Thursday, December 31, 2020

My last post for 2020

 My first embroidery project for 2021 will be making a Goddess a month for the entire year. The first one will be done on 100% cotton tone of tone fabric, using DMC Coloris floss 4509.

I will be making other projects throughout the year and also taking part in the 2021 Journal Threaders Facebook group, is anyone else taking part in the Journal Threaders 2021 project?

This year I am also planning to make a quilt using a basic goddess figure template, I made one several years ago for a friend and thought it was time to make another for myself.

I am hopeful of regaining my health in 2021 so I have more energy to blog and keep crafting. I have been scanned so many ways these passed few months I feel like I glow in the dark. Still no closer to a diagnosis but I don't have to have the gallbladder removed since I improved from a below 1% function to 40% in a few short months (anything 35 and above is normal). The biopsies I had show no cancer or tumors and according to one surgeon I saw digestive illness can be quite difficult to diagnose.

I have changed my doctor since I haven't been happy with his office staff since the beginning of this illness in March, he was the doctor who treated me while in the hospital and follow up afterward was just maddening, the doctor was fine but his office staff dropped the ball on return calls, refilling medications that it was time to find a new doctor. I am with a doctor I saw several years ago and after the surgeon decided I needed to follow up with my doctor it was the right move.

Here are a few photos of projects I completed during Yule, the pattern is from Hook Line & Tinker and has such a Scandinavian folk art look I just had to make them.


The blue was done using DMC floss 820 and the red I used DMC floss 321, I love the simplicity of the design and plan to make one in green as well.  I find hand embroidery so relaxing and ono days when I am up to it and can sit for a while I stitch.  Because of the near constant pain I have been in since March I haven't done much stitching.
Wishing you all a safe and Happy New Year


Wednesday, December 16, 2020

On the Way to Yule

 


Twas the night before Yuletide and all through the glen

Not a creature was stirring, not a fox, not a hen.
A mantle of snow shone brightly that night
As it lay on the ground, reflecting moonlight.

The faeries were nestled all snug in their trees,
Unmindful of flurries and a chilly north breeze.
The elves and the gnomes were down in their burrows,
Sleeping like babes in their soft earthen furrows.

When low! The earth moved with a thunderous quake,
Causing chairs to fall over and dishes to break.
The Little Folk scrambled to get on their feet
Then raced to the river where they usually meet.

“What happened?” they wondered, they questioned, they probed,
As they shivered in night clothes, some bare-armed, some robed.
“What caused the earth’s shudder? What caused her to shiver?”
They all spoke at once as they stood by the river.

Then what to their wondering eyes should appear
But a shining gold light in the shape of a sphere.
It blinked and it twinkled, it winked like an eye,
Then it flew straight up and was lost in the sky.

Before they could murmur, before they could bustle,
There emerged from the crowd, with a swish and a rustle,
A stately old crone with her hand on a cane,
Resplendent in green with a flowing white mane.

As she passed by them the old crone’s perfume,
Smelling of meadows and flowers abloom,
Made each of the fey folk think of the spring
When the earth wakes from slumber and the birds start to sing.

“My name is Gaia,” the old crone proclaimed
in a voice that at once was both wild and tamed,
“I’ve come to remind you, for you seem to forget,
that Yule is the time of re-birth, and yet…”

“I see no hearth fires, hear no music, no bells,
The air isn’t filled with rich fragrant smells
Of baking and roasting, and simmering stews,
Of cider that’s mulled or other hot brews.”

“There aren’t any children at play in the snow,
Or houses lit up by candles’ glow.
Have you forgotten, my children, the fun
Of celebrating the rebirth of the sun?”

She looked at the fey folk, her eyes going round,
As they shuffled their feet and stared at the ground.
Then she smiled the smile that brings light to the day,
“Come, my children,” she said, “Let’s play.”

They gathered the mistletoe, gathered the holly,
Threw off the drab and drew on the jolly.
They lit a big bonfire, and they danced and they sang.
They brought out the bells and clapped when they rang.

They strung lights on the trees, and bows, oh so merry,
In colors of cranberry, bayberry, cherry.
They built giant snowmen and adorned them with hats,
Then surrounded them with snow birds, and snow cats and bats.

Then just before dawn, at the end of their fest,
Before they went homeward to seek out their rest,
The fey folk they gathered ‘round their favorite oak tree
And welcomed the sun ‘neath the tree’s finery.

They were just reaching home when it suddenly came,
The gold light returned like an arrow-shot flame.
It lit on the tree top where they could see from afar
The golden-like sphere turned into a star.

The old crone just smiled at the beautiful sight,
“Happy Yuletide, my children,” she whispered. “Good night.”

Poem author C.C. Williford



Thursday, September 17, 2020

A Year of Herbs

 

My Mother was a Herbalist

Who lived to ninety five

And with her pills and potions

She kept us all alive!

She boiled her herbs - in a big black pot

She had a big black Cat

Some say she flew on a Broomstick

But we won't go into that!

January was DANDELION

Whose juice could cleanse our biles

February YELLOW CELENDINE

Was brewed for Granddads piles!

March brings out the PRIMROSES

A cure for your rheumatics

April sees the STICKWORT bloom

For wheezers and asthmatics!

May brings all the BLUEBELLS

Whose roots are used for starch

June grows the scented MEADOWSWEET

Whose mead your thirst will parch!

July the bold PETUNIA

With Heinz cures fifty-seven

August brings purple KNAPWEED

Which makes you feel like Heaven!

September blooms the FEVERFEW

A cure for any fever

October's YARROW's good for you

You'll all sing like a Diva!

November comes the LEMON GRASS

Gives out a fine aroma

December juice from MIStLETOE

Will cure your worst hangover!

Aloe Vera - Silver Sage and Golden Golden Rod

Gingo - Evening Primrose and Periwinkle too

Boil them up they'll cure your bod

A real Old Witches brew!

From New Years Day to Christmas Eve

We never had a fear

A dose of Mother's remedies

Would wipe each tear!


John Knight

Art Nadia Turner



Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Nature's Gifts

 

Nature gifts her bounty fair,
In root and leaf and flower,
And there within she leaves a drop,
Of all her wildest power,
For balm and salve the wise can make,
To heal the wound and mind,
And through the lore of herb and plant,
We see Great Mother kind.

~ Words by Robin Green-Elk
Artist Nicola Bailey.

Saturday, August 1, 2020

An Update on What I have been Doing

Over the last 3 months I have been in and out of the hospital for some digestive issues that have plagued me for over 20 years, the first visit to the hospital I was diagnosed with ischemic colitis an infection in the colon, subsequent testing after my third hospital stay revealed my gallbladder is no longer working and on Monday after going over the results with the doctor he informed me the gallbladder would need to be removed.  I can tell you I was relieved and angry at the same time, they knew the results in May so why wasn’t the surgery done then? It would have saved me a month of suffering with unbearable pain that ultimately sent me to the ER for pain relief.  Well water under the bridge I now wait for the surgeon to go over all the test results and make an appointment to schedule the surgery.

For my birthday the gift of rain came finally and believe me when I tell you it has made a difference it the air quality.  My return from the post office had gray clouds over head but the day before the gray clouds passed right by so I kept saying let it rain today let it rain.



It did and my thirsty plants are quite happy because using a watering can when the temps hit 98 everyday just doesn’t soak the plants as a good rain. Since I had the first attack of pain in March my time in the garden has been limited. Bending forward causes intense pain and discomfort not to mention nausea that stays all day.  So I water twice a day with my watering can and so far my plants have survived.  The Mexican petunias are thriving and growing like crazy, these lovely purple flowers were planted in the bed by the previous owner of my house.

I hope I will be well enough to plant a Fall garden this year since all my plans for the Spring garden couldn’t happen. My first hospital stay happened 3 days after I bought the first of my new spring plants which luckily survived despite not getting any water for several days and the one day it finally rained 3 of the plants had fallen over. All the seedlings I had started didn’t make it by the time I was discharged they were dried to a crisp, but that’s how gardening goes some seasons things work well and some seasons you lose.

I miss getting my hands in the soil but for now regaining my health is my number one priority along with watering my few plants daily.  Summertime in Florida is our rainy season and usually July is the time when those daily rains come so I am hoping this year will be a wet one.

Last month I received some lovely birthday gifts a lovely teapot for one, moon phase blocks and an edible arrangement from my great niece Tessa.






The Witches Brew teapot for one will get quite a bit of use, I love tea and my son and his fiancee gave me some lovely teas and succulent plant as well, the Muse Moon book is a journal of sorts from a friend. The edible arrangement is just lovely and those moon phase blocks will make a nice addition to my altar.

Oh I must show the panel from the lovely new fabric line by Meg Hawkey of Crabapple Hill Studios, this one is Spellcaster’s Garden.






I also bought a few coordinating fabrics to go with the panel. I love all the Crabapple Hill Witch patterns and fabric lines ever since I first hand embroidered the Hocuspocusville quilt blocks.  I am hoping this new line will have some hand embroidery patterns.  Since being ill I haven’t done much hand embroidery or crocheting, the pain makes it hard to hold my attention long enough for me to focus, on good days I do put a few stitches in a project or two but mostly I have been reading. Recently I have finished Waking the Witch and I’m halfway through Memoir of a Witch.

Well after weeks of illness and not being comfortable enough to sit up long enough to do any hand embroidery last week I was finally able to sit up for a little while and I pulled out an old pattern I had prepped on fabric to stitch. (I usually have a few small pieces prepped to stitch).  The pattern was offered free from Crabapple Hill Studios, I just love the cute snowman and witch.










On the medical front it seems my gallbladder will have to be removed as it is no longer functioning, one of the test I had shows me at 1% normal is 35% and above, I am hoping this is the reason for the intense pain and trips to the hospital aside from the aschemic colitis.  I don’t want to think about it too much until the surgery is done and that isn’t going to happen until sometime in September. UGH!

When I am too uncomfortable to stitch I have been reading a few fun light mystery books. 

Well that should bring you up to speed to what I have been doing while away from my blog.  I hope as the weeks pass to have more energy and feel well  enough to post more A entire month has gone by since my last post it's so disappointing.

Celebrating Lughnasadh is going to be very low key I'll try to bake either a quick loaf of bread or some scones.  I did add my Corn Dolly witch to my altar and as the season moves closer to autumn I will add other pieces.



Warm wishes for a wonderful Lughnasadh/Lammas!