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Friday, October 25, 2019

Dragonfly DragonRye

It is said that Dragonflies are messengers from heaven, bringing us messages from our loved ones who have run ahead.  Bringing us comfort with their gentle touch, the zing of their wings, and the amazing ability they have to stay on a shoulder, hand, elbow or even eyebrow with a seemingly effortless ease.  Being there for us.  Just being there.  It is very rare in the spring and summer when I am thinking of Rye that a Dragonfly does not come by to land on me and bring me a hello from him, or to comfort me with a little visit.

My cousin Joy Lynn is an artist!  I have lots of family who are artists, in all varieties of medium, but Joy Lynn is an artist with paint and easel and water color and oils.  The way Van Gogh and Starry Night was artistry - only better even!


Joy Lynn painted this beautiful work and I don't remember what she called it, but I call it my"Girl in the Wind" and I have it hanging in my office at work.  It reminds me to gather my blessings around me and look at whats going on around me as well for blessings.  I know I can keep F'ing going when I look at this beautiful print.  I know I can take a deep breath and get through the day, no matter what is swirling around me.....and hopefully be a nice lady too!



When I went to pick up the print of "Girl in the Wind" she also gifted me with the Dragonfly blessing that you see.  An incredible original watercolor piece she calls "DragonRye".  The pictures do not do either of these pieces justice, but know that they are incredible and vibrant.  I was so moved and blessed by this gift and the story she told me about how it came to be.  Rye woke her in the middle of the night - of course!


Here are Joy Lynn's words about how this DragonRye came to be.... such a precious gift for me with a message from my son it seems.


Here is something I painted in between currently working on commissioned pieces; as a gift for my cousin Lisa. It was a piece painted in love as a celebration of her son Rye’s life. I finished it a couple of days before the anniversary of his passing, which was three years ago. God moved me with compassion and I finally was completely unstuck creatively, except for a tiny drawing or painting here or there, but creativity didn’t flow easily it was hard work. But as God’s love flowed through me for my cousin I was finally able to paint this Dragonfly. I have been super stuck creatively for almost three years and this labor of love is the first time I have been moved so deeply with God’s compassion that I could paint and had to paint again. It was painted with love and sheer joy in between laughing and crying. So many wonderful emotions were felt during this painting’s journey.
😇🙌🎨😘❤️🎉
She said that some of what look like water spots on the painting are actually her tears mixing with the colors and the paper to become part of the masterpiece.


Here it is in it's silver frame, gracing the wall of my home office right above my desk.   I am hoping that she will have both of these made into fabric that I can use in quilts! Along with a couple of her other art pieces!  I'm not sure I would be able to cut is though the fabric would be so beautiful!


You can see her other art at her Joyful Aspirations Facebook site Here and her website Here

including this one....
No photo description available.

P.S. I want this one in fabric too!

I hope that you have someone in your life who blesses you with incredible art of some type and who helps to uplift you when you need it the most.  Thank you Joy Lynn ~ Joyful Aspirations  Blessed be.

Monday, October 7, 2019

Oh Good Garlic!!!!

I talked a while ago about trying to grow garlic in Alaska. You can see that post here. I saw some at the Alaska State Fair that was beautiful - I think it was from the Kenai Peninsula and it was called Khabar.  Mom and I wanted to try garlic again and so we planned way ahead and ordered our garlic in the winter of last year (late fall actually) to be recieved in September-ish of this year for planting.

Our garlic came from Filaree Garlic Farms and the bulbs are fat, juicy and happy looking!  It has frozen quite hard here (before we even got the bulbs to plant) and so we both had our garlic bins and areas ready to go before the garlic got here.
That bag says "Purple Glazer" one of the varieties that we ordered for this year.  I had 6 of my Purple Glazer bulbs come back in the spring and harvested a lovely bit of garlic - even though moose came through and ate all the tops off of my onions and my garlic - strangest thing ever - that was a first for me!  So this year I had to dig and find the garlic to harvest it.  What a mess!  But tasty garlic!


So we have Khabar, Purple Glazer and Metechi varieties.  Mostly what are called "hardneck" varieties.


So you take the bulbs apart into plantable cloves- keeping the paper skin on the cloves.  The paper skin you see at left here are the ones from the very outside of the bulb.  Save it to use in your chicken or veggie broth - it adds a lot of flavor to those broths!


I started with this 6'x6' space filled with good compost and garden soil (part of my Wicked Good Dirt Hill).


There are a few different methods recommended to plant garlic but our directions from Filaree said to plant them 6" apart in rows 9" apart and about 2" deep.  I admit I fudged a little and mine are closer than that - Im at about 6" and 6".  I did get them the 2" deep though! Some are now a little deeper since a baby moose came by and trod around in the garlic bed to see what I have planted there!  I wasn't abe to retrieve all of the cloves out of the depth that his little hooves trod them darn it!  My fingers are crossed that they survive!


I put a label on each end of each row in case the curious Wicked Ravens get ahold of the tags - I might be left with one at least at one end?!  I have to still cover the garlic bed with leaf mulch and some screen to keep it from blowing away.  Some folks recommend putting blue board insulation on the garlic bed over the top of the leaf mulch, but I have not found that to work so well for me out here.  I have had better success with just the screen and leaf mulch - a think layer of it - 4"+ - and you let the snow (hopefully) do the rest.

Then you leave it to come up in the spring.  Garlic takes a year to mature - you plant in the fall and harvest in the fall!  That takes a big love of garlic and passion for gardening!

If you are looking for a challenge and you love garlic (which we do at Wicked Raven Farm) give a little garlic a try!  It is worth the work and the wait!

Blessed be as we slide gently into winter shouting Whoo Hoo!  Bring on the snow!

****UPDATE****

I got exactly zero garlic that came up!  Even though there was lots of mulch and snow cover - when I dug down to check on them after every bit of the garlic at my mom's place (Snowfire Gardens) not only came up but was about a foot tall already, there were just frozen rotten cloves.  Darn!



I don't think I'll try garlic again until I have a better (warmer) spot for it.  I might see about putting it over the leach field or septic next year and see if that helps, but for this year I think I'll just take a pass!

I hope that if you have tried garlic you have had great success, and pass on the variety that might grow in Big Lake, Alaska!

Blessed Be!