Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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You are here: Home / Archives for Meredith

Meredith Knits for Maggie, Music and Roses

June 9, 2013 at 9:36 am by Claudia

After 36 hours of constant rain, courtesy of the most recent tropical storm, we are sunny and dry. At least for today. Friday afternoon consisted of heavy rain but the atmosphere here was considerably lightened by the sound of guitar, dobro, mandolin and banjo – along with my husband’s voice.

rehearsing

That’s Dan on the left playing the dobro and Don on guitar. Just on the other side of the table, you can see Scout’s ear. That girl never left the living room. It was as if I didn’t exist. She loves people and music, so I can’t blame her.

maggie1

Friday’s mail brought something from my sister. Meredith recently ordered her own Maggie Rabbit kit, as well as Alicia’s new pattern for a knit dress for Maggie. Since Meredith is a far better knitter than I am, I asked her is she would make a knit dress for Maggie.

Let’s see if we can get Maggie to stand up.

maggie

There! She needed to hold on to the wrought iron. Okay. Now we’ll put her in her new dress.

maggiedress

Hello! Could that dress be any more adorable? Maggie likes the layered look.

Meredith also sent along something she designed; an apron. After all, Maggie works in the garden and in the kitchen and all around the house. She needs an apron.

maggieapron

Be still my heart. She looks so cute.

Every time I put something over Maggie’s head, I have to rearrange her whiskers. I clearly forgot to when I took this picture.

Meredith is quite talented, you know. Thank you, sister!

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Lots of buds on the New Dawn roses.

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And the Julia Child roses, which were originally a pale yellow but now have reverted back to red, are really taking off.

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I love all my roses, but (shhh!) I love the New Dawn roses the best. They are in the side garden, so you can’t see them in this picture. I did plant another New Dawn rose bush at the end of the summer last year. It’s several feet to the right of this area of the garden, which is in front of the house. I’m hoping it takes off.

I have to start work on the text for Much Ado About Nothing. I’ve got a two-day gig in mid-July – I will be working with the cast of an upcoming production of that play being produced by the Barrington Stage Company (situated in the lovely Berkshires.) But our work will be in NYC. And then, not long after that, I will be once again coaching at Hartford Stage. This time it will be Macbeth and a French play, La Dispute.

I think I’d better tear myself away from the garden.

Umm….tomorrow. Because today is sunny and tomorrow will be rainy.

By the way, if you tried to download any of Don’s music and had a problem, we hope to resolve that within a few days. Just a glitch with Paypal that will soon be cleared up. I’ll give you the all clear when everything is resolved. Thanks for your patience!

Happy Sunday.

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Filed Under: Don, garden, Meredith 27 Comments

Embarrassing Stories: The Head Clunk

June 6, 2013 at 9:09 am by Claudia

I was talking on the phone with my sister, Meredith, the other day. You all know Meredith, right? We got to a point in the conversation where we journeyed down memory lane, sharing stories that have always made us laugh. We have been through some silly adventures together and we often find ourselves laughing about something. We are also able to find some dark humor in life’s challenges – as with our aging parents. It keeps us sane. Anyway, one story in particular makes us laugh so hard that we start crying. How about if I share it with you? At the risk of an all text post putting you off, I’ll share a few garden photos. (I don’t like using photos from the web, I’d much rather share my own.) This will be the first in an occasional series.

rosebud

Many years ago, my dad took an early retirement and one day, much to our collective surprise, our parents announced they were selling our childhood home and moving ‘up north’ to Rogers City, MI. Rogers City is a small town on Lake Huron at the top of the ‘mitten’ that is lower Michigan. They bought a lovely home with 5 bedrooms (2 more than our family of 6 had during our youth – how ironic) and we proceeded to gather there at Christmas time. Now, we were all adults at this point: Meredith was the youngest of the kids, my brother Dave was the oldest. I was in my thirties. Meredith was in her twenties. We had careers. We were living on our own.

Now, just to let you know a little about my mom, she has a wonderful sense of humor. Many is the time we laughed ourselves silly over something. There is one area of life, though, that she was deadly serious about: church. When she moved up to Rogers City, she started attending a tiny little Episcopal church on the edge of Lake Huron. When I say tiny, I mean it seated about 50 people, tops. Charming. But teeny tiny.

Cut to Christmas Eve. All the kids were home. Mom was thrilled that we would all be in her church on Christmas Eve.  She wanted to show us off. This little church shared a minister with two other churches, so services had to be scheduled at different times in order for the minister to travel between congregations.

There were several inches of snow on the ground and it was very, very cold.

peonypinkness

We arrived at the church, bundled in our coats. No space for a coat rack, so we did that thing you do while sitting in a pew; after sitting down, we took off our coats and arranged them around us.

We grew up in a Lutheran church, so the practice of using incense during a church service was new to us. Unfortunately, they went a little crazy with the incense and the smell of it took over the tiny church.

The service still hadn’t started. Clearly there was some sort of delay going on, as evidenced by stage whispers between the organist and someone else as to “Where is the minister?” “I don’t know!” This was long before cell phones became a part of everyday life, so no one could call him.

Along with the ongoing back and forth about the minister’s whereabouts, there were also whispered conversations about “Where is the baby Jesus?” “He’s missing!” “Who saw him last?”

Baby Jesus was missing from the rather large creche.

Meredith and I were sitting next to each other. My mom was right next to us. Meredith and I started to exchange glances as the quite audible whispers grew more and more frantic. We started to giggle. Just a bit. Then a little bit more.

Meanwhile, we waited for the minister.

The incense was overpowering.

Finally, the minister arrived. There was no back entrance in the church. He simply came in the front door, was greeted by the whisperers, shucked his coat, and made his way up the aisle. The baby Jesus had been found – where, I don’t know. The long delayed service was just about to start.

We were still a bit giggly. We’d been on the receiving end of a few quelling looks from my mom.

The service started. We picked up our hymnals and started singing the opening hymn. In the usual fashion, we remained standing while the minister greeted us and read from the opening of the liturgy.

Then we received the signal to sit down.

It was totally quiet in the church. You could hear a pin drop.

Meredith was on my left. You know how you reach back to make sure your coat is arranged against the back of the pew in a way that allows you to sit down without sitting on the coat? Well, Meredith looked back and to her right, I looked back and to my left.

We clunked heads.

Now, when I say we clunked heads, I mean we clunked them so hard that it sounded like two bowling balls had crashed into each other. The sound was deafening. Everyone in the church turned toward the unexpected sound.

We saw stars. Our heads hurt. The sound of the clunk reverberated throughout the church.

And we started laughing. Uh oh. Can’t laugh in church, especially with Mom there. So we tried to not laugh. We bit down on our lips. We thought about serious, weighty issues. We wouldn’t, couldn’t, look at each other. None of it worked. On went the service. My mother gave us more than a few razor-sharp ‘Stop it!’ looks. We couldn’t stop. Honestly, we tried. But the more we tried to stop, the more we laughed. Most of this laughter involved shoulders shaking, tears streaming down our faces, and most of it was inaudible to anyone but immediate family. Every once in a while, though, a quite audible gurgle of laugher would escape and we’d clamp back down on it.

We were in full view of the minister and the rest of the tiny congregation. It was impossible not to see what was going on.

My mother was furious with us. Her lips compressed into such a thin line that I thought she might explode. Or turn to her immediate left and shake me. With great willpower on her part, she refrained from throttling me.

She simply would not look at us. One can only imagine the thoughts going through her head.

At times we would seemingly get control; we’d wipe our eyes, take a deep breath and think “Okay! This is finally over.”

Then one of us would remember the sound of the bowling ball clunk and we’d be off again.

This went on for at least twenty to thirty minutes.

I don’t think I’ve ever laughed so hard in my life.

Church services. Funerals. Important speeches. Occasions of state. One is not supposed to laugh in these situations.

Needless to say, my mother would not speak to us the rest of the night.

I remember looking down the pew in my dad’s direction. He had a grin on his face. He got it.

Not Mom.

justabouttoopen

Now, these many years later, we will talk about this incident like we did the other day and find ourselves engulfed in laughter. Once again, tears stream down our faces. We cannot stop laughing.

Mom never, not even years later, found the situation remotely funny. We’d try to make her laugh about it. She would have none of it.

Meredith and I, by the way, have been know to literally (and I really mean literally) fall down laughing. There’s another story about that for another time.

Laughter, even laughter in church, is the best medicine.

Happy Thursday.

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Filed Under: Dad, life, Meredith, mom 43 Comments

Surprises in the Mail and in the Soil

April 8, 2013 at 9:02 am by Claudia

You all know my sister, Meredith, right? She blogs at Mereknits and she is an amazing knitter, crocheter and crafter besides all that other stuff: mom, wife, occupational therapist, wonderful person. She is my sister and she is my friend and we are very, very close. So, the other day, I opened the front door and there was a box on the front steps. It was from Mer. Hmmm.

I opened it up and this is what I saw:

sweater

Isn’t it beautiful? It was for me!

sweater2

I had been just about to leave the house to run some errands, so I quickly tried it on (it fit!) and took a photo of myself in the bathroom mirror with my phone and sent it to her. (I will not share that photo with you, my friends, as the mirror had not been cleaned and you can see the toilet in the background.) I ended up wearing it that day because I love it so much! There’s a story to this sweater: Mer wrote a post about it called “Can a Sweater Knit Itself?” Go over there and read it. She tells it much better than I could.

It fits like a glove and when I showed it to Don via Skype he said “Va Va Voom!” Thank you, sister!

Yesterday, I started the long project that is the Clean Up of the Garden and Yard. Oh my. It was windy out there and I, of course, did too much. But it felt good being outdoors, raking up the seemingly endless amounts of leaves and twigs that are covering the garden beds. It’s been a long, cold winter here in the northeast, but plants are coming up here and there.

sedum

Sedum Autumn Joy – always one of the first plants to peek through the soil

daffs

Daffodils. Will I see them bloom before I leave? I don’t think so.

As I was raking, I saw the hint of a green shoot poking through the leaves in a section of the garden bed where I didn’t have anything planted. After I removed the leaves, I saw this:

3bulbs

Four Five plants. What the heck?

Then I remembered something from last year. I added that new garden bed to the other side of the house. It had previously been grassy there. I was digging in a section of the bed, getting the soil ready to add a new plant, and I found some bulbs rather far down in the soil. I had no idea how long they had been there or what the heck they were, but I took them over to the big garden bed and planted them, thinking what did I have to lose? And promptly forgot about them.

hyacinths

A little yellow due to lack of sun (they were completely covered by the leaves) but they look like Hyacinths to me. What a wonderful surprise! When I took them out of the other garden bed, I noticed that the bulbs were not pointed in the right direction, so I made sure to do that when I replanted them. I have no idea how long it has been since these bulbs have bloomed, if ever. We’ve lived here almost 8 years and the guy who lived here before us did absolutely nothing to the property (he was a weekender) and he lived here for four years.

These are the little garden miracles that make me so, so happy.

Temperatures are supposed to be in the sixties this week! Positively balmy for our part of the country. Don is on his way home, just got an email from him – he’s waiting for his connection in Zurich. He won’t get home until late this evening. Scout and I are very excited, indeed!

Happy Monday.

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Filed Under: Don, flowers, garden, gifts, Meredith 46 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.

Thanks for stopping by.

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Scout & Riley. Riley left us in 2012. Scout left us in February 2016. Dearest babies. Dearest friends.

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