Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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You are here: Home / Archives for garden

On My Choice to be a Vegetarian

May 21, 2015 at 10:06 am by Claudia

5-21 sunset

Last night’s sunset. It was so gorgeous that I felt compelled to get off my tush and go out to the porch to capture its beauty. “Even while cuddling with one’s husband, one sometimes has to make the decision to break away in order to do the right thing”- Claudia’s wise words for the day.

5-21 wild strawberries

Wild strawberries in the side garden. That’s ground cover that I planted in the background. Will an actual strawberry show itself? Stay tuned.

5-21 little white flowers

These little flowers pop up every year in the garden bed that’s right next to the porch – the one with the older hostas. Long ago, I discovered its name, but I don’t remember it any longer. It’s such a sweet little plant and was here when we moved in. It lives under one of the hostas.

Many of you have asked me to share more about my vegetarian lifestyle and the recipes we use, as well as what food we buy. I hesitate to talk about it for two reasons. The first is that Don does most of the cooking and his meals are usually something he whips up from various things he finds in the cupboards and refrigerator and there is no official recipe involved. He likes cooking that way and he’s very good at it. At some point, I can share a list of things we tend to regularly buy at the market if you would like. I’ve been a vegetarian for 30 years and believe me, there is SO much more available than there was when I first made that choice. It’s very easy to live this lifestyle and get the protein you need. In fact, I never worry about it.

The second reason is that my choice to be a vegetarian is very personal and is based on a moral imperative that I feel deep within my heart. And that moral imperative is not to eat any animal, be it fish, foul, cow, lamb – anything. I don’t believe in killing animals for food, especially in our modern society where there are so many possibilities for food, so many plant-based choices that allow us to eat humanely.

Whenever I share this with readers, I run the risk of offending them. I tend to avoid the preachy, knowing that the only thing that matters is that I’m living my life in a way that matches my heartfelt beliefs. This is my  choice. My husband often eats vegetarian meals, but he still eats meat occasionally. That is his  choice.

That being said, let me explain my beliefs. I don’t understand, nor will I ever understand, how people can admire the beauty of a cow or a lamb or a chicken and then turn around and eat one. I am unable to separate the beauty of those animals, the fact that they feel pain, that they think and live and breathe, from the act of killing them. None of what I believe is a misinterpretation of ‘having dominion’ for me. What makes me think I am superior? Because I have opposable thumbs?

Don’t get me started on hunting or the abundance of trophy deer heads I see on decorating blogs.

But again, this is what I  believe. And I believe it deeply, strongly and passionately – with every fiber of my being.

I’m not perfect. I wrestle with the choice to wear leather shoes, for example, or use a leather bag. I do my best to learn and grow on this journey.

So there you go. I started this journey when I was in graduate school. I had already started eliminating red meat from my diet when my elder brother was diagnosed with cancer – he had lymphoma. He made the decision to fight it with diet instead of chemo. He became macrobiotic. I was intrigued by macrobiotics and I embraced that lifestyle, as did my mother. I ate very healthily but eventually the demands of my teaching position in Boston with its long, unpredictable hours made it impossible to follow that specific diet, so it morphed into a sort of vegetarian diet. But I still ate chicken and fish. Eventually, my feelings about eating any  animal became so strong that I eliminated all meat. And I haven’t looked back.

Paul McCartney says he never eats anything with a face. I couldn’t say it better.

What makes eating a dog (which we understandably find appalling and disgusting) different than eating a cow or a pig or a chicken? How and where do we draw a line? How do we compartmentalize those decisions?

I simply can’t.

And now I sound preachy.

You see now why I don’t speak of this very often. It’s private and yet not private. If I could convert everyone, I would, because I would be saving animals. It is a major part of who I am today. But I speak of it quietly, behind the scenes. That’s the way I roll.

I still have further to go. And more changes to make.

That’s probably the last I’ll speak of it.

If, after all this, you’re still interested in a list of things we tend to use in our cooking, I’ll start to put one together and I’ll share it with you.

Happy Thursday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

 

Tagged With: vegetarianismFiled Under: garden, vegetarianism 43 Comments

Outside: Deer, Birds & A Groundhog

May 20, 2015 at 8:34 am by Claudia

5-20 deer damage

Apparently the deer that share our property aren’t satisfied with the abundance of green things to eat elsewhere on the property. Their palates tend toward young green things in my big garden bed. Honestly, they snack a little every year, but this year…they are doing major damage.

Is this the thanks you give me for all I’ve done for you, ungrateful deer?

Why can’t you be like our groundhog, Henry, who dines on green grass and other things that have nothing to do with the garden?

You could learn from him.

I’ve been spraying a home-made concoction on the plants, but every time I spray everything, it rains.

5-20 poppy bud

Meanwhile, the prickly poppy seems to be safe from the deer. And soon we will have beautiful orange-red, paper-thin flowers.

Kiss Me Kate  was simply glorious. What a treat it was to watch it! I found myself whooping out loud after certain numbers like “Too Darn Hot” and “Tom, Dick, and Harry.” Witty, at times hilarious, touching, beautiful, with dancing and singing that knocks your socks off, it’s a treasure. Darko wasn’t at the matinée on Sunday, so I came home and wrote him a love letter via email. His work, along with the incredible choreography of Peggy Hickey, is superb. I took a few notes, but the actors are very good and they were very coachable, so most everything I had given them had been taken to heart and fully realized.

I’ll miss seeing it. Even now, three days later, the songs and images from the show are still vivid. Snatches of songs are running through my brain. Sigh.

The birdbath has been quite active this spring – much earlier than usual. Perhaps it’s due to the unseasonably warm temperatures we’ve been having. Yesterday, I happened to look out the window as a robin plopped himself down in the center of the birdbath. A catbird (they love taking baths) was just about to head into the water when he saw the robin.

5-20 robin & catbird

He tried an end run around the robin, coming in from behind the birdbath, but the robin turned and gave him a ‘look’ and the catbird backed off. He tried the bench. The robin wasn’t budging.

5-20 robin & catbird 2

He tried the planter. Mr. Robin wasn’t moving.

5-20 robin & catbird 3

He tried the chair. And….no movement from the robin. The catbird finally gave up and flew off right after I took this picture.

The photos are a little blurry as I took them through the window and I don’t have a telephoto lens (on my wish list) but gosh, I love taking pictures of the birds and the birdbath. I find them so fascinating! Yesterday, we had the bunny rabbit doing his thing outside the kitchen window, the birds taking baths, and Henry chomping on grass by the shed.

The deer were nowhere to be seen as they like to do their thing before I get up. I love them but they are in deep trouble!

I posted a book review yesterday and I’m giving away a copy. Don’t forget to enter! Just scroll down one post.

And there’s a new post up on Just Let Me Finish This Page: Thoughts on Book Reviews & Some Links For You.

Happy Wednesday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

Filed Under: animals, birds, garden 40 Comments

Chatty: Gardening on a Budget

May 16, 2015 at 9:30 am by Claudia

A gentle rain is falling as I write this. We need it. It has been extraordinarily dry here, with much less rain than is the norm. There have been ongoing burn bans and a couple of forest fires not far from us. One of those fires was caused by someone burning brush in spite of the ban. I guess he thought the rules didn’t apply to him. Don’t get me started.

So I welcome the rain.

5-16 barrels

I’ve been adding pots and plants to the Funky Patio and the porch. I love this Pink Ivy Geranium and I’ve used it for a couple of summers now. It takes me right back to my friend Kathy’s little cottage at the beach in San Diego. She had this growing everywhere in her garden. That little cottage was magical – Kathy was ahead of her time in her decorating style. All of those blogger/decorators who think the current trend of white and cream interiors with natural elements is a new thing? Not on your life. Kathy was doing it well over twenty years ago. She rented a little cottage and she made each beadboard nook and cranny into a little treasure – all on a budget and all with some ingenious DIY on her part. She covered cushions in linen and cotton duck. I can still see it now. I loved that place. In fact, I stayed with her when I first moved out to San Diego until I could move into my apartment. And that little cottage of Kathy’s was where I first met Don.

So this Ivy Geranium is little homage to Kathy and the beach and theater gatherings at her little cottage.

5-16 hensandchicks

Hens and Chicks on the Funky Patio Bench.

5-16 sweetpotatovine

Sweet potato vine in the galvanized planter.

5-16 galvanized

Along with some pink scaevola, which is the same plant I use every year for the hanging pots on the porch.

5-16 hanging

I bought two of them this year and they’re gorgeous. They’re a little pricey for me, but here’s the thing, they last all summer long and into the fall. I don’t have to replace the plants in mid-summer. So, they end up saving me money and I’m all about thrifty gardening because I have to be.

Everything you see in the garden beds was purchased a bit at a time over the nine summers I’ve been gardening here at the cottage. (We’re starting the tenth summer this year.) No landscapers, no garden designers. For better or worse, it’s just me and a very  limited budget. It took lots and lots of patience. But, oh my, it was and is so rewarding!

I am equally as thrifty about the annuals I add to the porch and patio.

5-16 porch

There are six places I can hang pots on the porch – six openings framed by the posts. Last year, I had only two hanging plants. This year, I have six. I purchased the two purple scaevola. I fill the rest of the pots myself. The pots themselves have been saved from year to year. This year, I bought a flat of impatiens. I already have the overwintered impatiens, which saves me a lot of money from year to year. The new flat of impatiens I use to fill a few little pots here and there, but mostly I use them for the hanging pots on the shady side of the porch. They will fill out beautifully and last through the summer.

This year, Don accompanied me to the nursery (that usually doesn’t happen but he’s developing a real love for the gardens and is much more observant about what’s popping up here and there than he used to be) and his eye hit on a beautiful hanging plant with deep red geraniums. We couldn’t afford another expensive arrangement, so I grabbed a small inexpensive pot of the same geraniums and plopped them in a hanging pot that I had on hand.

5-16 redgeranium

Don never asks for anything special in the gardens. He leaves all of that up to me. This year he asked for two things. I wanted to make sure he had his geraniums. He also fell in love with a little plant called Mexican Mint Agastache and asked if I could add it to the garden. Of course.

5-16 viewfromporch

It’s coming together, slowly but surely.

I’m very, very careful about each year’s gardening expenses, so much so that last year I didn’t buy mulch in order to save money. That was a mistake that I won’t repeat again. Yikes, Claudia, what were you thinking?

Mulch was purchased this year, along with the flat of impatiens, a couple of hanging plants, a few small potted plants, and some morning glory and zinnia seeds. That’s it.

Oh, and some bee balm, which had to be purchased because I mistakenly yanked all of the bee balm out of the garden.

Yes, you read that right. I thought it was some invasive mint (it smelled like mint) and yanked it. It wasn’t until a few weeks later when I realized I wasn’t seeing any bee balm come out of the ground that I learned that it is part of the mint family. I was so mad at myself! That bee balm had been in the garden for at least eight years. I felt sick to my stomach. It was as if I’d harmed a friend. And I had. Again, what was I thinking?

So Don insisted we go buy some bee balm the next day.

An added expense due to my momentary insanity.

Anyway. It’s taken nine summers to get the gardens to the point they are now. A few plants at a time. A little bit of money at a time. Now, I almost never add plants to the garden beds because they’re nicely full of perennials. (Unless I yank something by mistake, that is.)

Mulch, a few pots of annuals, some seeds. That’s doable for two freelancers. And knowing I did it all on a budget – very slowly, with no quick fixes – makes me proud.

Happy Saturday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

 

 

Filed Under: Don, flowers, garden 34 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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