Random Message from the Universe

I received a surprise package today. A special deck of cards that each contain a different writing prompt. Questions like, “What decision should you have made yesterday?” and “How do you define success…?”

I have no idea who sent it. I’m not sure I want to know, though. Sometimes, puzzling over stuff like that is half the fun.

Then again, how can I thank the mystery sender for this really cool gift?

I started to look for a nice EOA (emoji of appreciation), then decided a Bitmoji would be better. That’s when I found this…

I have no idea what it means, but how can I not share a ToadMama as Avocado Bitmoji? Anyone have any clue what THAT is supposed to express? Maybe it’s a spin on “cool as a cucumber,” but with a bit of a mean twist? “Awkward as an avocado” perhaps. Or  maybe it’s “absentminded as an avocado.” Because, you know, everyone knows how avocados affect a person’s memory. Especially if they come in contact with that big-ass seed.

Seriously, though, I do want to share an actual, appropriate ToadMama Bitmoji.

AND I sincerely wanted to say Thank You. For real, as I suspect someone who reads or has read this blog may have sent the deck. It was a kind thing to do, I can always use some inspiration, plus, it’s just a cool idea. So, thanks.

Of course, the best way to express my appreciation would be to actually use the deck.

Now, there’s an idea!

On another note… I took my computer on vacation. An actual laptop, so I could maybe write some blog posts and/or share some pics.

But, during the day, I just couldn’t bring myself to look at a computer, tablet, or even phone screen for any length of time. Why sit indoors, looking at my screen, when I could look at and listen to stuff like this?

Hawaii was awesome. We didn’t do much of anything, which is a big part of what made it so awesome.

I stared at the water A LOT. It was pretty.

Like, seriously pretty. And it was off season. So, other than places like Pearl Harbor and the world famous Waikiki Beach, there weren’t many people, so it was quiet. If you follow me on Instagram, you may have seen some of my pics.

I took around 2,000 pictures. I’m guessing at least half will be deleted. Have YOU ever tried to capture that perfect crashing-wave shot? Or fidgety yellow bird? Or ghost crab?

I DID manage to capture at least one good crab pic.

I might share some more here one day. But it won’t be anytime soon. We’ve got some special stuff going on this week. More on that later.

Thanks again for the cards, friend! I’ll try hard to put them to good use.

Exciting Times

It’s been an eventful month for me. I figured I should give y’all an update. I will warn you, however, that I’m using my tablet, so there may not be many images. Or the format of this post could be mucked up. We shall see.

I’ve been doing little stuff around the house to keep myself busy. One of those things was starting to neaten-up my side of the basement. I didn’t finish because I got sidetracked by a couple of projects.

The first project was making LOVE. Hubby helped. 😎

My town is a bit late to the Virginia LOVE program. There’s a LOVEwork outside of town at the Airlie House and Farm (that’s where Earth Day was born!), but I would really like to see one in the historic downtown. I’d heard that the Town Council quashed plans for a LOVEwork in Old Town Warrenton (OTW) so I started kicking-around the idea of making my own. Hubby had enough scrap plywood for three of the letters, but I wanted to figure out an easy way to make a different sort of “O.”

Back in July, when I was having my hair done, my hairdresser was telling me how the move to her house and unpacking was coming along when she mentioned needing to remove an old satellite dish the previous owner had left behind.

“Can I have it?” I immediately asked. She looked at me like I had a few heads and asked why I would want that. I swore her to secrecy then explained that I needed something to make the fourth letter in my own personal LOVEwork.

A couple of days later, there was an old, dirty satellite dish and hardware in my backyard, much to Hubby’s chagrin. We no longer have cable TV and are perfectly happy with analog TV and streaming other entertainment, so he had no idea why I would want or need an old satellite dish!

I outlined the letters on the scrap plywood and Hubby cut them for me. Then I painted everything and hung it on the wall in front of our house. It turned out quite cool, in my opinion.

I had a bit of fun with the thing. I even texted pics to all of the kids, saying “Look, we made love last last week and I am sharing pics!”

Other people like our LOVE, too. So much so that we made the local news. If you’d like to read the article, this link will take you to the story on FauquierNOW.

The next project was painting this old end table that’s been in the to-do queue for a long time. I decided it would make a nice table for the porch, and I added a Barn Quilt to the top. It turned out so nice, I think I may keep it in the house.

Speaking of barn quilts… a friend and I have decided to start a barn quilt trail. We are just in the planning stages now, so I can’t say much. I thought it would be fun to have one here in Fauquier County. In July, we met with the ladies behind the Blue Ridge Barn Quilt Trail in nearby Greene County. Their trail already has about 70 barn quilts in all shapes and sizes and it’s only been around for about a year and a half. The one pictured below is at the visitors’ center.

Barn quilt LOVE in Greene County, Virginia. #blueridgebarnquilttrail

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That is a barn quilt LOVEwork. How cool is that? 😊

I’ve been visiting LOVEworks, too. I’m now up to 96! My log page is not completely up-to-date since I turned in my work computer. You know, the one that belonged to my former employer. They were kind enough to let me borrow it for a couple of months so I didn’t have to conduct my job search from this tablet.

It’s been pretty hot, so we have not done much motorcycle riding. Instead, we’ve been visiting breweries in our spare time.

Another date night with Hubby. ❤️

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Visiting breweries is a much more expensive hobby. Local breweries don’t give you tours and such like big commercial brewers do, it’s really all about tasting their beer. We’ve both decided it’s fun tasting so many different beers.

Last weekend, we actually did something really different. We did a long weekend centered around bicycle riding. We drove to Farmville, Virginia, about two and a half hours south of here.

I’d been to Farmville a couple of times previously, once to see their first LOVEwork and then just passing through. I knew there was a bicycle trail there with a cool bridge and had said several times I wanted to return. So that’s what we did. They have a second LOVEwork now, too.

It’s a LOVEly day for an adventure. LOVEwork 90! #loveva

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The High Bridge Trail State Park was the center of our visit. I pasted the description from the state park’s website below:

High Bridge Trail is 31 miles long and ideally suited for hiking, bicycling and horseback riding. Once a rail bed, the trail is wide, level and generally flat. Its finely crushed limestone surface and dimensions make it easy to enjoy. The park’s centerpiece is the majestic High Bridge, which is more than 2,400 feet long and 125 feet above the Appomattox River. It is the longest recreational bridge in Virginia and among the longest in the United States. High Bridge, a Virginia Historic Landmark, is on the National Register of Historic Places.

It’s a really nice trail, and the bridge was fun to see.

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Check out out this short video from the bridge:

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We visited a few breweries, too. Trapezium in Petersburg had my favorite beer, a white ale. The brewery in Farmville — Third Street Brewing — was nice, too, and in walking distance from our hotel.

The LOVEwork just happened to be in the vicinity of a brewery or two.

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Hubby was kind enough to drive about a three-hour loop on Saturday to see some more LOVEworks while we were in the area. Then Sunday, we detoured through Bedford, Virginia, on the way home to visit the National D-Day Memorial. I created a Google Photos album of the pics from the D-Day Memorial, which was even more impressive than I anticipated. Click Here if you would like to see the album.

Next week is my last week of freedom. I start a new job on September 10th. I’m excited about the opportunity, which is similar to what I’d been doing, but slightly different. It’s hot and humid here, so we’ll be playing indoors for the next couple of days. Monday, I’m off to the beach for 3-4 days with a girlfriend. Then on Sunday, September 9, I’m off to Minneapolis for a week of job training, meet-and-greets, etc. Back to reality, in other words. 😎

A different sort of bike vacation!

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More San Diego Street Art

I’ve been working on sharing the many images I captured during my visit to San Diego in 2017.

Previous posts have covered the coolest art sculpture ever at Imperial Beach and Chicano Park and Barrio Logan. This post includes images captured at many different places in San Diego just because it’s easier than doing multiple posts for each area, not to mention trying to remember where each pic was taken. It was almost a year ago, after all.

Here are some of my favorites…

Done by the folks at GreetingsTour.com. They’re on a mission to paint a mural in every state.

 

Monstrous Art in North Park

 

Skeletal mermaid depicting the death of our oceans.

 

Doodle art!

 

Super-cool, old school South Park barber shop.

 

Crazy cats in North Park

 

Art by Autumn in Pacific Beach (click image to see her website).

 

Breakout dog in La Jolla

 

Shark! in Imperial Beach.

 

Homage to Prince near Normal Heights on Adams Avenue (separate neighborhood).

 

Near Normal Heights on Adams Avenue (separate neighborhood).

 

More Space Clones (maybe in Pacific Beach)

 

Funky house either in Ocean Beach or Normal Heights.

 

Utility box art near the Waypoint Public bar/restaurant in North Park.

 

Business Art near Normal Heights.

 

North Park

 

A close-up of that North Park piece.

 

Coolest parking garage in North Park.

North Park is my favorite city neighborhood (excluding the beaches) in San Diego. I think my second-favorite is South Park, but more exploration is needed. University Heights, Hillcrest, and Mission Hills seemed pretty interesting, too, but I only passed through each of those.

The slideshow below will let you see all of the images I wanted to share. I also created a Google Photos album including all of the images if you want a better look at any of them.

The music is just generic stuff that’s included on the Mac I’ve been using.

Street Art in San Diego

Chicano Park

I am a visual person. I hate to say I am an “art lover” because that sort of implies that I love visiting museums and looking at a bunch of classic paintings and stuff. Museums are fun in small doses, but I much prefer moving through the world looking at stuff that catches my fancy than spending hours in a dark building looking at pieces other people think I really should love and want to see.

I have really come to enjoy street art/murals. But what exactly is “street art”? A fancy name for graffiti? If you really want to know, click here. As an article about ten of the best places to find street art in SD on the SanDiego.org website says, “Muralists and street artists are the tricksters of public art. They play with scale, making familiar objects giant. They slip in visual puns and sly references, simultaneously secret and bold as a howl. They create monuments to people and moments they deem heroic.”

In my opinion, street art is fun. It’s colorful. It can really liven-up run-down areas and add visual interest to an otherwise hum-drum scene. It’s a creative way to grab attention as an alternative to an ordinary sign, e.g., for businesses.

On previous visits to the area, I noticed that there seemed to be a lot of street art in San Diego (SD). Hubby doesn’t share my appreciation for the medium, so I figured my extended solo visit would be a great time to explore the art of SD in addition to the local beer and street taco establishments. And that’s exactly what I did.

I visited many different areas in and around the city. I  captured hundreds of images during that time, many of which I shared on Facebook and Instagram. The focus on street art was a departure from the type of travel pics I usually share. Later, one of my friends said she hadn’t enjoyed my SD posts as much as she’d likes pics I’d shared from visits to other places because she doesn’t like “graffiti” and stuff as much as I do. That comment tickled me. I wasn’t offended because I know that art, like beauty, really is in the eye of the beholder. Travel photos are art, too, right?

San Diego is a big place. Rather than just wander around aimlessly, hoping to get lucky, I figured I’d do a bit of research to find concentrations of art in the city. One of the areas I chose to visit was Chicano Park in Barrio Logan. According to the SanDiego.org website, “The park is home to the largest concentration of Chicano murals in the world with more than 80 paintings on seven acres dotted with sculpture, gardens, picnic tables and playgrounds.” That website can give you a very succinct and explanation of the history and cultural significance of Chicano Park.

If you’d like to know more about this very unique spot, I encourage you to visit this website, which “…supports MAS 350B: Mexican American Studies – Chicano History at San Diego State University. This class involves the study of the history of Chicanos since 1848, using Chicano Park as a point of departure for research and study. The main emphasis of the class will be to survey the major themes of Chicano history that are suggested by the murals of Chicano Park in Barrio Logan San Diego, and to do research on the park in order to contribute to its preservation by revealing the rich artistic and cultural legacy its embodies.”

If you are interested in the meaning behind the murals, this page has links to explanations for key murals in Chicano Park.

I’m glad I visited Chicano Park and Barrio Logan without any human companions. It really gave me the opportunity to meander aimlessly around the park and surrounding neighborhood, lingering as long as I liked. That’s important as there was so very much to see.

I have so many images from that day, I decided to create a slideshow for sharing. One blog post is just not the right place to share 100+ images. I’ve posted my top-10 favorites within this post. The rest can be seen in the slideshow embedded at the end.

A Google map is embedded below so you can see all of the ramps leading to/from the bridge. The map will help you better appreciate the number of different support pylons photographed.

My slideshow and collection of photos is not all-inclusive. It really is an impressive site. If you ever visit SD and like street art, I encourage you to visit, allowing a few hours to take in the sights.

This guy gave me an extra hand with Jasper.

We probably spent several hours just moseying around.

Colossus

 

A painting of paint.

 

Super-cool skater.

 

Skate Park

 

Neighborhood sign.

 

Cute house with a yard full of fun kitsch.

 

I love the way this image looks with the foreground of stony ground.

I share this next image more for the story behind the recent controversy surrounding the mural than for the mural itself. Although I DO love this shot for its multiple murals and interesting angles.  You can read the full story of the controversy if you like.

Ironic controversy.

In a nutshell, many people who don’t know the history of the area misinterpret the meaning of “yonkes” and are offended. It’s a prime example of Americans whining about ridiculous stuff AND displaying their language ignorance at the same time.

Yonkes is a Spanish slang term. It does not mean “yankees” (referring to white people) or “honkies” (again, referring to white people). Just because it kind of resembles yankees and honkies, those are English words. Yonkes is local-ish Spanish slang that means junkyards.

People really can be so narrow-minded and stupid. I must admit, I love it when their narrow-mindedness makes them look even more ignorant than they already are.

Finally, one of the things I also loved about the art in and around the park is that it isn’t all expertly rendered. Some pieces are artistically superior to others by far. There are quite a few that are downright bad. Some were clearly done by children. But they’re still there, because this is a place that’s for the people of the neighborhood. All of the people. Even folks that are less artistically talented than others have a right to express themselves and be heard.

I really do like that the works encompass the full spectrum of skill levels, however, some of the pieces made me chuckle. Like the family of three in this next image. That family, which is painted on a wood cut-out positioned on the ground behind those plants, looks like a family of zombies to me. The kids more so that the man. In my opinion.

Family from “Fear the Walking Dead”?

 

If you’d like to see the slideshow images more closely, I also created a Google Photos album to share.

 

Fun with Paint

Our last visit to Belgium really was spent hanging around our friends’ house for a week or so. They’d just moved in five days before we arrived. They needed time to unpack/get organized, and we said we could help while we were there. I volunteered to serve as personal chef for the week and Mike agreed to be the extra handyman.

Their house was not newly built. It’s a building they bought, gutted completely inside and out, then re-did the way they wanted. It was a brave, expensive, and time-consuming undertaking. It’s still a work in progress, but their vision is coming-together nicely.

While we were there, one of the things that kept drawing my attention was this big hole in the wall between their kitchen and living room. I know that it is meant to house a fireplace one day, but I also know that fireplaces are expensive, so it may be a while before they actually get one. Based on our experience building the WV place, I know that space will end up being a storage spot for miscellaneous boxes and other junk until it is properly filled.

Unsightly Hole in the Wall

Who wants to look at that all the time? So, I suggested that Annelies and I do a craft project and make something to hang over the hole as temporary camouflage. She’s not usually one who would go for that idea, claiming she can’t draw and isn’t very artistic. I offered to draw the thing so all she’d have to do was add paint. She agreed.

We bought some inexpensive canvases, paint, and brushes. I found some examples of cat art we’d seen on a previous trip, which I used as inspiration. I drew a cat for each of us, then we got creative.

Here I am, painting my cat.

 

Annelies painting her cat.

 

She had more fun than she thought she would.

 

Cats in progress.

 

Things got quite colorful.

 

Colorful cats.

 

Voila! Two artful cats.

 

Perfect to hide the junk.

All it took was about 30 Euros(?), a little time, and some creativity. No more unsightly junk-collection spot.

I wonder if they are still hanging there?

The Ends

I finished another creative project.

I’d gotten tired of looking at the coffee and end tables we’d had in our family room for about 17 years. So, we moved those to my MIL’s house and I painted some old end tables for a fresh, new look.

By “old end tables” I mean pieces I acquired at a local thrift shop about three years ago. They’d been sitting in a corner of our basement, collecting dust, just waiting for inspiration to finally hit.

End_Table_Before
Thrift Store Find (Before)

 

Part of the fun of these furniture painting projects of mine is finding the pieces to transform. I snagged this pair of end tables for about $50. Knowing what I know now, I probably could’ve gotten them for a bit less, but that wasn’t terrible.

I know I’ve said this before, but that Annie Sloan Chalk Paint® (ASCP) is miraculous stuff. It really does stick to anything, and really let’s you give a piece, or pieces, character.

I wanted to do something colorful and fun, but not too much fun, otherwise that Hubby of mine would hate it.

End_Table_After
Thrift Store Find (After)

 

I like the distressed look, but you could easily achieve a “new and clean” finish with ASCP, too. It’s the dark wax that really lends the aged look to a piece. In the image below, the drawer on the left is how it looked before I topped it off with dark wax.

End_Table_Drawer_3
L-R, Before and after dark wax.

 

Speaking of fun, I wanted to line the drawers using decoupage, a technique I’ve seen my friend Janet — The Empty Nest — use many times. I didn’t have any dog-themed or appropriately colored paper on hand, and I didn’t want to go buy anything new, so I decided to use pages out of an old literature textbook.

End_Table_Drawer_4
1950s-era Textbook

 

I’d picked that book up a while back when my auction-house friend told people to help themselves to some boxes of books that hadn’t sold. Actually, if I remember correctly, she said all buyers had to take at least one book with them or they couldn’t leave. I was selective and only grabbed a few, some of which were excellent reads. But Ideas for Writing wasn’t one of them. I’d been hoping it was more how-to book than textbook.

I’ve actually been meaning to toss the thing. Which is why it struck me as odd that it was quite hard for me, a book-lover, to tear pages out of that book. I mean, I knew it was headed for the trash heap, or at least the donation pile, but still. It’s a book. Full of essays, stories, and poetry created by literary greats.

End_Table_Drawer_2
Drawer lining.

 

I think it turned out kinda cool. I even tried to use interesting bits of text.

End_Table_Drawer
The Finished Piece

 

Cute, right? Not that we’ll see much of that drawer bottom on a regular basis.

End_Tables_Both
A Matching Pair

 

I’ll be adding table-toppers, which I will sew one day, to tie in more of the red and gold from the rug.

What do you think? Fun and functional? Or kinda ugly? You’re entitled to an opinion, too, you know.

Oh, and in case you’re wondering, I got the drawer pull (yes, they’re dog heads) from The Empty Nest. But it’s been a while, so she may no longer have them in stock.