full of birds and their birdsong, and we spotted some trees--shadbark and I *think* witch hazel(not entirely sure)in bloom.


Image This is me sitting on a (cold as) stone "chair" along one of the trails.



Image Some green showing in a boggy place among the still-bare trees.

Vernal pools, unseen, deeper in the woods were the source of "spring peeper"(Pseudacris crucifer) frog sounds(one of the earliest signs of spring here, and usually loudest--a true chorus--at night). Interestingly, while looking up the correct Latin classification name for the this frog, which all my life I had always only known them as "peepers", I learned that on Martha's Vineyard they are called "pinkletinks". Heh.


Listen to the peepers here.



Image Typical New England woodland --rocks and stones all over, sometimes with trees growing out of a split rock like this one.


Image Yes, the landscape is flat. Image
Image Jewel, sniffing away, and my sister, Angela.