Showing posts with label woods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label woods. Show all posts

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Groundhog Day Hike

I never get tired of our mountains and woods around here. Yesterday I took a walk with a very good friend and his dogs, and here are some photos of what we saw. I've got some good painting subjects, don't you think?

Lichens...

Beaver damage by a pond...

On one side, Hanging Rock in the distance...

On the other side, Virginia Mountains up near Stuart in the distance...

Another view of Hanging Rock...

The Saura Mountains as dusk is approaching...

And a gorgeous cloud formation as the sun begins to set...

Until next time, be thankful, be content, and be kind.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Sunlit Sunday


Last night when I climbed into bed, it was still snowing. It'd been snowing on and off all day, sometimes with a little sleet mixed in, sometimes hard, sometimes gently, but it was definitely a grey, stormy day through and through. Though I was hoping for some clearing so that the full moon would shine and light up the night, that didn't happen... not until some time in the middle of the night.

This morning dawned cleared and cold... about 15 degrees when I got up at 7. What was the first thing I did, after dressing? Go outside in the ten-inch snow and try to get a few photos. So here you go...

Looking into the woods towards the lake...

Moore's Wall...

Our heavy-duty brake-rotor windchimes...

Amd just for a little artistic measure... a black and white...

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Of Trees and Birds

Living here in the NC woods definitely influences my art. All these trees, so beautiful in each season, and the birds which alight, sing, and nest in them... they fill my landscape, my soul, and now my canvases. It's not just the colors that I love, but the lines, the rhythms, the textures. It seems to be what I am painting these days. I finished a couple this week, which I listed already on Etsy. There's one 24 x 36 in the studio still in process... trees in the rain. And I'm thinking there's many more to come.

Some, perhaps from these photos taken yesterday, which was an absolutely perfect day... temps in the low 70s, sunny with a slight breeze, and oh that blue blue October sky! My son had come up to collect his dog, whom we'd had here "at camp" for about 2 1/2 weeks, and while he was here, he washed my car and his dad's truck... a chore neither my husband nor I enjoy! But I enjoyed the sun and Jesse's company, and got out the camera too.

This is Empi, my grandpuppy, named for a VW parts manufacturer...







And here are some oil paintings completed in the last couple of months...
After the Fire... 24 x 48

Waxwing Memories... 16 x 20... newly posted on Etsy

Morning Has Broken... 12 x 16 of a Wood Thrush... newly posted on Etsy

October Fire... 16 x 20... recently posted on Etsy


There's much goodness in country living. Y'all come!

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

The Art of Cutting Firewood


Yesterday evening I posted a treasury on Etsy with the title Knee Deep in a Simple Life, but living a simple life isn't always easy. We try to live as simply as we can here without giving up all our comforts. We have friends who live without electricity and indoor plumbing... that kind of lifestyle isn't for us, and our kind of lifestyle isn't for everyone. We must each choose our path and our lifestyle and make the best of it. And I hope that includes making as light a footprint on the earth as possible.

We made a conscious decision several years ago to move out of the city into a rural area, and we worked hard at making that happen by reducing expenses so that we could rebuild a small home that my father-in-law had built in the late 50s and so that we could be free of debt once we sold our home in the city. We now live in a small, 1200 square foot home designed by us to make the best use of the space and built with our own hands, and those of my father; we gave up our cell phone and satellite tv while of course continuing our satellite internet service; we travel into the "big city" as rarely as possible, always trying to combine a variety of errands into one trip; and for recreational activity, we enjoy our nearby state park, community events, and getting together to make music with our friends and neighbors. We've invested in land and acreage surrounding our home, and we try very, very hard to live within a small budget... which means, among other things, that we use a limited amount of electricity and lights. We live for the most part without air conditioning, acclimating ourselves to the heat of an NC summer except on the hottest and muggiest days when temps go above 100, and we heat with wood rather than spending money on natural gas or electric heating systems.

And that's where the "not so easy" comes in. Cutting firewood is not easy work. It's a definite form of exercise! But it's rewarding to know that you've spent your day working hard (my muscles are telling me that this morning!) and that you have something to show for it. This is how we spent our day yesterday...

On my dad's property, there were a couple trees down in the woods, so we started with those and got our first pile of wood for the season. We normally start in the summer, but somehow the summer got away from us this year.

Starting with the smaller tree, a maple, first cutting it in half...

Then tying a rope around the log and pulling it out with the tractor...


Moving on to a much larger oak which has been dead for two years and down for one...

Rolling the cut sections out of the woods into a pile where they could more easily be split...

The initial splits... by my dad, a miraculous 81 years old and still the hardest working man, and most stubborn too, I know...

John takes over and splits with a maul, no wedges for him...


One pile down... and that was enough for the day. There's still the other half of the oak tree in the woods which we'll get at a later date.

Truck loaded and ready to bring home the wood...


We'll need several more truck loads of wood, and the gas-fired woodsplitter, to get us through the winter, but this is a good start! I may go out today and split some of those quartered logs, but first, I'm going to do some painting!