Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Shakespearean Garden












The timeless appeal of Shakespearean literature draws upon nature's imagery that eloquently brings to life concepts such as beauty, love, and faithfulness. Plants create many different moods, linking scents to memories, colors to emotions, and various textures to any number of sensations. I think of this often when I write. Shakespeare has always inspired me. So with my botanical background I searched out these flowers and plants that could be the flowers of his writings. I plan --- over the next three years to develop a Shakespeare inspired flower bed.. I reasearched some what I have found are here and their images to see.

The color and texture really shows .. I so wish we could all smell their scents!!!

Sparkles Bee










Friday, April 25, 2008

Puppy Update




Another Puppy update.. Well my babies are 7 months old now. I had them pose today for a snap shot or two.. They cooperated some what---LOL

I am just now getting them to know that it is OK to be out doors by themselves.. I am letting them alone for a short time to help them trust themselves.. We have so many wild animals here. This has to be gradual so they gain confidence..

They love the warm weather too!! They want to stay out all day with mom, and do all the things Mom is doing..

They love all this digging and dirt moving.. The garden is of great interest too. They helped me move all my plant starts from the house to the green house with much interest. They know these plants are pretty important as they walk around them very carefully! It is really funny to watch as I have never told them anything about the plants they must just know by how I act when working with them??? Very smart puppies,--> to smart sometimes.. :-)


Sparkles

Bee

Green House Project Update






Hi to all .. ** FINALLY ** My green house is done!!!! Not all the surrounding ground work, but most of it.. Scotch on the Rocks was doing it at the same time we were under construction with the building.. Of course he had to build a support wall, and small patio ect. ect..
I have all my plant starts in there now. I had all those in the house, and I planted some cucumber seeds today. We made temporary tables out of saw horses, and 2 by 4's for the tops. They work pretty good. I was surprised.
It is so nice, I have waited a long time for this day. Lots of fun for me now to mess around in there .. Nice and warm to -->on a cold day!!!


Sparkling Bee

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

35 Ways to Reduce Your Carbon Footprint


A Carbon Footprint is the impact our activities have on the environment by the amount of greenhouse gases we each produce. It is measured in units of carbon dioxide.

Please use the calculater link below to find out your current carbon footprint.



http://www.carbonfootprint.com/calculator.aspx







Hi to all,
I spent my Earth Day finishing my green house, and working in my compost bin. It was a lovley day here in the high 60's. To my surprize my newly planted sunflowers and pumpkins emerged from their seed today!!
Sparkling Bee



Happy Earth Day --> Please remember, 1 person's actions CAN change the world.




EVEN though industry and governments are going to have to make earth-shaking changes to cool things down, there's plenty we can to do help. The basics of reducing our individual carbon footprints are to do what Henry David Thoreau said: "Simplify, simplify." We'll all live better with less-processed, packaged and industrially produced stuff carted here from across the planet.
Then there's Wabi Sabi, Japan's esthetic ideal: Less is more. If you aren't using it, give it away or dispose of it responsibly. Before you purchase, be sure there's room for it in your home. Buy local, buy less and reuse, repair, freecycle and recycle more. You may pay more for locally produced, fair trade and organic products, but it evens out when you buy less of everything else and reduce carbon intensive activities like driving. It's not a coincidence that when you do things to save the planet you not only save money, but your life gets simpler, healthier and happier.




Here are 35 tips.


1. CUT DOWN YOUR COMMUTE.
2. BIKE TO WORK.
3. MAKE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION WORK FOR YOU.
4. DISCOVER 'TRIP LINKING.'
5. GO SOLAR.
6. GREEN YOUR BUSINESS.
Don't have the bandwidth or bread to develop "go greener" programs? Silicon Valley Leadership Group, Sustainable Silicon Valley and PG&E offer free services that help businesses get energy efficient and plug into available subsidies and legislative initiatives. Develop state-of-the-art commuter and telecommuter programs that'll get your employees to work without their cars (again, 511.org is a good place to start).
7. HUG A TREE. It's OK. It's cool now. Better yet, plant a tree.
8. USE LESS PAPER. The third largest industrial emitter of global warming pollution is the pulp and paper industry. Use paper made from post-consumer waste, and recycle your newspapers.
9. RID YOURSELF OF JUNK MAIL. 41pounds.org claims that the average adult gets exactly that much junk mail in a year. You can pay them $41 to nuke it from your life or try these more labor-intensive solutions: Call whoever is mailing you stuff and tell them to stop and to not sell, exchange or give your info to other commercial interests. Write this on their envelopes and mail it to them. When you buy online or through a catalog, or buy a magazine subscription, tell these vendors the same. Opt out of credit card solicitations by calling 1.888.5.Opt-Out. Many junk mailers like ADVO and Val-Pak Coupons have online opt-outs.
10. CUT DOWN ON PRINTER USAGE. Also, don't toss old faxes, reports and letters—put them in your printer face up and print on their blank side.
11. KEEP A CLOSED-DOOR POLICY. Moms know a lot about this. Keeping your doors closed means don't have to turn the heat or air conditioning on as much. Don't set your thermostat too high when it's cold or too low when it's warm.
12. NO TRASH BAGS. Don't use specially bought plastic bags—line your kitchen garbage container with newspaper.
13. LEARN HOW MUCH ENERGY YOU'RE USING IN YOUR HOME.
14. USE THE SUN TO DRY YOUR CLOTHES.
Energy-guzzling gas and electric clothes dryers replaced Grandma's clotheslines, drying umbrellas and wooden drying racks that can be used inside or out. Sun-dried clothes smell good, the sun bleaches whites whiter and you'll seriously reduce your utility bill.
15. OUTSMART YOUR APPLIANCES. If you must use then, run your dishwasher and your laundry machines only when you have full loads.
16. TAKE SHORTER SHOWERS. And use less heated water.
17. BUY ENERGY STAR LABEL APPLIANCES. It's the mark of approval from the federal government, and for once, that's not a bad thing. See the details at energystar.gov.
18. SEAL OFF WINDOWS AND DOORS. Using weather-stripping to seal drafts around windows and doors will cut your heating and cooling expenses and reduce the burning of fossil fuels. It also protects against zombies.
19. GO SECONDHAND. Before purchasing something, ask yourself if you already have it or something similar that can be reused. Can you buy it secondhand at a thrift store or on Craigslist?
20. GET STUFF FREE. If there's something you need only once or twice, don't buy it. Borrow and return it. Go to www.freecycle .org and join a local group to exchange or borrow stuff. It's amazing what you can get for free by browsing the listings or posting a want ad.
21. REVOLUTIONIZE YOUR COMPUTER USAGE. Turn off computers and pull chargers out of the wall when you're not using them. Maximize your CPU settings, like the sleep mode, to reduce energy use. Set your printer to fast quality so you use less toner. Find responsible sellers and their take backs at www.computertakeback.com.
22. REFILL YOUR PRINTER CARTRIDGE. Find a Cartridge World franchise and reuse instead of tossing and buying a new one. Mailing your used cartridges somewhere uses fossil-fuel-intensive air travel. The same with gimmicky faux green products that come with a mailing envelope. Don't mail something to recycle it!
23. RECYCLE RESPONSIBLY. Be sure your e-waste recycler isn't merely collecting and selling it to brokers who'll ship it to a developing nation or a prison where it will be dismantled for salvageable parts and dumped. Go to www.ban.org and choose recyclers like Green Citizen who've taken the Electronics Recycler's Pledge of True Stewardship.
24. DON'T DUMP. At least not on Goodwill or the Salvation Army. If it isn't nice enough for them to sell, or if it's too specialized for them to know what to do with it, they'll have to pay to trash it.
25. USE THE PUBLIC LIBRARY. There's no need to buy so many books, especially if they're published overseas and sold at a big box store. Any library in Santa Clara County usually either has the book you want or can get it for you from a neighboring library.
26. READ LABELS AND BUY LOCAL. Organic from Canada or overseas isn't as easy on the environment as locally produced products. Buying anything imported across an ocean means a container ship transported it. "Just one container ship traveling one mile produces NOx emissions equaling 25,000 cars traveling the same distance," says Anthony Fournier of the Santa Barbara County Pollution Control District. Foreign manufacturers often use carbon-intensive industrial and environmental practices that are illegal here. Many imports are made in sweatshops where people labor in dangerous work environments and aren't paid fairly. Reducing the demand for imports not only reduces our carbon footprint but also sends a message to big business that we want better for everyone.
27. REDUCE PACKAGING AND PLASTICS. Let's stop using billions of pounds of plastic which uses millions of barrels of oil to produce. Wherever plastic is manufactured the environment gets trashed and the workers and nearby residents get sick from harmful chemical emissions. Plastic bags and water bottles release endocrine disrupters like Phallates and bisphenol A, especially when they're reused or heated.
28. BYOCSB. Bring your own cloth shopping bags.
29. BYOCC. Bring your own coffee canister. If you buy beans or ground coffee from a coffee shop, bulk sellers will usually let you bring your own containers.
30. SAY NO TO INDIVIDUAL WRAPS. Choose products without individually plastic-wrapped multiple servings.
31. REALLY SAY NO TO STYROFOAM. If it's sold in Styrofoam, just don't buy it.
32. DON'T BE A SLAVE TO CONVENIENCE. We'll all be paying later for using convenience foods like packaged mixed salads, because they use a lot of resources to produce.
33. AVOID FAST FOOD. Methane-producing factory farming and long-distance shipping are the heart of its business model and they're clear-cutting rain forests to graze their cows.
34. EAT LESS MEAT. Especially beef. The Worldwatch Institute says growing numbers of intensively farmed livestock are responsible for 18 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions and account for 37 percent of emissions of methane, which has more than 20 times the global warming potential of CO2, and 65 percent of emissions of nitrous oxide, another powerful greenhouse gas, coming from manure.
35. DISPOSABLE CUPS? Really? Do the math: Buying coffee every day in a disposable cup generates at least 20 pounds of paper a year plus several hundred megaindustrially produced plastic covers. Styrofoam cups are worse. Dr. Theo Colborn, in "Our Stolen Future," says researchers have found traces of polystyrene in 100 percent of human tissue tested, because it migrates from the cup into hot food and beverages. Yuk! Bring your own coffee cup!

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Fiddleheads--> a sign of Spring



Hi to all, Just had to drop a bit on the Fiddleheads. I love them.. They are so cool. This time every year I search for them, and its like a treasure hunt. Then one day there they are pushing their fiddle heads up from the earth seeking the warmth from the sunlight of spring time.

Sparkles
Bee

Fiddleheads are the young coiled fern leaves (about an inch in diameter) of the ostrich fern (Matteuccia struthiopteris). Nearly all ferns have fiddleheads, but those of the ostrich fern are unlike any other.

Common Name, Comes from the resemblance of the fronds to the plumes of the large flightless bird of Africa.

Other common names include Fiddlehead Fern, Garden Fern, Hardy Fern, Fougère-à-l'autruche (Qué), Strutbräken, Foderbräken (Swe), Strutsveng (Nor), Strudsvinge (Dan), Kotkansiipi (Fin), Straußfarn (Ger), Matteuccia (It), Struccpáfrány (Hun), Pióropusznik strusi (Pol)

(Hope I spelled these right?)

Fiddleheads are a delicacy that appears in the early spring. Harvest the tender little rolls of fern almost as soon as they appear within an inch or two of the ground. Carefully brush out and remove the brown scales. Wash and cook the “heads” in a small amount of lightly salted boiling water for ten minutes, or steam for 20 minutes. Serve at once with melted butter. The quicker they are eaten, the more delicate their flavor. They may be served, like asparagus, on toast. Cooked, chilled fiddleheads can be also served as a salad with an onion and vinegar dressing
They are available for just a few weeks in April & May, (Depends on where you live & this fern is common in the Northern United States)
If see some growing in the woods near you, take care. There are many other ferns that resemble the Ostrich Fern, some of which are considered to be carcinogenic, like the Bracken Fern. There are other edible Fern, but you MUST know how to positively identify them.

Their flavor is mild, and perhaps most closely resembles asparagus, and asparagus is the best substitute for the ferns. Some also say they are similar to green beans and artichokes. They are pleasantly crunchy with a nutty, slightly bitter bite, which is why you’ll see so many fiddlehead recipes calling for butter and salt. Treat the fiddle heads like asparagus tips and you can’t go wrong. If you really want a treat, serve them up with some morel mushrooms( I pick these too!!); their season coincides almost exactly with the ferns and they pair well.
Due to the short season for fiddleheads, some people like to preserve them to be used later. To freeze fiddleheads, prepare them as you would for the table. Blanch a small amount at a time for two minutes. Cool and drain. Pack into moisture- and vapor-proof containers and store them in the freezer.


**The Center for Disease Control (CDC) has investigated a number of outbreaks of food-borne illness associated with fiddleheads. The implicated ferns were eaten either raw or lightly cooked (sautéed, parboiled or microwaved), which was what caused a food-borne illness outbreak in British Columbia in 1990. Although a toxin has not been identified in the fiddleheads of the ostrich fern, the findings of this investigation suggest that you should cook fiddleheads thoroughly before eating (boil them for at least 10 minutes) . **

*Referance Source;University of Maine Cooperative ExtensionBulletin #4198


Fiddlehead Dijon

1-1/2 pounds fresh fiddleheads
1 tablespoon cornstarch
1 cup nonfat buttermilk
2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
3/4 teaspoon lemon juice
1/2 teaspoon dried tarragon
1/4 teaspoon pepper

Clean and prepare fiddleheads. Remove scales and wash thoroughly. Place fiddleheads in a vegetable steamer over boiling water. Cover and steam 20 minutes or until tender, but still crisp. Set aside, and keep warm.
Combine cornstarch and buttermilk in a small saucepan; stir well. Cook over medium heat until thickened and bubbly, stirring constantly. Remove from heat; stir in mustard, lemon juice, tarragon and pepper.
Arrange fiddleheads on a serving platter. Spoon sauce over fiddleheads. Serve immediately. Makes 6 servings.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Aprils Pink Full Moon









Hi to all on the eve of the Pink Moon,


The month of April is known for "April showers, Brings May flowers" (Except here at RavensWood.. Snowed today????) But anyway it is known as a month when spring flowers begin to show up. Herb moss, pink, or wild ground phlox, are some of the earliest widespread flowers of the spring. As the name infers, the flowers are pink in color, thus the name for April's full moon. I decided to put this to the test.. As the Old Farmers Almanac states this is why it is called the pink moon, as lots of pink flowers come into bloom around this time.. So I went out to my woods today with my puppies and camera in my shaky hands.. ( Very cold today) To search for this evidence... Low and behold there they were --- phlox, salmon berry, red current and apple blossoms. All natives here but the apple. I got some snap shots of them just before it started to snow..
So I guess the old farmer almanac wins again.... :-)
Many sparkling Moon beams to all
Bee

Friday, April 18, 2008

Basics On Willow Bark






Hi to all, I had a question from a blog reader about the pain relieving qualities from willow bark. So I am giving you all some general information on willow bark.
Willow is one of my favorite trees, and so very special.. I gain this information through many herbal books and source documents from my own personal library. So I feel this information is very sound.


Sparkling

Bee




Willow Bark has been used for thousands of years to treat fevers, and headaches, white willow bark contains a chemical forerunner of today's most popular painkiller - aspirin. The herb is sometimes called 'herbal aspirin', but has few of that drug's side effects.



"Salix Alba" (white willow) know as the American willow, belongs to the Salicaceae family and is also called "white willow", salicin willow, withe, withy,"Salix Nigra",( black willow) willow bark and salicis cortex.


"Salix Nigra" "Black Willow" Originating in Europe, this salix is also called the European willow.


History tells us that the bark of Salix Alba ( white willow?) has been used to relieve pain and reduce fever for over 2,000 years. The Willow encompasses more than three hundred species. The White Willow is a low-growing deciduous tree that is native to Europe and northern Asia and naturalized in North America. It grows in damp, low places, especially along riverbanks, and thrives in moist-to-wet, heavy soil in sun, rising to a height of eighty feet. White Willow branches were once regarded as a symbol of desolation and grief and were displayed by those who experienced "lost love," but it has more often been called one of nature's greatest gifts to man because of its natural painkilling effects. In the first century A.D., the Greek physician, Dioscorides, appears to have been the first to note the use of Willow Bark to ease pain and reduce fevers, and he even specifically prescribed a mixture with the bark to treat lower back pain. He also prescribed it for the pain occurring in childbirth. Biblical scriptures also reflect the use of willow bark as a "tea," which had an aspirin effect During the Middle Ages.

White Willow Bark continued to be used in Europe to reduce fevers and relieve pain. The plant contains salicylic acid, which was first synthesized in 1838, and provides the basis of aspirin; and in 1899, the Bayer Company of Germany introduced a drug composed of a synthetic chemical compound, similar to the active compound in Willow Bark, the "aspirin."

Native Americans knew of the benefits of White Willow Bark when they used it as a painkiller, a cure for fever and to induce sweating. Some tribes used Black Willow Bark to quell sexual desire and also made good use of the stems for basket-weaving. The stems are still used to create baskets and in the manufacture of wicker furniture and artists' charcoal pencils. Over the centuries, White Willow Bark's growing list of medicinal applications has risen to include remedies for insomnia, colds, rheumatism and dysentery. Some of the constituents included in White Willow Bark are apigenin, beta-carotene, catechin, lignin, rutin, salicin, salicylic acid, tannin, calcium, iron, magnesium, manganese, phosphorus, potassium, selenium, zinc, B-vitamins and vitamin C. .

History reads that in mid-18th century England, the Reverend Edmund Stone tasted white willow bark and found its bitterness similar to that of cinchona bark, the source of quinine(used to treat cramps). He wrote of the "success of the bark of the willow in the cure fever. Reverend Stone had reached this conclusion based on the willow's growing in damp areas. He reasoned that fevers abound in damp areas and the willow bark possessed properties appropriate to curing feverish conditions.
Salicin, is the active ingredient in willow bark, and was discovered in 1827. In conjunction with Reverend Stone's theories, it was first used in 1875 to treat rheumatic fever. Later uses included the relief of joint inflammation and reduction of uric acid in the blood of patients with gout. In the 1890s.

Gathering and Preparation;

Salix bark is stripped from the tree in spring when it is moist with sap. The bark can then be prepared in a variety of ways.


Salix as a liquid extract can be prepared by soaking one teaspoon of bark in cold water for 8-10 hours. The bark is strained and removed from the water. One cup of this extract equals a low dose of aspirin (about 60-150 milligrams.) Liquid extracts can also be prepared with alcohol and taken at a dosage of 1-3 milliliters. These extracts are generally used for cold symptoms, but can be used simply as teas. When consumed as a tea, sugar or honey is added to sweeten the bitter flavor of the bark. Preparations for extracts include soaking or boiling 1-3 teaspoons bark in 1 cup of cold water for 2-5 hours. The liquid is bitter and taken unsweetened. The dosage is 1 cup per day, a mouthful at a time. Although the bark is the most commonly used part of the salix tree, its leaves can also be eaten. This produces results similar to the bark as the leaves contain a concentration of salicin.


I must Warn you willow bark may ;

Cause upset stomach, nausea and vomiting
Avoid if you are pregnant or breast feeding.
Consult a physician before using salix bark to prevent heart attack or stroke.
Avoid if you have an ulcer.
Avoid if you have asthma or tinnitus (ringing in the ears)
Avoid if you are allergic to aspirin.
Do not give willow bark to children as it may cause Reye's syndrome. Although rare, the syndrome is potentially fatal and damages a child's brain and liver.

In the body the salicin from white willow bark is metabolized to form salicylic acid, which reduces pain, fever and inflammation. Though the herb acts more slowly than aspirin, its beneficial effects last longer and it causes fewer adverse reactions. Most notably, it does not promote stomach bleeding - one of aspirins most potentially serious side effects. Benefits White willow bark can be very effective for relieving headaches, as well as acute muscle aches and pains. It can also alleviate all sorts of chronic pain, including back and neck pain. When recommended for arthritis, especially if there is pain in the back, knees and hips, it can reduce swelling and inflammation and increase joint mobility. In addition, it may help to ease the pain of menstrual cramps - the salicin regulates the action of hormone-like chemicals called prostaglandins that can contribute to inflammation and cause pain.


USES

The white willow is an outstanding medication to heal arthritic as well as rheumatic pain that have an effect on the back as well as joints like keens and hips. When blended with other aromatic plant extracts and modifications in the dietary systems, while willow acts efficiently to alleviate irritations and enlargements. At the same time, it perks up mobility in sore and rasping joints in the body. Although these days aspirin-based medicines function better and more quickly than white willow, they are known to have bitter side affects.



In addition to the above mentioned uses of white willow, it may also relief headaches or any other kind of pain in the skull. White willow is also useful for women as the herb helps in lowering night sweating and hot flashes through menopause period.



When it comes to aspirin and colon cancer, it is not as if there are no other options. Aspirin was originally sourced from the herbs meadowsweet and white willow bark. In these plants salicylic acid is buffered by other plant compounds and they tend to be easier on the stomach and intestinal lining. While these herbs are a more gentle option, there is still no call to be taking them without good reason and without supervision for the long term.

I also have a source document that claims that Salix Nigra ( Black willow) also has a aphrodisiac effect.






Thursday, April 17, 2008

Got the new box bees today!!


Hi to all, Well I picked up my new baby bees (as I call them) Two boxes about 4lbs each--> which is estimated to be about 45,000 bees in each box.... Nice big bees too!! Got them home, did a little prep to the already prepared hives, and Scotch on the Rocks & I loaded them up. Got it all done in about 1 hour--- closed up the hives in the nick of time as it started to pour rain!!! Whoooosh!! Lucky Bee charmer I am. I smelled that rain a comen!!!
I had to load them this afternoon as the temperature is going to start dropping this evening... In fact our snow level is dropping to 500 feet this weekend... We could get SNOW!!!!!! My bees are safe in there dry new home all snug like a bug in a rug so I am happy happy BeeCharmer !!!


Tuesday, April 15, 2008

5th Moon of the CelticYear




WILLOW LORE

· 5th Moon of the Celtic Year - (April 15 - May 12)
· Latin name: Weeping Willow: salix babylonica; black Willow: salix nigra
· Celtic name: Saille (Sahl' yeh)
· Folk or Common names: Willow, Witch's Tree, Pussy Willow, Salicyn Willow, Saille, Sally, Withe, Withy, Witches' Aspirin, Tree of Enchantment, Osier, Tarvos Tree, and Sough Tree. The Anglo-Saxon 'welig' from where the name 'willow' is derived, means 'pliancy'.
· Parts Used: Bark, sap, twigs, branches, wood.

· Herbal usage:

The bark of the Willow has been used as a pain killer... the bark contains a glusoside called salicin that forms salicylylous acid which is the 'active ingredient' in aspirin. The bark has astringic qualities and can be used for rheumatic conditions, heartburn and as a diuretic. The sap gathered from the tree when it is flowering can be used to treat facial blemishes and dandruff.

· Magical History & Associations:

The bird associated with this month is the hawk, the color is haze, and the gemstone is blood-red carbuncle. The Willow, a Feminine herb, is associated with water, and is an herb of the moon. The bird associated with this month is the hawk, the color is haze, and the gemstone is blood-red carbuncle.
The Willow is associated with water, and is an herb of the moon. Willow wood is one of the nine traditional firewoods to be added to the Belfire that is burned at Beltane - as the tree of death that is Sacred to Hecate, Willow is added to the fire as a celebration of death.
The Willow is also associated with Orpheus, regarded by the Greeks as the most celebrated of poets. It is said that Orpheus received his gifts of eloquence and communication by carrying Willow branches on his journey through the Underworld. A bas-relief in a temple at Delphi portrays Orpheus leaning against a Willow tree, touching its branches.
Pagan associations with the Willow have always been strong, for they are often revered as trees of the Moon Goddess, she who reflects her moon magic upon the waters of Earth. Willow was often the tree most sought by the village wise-woman, since it has so many medicinal properties, and eventually the Willow's healing and religious qualities became one and the tree became called 'witch's tree'. The Willow is also associated with the fey. The wind in the Willows is the whisperings of a fairy in the ear of a poet. It is also said that Willow trees can uproot themselves and stalk travelers at night, muttering at them.
· Magical usage:
The Willow has applications in magic done for enchantment, wishing, romantic love, healing, protection, fertility, magic for women, death, femininity, love, divination, friendship, joy, love, and peace. Placed in homes, Willow branches protect against evil and malign sorcery. Carried, Willow wood will give bravery, dexterity, and help one overcome the fear of death. If you knock on a Willow tree (knock on wood) this will avert evil. A Willow tree growing near a home will protect it from danger. Willows are also a good tree to plant around cemeteries and also for lining burial graves for its symbolism of death and protection. Willows can be used in rituals for intuition, knowledge, gentle nurturing, and will elucidate the feminine qualities of both men and women. If a person needs to get something off their chest or to share a secret, if they confess to a Willow, their secret will be trapped. Also, wishes are granted by a Willow tree if they are asked for in the correct manner. Willow leaves, bark and wood add energy to healing magic, and burning a mix of Willow bark and sandalwood during the waning moon can help to conjure spirits. Uses of Willow in love talismans include using the leaves to attract love. Willow leaves or twigs can also be used in spells to create loyalty, make friendship pacts, treaties, or alliances. A rejected lover can wear Willow as a charm to win back the love.
To determine if you will be married in the new year:
"Throw your shoe high upinto the branches of a Willow tree; If the branches catch and hold the shoe,you soon will married be."

Willows have many uses to Witches, the most common is that the wood is used to make wands for moon magick. Willow wands can also be used to dowse for water (underground --> I have tried this it works!!! So has my hubby), earth energies, and buried objects. (The Witch should be careful to ask for the tree's blessings before taking a branch to make a wand.) The supple long ending branches of the Willow make good weaving materials to use to weave circlets and wreaths. ( I do this too, it is great! I have a native white willow tree) Willow wood is good for making magical harps.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Diversity of Beliefs




Old St. Peter's Landmark (1898)




Gothic Revival style Catholic Church completed in 1898, the building features Carrera Italian marble, Kilgen pipe organ, 40-foot stamped metal ceilings, six foot rooster on a 176-foot steeple, which is the Gorge’s highest spire. Stained glass windows memorialize pioneer families. The wooden Madonna was carved from keel of a sailing ship. The building was used as a church until 1969. Old St. Peter's has been renovated and is open the to the public as a museum and a wedding chapel.

What the photo does not show is a beautiful red brick wall on the lower side near the street. I used to sit on this for hours and watch the traffic with my girlfriends back in the 60's "Ogling" muscle cars!!











Indian Shaker Church (1875)



Built by Henry Gulick, a Scottish immigrant who settled in the area in the 1890s. His wife Harriet, a local Wasco woman, was a member of the Indian Shaker movement, a unique mix of traditional and indigenous spiritual practices. The roof collapsed under snow in November 1996. North of the Shilo Inn, Jct. I-84 and U.S. 197, The Dalles. You can walk to the river side of the Shilo to view, but the buildings are not safe to enter. View from the exterior only The Indian Shaker Church was a unique mix of Catholicism, Protestantism, and indigenous spiritual practices. In the early 1880s, John Slocum, a Squaxin Indian and resident of western Washington’s Skokomish Reservation, claimed to have died and been resurrected. While “dead,” Slocum said he had a vision in which he was rejected from heaven and told to return to earth in order to lead others away from sin.



I had walked by this building many times this is a old photo it did not look like this when I was girl.. it is very run down now..







Celio Falls


A place called Celio. It’s a name that remains of a thing which is gone, the place where Interstate 84 now takes a joyful turn, banking and diving like a swallow over the water.
Here where the river widens was a festival of water, tier over tier; thunders and rills of whitewater and over them tier over tier were the stretching hands of fishing platforms made of cut saplings, impossible frame works and the silvery bodies of leaping salmon. All of them are frozen in photographs seen in museums: men standing in crow’s nests gathering fishnets, enormous purses slung from long poles, people seemingly playing with giant’s toys; exhausted, sweating, laughing. Hundreds of house-sized racks shingled with drying salmon.
These are things My Grandmother heard, smelled, touched, tasted. I have heard the lament sung by the thousands who gathered to witness the drowning of Celio Falls. Someone at the High Desert Museum outside of Bend, Oregon thought it worth our time. The only sound I have ever heard like it is a historical recording of an Irish lament collected from a survivor of the famine; a farewell to the white potato. These are love songs for the end of the world.
The river is wide now, mirror quiet. Above it rises the smooth concrete wall of The Dalles Dam whose only ornament is the image of a battlement castle in black and white, symbol of the Army Corps of Engineers.


I am one of the lucky ones who new the Celio people. My Grandmother (of Irish decent) witnessed the death of the falls, and new what it meant to loose your life's blood literally. She and my Grandfather took black and white photos of the falls and fishing tribesmen right before it was taken. One of these photos was later made into a painting that now hangs in the the Oregon State capital building. There are very few photo's in existence of the falls or of her people..

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Historty to some ? Smells like home to me!








Granada Theatre (1929)



When it opened, the Granada was the first theater west of the Mississippi River to feature “Talkies.” Closed in the early 1990’s, reopen in 1996, and was closed again in 2004. The building was recently purchased and will be undergoing remodeling, beginning in 2008. Visitors are welcome to view the Moorish architectural-style exterior of this historic landmark from the sidewalk.




What history will not read is that this little theater was the center of my childhood memories as well as many others in my small town.Which includes my Mother, and Grandmother. We had three movies places in The Dalles when I grew up. The Granada was the only walk in. The other two were The Star Light Drive --In, and the The Dalles Drive --In.The best pizza in town!!!









Columbia Gorge Community College (1929)



Originally built as a a 270 bed hospital for tuberculosis patients, known as the Eastern Oregon Tuberculosis Hospital (1929-1959). In May of 1959 the state converted the hospital to the Columbia Park State Home, which was Oregon’s first institution for chronically ill and geriatric patients. In 1965 it was renamed the Columbia Park Hospital and Training Center; its role was changed to the care of mentally retarded adults. The facility closed in 1977, then sold to Judson Baptist College in the early 1980s. In 1993 it was sold to Columbia Gorge Community College.




I never new this building as a tuberculosis hospital. I new it as a Mental Hospital for most of my life. I volunteered there as a teenager to keep company the many patients that were keep there. The grounds were not fenced, just huge green lawns.





Gitchell Building




Can be viewed from the 200/300 blocks of East First Street ( across the tracks).“The Times-Mountaineer” merged from two previous papers and was the direct descendant of the oldest newspaper in Eastern Oregon, which was published for a while in the Gitchell Building. This was “The Dalles Times,” which traced its lineage to the military paper published at Fort Dalles. The Dalles Chronicle was an upstart, published in competition with the Times-Mountaineer beginning in 1890 and ultimately supplanting it. The newspaper was founded amid a dispute over the city’s water service.


OH this building was so cool. In my teens this was the "Head Shop: where all the incense, posters, India jewelry, and tapestries ect were sold.. I loved going in there it was a magical place. The building itself was very cool as well.!







Historic Ben Snipes Home (1865)




In 1865 Ben Snipes (1835 - 1906), the "Northwest Cattle King," built this house for his bride, Mary. By 1864, Snipes owned more cattle than any other person in the Northwest, with livestock estimated at 125,000 head of cattle and 20,000 horses. In 1958 Snipes was inducted into the National Cowboy Hall of Fame's Hall of Great Westerners. In 2004 Alan and Bev Eagy converted the Snipes home into the ANZAC Tea Parlour, complete with its own commercial kitchen.


I never visited this home but I may if I get a chance to get back home..





Wasco Co. Courthouse (1914)





The original Wasco County Courthouse was completed in 1859 and was first located at the intersection of East 3rd and Court Street. This courthouse, seat of government in a county that once was 130,000 square miles,was built in response to a citizen petition. It is one of only two still standing which date back to Oregon Territorial days. The building, which cost $2,500, provided the first county-owned jail and office space. The current county courthouse is the latest of three courthouses. Built in 1914 at a cost of $179,645. Halls are finished with marble and exterior and interior walls are terra cotta tile. The building has been moved many times and today it stands completely restored.




Ah yes, the old Court House, never spent much time in there just went to drop off cigarettes to friends who got in trouble for tickets or DUI ??

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Green House Project Update







Much Merry to all!!


Here are a couple photos I took today of the progress of the greenhouse. Floor and foundation are in, frame constructed. Just over head ceiling vents, and the door to install then the green house panels. I used all the material I had hanging around the house for the floor thus the difference in colors in the pumas block.. Never the less I will be painting a picture on the floor so it really does not matter anyway. The more color the better!
Nice day today, a little chilly but nice. We should have most of this done by Sunday!~~
The stone wall in front well that will take a little more time although hubby tells me not really much more to do..?? Famous last words!!
Bee

Historic Landmarks of The Dalles







Known as the end of the Oregon Trail, The Dalles was where pioneers loaded their wagons onto rafts or barges and floated down the Columbia to the mouth of the Willamette River, then upriver to Oregon City. The Barlow Trail was constructed later to permit an overland crossing.

Lewis & Clark Historic Site (1805-06) . Lewis & Clark and the Corps of Discovery camped on both legs of their journey; October 1805, and again in April 1806. They called this site at the mouth of “Que-neet Creek,” or RockFort Camp. Memorial plaque and interpretive signage located on site.
( Oregon trail begins in the state of MO.)

In April of 1806, Lewis and Clark stayed at a spot they called "Rockfort" camp. As salmon ran up the swift water, Indians were spearing them from the rocks of Celilo Falls or scooping them out of the water with long handled nets. These Indians menaced the whites as they portaged the rapids, and Lewis and Clark as well as the 1811 Stuart Party paid them tribute. Despite this, the Indians stole what they could and so earned the reputation of being the worst thieves between the Missouri River and the Pacific Ocean. William Clark himself came near to shooting an Indian -- any Indian -- when his dog was stolen (happily for all concerned, he soon got it back).
  • In 1838, the Methodists built a branch mission named Wascopam at The Dalles Oregon Trail emigrants described the mission as two dwellings, a schoolhouse, stable, barn, garden, and cleared fields next to the wooden huts of an Indian village
  • What History does not speak of is that my best girl friend lived right next to the marker for the trail. It was never ever really kept up by anyone. It was just there . In fact my friend Cindy, and I proped it up many times. This all changed when the county decided to start a push for tourism<--- :-(





Ezra Meeker Oregon Trail Marker The Dalles City Park, Fifth & Union Streets
This marker was placed by Ezra Meeker in the early 1900's. Meeker was an advocate for preserving the Oregon trail, and he came to The Dalles on a journey to re-traced the Oregon Trail, traveling by covered wagon pulled by a team of oxen.



In 1906 Ezra Meeker and the people of Dalles City, Oregon, erected a monument near the city center proclaiming the "End of the Old Oregon Trail 1843-1906." It is incorrect in dates, location, and facts.Meeker had a policy of placing monuments at city centers or parks where they could get the best exposure. He is to be commended for this. If he had placed a plaque at Crates Point that said, "Temporary End of the Overland Portion of the Old Oregon Trail 1843-1845," few people would have given it notice.






Pulpit Rock, a curious thumb of rock near the corner of 12th and Court Streets, combines geology and theology. From this natural pulpit, early Methodist missionaries preached to the Native Americans. The rock still serves as a pulpit for local Easter services. I have been to the rock many times is was one half of a block from my child hood home. It was always a big deal Easter morning for my grandmother, and I to walk to the rock for sunrise services. We did it each year..

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Fort Dalles *~* Circa 1857




Fort Dalles Museum (1857)

The site was first occupied in 1850 and was called Camp Drum. In 1853 the name was changed to Fort Dalles. By the late 1850's the Indian frontier had moved east and after temporary use in 1867-68 there was no longer a need for a fort in The Dalles. The museum, Oregon's oldest, has been in operation since 1905 preserving the historic Fort Dalles site. The original Surgeon’s Quarters is the fort’s last surviving building. Pioneer and military artifacts from 1860s, antique vehicles are on display.




History:




Wascopam Mission was abandoned in 1847 and sold to Dr. Marcus Whitman for $600. After the Whitman Massacre, the property was returned to the Methodists. Neither the Whitmans nor the Methodists attempted to keep up the property, and emigrants of 1849 found the mission in ruins and decay. After Fort Dalles was built, the old mission was burned and the U.S. government paid $24,000 to the Methodists for title to the land. Various lawsuits proved that the Methodists had never obtained legal title to the property, and $23,000 was returned to claimants.




Major H.A.G. Lee, of the Provisional Government's Oregon Rifles, arrived in The Dalles during the 1847-48 Cayuse War. He built a stockade around the old mission buildings that became known as Fort Lee or Fort Wascopam. In 1849, Colonel Loring of Fort Leavenworth established several posts along the Oregon Trail to protect the emigrants, including Cantonment Loring near Fort Hall and Fort Drum at The Dalles. Starting in May, 1850, crude log buildings were constructed a short distance west of the old Wascopam mission. The fort was redesignated Fort Dalles.


Fort Dalles was the headquarters for Army operations during the 1855-56 Yakima Indian Wars. Eight companies were assigned to the garrison. The Surgeon's Quarters that now serves as the Fort Dalles Museum was built at that time. In 1861, Fort Dalles was downgraded to a quartermaster's depot before being abandoned in 1867.With Army regulars to serve, a town began growing around the fort in 1852. It was incorporated in 1857 as Fort Dalles. The land claim was entered at the U.S. Land Office at Oregon City. The name was later changed officially to Dalles City.

Historic Home Town



Hi to all on this drizzly April day..
I have been home sick for a while now. I know we all think of our home town on occasion, but I really miss my little town sometimes . The simple life, and the so very fond childhood memories of it..
The smell of lilac blooms in the spring, the scent of cold rain on the hot sidewalk in early fall. The sound of the noon whistle, and the rumble of the train lumbering down the tracks. The pink blooms of the the cherry orchards painting the surrounding hills and valleys. The Christmas decorations draped all over main street.
Yes, I loved living in my little home town. Its population is somewhat larger now. But never the less I will always remember the town I grew up in with fondness. I decided to do a few blog entries on my home town as it is a historic one.

To find my home town just follow the highway east from Portland Oregon . About 1 hour drive. It is right on the mighty Columbia River. The name "The Dalles" is a Indian name meaning; "the meeting place". Many years ago to go east from Portland settlers took a ferry (a paddle wheel) up the river to a place that was called;"Bend in the River" There is a movie called that with James Stewart staring in it. Well that's The Dalles. It was a place of meeting for trade for settlers, trappers, Indians, etc.and of course the journey east.Then this bend in the river slowly become a town mainly do to the Calvary fort "Fort Dalles" That is where I will start. Why bend in the river well the paddle wheel boat could not go upstream much farther as Cielio Falls as they were called prevented boat traffic any farther. ( the falls do not exist as they were cover with water when The Dalles dam was built in 1957.



In the fall of 1855, troops were dispatched north of the Columbia River to go after the Indians responsible for the death of Indian agent Andrew J. Bolin and some miners in the Colville area. They took part in one engagement in which they were soundly defeated. In the fall, Rains was ordered to Fort Dalles for the winter. Unfortunately, it did not have enough beds for such a large force. They had tried to build more, but earlier requests for money from the army were denied because the fort went far beyond any reasonable budget when it was first established. At least four companies had to enure the winter in tents. In December one detachment was sent to Walla Walla to back up the troops there who were engaging in battle. Several companies also assisted in the Yakima wars the following years.
Captain Thomas Jordan was transferred to Fort Dalles from Los Angeles in March 1856. He was quartermaster and was assigned to redesign the fort. Jordan worked with Louis Scholl, an accomplished artist, to design the fort. They patterned the buildings based on the “picturesque” architectural style, created by Andrew Jackson Downing. Downing stressed that the landscape was very important in the design and painting of a building. So too was the needs of its occupants, over the appearance of the exterior. The basic design was that of an English cottage. Verandas and porches were also an integral part of the design. Such homey and comfortable buildings must’ve seemed out of place in this frontier location.
The post was unique but had been enormously expensive to build. Department quartermaster Osborne Cross warned Jordan that the quartermaster general would not approve. Jordan had spent an average of $14,000 per month on 220 civilian workers between May and December of 1856. On March 16, 1857, Commander Wright was ordered to fire all but the indispensable. Wright refused stating there were no more men there than those needed to supply and defend the outlying posts of Fort Simcoe and Fort Walla Walla on the Washington side of the Columbia.
In the spring, General N. S. Clarke, new commander of the Department of the Pacific inspected Fort Dalles. Afterward, he issued orders that among other things, posts should be built in the simplest and most utilitarian manner possible. Deputy quartermaster General Thomas Swords was with him and he reported to the quartermaster general that the buildings were unnecessarily large and officers had at least twice the normal allotment of rooms. In his annual report, Jordan justified his expenses by describing the dilapidated condition of the fort when he arrived. Construction continued and the relatively high wages paid by the army resulted in a boom of growth in the city near the fort. Dalles City was incorporated in January of 1857.

In the fall of 1855, troops were dispatched north of the Columbia River to go after the Indians responsible for the death of Indian agent Andrew J. Bolin and some miners in the Colville area. They took part in one engagement in which they were soundly defeated. In the fall, Rains was ordered to Fort Dalles for the winter. Unfortunately, it did not have enough beds for such a large force. They had tried to build more, but earlier requests for money from the army were denied because the fort went far beyond any reasonable budget when it was first established. At least four companies had to enure the winter in tents. In December one detachment was sent to Walla Walla to back up the troops there who were engaging in battle. Several companies also assisted in the Yakima wars the following years.
Captain Thomas Jordan was transferred to Fort Dalles from Los Angeles in March 1856. He was quartermaster and was assigned to redesign the fort. Jordan worked with Louis Scholl, an accomplished artist, to design the fort. They patterned the buildings based on the “picturesque” architectural style, created by Andrew Jackson Downing. Downing stressed that the landscape was very important in the design and painting of a building. So too was the needs of its occupants, over the appearance of the exterior. The basic design was that of an English cottage. Verandas and porches were also an integral part of the design. Such homey and comfortable buildings must’ve seemed out of place in this frontier location.
The post was unique but had been enormously expensive to build. Department quartermaster Osborne Cross warned Jordan that the quartermaster general would not approve. Jordan had spent an average of $14,000 per month on 220 civilian workers between May and December of 1856. On March 16, 1857, Commander Wright was ordered to fire all but the indispensable. Wright refused stating there were no more men there than those needed to supply and defend the outlying posts of Fort Simcoe and Fort Walla Walla on the Washington side of the Columbia.
In the spring, General N. S. Clarke, new commander of the Department of the Pacific inspected Fort Dalles. Afterward, he issued orders that among other things, posts should be built in the simplest and most utilitarian manner possible. Deputy quartermaster General Thomas Swords was with him and he reported to the quartermaster general that the buildings were unnecessarily large and officers had at least twice the normal allotment of rooms. In his annual report, Jordan justified his expenses by describing the dilapidated condition of the fort when he arrived. Construction continued and the relatively high wages paid by the army resulted in a boom of growth in the city near the fort. Dalles City was incorporated in January of 1857.

*The original Surgeon’s Quarters is the fort’s last surviving building. Pioneer and military artifacts from 1860s, antique vehicles are on display.




Saturday, April 05, 2008

Bee Tragedy



Hi to all.. Well today was suppose to be a day of happy events.. But it turned out to be very sad. I was scheduled to pick up new boxed bee's this morning.. I arrived with bells on as usual to pick up 3 box's of new baby bees--> only to find a tragedy. The bee agent I have purchased my bees from for years now had a sad, and horrifying site to behold.. Over 7 million dead bees still in the box's.. It seems that they were picked up and loaded from the broker in California about 35 hours ago. The drive seemed good and all seemed well. The truck pulled in late last night at my agents farm and they parked the truck inside the barn awaiting to unload the box's early this morning . When my agent went down this morning and started to unload he noticed a lot of sugar syrup( which the bees feed on during the trip. Each box of 35 thousand has its own can pre fitted into the box) As they panicked and unstacked them they saw more and more box's full of dead bees. Well they unloaded them all only to discover over half the load was dead.. With further inspection they found the sugar syrup mix was not thick as it should be. It is NOT to run out of the can freely! So the result was the syrup all ran out on top of the bees and drowned them.. Very, very sad to see this. Very, very sad site to behold!! My agent lost a lot of money too! So he is going to have to negotiate for another load of bees. Hopefully this next week or week end!!??? I will keep you posted~~

Friday, April 04, 2008

Sleepy Day







Hi to all, Just hanging out today kind of feeling bad... But hopefully I can get some rest, and feel better by tomorrow--> as am picking up new baby bees!
I also have some news--> I have been chosen for the fourth year in a row as one of 200 lucky poets to be published in the "Best Poems & Poets of 2007". I was ask to contribute a new poem for the publication so I chose one called "Beltane Moon"" I also received a editors choice award earlier this year for my poem "The Lori-Bird" which will be included in a anthology of poetry. That book will publish at years end . I feel so honored and so lucky. I write from the hip one might say, always nothing special just what comes to mind. Sometimes I dream a poem<-- yes really, and I have learned to wake up and write them down.. So many have been lost between slumber and sunrise.

Anyway I will up date on the bees after tomorrow --> Always a exciting day!!
Sparkling
Bee











Beltane Moon

Under the moon, its pure delight,
As it rises high, so full and shinning bright.
Reflecting a smile to all below,
and wrapping the world in a magical glow,
To wish alls well in the renewed days to come
Filled by Mothers Natures grace, with the rising of the sun.





The Lori-Bird

A tiny bird sits upon my window sill,
She always sings a happy tune.
To brighten each day with her skill
she always there when I need a smile.
so I can escape for awhile
The fairies say she's a Loribird..
with a special gift to all that yurn,
for a smiling face,a giggle or laugh.
The sounds of her song bring these all to pass,
So be on the look out for the Loribird..
No better song can ever be heard..