
This has been an amazing spring, a spring when I have been brought face to face with people I'd only admired from afar. When I've realized that the Internet connection that started our friendship is a powerful thing and capable of much good. That the feeling you get when you chat with someone via email can be as real as it is good. That came home to me when Murr Brewster traveled all the way from Oregon to stay a few days at Indigo Hill. I knew I'd love Murr and sure enough we were like sisters (without the baggage) from the moment we met. I felt I'd known her forever.
Chet Baker loved Murr, too.



"It's a whole salmon. Caught it this morning."
And I thought to myself, Oh God what am I going to do with a whole fresh salmon when we're leaving for a festival. With friends like these, who needs enemies? "Smoked?" I squeaked hopefully.
And Murr turned around and handed me a rolled up hank of fabric and I thought, Oh, thank God, it's just a piece of salmon.
And I unrolled it
and tears squirted horizontally out of my eyes
because something like that has to be made with great love
pieced together out of hundreds of tiny bits of fabric and quilted for hours and hours

and capturing the soul of The Bacon so precisely and adorably
and after all we'd never met, but Murr just knew what to do. And it still makes me weep.
Murr's made a number of these quilts, all for friends, mostly of their beloved doggehs, present and past.
Thank you just doesn't begin to do it. I have the quilt hanging in my kitchen where it's the first thing you see when you walk in the door--you can't escape it-- and everybody who walks in goes straight to it with their mouths hanging open and they all kind of sputter for awhile before they're ready to get the story of The Woman Who Can Do Anything She Turns Her Mind To.
So that was a hostess gift with the mostess, and I am still agog. I resolved to try to be as good a hostess as Murr was a guest so I tied my apron on and fed her up good. No salmon, though.
So that was a hostess gift with the mostess, and I am still agog. I resolved to try to be as good a hostess as Murr was a guest so I tied my apron on and fed her up good. No salmon, though.
The place was showing rawther well, with trees dressed in filmy greens and blossomy blouses of white. View from towertop.
Liam was exploring the physics of cardboard ramps and flying Matchbox cars.
The meadow was alive with field sparrow song.

Chet Baker was cold, as usual, so we fixed him up in an ET wrap.
Murr got a taste of GardenPod Xanadu. All that's since been emptied out and put into planters and baskets, and it's simply ridiculous how beautiful it all is.



Chet Baker was cold, as usual, so we fixed him up in an ET wrap.


When Nina (of Nature Remains) arrived, we played with a baby mourning dove for awhile

The Bacon, awash in blue-eyed Mary (Collinsonia verticillata)

The garlic mustard is the big white stuff towering over little Mary.




Murr looks for salamanders everywhere. She likes salamanders best of all. And she found two: a dusky salamander Desmognathus fuscus


Woo hoo!


Jacob's ladder

and dwarf larkspur. The larkspur had spread and was coming up yards and yards away from the original tiny patch I'd known about for years



We found tiny gold-butted beetles partying on a splash of bird doo, which is something I'd have liked even without Murr there


But he shambled up to the fence to say hello, for he is nothing if not a companionable bull.

Tina, who looks more like a hippo with her frostbitten ears than a cow, said hi too.

When who should arrive but Jeff Warren, Buck and Tina's owner. I was delighted to introduce him to Murr and Nina.

We ended a perfect excursion with a look at seven perfect Carolina chickadee eggs in a box in my driveway. As I speak six of those seven eggs are feathered out and yelling for their afternoon repast.

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