Category: Gardens

  • Minding the Sky || The Constant Inconstant

    Minding the Sky || The Constant Inconstant

    BY JUDITH WALCUTT
    July 1, 2015

    I had been posed in a shoulder stand during my morning yoga practice when the words: “constant inconstant” came to mind. The last I remember writing here, so many months ago, the cherry blossoms had just peaked, the air smelled of turning earth, and we began to imagine the days of summer beauty coming upon us, suddenly, like a deer crossing the road. (https://www.whidbeylifemagazine.org/minding-the-sky-dreaming-of-buried-treasure/)

    Hidden jewels  (photo by the author)
    Hidden jewels (photo by the author)

    The sky has changed several times since then and now we are in the full bloom of it. The light lasts late into the day, the scent of strawberries drifts up from our tiny patch in the morning sun and I have already put aside some jam to capture their beauty for a winter’s remembrance. My feet pointed at the ceiling and blood rushing to my brain, I thought: “The upside down bat laughs at the topsy-turvy world, while the constant inconstant swirls all about” and I thought—perhaps that’s what I’ll write about for this solstice season’s blog.

    The phone rang. I came down from my shoulders to answer it. By the tone of the caller, I knew something life changing had happened. And indeed it had. My husband’s work partner in the Firesign Theatre, Phil Austin, aka Nick Danger, had died in the early hours of that day. The loss—to his wife and closest companion for over 44 years—Oona, to his other surviving Firesign partner, Phil Proctor, and his wife Melinda, and to us, let alone the fans, the multitudinous, wonderful, motley and colorful assortment of fans who have loyally memorized and recited lines from over 25 albums and performances over the past 50 years, is quite frankly incalculable.

    The question is: what loss isn’t?

    And the follow up—will the grief ever subside?

    Phil Austin, aka Nick Danger   (photo from the Firesign Theatre Archive)
    Phil Austin, aka Nick Danger (photo from the Firesign Theatre Archive)

    In our community, we’ve shared such losses that the whole town has turned out for—and each one of us, individually and alone, has had some loss that has left us topsy-turvy, upside-down and backwards, wondering, “How will I ever come back from this?”

    Sometimes it sneaks up on you when you’re not looking. Sometimes you even think you’re ready for it. When my mother died, a year and a week ago this past Sunday, I had thought, while I held her hand, or just sat in the room as she slept most of her final days away, that I would feel a relief for the end of her suffering, for the end of the life in which she was bedridden, in pain and stuck between one reality and another. I thought I was prepared for saying goodbye and letting her go to wherever she was bound to from here.

    In her final days, in a moment of luminescent alertness that comes in the process of dying, she told me she was excited because when she left here, she was going to go back to school. “A big school—well, more like a medium-sized one—but big enough,” she said, modestly pleased with the prospect. “What will you study?” I asked, curious as to what she saw for herself as her next course, after here.

    “I’m not sure” she said, a little daunted, as I’d asked her to describe a place she‘d never been, “I think I’ll find out when I get there, but I’m sure it will be interesting. I’ll go on ahead and get things started—we can meet up there later on.”

    3Mom before she went IMG_1775
    Muriel Albers Walcutt Bittel toward the end (photo by the author)

    I hoped that would be true, that we’d meet up again, later on.

    She was 96 and had celebrated her birthday three months earlier surrounded by family and people who loved her, in good spirits, with good cake. I see now that for her, that was her ideal goodbye party—the one at which she smiled and nodded regally, then merrily waved us off on our way as she silently made up her mind to let go and die (which three months later, to the day, she did).

    I was completely wrong about being relieved when she “checked out of the hotel,” which is how we in our family refer to the d-word. I was as distraught as anyone at any age might be, losing a mother who was, like Mary Poppins, practically perfect in every way. Never mind that in the last years of her life, she was a flat, paper-doll semblance of her former self. The memories I had of her were rich, 3-D, and filled in all the gaps. She was funny, she had moxie, she threw a good party and had a terrific laugh. She was the mother everyone wished they’d had.

    In the patient slog up to death’s door, I tried to remind her of as many of our shared joys as I could, and while she seemed to relish the stories I told her of many great times we’d had together, she also seemed distracted by the world that was visible to her just past my shoulder, attending voices only she could hear at that exact moment.

    As it turned out—no, I was not relieved when she was set free from her body. I was distraught, grief-stricken, and felt as though someone had stabbed me through the chest with a sharp implement. That feeling has stayed with me, to a greater or lesser extent, ever since. Recently, I have come to the conclusion that I will never not miss her. And so it is, I think, with those people we really and truly love, who are irreplaceable in our shared lives and hearts. How could we expect to “get over it”? Prepared for loss or not, ready or not, we grieve. It is the human thing to do.

    This past week my husband lost his life-long friend and working partner, Phil Austin—aka Nick Danger, the fabulously funny faux detective who sent-up the noir genre in a conflagration of cellophane sound effects. His wife, Oona and he were what Kurt Vonnegut would have seen as a duprass—a life-team of two who, together, were part of the four-man karass of the Firesign Theatre; they—Phil and Oona—were in it together, for life.

    In their forty-four-year-and-counting relationship, they spent only one night apart in that entire time, and when they did, they agreed never to do that again. The grief for Oona over the loss must feel insurmountable.

    Phil’s departure coincided with the weekend of the first anniversary of my mom’s death. As a result, I felt it hugely, both coming and going. Floating in the tide pool of these deep emotions, I find that the only refuge from that sense of grief is to remember.

    That’s right: remember. Not avoid—but remember what I loved about my loved one that I miss so much. Because if I avoid thinking about it, I will lose the sense of who that missing person is and what was beloved about them. And then I would really lose them—forever. So as hard as it is, (and I imagine it is very hard in Charleston, S.C., right now, and locally in Langley where Bob Giswold’s family gathers this week to honor his passing) let’s remember them, think of them, see them in our mind’s eyes, and love them still.

    As for my mother, I remember she was quite simply magic. A real live Magic Mommy—she made magic with birthday parties with present trees and buried treasure and backyard carnivals—and she made magic at holidays with the sort of Santa Claus you could really believe in and an Easter bunny no one would doubt, and she made magic on plain old ordinary days, because what could be better on an ordinary day than a little magic?

    I don’t know how she did it. Even when I was grown and gone and living on the opposite coast of the country, my mother could suss out what I needed most at that exact moment and somehow got it to me. In my twenties, which were pre-computer days, when—if you were a writer or trying to be a writer, you needed your typewriter with you at all times—I lugged my Smith Corona electric back and forth across the country on every trip, from one end of the airport to the other, on and off trains, in and out of subways, up and down six-floor walk-ups in downtown NYC, as I looked for that illusive writing job that would finally settle me down to one place, one job, one life.

    My mother witnessed this struggle with the mechanics of my life, as she met me at an airport between flights, to share a quick meal, on the way to someplace else. Finally home in Los Angeles afterwards, I was amazed when a UPS guy delivered a package to me that contained an Olympic portable, the lightest typewriter made at that time, specifically for journalists and built to fit on fold-down airline trays. I was ecstatic. My mother—the true magic mommy—was a practiced genius of observation.

    I miss that about my mother—the way she had of knowing her family’s needs and making sure they were met.

    Now, I lean heavily on the constantly changing nature of the sky to remind me that however things might be at this exact moment, if I wait a minute or two, or a day or two, or even a week or two—it will change—it will all change and upside down or right-side up, the constant inconstant will be at work. But there are also the permanents, the eternals, the qualities that are outside of all time/space continuums—and I am certain my mother’s thumbprint is visible even there, on my understanding of what remains in the wake of the permanent impermanence of our lives.

    In the last days, as my mother’s hold on the here and now began to weaken and the life force thinned out and away from her bones draped in the luminous transparency of her vanishing flesh, she had begun to speak in that kind of beautiful poetic, symbolic way that comes of trying to say big things, summarizing huge thoughts from a lifetime of experience, in a very few words. At such a moment, she looked at me with great seriousness, and said in one short declarative sentence everything she knew to be true in this life: “Love is bigger than a big sky,” she said, saying the exact thing I needed to hear at that moment.

    Love is bigger than a big sky—and the sky is always changing. Let the big wings of the one carry you through the downdrafts and the bumpy air turbulence of the other. And believe me, because my magic mommy told me so and she knows—“It will all work out,” she said with a kind certainty, “Whatever it is, it will all work out—just wait and see.”

    Muriel at 96—the day after the party (photo by the author)
    Muriel at 96—the day after the party (photo by the author)

    ____________

    If I wanted to be a magic mommy like my mother, I would be sure to take a band of appropriately aged children and playful adults to the Meerkerk Garden’s Fairy House Festival between 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, July 11, where supplies will be available to build your own elf and/or fairy house. $5 admission charge, unless you are 12 and under, in which case admission is free. See http://www.meerkerkgardens.org/calendar.html for details.

    The last time we went there, I took some old childhood friends of mine who were visiting the island and they had a marvelous time, enjoying the spontaneous magical buildings, photo opportunities, and a picnic on the grounds. In memory of my magic mommy Muriel—I share a few pictures from that outing below.  (photos by the author)

    5Four friends go to MeerkerkFour old friends set off on their adventure at Meerkerk Gardens.

    6Four friends alot to see IMG_2327Odin and Agatha are excited to show their visiting friends Robear and Celeste the magic of Meerkerk Gardens.

    “Where shall we go first?

    Let’s tour the houses!”
    7-P1060611

    That one is interesting…

    8Four Friends visit unusual structure!

    Let’s get a closer look!

    9Four friends trying it out 2011-07-09 00.22.56

    Very comfortable!

    10-Four friendsLet's try this one! IMG_2342

    Here’s one with a roof top garden. Love the view!

    11-Four friends the girls IMG_2353

    The girls like this one!

    12-Four friends picture IMG_2355

    I’ll snap a picture!

    13-Four friends Celeste and RobearIMG_2356

    We’ll use this one for our Christmas card!

    14.2011-07-09 17.56.35

    Picnic time for the four old friends at Meerkerk Gardens after visiting the Fairy Houses

    15-Four friends time to go IMG_2368

    That was fun! Time to go!

    16-IMG_0283

    The author at work.

    Judith Walcutt lives and writes on Whidbey Island. Her novel, “Memoirs of a Modern She-Noodle,” will be published in 2016 by NeoPoiesis Press. (photo by the author)

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • The Whidbey Island Garden Tour in photos

    The Whidbey Island Garden Tour in photos

    BY DAVID WELTON
    June 24, 2015

    The 20th Whidbey Island Garden Tour this past weekend showcased five properties from Clinton to Coupeville, demonstrating techniques of color mixing, art in the garden and planting to complement architecture, water and environmental conservation for the benefit of our community.

    Featured gardens were:

    A Tale of Two Gardens, Liz Axford and Patrick Johnson

    The three buildings on this estate are shadowed by the forest and face Puget Sound. Upper level balcony living spaces, and large windows bring the outdoors in. Shade loving plants give way to the sunny undeveloped lot across the street, affording a prairie garden of mixed grasses and multi-hued flowers and preserve the water view.

    Axford Johnson_0063 Axford Johnson_0072 Axford Johnson_0080 Axford Johnson_0105 Axford Johnson_0123 Axford Johnson_0136

    Westside Garden, Louise Abbott and Dave Earp

    Facing Puget Sound and the Olympics, this garden has been in the family for fifty years. The owners are artists and art connoisseurs, and have incorporated their varied collection of art into the landscape. Sculptures by Sue Taves and Georgia Gerber, to name but a few, are surrounded by native orchids, grasses and conifers. Dave gazes through a green lens, for a unique inverted, backwards and distorted view of his garden. Openings in a steel giraffe sillouette allow the colors of vegetation to shine through.

    Abbott Earp_0021 Abbott Earp_0033 Abbott Earp_0049 Abbott Earp_0055 Abbott Earp_0072

    Re Imagined Garden, Meg McClung

    Located on Race Lagoon, this landscape runs from the forest to the water’s edge. The owner has decorated her property with whimsical statues and artifacts to memorialize her family. Chicken statues do not awaken the neighbors and are easy to maintain.

    Meg McClung_0007 Meg McClung_0082 Meg McClung_0133 Meg McClung_0149 Meg McClung_0165

    Twisted Willows, Fran and Jack Spicer

    Secret Gardens linked by tunnels and passages through the vegetation allow for reflection and areas for grandchildren and dragonflies to frolic.

    Spicer_0014 Spicer_0038 Spicer_0039 Spicer_0073 Spicer_0077 Spicer_0089

    June Garden, June and Richard Davis

    June Davis, experienced horticulturist and former sales manager at Skagit Gardens in Mt Vernon has preserved a stately Madrone tree, and added a variety of Japanese Maples and flowers to provide year round color. A birdfeeder urn graced by clay sculptures of their dogs attracts yellow grosbeaks, scissortails and finches to further enliven their garden.

    Evening Grosbeak June Garden_0028

    June Garden_0033 June Garden_0064 June Garden_0065 June Garden_0076

    To read more about the WIGT, read this feature from earlier this month by WLM writer Barbara Moran here.

    David Welton is a retired physician whose award-winning photographs have been widely exhibited ands are frequently seen in the print and online pages of Whidbey Life Magazine.

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • What’s Happening || Thursday, June 25 through Sunday June 28

    What’s Happening || Thursday, June 25 through Sunday June 28

    BY KATY SHANER
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    June 24, 2015

    Welcome to the weekend on Whidbey. Many weekend events start on Thursday night so this “What’s Happening” covers Thursday through Sunday. “What’s Happening” is a collaborative information guide project between the The Visitor Information Kiosk and Whidbey Life Magazine.

    THURSDAY, JUNE 25

    orcaORCA NETWORK WHALE SIGHTING REPORT While  watching and visiting the whales in their home, please observe, love and respect them from a distance. The Salish Sea is swimming with orcas! J, K and some Ls came in from the west on the 20th after having been out for a few. Get the most recent sightings by going to info@orcanetwork.org

    THE PORCH SESSIONS 7 – 9 p.m. June 25. A free outdoor summer music series at the Kalakala Mercantile Co. All ages welcome. 138 2nd Street, Langley Facebook.com/KalakalaMercantile 360-221-0161 Featuring: Magic Potions https://themagicpotions.bandcamp.com/, Memory Boys https://memoryboys.bandcamp.com/, Ghosts I’ve Met Recently played live on KEXP https://ghostsivemet.bandcamp.com/  Questions? Contact: shantisivadas@yahoo.com

    FRIDAY, JUNE 26

    INTERNATIONAL GUILLEMOT APPRECIATION DAYS 2015 First event 3 to 5 p.m. Friday, June 26. Happy Hour at Ott & Murphy Winery 204 First Street, Langley. Specials on glasses of wine. Members of the Pigeon Guillemot Research Project will have photos and discussions of this long running study. Make your own Guillemot feet with red and black felt. Questions? Contact Govinda at: govinda@whidbey.com

    FRIDAY NIGHTS AT BLOOMS WINERY TASTING ROOM Literary and Poetry Night by Northwest Institute for Literary Arts 6 p.m. Friday, June 26. Featuring readings by Jim Gearhart (essays have appeared in Shark Reef Literary Magazine and High Country News); Mary Heron Hake (nominated for inclusion in Best New Poets 2015); Mel Flannery (Seattle poet with Masters in both Nursing and Creative Writing); Carolyne Wright (published nine books of poetry, including several that were nominated for various literary awards and one that won the Blue Lynx Prize and the American Book Award. Also a collection of essays and co-edited an anthology on women and work); Stephanie Hammer (nominated for a Pushcart prize four times in poetry, fiction and nonfiction. First novel The Puppet Turner of Narrow Interior), and Marie Hartung (Appeared most recently in Talking River Journal. Named a finalist for the Writers at Work Fellowship in 2014, the Eric Hoffer Award for Prose in 2015. Recipient of a fellowship scholarship award for the Summer Literary Series in Kenya). These poets and writers will do readings, and will have time for discussions and book signings. Enjoy a glass of wine and hear their poetry and prose. Blooms Winery Tasting Room 5603 Bayview Rd., Langley (in the historic Bayview Cash Store) (360) 321-0515 www.bloomswinery.com

    WICA_WLMad_EMMA_2015EMMA 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Last weekend. Whidbey Island Center for the Arts. “A delightful retelling of a comedy.”  TalkinBroadway.com. Emma Woodhouse is Jane Austen’s most maddening, endearing heroine. Clever and effervescent, young Emma is also a bit too accustomed to having her own way, although only her friend Mr. Knightley seems to notice. Nearly 200 years after its publication, Emma continues to delight, both as a coming-of-age tale and a lively satire of Austen’s elegant and quirky characters. This sparkling adaptation features Regency dance, revelry, and romance that will welcome audiences into Austen’s witty, captivating world. Adapted by Michael Bloom. Directed by Matthew Gregory. Adult $22 / Senior $18 / Youth $15 / Matinee $15 / Military $18 Tickets: (360) 221-8268 www.wicaonline.org 565 Camano Avenue Langley

    SATURDAY, JUNE 27

    INTERNATIONAL GUILLEMOT APPRECIATION DAYS 2015 Second event Saturday, June 27. Morning Field Trip to Two Guillemot Colonies. Meet 8 a.m. at Freeland Park and Ride, Trinity Lutheran Church, 18341 Hwy 525. International Guillemot Appreciation Day began 24 years ago with Mid-Coast Audubon Society in Maine to highlight the Black Guillemot. Whidbey Audubon Society joins Mid-Coast by celebrating Whidbey’s Pigeon Guillemots. Our second year! Questions? Contact Govinda at: govinda@whidbey.com Locally sponsored by: Island County Marine Resources Committee Whidbey Audubon Society •  Ott & Murphy Winery

    ARTISTS AND ART LOVERS 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. Saturday, June 27. You are invited to come and draw or come and watch and support! South Whidbey Island Figure Drawing Group. Outside Figure Drawing Party (teens welcome). Presented by Whidbey Island Fine Art Studio and Brackenwood Gallery. Donation at the ‘door’ entrance. Rain date: July 11. Whidbey Island Fine Art Studio 813 Edgecliff Dr., Langley. This new Group is set up as a community service for artists. We have planned this fundraising event to help us keep down the cost to participants down to the minimum. Signing up for this Group is free of charge and you will receive updates and information. Drawing sessions will start in September. To sign up: http://www.meetup.com/South-Whidbey-Island-Figure-Drawing-Group Cary Jurriaans

    SUMMER BASH 2015 6 – 12 midnight Saturday, June 27.  Membership Drive and open to the public. American Legion Post 141 Hwy 525, Langley. Music by Hwy 20 playing from 8 p.m. – 12 a.m.! Ribs and steaks available! $5 cover after 8 p.m. Questions? (360) 321-5696

    DRUM AND DANCE 6 p.m. potluck and 7:30 p.m. dance. Saturday, June 27 with Wa’De: Erick, Rachman, Stephan, Roger, Joseph, Wade. Potluck, too! BYO plates and utensils. At Brad Rice’s Raven and Spade Barn. 4785 East Harbor Road, Freeland. $5-$15 sliding scale, kids free. For more information: (360) 320-1172 earthrhythms@whidbey.com

    PLANT-BASED POTLUCK 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. Saturday, June 27. Join the Vegans of Whidbey Island for another plant-based vegan potluck at Someday Farm Vegan Bed and Breakfast. Directions: http://somedayfarmveganbedandbreakfast.com/reservations.html.

    fruits-and-veggiesOur entire community is welcome  – Vegans, Vegetarians, environmentalists, foodies, great conversationalists and open-minded life enthusiasts are all welcome. Please note: we ask that everyone attending this potluck donate $1 in support of our continued efforts to keep this informal group going, and our presence known. Thank you! For those interested in joining us, please bring only plant-based vegan food. This means the dish you bring will not only need to be free of animal-based meats, but also from dairy (butter, whey, casein, milk), eggs, gelatin and honey. If you have any questions regarding vegan cooking and eating feel free to contact us directly at: vegansofwhidbeyisland@gmail.com Bring your own dishes, cups, and utensils to eat with and serve your food with. We love the furry family members, but we ask that you keep them at home for this event. Vegan happenings at blog; www.whidbeyvegans.wordpress.com

    A CABARET OF MUSIC FROM THEATER TO OPERA 7 p.m. Saturday, June 27 at Sweet Mona’s Chocolate Boutique. $30 per person. Includes Entertainment, Espresso, Coffee and a Selection of Dessert. Sheila Weidendorf (Piano), Mathew Habib (Tenor), and Sweet Mona’s Chocolate Boutique present Songs You Didn’t Know You Loved, an elegant evening of music from Verdi’s “Rigoletto” to Lucy Simon’s “The Secret Garden” and a selection of beverages and desserts. (360) 221-2728 to purchase tickets for this exclusive and elegant evening of music & chocolate! Seating is Limited! Sweet Mona’s Chocolate Boutique 221 2nd Street, Ste. 16, Langley

    EMMA 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Last weekend. Whidbey Island Center for the Arts. “A delightful retelling of a comedy.”  TalkinBroadway.com. Emma Woodhouse is Jane Austen’s most maddening, endearing heroine. Clever and effervescent, young Emma is also a bit too accustomed to having her own way, although only her friend Mr. Knightley seems to notice. Nearly 200 years after its publication, Emma continues to delight, both as a coming-of-age tale and a lively satire of Austen’s elegant and quirky characters. This sparkling adaptation features Regency dance, revelry, and romance that will welcome audiences into Austen’s witty, captivating world. Adapted by Michael Bloom. Directed by Matthew Gregory. Adult $22 / Senior $18 / Youth $15 / Matinee $15 / Military $18 Tickets: (360) 221-8268 www.wicaonline.org 565 Camano Avenue Langley

    BAYVIEW FARMERS MARKET 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Saturdays. The big grassy area behind the “Farmers Market” sign at Bayview Corner on SR 525 and Bayview Rd. http://www.bayviewfarmersmarket.com/

    SUNDAY, JUNE 28

    SOUTH WHIDBEY ACOUSTIC MUSIC FESTIVAL SWAM 2015! “Eve’s Turn” 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. Sunday, June 28 at Tilth Farmer’s Market. Presenting this year’s line-up of all-female headliners: •  11 a.m. – Morris Zick Duo (Kimmer Morris & Debbie Zick) •  12 Noon – Joann Quintana Band •  1 p.m. – Siri Bardarson •  2 p.m. – Gloria Ferry-Brennan •  3 p.m. – Toni Talia Marcus •  4 p.m. – Beverly Graham. Tilth Farmer’s Market at Hwy. 525 and Thompson Rd. (just north of Bayview Corner). Information: https://www.facebook.com/SWAMfestival?ref=hl 

    CAMPFIRE CONCERT 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. Sunday, June 28 at Whidbey Island Distillery. Featuring: David Moss, Emma Beaton and Blair McMillan. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. Bring a Picnic. BYOB. Suggested Donation $15-$20. All donations go to the Musicians! Details email: hello@whidbeydistillery.com

    ENJOY SUNDAY AFTERNOONS WITH LIVE MUSIC 3-5 p.m. June 28. Blooms Winery Tasting Room at Bayview Corner Cash Store. Joann Hamick Quintana and her new band, J-Pod, will be performing this Sunday. J-Pod is Tom Ehrlichman on lead guitar, Kevin Voigt on bass, Bruce Launer on percussion and banjo, Thomas Barkes on dobro, and Joann Hamick Quintana on guitar and vocals.  Joann has written several new bluesy, jazzy songs that they will be performing. No cover, no minimums. Just fabulous wines and great music! The week of the art show features collages and painting by Jamie Greene and 3D metal object shadow boxes by Jonathan Bartholick, plus photography by Bryan Smith. The show runs through June 31. Blooms Winery’s Tasting room. Bayview Corner Cash Store, 5603 Bayview Rd. Langley. Available for private parties too! 360-321-0515 www.bloomswinery.com

    SOUTH WHIDBEY TILTH FARMERS’ MARKET 11 – 3 Sundays, through October 25Cultivating a variety of opportunities for local market gardeners and farmers, artisans, and concessionaires. Kat Fritz performs on violin. www.southwhidbeytilth.org 2812 Thompson Rd, Langley. (360) 544-2278

    _____________________________

    THE VISITOR INFORMATION KIOSK ADVERTISERS HELP US WELCOME YOU TO WHIDBEY ISLAND. PLEASE VISIT THEM WHILE YOU VISIT OUR FAIR ISLE.

    WHIDBEY LIFE MAGAZINE

    WHIDBEY TELECOM WiFIRE COFFEE BAR

    ONE SPIRIT GARDEN

    BLOOMS WINERY

    WHIDBEY ISLAND VINTNERS

    HARBOR INN

    WHIDBEY ISLAND WINERY

    WHIDBEY ISLAND BANK

    WHIDBEY PHOTO ADVENTURES

    The Visitor Information Kiosk is funded by the Greater Freeland Area and Langley Chambers of Commerce and What’s Happening is prepared by Katy Shaner, Manager and Volunteer Coordinator, contact Katy at ktshaner@whidbey.com

    Got an event you’d like to see on What’s Happening? Make sure to put it on the Whidbey Life Magazine Calendar https://www.whidbeylifemagazine.org/submit-your-event/.

    Since 2008, the Visitor Kiosk has welcomed over 22,000 visitors to Whidbey. The island offers a wealth of activities, places to stay, eateries, shopping and an abundance of the natural environment to enjoy and appreciate. Welcome and enjoy your visit. Do come back.

    Event contributions come from Katy Shaner, Whidbey Life Magazine www.whidbeylifemagazine.org  and drewslist drewslist@whidbey.com.

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • Have a Bloomin’ Good Time at the 20th Whidbey Island Garden Tour on June 20

    Have a Bloomin’ Good Time at the 20th Whidbey Island Garden Tour on June 20

    BY BARBARA MORAN
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    June 10, 2015

    Among stunning attractions at this year’s Whidbey Island Garden Tour are unique yard art, water features, water views and places for peaceful reflection located within shade gardens, sun-loving gardens, a woodland garden and a romantic country garden. This year marks the 20th anniversary of the tour, which will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 20.

    “There is enormous variety,” said Penny Harger, veteran WIGT event planner and board member. “Three of the five gardens offer big water views. The Westside garden features exotics and the Tale of Two Gardens was professionally designed.” What they all have in common is “passionate gardeners,” she added. The gardens are located from Coupeville to the island’s south end.

    June Garden  (photo by CJ Baker)
    June Garden (photo by CJ Baker)
     June Garden  (photo by CJ Baker)
    June Garden (photo by CJ Baker)

    One of this year’s five featured gardens is at the home of June and Richard Davis in Freeland. It reflects June’s passion for Japanese maples as well as her extensive knowledge of garden plants resulting from her education in horticulture and many years as sales manager for Skagit Gardens in Mt. Vernon.

    In addition to 30 varieties of Japanese maples and dwarf conifers, the garden highlights unique shrubs, perennials and annuals artfully placed about for bursts of summer color. Visitors will also get to stroll paths with exquisite brick and rock work designed and, in many cases, built by Richard, as well as container plantings clearly designed with June’s expert eye.

    The front entry of the Davis home  (photo by CJ Baker)
    The front entry of the Davis home (photo by CJ Baker)

    Unique birdhouses (including one that looks like their dog), as well as feeders and water stations, confirm Richard’s passion as a “birder.” The avian accoutrements attract a colorful variety of birds, inviting the use of binoculars.

    A greenhouse at the edge of the garden is a bright and cozy respite. “When I was working for Skagit Gardens I didn’t work in the greenhouses, but I did visit them daily and always loved the smell of the cedar benches and the sight of all the different plants growing there,” June recalled. “I use my greenhouse to overwinter my pet plants and to grow seedlings for transplant in the spring. Also, I love having my morning coffee there in the colder months when I can’t be outside. It’s a delightful place for both me and my plants.”

    June Davis  (photo by CJ Baker)
    June Davis (photo by CJ Baker)

    It is obvious that gardening is both creative and meditative for June, whose landscape is immaculate as well as charming. She even turns weeding into a transcendental activity by listening to audio books through headphones on occasion. “Weeding can be very therapeutic,” she observed.

    June is happy to participate in the Tour, she said. “I give a lot of garden talks to help people with their gardens, but there’s nothing like visiting a garden to see how plants actually grow and work together. If people are interested in learning more about their own gardens then I highly recommend they visit as many gardens as possible to gain a deeper understanding of plants, garden rooms and the hardscapes that all work together to make a garden special. You really have to see it to understand it.”

    Of particular note is a stately native madrone. June said when the couple built their home eight years ago, she was very protective of it and several other natives on the property.

    In fact, she recalled telling their architect that, given a preference, “I would just have a garden.” As a result, she said, “I can walk out of any door and be in my garden.”

    image1 (1)
    Clinton Community Center volunteer Bob Woods tends the center grounds, which benefited from WIGT proceeds. The green sign is posted at locations where WIGT proceeds have been provided. (photo by CJ Baker)

    Describing hers as a “young garden,” she added, “We picked this lot because we wanted a larger garden but not more than an acre. We wanted to be close to town so we could run to the store quickly, yet we wanted to feel like we were in the country. Our lot is on a slope and we didn’t want to have a deck on stilts—we wanted to walk directly into the garden, so our architect, Todd Soli, designed the house with the garden in mind. We had to bring in a lot of fill to keep the patios on the ground level, and then rock walls were built for the rest of the back garden. This gives the gardens layers that make for interesting plantings.”

    At the opposite end of the garden from the greenhouse is the family’s well-tended chicken coop, which guests can also visit.

    The Greenbank Farms' demonstration garden has also received WIGT proceeds.  (photo by CJ Baker)
    The Greenbank Farms’ demonstration garden has also received WIGT proceeds. (photo by CJ Baker)

    The four other featured gardens, fully described on the WIGT website (http://wigt.org/gardens.html), are:

    Westside Garden by Louise Abbott and Dave Earp with garden art, native orchids, a conifer section, water view and many bird species attracted by particular plantings

    A Tale of Two Gardens by Liz Axford and Patrick Johnson, with landscape architect Ken Philp, featuring both a peaceful shade garden and a bright and colorful sunny garden as well as a Prairie Garden

    A Re-imagined Garden by Re McClung offering a spacious woodland garden with visual surprises including birdhouses, sculptures, artwork and a bridge leading to an intimate memorial garden.

    Twisted Willow by Fran and Jack Spicer—a true country garden overlooking Saratoga Passage with enchanted, artistic “garden rooms” enhanced with birdhouses, benches, wagon wheels, pottery, chimney flues, water features, sculpture and even headboards.

    Tickets are limited, so early purchase is recommended. Buy tickets online at http://wigt.org/buy-tickets.html or at one of several locations listed on the website. Adult tickets are $20 in advance or $25 on the day of the tour. Youth tickets (ages two to 12 years) are $10 in advance or $15 on the day of the tour. A map to all locations is provided with purchased tickets.

    Gardeners interested in having their gardens considered for next year’s charitable event are encouraged to attend this year to see the variety and splendor afforded through the tour. The WIGT works to find different gardens every year and is in the process right now of locating gardens for next year’s tour.

    Gardens are selected based on their unique character and charm, as well as the practical need for parking, since the event is well attended. Volunteer greeters, docents and parking attendants all help out at each garden, Harger said, and added, with a smile, “I could still use some more ‘parkers.’” Volunteers are all treated to a free tour before the event as well as a party afterward.

    Planning the event takes “a lot of energy,” but Harger—a former board president and key event coordinator—devotes time, she said, because “it was [always] one of my husband’s and my favorite annual events on Whidbey, before I got involved…. It even influenced our decision to get motorcycles. We loved the opportunity it provides to explore Whidbey Island, as well as the fun and education of seeing the variety of gardens. I also love the idea of capitalizing on a truly hidden island asset to benefit the whole community. It’s a totally win/win tradition. Since getting involved, it’s the fun of working with all the people involved that has kept me engaged.”

    While the event first blossomed to save Saratoga Woods 20 years ago, WIGT now benefits many island causes and non-profit organizations that support the improvement, restoration, and maintenance of our common habitat. Grant recipients have included the Whidbey Institute, South Whidbey Good Cheer, Whidbey Camano Land Trust, Whidbey Watershed Stewards and the South Whidbey School District Middle School Garden Project.

    If enough money is raised, WIGT hopes to underwrite all the following this year:

    • Meerkerk Rhododendron Gardens – Hussey Meditation Garden Renovation
    • South Whidbey Good Cheer Food Bank Garden – Seeds and Starts Giveaway Program
    • South Whidbey School District – Langley Middle School Vegetable Garden
    • The Whidbey Institute – Westgarden mulch bagging attachment and supplies
    • Whidbey Animal Improvement Foundation – New animal shelter landscaping
    • Whidbey Camano Land Trust – Native pollinator plantings at entrance to Saratoga Woods Preserve
    • Whidbey Environmental Action Network – Site mapping of 8.17 acres/wetlands and trails

    As Harger noted, it’s up to garden lovers to attend and make it happen.

    Barbara Moran (msbmoran.com) teaches writing and is a veteran journalist focusing on animals, nature and the environment.

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • Sirithiri || Rose is a rose, is a rose, is a rose

    Sirithiri || Rose is a rose, is a rose, is a rose

    BY SIRI BARDARSON
    May 20, 2015

    Downsizing is big these days and I have done it. A year ago I moved from 1700 sq. ft. to 665 sq. ft. and from 18 rosebushes to one.

    According to the Census, the average American will move 11.7 times in a lifetime. Mobility and a shortage of usable space have inspired cozy Manhattan studios measuring less than 300 sq. ft. and a popular “tiny house” movement.

    What is livable? What is living?

    I bought this tiny condo the first time I saw it. I had searched for anything under 100K and ended up in Oak Harbor. I was scouring a neighborhood near the water and nearly missed the For Sale sign propped up in a window of a building that looked like an old Herfy’s hamburger joint. The place was so 1970s—just like me. The front door was nothing more than a slider and I couldn’t see much through the reflective coating. I jotted down the agent’s number and then I noticed the rosebush at the edge of the concrete patio.

    SIRI-CondoRose
    Condo Rose (illustration by Siri Bardarsan)

    The rose was lanky and blotched with black spot, like rosebushes get around here with proximity to the saltwater. It had the biggest bright orange rose hips that I’d ever seen, and I broke one off and twiddled the stem in my fingers while I stared 25 yards down the driveway to the saltwater of Oak Harbor. I hurried to my car and called the phone number from the sign and stuck the rose hip in my visor.

    The next day, my real estate agent yammered at me as I stood in the living room. The condo was crummy with inexpensive faux oak laminate on the floor that was cupped on the seams. It had been freshly painted in dull sage in high gloss, the ancient uneven taping of the overhead drywall illuminated by the shine like zits on a greasy 16-year-old nose. It had a four-by-four foot kitchen that had a smell, but there was a view of the saltwater and the rose bush.

    “I’ll buy it,” I said.

    The offer was a short sale and I immediately had buyer’s remorse and suffered for the six months to closing. One evening after teaching, I grabbed some fast food and sat in my car in the February darkness at the end of the condo driveway on the street by the water.

    What the heck had I done? My house in Freeland was a mile from the beach on an acre of land with 18 roses in my overgrown veggie garden and more Great Horned owls than one long night could stand. We had lived there for 20 years.

    I took a bite of my sandwich and rolled down my window to breathe in the cold salty air of Oak Harbor. On the water in a puddle of streetlight floated the largest raft of Hooded Mergansers I had every seen. I calmed down.

    Do you know Edgar Albert Guest’s poem, “Home”? The one that starts—“It takes a heap o’ livin’ to make a house a home?”

    Here is the last verse:

    Ye’ve got t’ sing an’ dance fer years, ye’ve got t’ romp an’ play,
    An’ learn t’ love the things ye have by usin’ ’em each day;
    Even the roses ’round the porch must blossom year by year
    Afore they ’come a part o’ ye, suggestin’ someone dear
    Who used t’ love ’em long ago, an’ trained ’em jes’ t’ run
    The way they do, so’s they would get the early mornin’ sun;
    Ye’ve got t’ love each brick an’ stone from cellar up t’ dome:
    It takes a heap o’ livin’ in a house t’ make it home.
      

    Maybe with the new paradigm, our experience with what we love, like roses, will be fleeting. Maybe we will pick up where that last stanza left off.

    Best Rose Rosette  (illustration by Siri Bardarsan)
    Best Rose Rosette (illustration by Siri Bardarsan)

    Many years ago, I won “Best Rose” at the Island County Fair. I know it’s near impossible to kill a rose bush. Does it have to be “new,” does it have to be “mine” to love it just as much and take care of it just as well?

    I have a piece of a rose thorn embedded on the inside of my forearm from some rose wrangling in my old garden. It is like a tiny black tattoo on my white skin. I tried to get it out and I dug at it with a needle. It got infected and I figured it would disappear after time. Ten years later, it is still in my arm.

    It’s the only bit of rose I’m ever really taking with me. I think about this deep in the night while I listen to the Great Horned owl outside the condo.

    A Pacific Northwest native, Siri Bardarson is a writer with an emotional hotline to the vibrant magic of the Puget Sound area. She writes about the importance of the wild blackberry, daisies and natural time and how we are all in this together, and she plays her cello a lot. Siri loves her Whidbey Island home but she feels prepared to live just about anywhere.

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • Rock Bottom Line  ||  Happily Living as My Grandpa on Whidbey

    Rock Bottom Line || Happily Living as My Grandpa on Whidbey

    BY HARRY ANDERSON
    May 20, 2015

    Since I moved to Whidbey Island six years ago, a strange but wonderful phenomenon has overtaken me. I am becoming my grandpa.

    To some extent, it’s understandable. I recently celebrated a birthday with a zero in it. The one they call “the new 50.” Hear me chuckle about that, as my knees hurt and my shoulders ache and I fall asleep in my chair at 9 p.m.

    I remember my grandpa as being old, very old, and always “retired.” But he was always busy, always doing something. Washing and waxing his 1962 Chevrolet Impala, which he sometimes did weekly—at least in summer. Building or expanding shelves to hold my grandmother’s prolific home canning in their cellar. Pruning his magnificent roses. Tending his beautiful tomatoes, beans and carrots in his 10-by-20-foot garden plot next to the garage. Fixing the same leaky faucet he’d fixed a hundred times, unsuccessfully.

    My grandpa stands with my grandma Esther and two of their three sons in 1922. My dad is on the right, his brother Ken on the left. (photo courtesy of the author)
    My grandpa stands with my grandma Esther and two of their three sons in 1922. My dad is on the right, his brother Ken on the left. (photo courtesy of the author)

    Taking an annual drive with my grandmother to Reno so she could play the slot machines. Drinking a pot of black coffee and smoking a pack of Pall Malls every day. Talking back to the nightly news on his 16-inch black-and-white television. “World’s gone to hell in a hand basket,” was one of his favorite comebacks.

    Harry Waldemar Anderson was born in Marquette, Michigan, on Nov. 3, 1890. His mother died when he was two years old and his father soon remarried a woman who, according to him, didn’t think much of her new stepson. As he told it, she ordered him out of her sight from 7 a.m. until dusk. He sold morning newspapers on the trolley cars to make pocket money, went to school, sold afternoon newspapers on the trolley cars, then dozed in the atrium of a bank building until it was dark enough to go home.

    By the time he was 14, he had left home for good. For a while, he slept in the back room of a local saloon and earned cash by cleaning spittoons. A couple years later, he and a friend briefly tried their hands as vaudeville song-and-dance men. Then he drove a hay wagon.

    After he met my grandmother Esther, he hired on as a railroad bookkeeper and they eloped to Minneapolis in 1916. They raised three sons and had seven grandchildren. They moved first to Montana, and then to Tacoma. Harry retired from the Chicago, St. Paul, Milwaukee & Pacific Railroad after 40 years, and he died peacefully in 1977 at the home in Tacoma that he and Esther had shared for more than 50 years.

    Before Whidbey, my life was not much like my Grandpa Harry’s, especially not his Dickensian childhood. I grew up in an Ozzie-and-Harriet environment with mom, dad, sister, brother and picket fence. I moved around a lot, living in Washington, California, Oklahoma and Texas. I had an all-expenses-paid year in Vietnam and Japan, courtesy of the Army. I spent my working years in journalism and public relations. (Grandpa Harry liked to brag about his journalist grandson; he said I reminded him of how much he enjoyed being editor of the railroad employee newsletter back in the 1940s.)

    My grandpa in 1964, as I remember him best (photo courtesy of the author)
    My grandpa in 1964, as I remember him best (photo courtesy of the author)

    But now, retired and living blissfully on this beautiful island, I have come to understand why my grandpa seemed to enjoy his old age so much. He knew how fortunate he was to have survived so long with good health. He learned a trick that too few seem to learn: Life is simpler and sweeter when you’re older, but you have to figure it out.

    And Whidbey is a sensational spot to grow old. It’s an active place where your days fill up with good works and interesting people. Before you know it, you volunteer to clean up roads, help the less fortunate, serve on a County board or assist at a local food bank. Or else you’re attending a local history lecture, hanging out with neighbors at the farmer’s market, indulging in the artist expressions you never had time for, or even writing a blog for Whidbey Life Magazine.

    Unlike my grandpa, I don’t wash my car every week or take annual trips to Reno. But I am as inept as he was at plumbing, and I do love to talk back to the television, especially those annoying talking heads on cable news.

    My Whidbey garden is every bit as lush as Grandpa Harry’s garage-side plot in Tacoma. Like him, I harvest enough food to last us well into the winter months. My canning abilities, though not as exemplary as Grandma Esther’s, have come along nicely. I am particularly proud of my pickled beets.

    Time has a different meaning on this island. It’s not slower but it’s less rushed, more reverently passed. Whidbey sometimes has a feeling less like 2015 and more like 1955, the year my grandpa retired. That’s especially true once the TV, Wi-Fi and cell phone are ignored. Six hours of pulling weeds here brings a unique sense of satisfaction that is amplified by not competing with five other things that must be “multi-tasked” simultaneously.

    Fast food drive-throughs and cheap eats are scarce here, so we cook at home most of the time. We even eat together. There are only four indoor movie screens on Whidbey (a rather sad three-screen multiplex in Oak Harbor and the nostalgic Clyde in Langley). That limits our away-from-home filmed entertainment options, except for the wonderful Blue Fox Drive-In where 1955 lives in glory. Touring Broadway musicals don’t stop here, but WICA and the Whidbey Playhouse give us a chance to see our friends gallantly emoting and singing.

    Like my grandpa, I also manage to live decently on what’s euphemistically called a “fixed income.” Lower cost of living is another great benefit of Rock dwelling.

    So, thanks Whidbey Island, for making my Golden Years comfortable and fulfilling. And thanks, Grandpa Harry, for showing me how to live long and prosper.

    Once upon a time, Harry Anderson made an honest living as a reporter, editor and columnist at the Los Angeles Times. He now lives in central Whidbey, where he spends his time gardening and ruminating on things that interest him.

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • Pigment, Perspectives and Pandas || Taking The Long View

    Pigment, Perspectives and Pandas || Taking The Long View

    BY ANNE BELOV
    May 13, 2015

    I’ve been thinking about trees recently. I moved into my house almost 15 years ago and—like many garden-obsessed Northwesterners—immediately started planting things, especially trees.

    “I own the dirt! I can plant trees!” (…trees being a long-term investment, of course).

    Since I didn’t have much money to invest in my trees, most of them were very small when I planted them. Some were hardly bigger around than a pencil. During a rather flush financial period, I bought some birches that were as big as I could (barely) wrestle into the ground.

    Most of my trees, but not all, survived. Some were unidentified hand-me-downs from friends who had gotten them from other friends. One of those turned out to be a tree on my most-wanted list, a multicolored peeling bark Heritage River Birch, which—in the 14 years since I planted it—has gone from just about one foot tall to over 30 feet. I sure hope I put it in the right place, because if I didn’t, I’m in big trouble now.

    One of the things that has led my thoughts into all things arboreal is that my Davidia Involucrata (known as a Dove Tree or Handkerchief Tree to those of you who don’t speak horticultural Latin) has bloomed for the first time, having been in the ground for 14 years.

    Yep, planting trees is not for those seeking instant gratification. Kind of like choosing to be a painter, don’t cha know? (You knew I was going to work that in somehow, didn’t you?) But on a recent trip, I saw that I am a mere neophyte in the “planting for the future” arena.

    Darlington Spanish Chestnuts  (photo by Anne Belov)
    Darlington Spanish Chestnuts (photo by Anne Belov)

    One of the most wonderful things about visiting the English countryside is seeing trees that are hundreds of years old. We visited an old manor house and gardens once owned by someone who probably wouldn’t have let me through the front door. Now it’s a very upscale hotel and conference center with the grounds and gardens open to the public.

    At the top border of a sunken garden—big enough to fit most of downtown Langley into it—was a row of Spanish Chestnuts that are more than 500 years old. (Even more impressive is that whoever planted them knew enough to space them so they would look majestic and not crowded 500 years later.) I can barely contemplate the idea that not only would I, as the person causing these trees to be planted, never see them reach maturity, but it would be many generations before someone—Ha! Me, a mere serf to the lord of the manor—would get to see how truly majestic these trees would become.

    And this is what makes me think so much about the decision to make art, to make art-making the focal point for my life. I have spent more than half a century working on becoming the artist that I am now, and I’m quite sure that I am not done growing and developing as an artist. I don’t know that in 500 years (give or take a decade or a century) people will still be looking at my paintings, but I hope so.

    Choosing to make art forces you to take the long view. Tastes of the art buying and book reading public will change like wind and tides but, as an artist, my vision and focus can’t blow around like a field of grass. And, if today, what I am painting and writing are not fashionable or desired, then I shall be unfashionable.

    I choose to be a tree, planted for the future. It’s not a bad thing to take the long view.

    Anne Belov blogs about visual art and how it influences her view of the world. She is also the mistress of all-things-panda satire via her blog, The Panda Chronicles. When not chained to her easel or drawing table, you can find her contemplating the mysteries of life in her garden or…um…watching panda videos. It’s a tough job, but someone’s got to do it. www.yourbrainonpandas.com.

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

     

  • Fifth Annual Japanese Pruning Workshop Provides Lessons with Visual Delights

    Fifth Annual Japanese Pruning Workshop Provides Lessons with Visual Delights

    PHOTO ESSAY BY DAVID WELTON
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    May 6, 2015

    The Northwest Language Academy presented their Fifth Annual Japanese Pruning Workshop with Masa Mizuno at a home on The Headlands in Clinton, the south end of Whidbey Island, this past weekend.

    1.Pruning Seminar_0043
    Josette Hendrix and Masa Mizuno

    NWLA director and founder Josette Hendrix welcomed 40 guests to the workshop and introduced Masa Mizuno, a Master Gardener who is past Landscape Director of the famed Japanese Garden in Portland, owner of Masa and Associates and a consultant to many fine gardens throughout the Northwest. Josette explained that NWLA seminars, through cultural enrichment, “make it possible for the local community to become residents of the larger global community.”

    2.Pruning Seminar_0110

    Masa approached a healthy, but awkward, Japanese Black Pine that had encircled and camouflaged an interesting large rock. He startled onlookers with the decisive first cut. “Now that we have begun, the rest will be easy,” he said.

    3.Pruning Seminar_0590

    After he reshaped the tree, he and assistant Sam Hendrix relocated the one-thousand pound boulder with a tripod and a block and tackle.

    The result? Outdoor in-ground Bonsai!

    5.Pruning Seminar_0221

     

    He then approached a wild and wooly Contorted Larch that had grown like a lanky teenager. After pondering its shape he applied the tools of his trade and gave the tree its first haircut, chatting amiably all the while, explaining how it should fit the landscape.

    4.Pruning Seminar_0356

     

    Masa invited Zina Sangarova, from Shoreline, to help clip the larch.

    6.Pruning Seminar_0294
    Zina Sangarova, from Shoreline assisted in clipping a larch.

     

    7.Pruning Seminar_0505

    A gumdrop-shaped weeping maple was the next target. He discovered the internal structure of the bush, trimmed foliage and exposed the hidden tree within.

    8.Pruning Seminar_0603

    Attendees enjoyed a Japanese lunch on the sundrenched deck with salmon, shrimp, sushi, seaweed salad, soba, grapefruit ice cream and green tea “matcha” shortbread cookies.

    9.Blue Heron, Maxwelton Beach

    Proceeds from the seminar and a silent auction of this image of a Blue Heron taking flight from Maxwelton Beach, donated by event photographer David Welton, will provide scholarships for children to attend NWLA language immersion summer camps.

    Image at top: Masa considering a Contorted Larch that had grown like a lanky teenager.

    *  *  *

    David Welton is a retired physician and staff photographer for Whidbey Life magazine. He thinks and processes information visually and, therefore, (he says) is a man of few words with limited verbal communication skills.

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • Pruning Workshop and Luncheon with Japanese Master Gardener Masa Mizuno on May 2

    Pruning Workshop and Luncheon with Japanese Master Gardener Masa Mizuno on May 2

    April 22, 2015

    The Northwest Language Academy is honored to welcome back revered Japanese Master Gardener Masa Mizuno for a pruning workshop from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 2. The event will be held at a private residence in the Headlands, on Whidbey Island.

    This will include a demonstration and Q&A, followed by a tour of the gardens and authentic Japanese lunch and is a great opportunity to view an outstanding private garden and residence and to meet and speak with one of the living masters of Japanese gardening in the company of other avid gardeners. Learn to recognize the inherent shape within the structure of a tree or shrub, to understand the balance of positive and negative space, and to encourage health and form through pruning.

    Masa Mizuno came to the United States from Osaka in 2000 and has been the landscape director of the Portland Japanese Garden for over a decade. As the president of his own 30-year-old design firm, he has installed public and private Japanese gardens around the world, including several on Whidbey Island.

    The Japanese have been creating gardens since the first century A.D., designing miniaturized ideal landscapes based on symbolic, spiritual, and exacting aesthetic principles. In Japanese pleasure gardens, a series of view points are laid out to create specific corridors of sight; concealment and the slow reveal of disparate elements is of great importance, as is the principle of asymmetry, offering—as landscape gardener Seyemon Kusumoto once wrote—“the best of nature’s handiwork in a limited space.”

    Seating is limited; advance reservations are strongly recommended, as the event is certain to sell out. The cost for the workshop and luncheon is $75 per person, the balance of which will benefit NWLA’s summer camp scholarship program.  NWLA is committed to providing its summer camps and language classes to all children regardless of ability to pay, and attendance at events such as these helps make this commitment possible.

    Overnight accommodations are available in the Cultural Center’s luxurious Guesthouse at 5023 Langley Rd. in Langley.

    Reservations can be made on line via NWLA’s website or by calling 360-321-2101 or info@nwlanguageacademy.com. To learn more about NWLA and upcoming programs or classes, visit www.nwlanguageacademy.com.

    NWLA is a not for profit organization that makes it possible for residents of the local community to become residents of the larger, global community. Through the study of languages and cultural enrichment, we are preserving and honoring diversity while building bridges of understanding and appreciation between people of different cultures.

  • All the Cool Birds are Flocking to the ‘Chicken Coop Tour’ on Saturday, April 18

    All the Cool Birds are Flocking to the ‘Chicken Coop Tour’ on Saturday, April 18

    BY BARBARA MORAN
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    April 15, 2015

    It’s the most prestigious home show on Whidbey Island—that is, if you’re a chicken.

    The Sixth Annual Chicken Coop Tour, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, April 18, will feature high-end amenities like indoor drinking water systems, luxurious easy-to-clean nest boxes and, of course, swank touches like a chandelier.

    The chickens at the Eckholm Farm in Ebey's Landing make themselves at home.  (photo by Marsha Morgan)
    The chickens at the Eckholm Farm in Ebey’s Landing make themselves at home. (photo by Marsha Morgan)

    In addition to seeing decorated coops, disco balls, and twirling CDs (to deflect predators), visitors will also enjoy fine art featuring chickens and art glass that celebrates nature.

    Whether visitors want to learn about keeping chickens or just enjoy a day amidst contented clucks of local egg producers, it’s a chance to experience Whidbey Island in a novel and charming way.

    The idea for the annual self-guided tour was first hatched by the Rock’n Doodle 4-H Poultry Club, which uses proceeds to support 4-H programs, community education and barn improvements at the county fairgrounds. Tickets are $12 per car to admit all children and up to four adults; they’re available at Bayview Farm & Garden and Skagit Farmers Supply Country stores in Freeland and Oak Harbor.

    The club is open to kids ages 5 to 18. The Cook brothers—Julian, 9, Adrian, 14, and Jameson, 17—are all members. Each won grand championships in Poultry Showmanship at the Island County Fair and they are experts on poultry nomenclature, diseases, breeds, science, maintenance, management and proper handling. “[Chickens] have lots of cool personalities,” explained Jameson, immediate past president. “Each is different, just like humans, and you can learn a lot” from their various characteristics.

    The Cook brothers—Jameson, Adrian and Julian, left to right  (photo by Marsha Morgan)
    The Cook brothers—Jameson, Adrian and Julian, left to right (photo by Marsha Morgan)

    Current club president Adrian agreed that in addition to being fun to have around, they provide an ongoing educational opportunity, which began for the boys when youngest brother Julian got chickens for his fifth birthday. Their mom, Julia Cook, said club members help advocate for preservation and renewal of a rural lifestyle that is rapidly disappearing.

    Host Diane Tompkinson
    Host Diane Tompkinson will be showing her coop, her prints and her cards.

    Host Diane Tompkinson, who will share her Coupeville coop and art studio, said, “I’m a chicken lunatic and I’m passionate about art.” For her, the combination is not far-fetched. Eggs, she said, “feed your body and art feeds your soul.”

    Her family has a long history of combining art with food production. In fact, her grandmother’s last name was Eihusen, which—Tompkinson noted—is German for “egg house.” Her whole family was creative and artistic, including her mom, a master carver. They produced their own food and art. “All of us learned how to gather, garden, cook and create,” she said, recalling how she would roam the family property and draw as a child.

    Tompkinson’s Crow Valley Arts studio will feature her chicken prints and cards; her art is also on view at the Whidbey Art Gallery in Langley. She specializes in complex monotypes, collagraphs, and other types of prints using specialized hand-torn and hand-painted papers like salago (from a bush in the Phillipines) and embellishments like metallic paint spatters.

    As she walked toward her studio, her chickens scurried to greet her from the nearby coop and garden. The scene, which included her dogs, Missy Blue and Charley, became a bucolic parade. A second year host, Tompkinson said she enjoys participating and likes helping the 4-H kids.

    Sherren Anderson hugs one of her favorites outside her glass studio.   (photo by CJ Baker)
    Sherren Anderson hugs one of her favorites outside her glass studio. (photo by CJ Baker)

    That sentiment was reflected by first-time host, Sherren Anderson of Clinton who specializes in fused glass art for the garden and home, as well as shimmering fused dichroic jewelry, wind chimes, and much more. A tour of her Glassworks & Gallery was accompanied by the peeping of chicks being kept warm in the adjoining room.

    Along with her “greeter” border collie Molly, Anderson provided a look at her art and her three coops—one for current laying hens, one for “special needs” chickens (like one with a splayed leg), and the sunflower painted senior-citizen coop for her chickens that are beyond active egg laying but still beloved.

    Looking at her busy flock pecking about the grounds, she smiled and said, “They provide me with eggs and entertainment. I call them pets with benefits.”

    The coop at the home of Tamara and Kim Guthrie in Freeland is a whimsical work of art itself. Inspired by the Dr. Seuss book “Horton Hatches The Egg,” it features delightful colors, funky architecture, a disco ball and chandelier. Boy George, a proud example of rooster regality, rules this enchanting roost.

    “In 2008 our daughter with her two children wanted to raise chickens for their eggs,” Tamara explained. “She had become quite the cook and saw the advantage of having eggs right out her back door.”

    Daughter Sarah asked her dad Kim to build her a chicken coop with Dr. Seuss in mind, since the family was reading his books. Both daughter and dad drew up plans and when they got together, amazingly, the drawings were nearly identical except for modest differences in the chimney design (yes, it has a chimney).

    Kim built it in his garage and reassembled it in his grandkids’ yard. It was base-coated white. Then last year, Sarah, her hubby and kids moved to Atlanta, so Kim put the coop on a trailer and brought it back. “I got to pick the colors that I felt were what our daughter had in mind,” Tamara said. “She came at Christmas and cried when she saw it.” It was the perfect completion of a loving family project.

    Rock’n Doodle Horton's Hens
    The “Dr. Seuss” coop built by Kim Guthrie in Freeland. (photo by Marsha Morgan)

    The Eckholm Farm  in Ebey’s Landing has a long rich history from the 1850s when it was part of the original Donation Land Claim of Isaac B. Power. Linda and Bruce Eckholm purchased it in 2013 and are working to restore features such as the original homesteader cabin and barn built by Dan Earlywine after he purchased the land in 1917.

    Bruce, who describes himself as a “Wisconsin farm kid,” also has a doctorate in entomology and will happily share a wealth of information with visitors about bees, bee keeping and the vital role bees play in the environment.

    The lovely, expansive farm features 75 apple trees, 20 rows of various berries, and of course, a well-appointed chicken coop and large net covered chicken yard. It’s a chance to visit a working farm located in one of the island’s most significant areas.

    To learn even more about these and other coop tour hosts, check out the “Rock’n Doodle 4H Poultry Club” on Facebook.

    Image at top and below (larger): The “Dr. Seuss” coop built by Kim Guthrie in Freeland.   (photo by Marsha Morgan)

    Barbara Moran is a college writing instructor and veteran journalist focusing on animals and nature. She can be contacted through her website at msbmoran.com.

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.