Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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Outdoors at the Cottage & the Power of a Good Book

July 5, 2013 at 7:45 am by Claudia

coneflower

The very first of my many purple coneflowers has bloomed. Coneflowers are in every garden bed around here and since they’ve gratifyingly reseeded themselves, they’re cropping up in some unexpected places, as well. I just love them. They are very cottage garden to me.

I’ve finished all the Deborah Crombie books except the very newest, which is in hardcover. I’m going through a little period of mourning. I find myself unable to commit to any of the other books that are sitting around here, ready and waiting to be read. This happens to me rarely, but it sure has happened with this series. I’ve grown to love the characters so much that I feel as if dear next-door neighbors have moved away. I want to hang out with these characters, to have tea with them in their home in London – I want to be their friend. I’ve been pressing my nose against their fictional windowpane and I want in!

Does that ever happen to you? Does a book or a series of books so enthrall you that you find yourself wanting to live in that world? It’s sort of a mixed blessing, but it certainly attests to the power of the well written word.

hostabloom

The hostas are sending up their flowers and will soon be blooming.

I went out in the early morning yesterday and mowed part of the lawn. It’s growing so fast because of all the rain we’ve had and I knew that with the 90 degree/90% humidity forecast for the day I had better get cracking early. Totally exhausting, this weather. I did get a nice chunk done and I’ll do some more today. But only in bits. Because this weather, which has hung on for days and days, is not the best or healthiest in which to do any chores. Don, my poor guy, is in a dorm with no air conditioning. The actors are miserable. It’s hard to sleep. Yesterday, he was scheduled for only a costume fitting, so he went to see a play in the afternoon and a movie in the evening, just to be in someplace air conditioned.

I would not be coping nearly as well as he is. I hate humidity.

lavender

The lavender planted in the raised bed by the kitchen door.

garden

The bee balm has spread this year and its splash of red really adds to the garden.

beebalm

See that wheelbarrow in the upper right hand corner of the photo? Several weeks ago, I lifted it and noticed a small ant hill under it. I lifted it yesterday and gasped out loud. There is a veritable city there. Look:

anttown1

Do you believe this? It’s fascinating. It reminds me of ancient pueblos or those Indian dwellings carved into stone in the Southwest. How do they do it?

Good thing I don’t have to use the wheelbarrow at the moment.

Happy Friday.

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Filed Under: books, flowers, garden, nature 34 Comments

What I’ve Been Up To

June 30, 2013 at 8:24 am by Claudia

booksi'mreading

• Reading the next to the last Deborah Crombie mystery. Only one more to go. Say it isn’t so! I did the same thing with Lee Child’s mysteries two summers ago – I read every one of his books over the course of the summer. As I near the end of the books, I get sad.

I also ordered some books through my local library. Susan Branch speaks so highly of all the books by Gladys Taber and I seem to share Susan’s sensibility. So I’ve started in on Stillmeadow Seasons. As to the other book, I read one of Miss Read’s wonderful books while in Hartford and I fell in love with her cozy and funny stories of English small town life. She was a prolific author, so I will have plenty of books to explore.

edgarguest

• Dusting, swiffering and vacuuming. I’m not a big fan of dusting since I’m allergic to house dust, but when I’m in the mood to do it, I suddenly see dust where I previously hadn’t noticed it at all. Selective sight, I suppose. These books of poetry by Edgar Guest got some attention and now they look beautiful once more. By the way, did you know that Edgar Guest was my dad’s godfather? Yep. He and my grandfather were very close friends – Dad remembers them playing cards at his house. According to my dad, Edgar Guest was a great guy.

naturalwonders

• Adding to my collection of natural wonders. Remember the flicker feather I found in Hartford? There it is on the left. I just added half of a walnut shell from our black walnut tree. And that splash of yellow? Part of a bird’s egg that had fallen onto the funky patio. Does anyone know what bird lays yellow eggs? I’ve searched online but have been unable to come up with a definitive answer.

shakespeare&fruit

• Preparing for two coaching jobs – a two day job in the middle of July and the next gig in Hartford starting at the end of July. By the way, I just realized I will be gone for nearly two months this time around. I was expecting six weeks. Yikes. I can’t think about that too much or I get really sad.

cindy'ssoaps

• Getting a package in the mail. My blogging friend Cindy, of Cottage Instincts, sent me four bars of her amazing homemade soap. After my post the other day about The Struggle, she thought I could use some pampering. They smell heavenly.

soapindish

Cindy mentioned that Lemon Poppyseed was especially nice to use after some gardening, so I’ve put it in the soap dish by the kitchen sink. Thank you, dear Cindy, for your sweet and thoughtful gift!

• Mowing. No picture necessary. Just take my word for it.

• Getting the car fixed: new radiator and new something or other bolt that had deteriorated. causing my right front tire to wear more quickly than the other tires. It was, according to my mechanic, ‘becoming a safety issue.’ No picture necessary.

gorgeousgirl2

• Spending time with this girl. She’s still full of spunk and is doing well. She misses her dad, of course, and he misses her. (Her allergies are troubling her, hence the red, weepy eye.)

Oh, let’s look at her again.

gorgeousgirl

She’s gorgeous. And smart. And funny. That’s a good combination.

Happy Sunday.

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Filed Under: birds, books, collecting, Edgar Guest, Fellow bloggers, Hartford, Scout 50 Comments

Reading on the Porch

June 11, 2013 at 9:48 am by Claudia

porchreading2

Hello. My name is Claudia and I love to read on the porch.

Let me put that more precisely: I love, love, love to read on the porch.

I’ve been this way since I was a child. I was one of those kids whose head was always buried in a book. Always. A stack of new-to-me books from the bookmobile was the best thing ever. All the possibilities contained between those covers filled me with joy.

I grew up in a suburb of Detroit, Michigan and we had a porch. Every house in our post-war community of small bungalows had one; some were rather small, like that of our next door neighbor, Linda. Others were fairly sizable, like ours. My family loved to spend time on the porch. We read, we played games, we chatted with our neighbors as they walked by the house. We drank lemonade. On hot summer nights, before we had an air conditioner, we often sought refuge there. We even watched fireworks from our porch.

I liked to read. And I liked the porch. So it only makes sense that some of my fondest memories are of life on that porch, book in hand, head lifted occasionally to say hello to someone passing by, but mostly, head buried in the pages of a book.

If I looked at the house to my right, I might see Karen sitting on her glider reading to one of her children. If I looked to my left, I would see Linda reading.

Linda, who was an elementary school teacher, loved to read. She often made trips to our public library and checked out lots of books, which she would bring home and proceed to read – on her porch. I can see her still, sitting in her aluminum chair, legs propped up on the wrought iron railing. We shared a love of gothic mysteries, those wonderful books by Victoria Holt and Mary Stewart and Phyllis Whitney and a host of other writers. When Linda finished one book, and she read voraciously and quickly, she would pass it on to me. In the years when I couldn’t drive yet, I was envious of Linda’s ability to drive to the Main Library in our city at any time she pleased. But I also benefitted from those trips because that pile of books she would bring home was for me, too. After we’d both read a book, we would talk about it, often from porch to porch. Our houses were fairly close together, so this was entirely doable.

meandscoutie

Linda was a great neighbor and I remember her fondly. I babysat for her son Kevin for many years (he was a handful.) Years later, after I had long ago left Michigan behind and my parents had retired to a home in northern Michigan, I was in town for a high school reunion. I had a rental car and decided to drive through the old neighborhood. Something made me stop in front of Linda’s house on the off chance she might be home. She was. It was so great to see her again. She happened to be house sitting for the people that lived in our old house, so she grabbed the keys and I got to walk through my childhood home again.

Linda was cool that way. Still is, I imagine. I used to hear the news about Linda through my mother, who kept up a correspondence with friends in the old neighborhood. But now that mom exists in a sort of twilight, I no longer hear about Linda. I think I need to contact her because she’s been in my thoughts lately.

After leaving Michigan behind and living in a series of apartments in other cities, I was thrilled when Don and I rented a Craftsman house in San Diego that had a porch. Oh, heaven. I felt like someone who had been stranded in the desert and had finally found an oasis. Loved that porch. Loved reading there.

prettyporch

But this porch, with its bluestone floor and a rusty old glider that rocks gently while I read, this is the best yet. Because not only is it beautiful, it is surrounded by gardens I have planted, by a huge old maple that gracefully spreads its branches over the gardens and lawn. It’s not my parent’s porch. It’s ours.

This time of year especially, before it gets too hot and muggy, is the best time to grab a book and mosey on out to the porch. I sit and read for a while, look up at the gardens, watch the cyclists ride by, tuck back into the book, take a picture….I while away the hours there. I’ve done a lot of that lately.

What could be better than losing yourself in a book and being transported to another world, all the while feeling the fresh air on your face, catching the scent of roses on the breeze, with a sweet little doggie at your feet?

Do you read on a porch? Or a patio? On a dock by a lake? Or, glory be, in a hammock?

Happy Tuesday,

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Filed Under: books, porch, reading 65 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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