My mom mentioned she hadn’t gotten to read a blog post from me in a while. I said, just reread the last post. Life is basically just a rerun during the summer. Get up, have breakfast with my little buddy, and then go out and water.

Last post I talked about how much rain we were getting. This month, not so much. There was that flooding 5″ of rain a week ago, but nothing since. So out I go to water anything that was just planted in the last couple of weeks. Which is a number of plants!
I mow when necessary, weed when necessary, which is all the time… The interesting thing about native plants, is when they fill in, you don’t need to weed under them, but you do need to watch out for things that suddenly appear out of nowhere and are 4 feet tall because some bird pooped out the seeds. Today I pulled out four Northern Catalpa trees. There were a few Tree of Heaven seedlings, which I instantly eradicated. And though the pokeweed is native, and I kept a few bushes because they are an important food source in the fall, I don’t need 485 seedlings. So I’m always on the hunt for things that shouldn’t be on my property, and I use my plant app on my phone hourly.
The gardens are magical.




Even the lily pad in the koi pond bloomed.

My landscape designer ripped out a 40 foot tall non-native trumpet vine, and we replaced it with an American Wisteria (Wisteria frutescens), who knew there was such a thing, not to be confused with that monster non-native thing that destroys buildings.

I had additional path lighting added to one of the new planting areas. It was magical to sit in my window and look out at the lit path as dusk set in, during a rain storm.

The insects are everywhere, except mosquitos, for some reason I don’t have them. Dragonflies are everywhere. I hear dragonflies eat mosquitos…

There must be 50 different types of bees in my yard, all different sizes. Here is one on the Rattlesnake Master.

Lest you think that my life is one giant play in the dirt kind of existence, which it mostly is right now, I’m heavily into the early music world, playing recorder with a couple of different groups, and now the cello, with the early music beginner group. We had a performance at the Tenafly Nature Center last Saturday night, I wish I had a picture. It was for a Faeries and Fireflies festival, and there was a quintet of us, along with a drummer and a couple vocalists, all set up in a life size eagle’s nest built on a platform. We were in our medieval costumes and it was just the greatest experience. We even had a mama doe and four baby fawns stop to listen to a few songs.

Our Medieval Festival is coming up the end of August, and I’ll be playing bass recorder with Montclair Early Music, and cello with the beginner group called the Musettes.

I think a lot about this new path I’ve chosen, especially on the cello. I’m not particularly good at the cello, but I am always prepared, organized, and I show up. And I practice a lot. That in life, counts for a lot. Talent is a gift. But the professional part of showing up prepared and practiced counts for more! So I practice, and I show up with my music ready, in order. And I play my heart out. And each time, I get a little better.
Meanwhile, my local library in the next town has a botanical drawing class once a month. True botanical drawing requires precision. Especially on location. Laying on the ground using calipers and measuring devices, to sketch accurately a particular flower or leaf, isn’t quite my most favorite thing. I much prefer to draw from a picture that remains static, and isn’t influenced by a breeze, or by changes in lighting. One of the things I tried was to take a great flower picture. and then trace it onto my sketchbook. That way it is accurate size wise, and then I could fill it in with watercolor. But that sort of becomes like a coloring book. Which I use to love as a kid.


But now, I just want to look at the picture, figure out how things are shaped, and do a quick line sketch, toss in some color, research what I’m drawing, and call it a day.

July is my least favorite month, I hate the heat, obviously I’m a sweater girl, because I make them. But July is filled with loud thunderstorms, and fireworks, and I have a couple of animals that get traumatized easily with loud unexplained noises. So I always plan to sit on the floor of my basement, during July nights when there are fireworks or thunderstorms, with my dogs, one of them has to be sedated, and have my knitting at hand. I started a new sweater, because September will be here before you know it.


And yes, in spite of my crazy busy life, I’m still weaving. I have a powder room on my first floor, off the kitchen. It is located in the interior of the house, no windows, and therefore some protection from things like fireworks, etc. One of my dogs lays on the tile floor in there a lot.

I was using the powder room the other day, sitting there, like one does, with the dog curled up around the sink, and noticed that there was some kind of rubber debris scattered around the floor. Right away I assumed the dog chewed up something. I looked at the little bathmat on the floor, not remembering at all where it came from or how old it was, and it looked intact, so I was confused.
I turned the rug over and yikes! The rubber backing was disintegrating before my eyes.

Damn, that means I have to add to the list a trip to get a new rug for the powder room.
As I sat there, I started to think… Which one can do easily sitting a powder room…
I had just transferred a warp from a table loom, onto my floor loom, or one of them anyway. It was a colorful Rep Weave, about 25″ wide, and would be much easier to weave off spread over 8 shafts on a large floor loom instead of struggling trying to separate a dense warp on 4 shafts on a table loom. I had blown through half the repeat in just one sitting already. Yarns are vintage Silk City Fiber Contessa, Rayon/Silk, variegated, circular wound on a board to create an ikat effect.

So I got to thinking… I wonder if I could just finish that little Rep rug, and if it would fit in the area in front of the sink in the powder room. I went out to the studio, turned on some music, and got to work. Within a few hours, I had woven off the rug, stitched the ends, tossed it in the washer and dryer, and bound off the edges with some silk noil bias I had laying around.

It is my new favorite thing in the house. I love that I can instantly fix a problem with something that comes from my hands.

Oh, and the original rug? My daughter told me later, when I showed her the replacement, that the original mat had been given to her by a former co-worker 9 years ago when the co-worker was leaving the vet practice and cleaning out her locker. The co-worker kept it in her locker for her dogs when she would bring them to work with her. It didn’t owe us anything.
So my days are full, of flowers, of music, of yarn, of animals, I only wish there were more hours in a day. Fortunately I live in a climate where by late fall, the gardens will go to sleep, and I will have a few months of inside time, and by March, when I’m tired of the inside time, things outside will start to wake up. Meanwhile, there are vegetables to harvest and eat, and we are coming into tomato season, and there are a lot of tomatoes out there!

Stay tuned!
Hello! Thank you for your blog and pictures. I enjoy them so much! I live in Berlin and am lucky to have a small fifth floor balcony (it seats two people). I used to know nothing about gardening but I love the plants so mich that slowly slowly I put together a garden which grows! I have roses, snapdragons and flowering herbs like rosemary and oregano. I love watching the bees and various insects feast on the flowers – though the roses don‘t offer much. My roses are fighters and I love watching them thrive in the less than ideal… Read more »
Your new powder room rug rocks! Congrats on creating a solution with something you did. Now you can enjoy all of the times you have a little visit to that room. Your gardens look wonderful and the up-close photo of the dragonfly was awesome! Hugs from California, Nancy
Daryl, your sketches and watercolors are inspired. Obviously practiced with many pencil and brush miles. Makes me smile to remember when you wanted to do this, but couldn’t find the time. Good for Muldar for encouraging the possible!!!
Love the rug! And your garden is beautiful! Always interesting to see your blog.,
Your yard is so beautiful and a dream garden for insects and small creatures. Congratulations!
Your videos and blogs have inspired me to weave fabric to turn into garments. A niece getting married has postponed my first project. (Of course, I have to weave her a wedding present.) In the meantime, you also gave me the idea of taking clothes that I no longer wear and making something new with them. And so, a pair of culottes that I had made are being transformed into a sashiko-stitched top.
Your ‘botanical’ art work reminds me of the class I took from your friend, whose name I don’t remember, the year after I retired. I was so full of hope and enthusiasm until I showed her some of my iris paintings to which she responded rather disdainfully, “they’re irises”. They were little whimsical ditties but I liked them. Ha, but nothing like the one I did in her class which was much more…. well, botanical.
I absolutely love the bathroom rug.
Thank you for sharing! Just beautiful–and inspiring.
Lovely post!! I so enjoy your paintings, as well as your weaving! Quick question, how did you manage to remove the trumpet vine? Ours can’t be killed and is sprouting up all over!!
You are just getting tomatoes?! Mine are just winding down. I have 3 window sills in the kitchen full of tomatoes! Cherokee Purple is our all time favorite and then I have large cherry (producing hundreds), Early Girl, still giving generously, and some fickle others that seem to produce a little in spurts. My eggplants love the heat and a new one to me, a KAMU eggplant is lovely and mild. The Shoe string eggplants are a kick to peal, like half is gone by the time the skin is off! And yes, I too, am weaving: a warp of… Read more »
I so admire your zest for living and your continued life long learning. You are a role model for me since my own husband died 18 months ago. I do aspire to pick up the pieces and live life fully again, as you do. Thank you.