Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Travelog: Victoria with Magpies and quilts

 The Magpies met in the late 1990's on the Usenet newsgroup Rec.Crafts.Textiles.Quilting. We spun off from RCTQ so we could chatter (like magpies) off-topic.  We've had in-person meetups large and small.  

Earlier this year Diane offered to host a Magpie meetup in Victoria, BC, in conjunction with the Victoria Quilters' Guild annual show May 9-10.  Five of us took her up on the offer:  Stacey (MO), Phebe (WA), Janet (PA), Debs (also in Victoria), and me.  


Janet flew to O'Hare and we had the same flight from ORD to SEA.  We spent the night in Seattle (8 p.m. arrival so no sightseeing time) and took the FRS Clipper ferry from Seattle to Victoria on Thursday.   

The Huntingdon Hotel is conveniently located near the ferry dock and downtown Victoria.




Thursday afternoon:  we walked to the Emily Carr House and met Diane there.  The house was the Carr family home where Emily and her four sisters grew up.  She became a noted artist and writer whose work was inpsired by the First Nations people of British Columbia.  



with Diane and Janet











The garden at the Carr house had quotations from her writings.   



After the Carr house we walked to the British Columbia Parliament building and took a tour.  A magnificent dome, stained glass, mosaic floors. 

We sat in the legislative gallery for a few minutes and watched an uneventful discussion of a budget item. No photos allowed.


Parliament is illuminated at night







The Empress Hotel is just across the bridge from Parliament.  We went in the lobby but we did not have the legendary tea. ($109 CDN per person w/o champagne, $151 with.)   

Debs joined Janet, Diane, and me for dinner. 


Emily with animal friends outside the Empress











Friday morning I woke up before Janet and had a long walk at Beacon Hill Park.

We had breakfast together at the hotel, then she went out for a walk and I did some exploring on my own. 

The Maritime Museum is in a two-room storefront across from the Empress.  They're raising funds for a standalone building on the waterfront. There's a lot packed into the two rooms!

I chatted with the man at the front desk and commented on the Rotary polo shirt he wore.  He said, "If you're interested in local Rotary, the district annual meeting is right next door in the conference center."


I went to the registration desk and explained that I was just in town to visit. They said I was welcome to browse the projects booths.  Such fun to learn about their district actitivies to address Rotary initiatives!  







The Miniature World Museum was around the block.  Kitschy but fun.  From WWII to the Civil War, the Old Woman in the Shoe, and King Arthur.


I ducked in to the central branch of the Victoria library. 


On my way back to the hotel I noted that the ferry had arrived -- and there were Stacy and Phebe.  I escorted them to the hotel.

Diane and her husband Ralph picked all of us up (S, P, J, me) and we went to the renowned Butchart Gardens.   Debs met us at the garden restaurant at lunchtine.  



Visiting Butchart Gardens was a bucket list check off for me!

The gardens  were developed by Jennie Butchart from a limestone quarry that supplied her husband’s cement plant. The gardens were begun in 1909 and completed in 1921. They now encompass 55 acres.  








At this time of year: spectacular rhododendrons, fancy tulips, English daisies, blue/pink/white forget-me-nots and so much more!


We had dinner at an Italian restaurant in downtown Victoria.


Saturday we went to the quilt show!  It was held at the Pearkes Recreation Center in Saanich.   The Victoria Quilters' Guild is large with several hundred members. The show is biennial.   

Janet, Phebe, Diane, Stacey, me, Debs

Local shows are great because there are stop-in-your-tracks beauties and also quilts that you could conceivably make.  Here are some that caught my eye.  I have artists' statements if you want to know more.  




 


 All Canadian themes.  You can't miss "Anne With an E."  Lower center is inside a grain elevator. 






 



 





The Raven got my viewer's choice vote.  

Jane Goodall and a chimpanzee are at the bottom. 


There were vendors at the show. I was aware of my little suitcase and my fabric diet so I treated myself to 8 FQs and two half-metres and that was it!

# # # # # 

After the show there was enough time to see local attraction Craigdarroch Castle.  It was commissioned by Scottish-born coal baron Robert Dunsmuir and his wife Joan and completed in 1891. The Dunsmuirs lived there for three generations. The house also served as WWI military hospital, a college, and the Victoria school department offices. Restoration as a historic house/museum began in 1995 and is ongoing.

# # # # # Diane and Ralph hosted dinner for all of us at their house. 

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Sunday morning:   Janet and I (compatible early birds and dedicated walkers) went back to Beacon Hill Park. 

We saw seven peacocks and one peahen, a turtle, two deer, and many flowers.  We also got a view of the snow-capped Olympic mountains across the sound.






After breakfast with Stacey and Phebe (who were going to meet an online knitting friend) and chcking out of the hotel, we headed to the Royal British Columbia Museum.   (Again, conveniently near the hotel).  


RBC has natural history, human history, and a lot more.  We saw it all!   


I was reminded of Te Papa, the museum in Wellington.

 







Preserving First Nations culture, including their languages.



There is a great Old Town permanent exhibit.  




The spirit or Kermode bears are black bears with white fur.  (Polar bears are grizzlies.)   Note the magpie (the avian one). 


We went back to the hotel, said a final goodbye to Stacey and Phebe (who took the ferry back to Seattle). Ralph and Diane took Janet and me to the airport, with dinner on the way.   

We flew from YYJ (Victoria) to Toronto, touching down at 6:30 a.m.   Customs was a breeze.  Our final flights were two gates apart:  Janet to PHL and me to ORD.   I was home at 10:30.

We packed a lot into a short trip:  quilts, history, exercise, and most of all friendship.  

 


This is a monkey-puzzle tree.  Arucaria arucana, native to Chile.  The leaves are all spiny, sharp and hard.  



Camas, or Indian hyacinth, was blooming profusely at Beacon Hill Park.   It was an important food source for native people.   The cooked tubers taste fig-like, according to the website.  


I'll share more photos in subsequent posts.

Meanwhile I'm linking up with Wednesday Wait Loss

Thanks for reading all the way to the end! 

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Midweek: a finish and a start before leaving

 


Monday was sunny and warm.  Lots of wildflowers have sprung up!  


Upper left: white trillium. Upper right: red trillium. Center: bristly buttercup, crane's bill (geranium). Lower: chokecherry, mayapple. (I put the camera on selfie and aimed from the bottom to get the mayapple blossom.)




The Zion Woman's Club ended its 119th program year with a luncheon* meeting and officer installation.  Actually, it was a re-installation since we all agreed to continue in the same offices for 2026-28.   


*Lunch vs. luncheon: lunch is casual, luncheon is fancy.  Another distinction to trip up English language learners. 



The group posed with the Cinco de Mayo accessories that Regina provided.


Steffi wore the medals she won at the Masters swimming tournament in North Carolina last weekend.  She competes every year.   


# # # # # #   In the studio:   I'm being intentional about getting flimsies finished this year by scheduling monthly appointments for Barb to quilt them. 



 Here's the Black/White/Jade nine-patch that needs a better name.    74 x 84.



BoBevelynn is the top-along pattern for May.  I pulled the bright floral (upper right) and all the others just jumped in to play.  


I had enough bright-bright yellow tone-on-tone for 22 blocks so I may have 20 for the front and put two on the back.   


But the design wall will stay this way for the near future.  I leave today for the Magpies' meetup in Victoria, BC.Home on Monday.   Of course there will be photos on Facebook.

Now, to finish packing!

Linking up with Wednesday Wait Loss


Monday, May 4, 2026

Weekly update: Wildflowers, Bunco, and placemats

 


Two walks in two days!  Lake Carina on Saturday (lower left) and the south unit of Illinois Beach State Park on Sunday.  Upper left: crabapple. Upper right: hoary puccoon (which sounds like a Shakespearean insult). Center; Sand cherry.


But before that:  Zion Woman's Club spring Bunco was Friday evening.  We've done this for 10+ years and have a group of regulars.  Though fewer people came than last fall the preliminary income is $1402 (thanks to club members who aren't asking for expense reimbursement).  

There are four raffles:  50/50 cash, a gift card tree ($195 value), a spring gift basket, and a quilt.  Here is the winner with me and Carolina Chain. 


# # # # #   




In the studio:  I'm caught up with RSC.  





 11 placemats finished out of the 24 for my May OMG.  

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Lots to do today, so I'll link up and then tackle the list.   Oh Scrap!  Design Wall Monday Sew and Tell   Monday Musings

Friday, May 1, 2026

Friday check in: wrapping up April and goals for May

 

Tra la! It's May!
The lusty month of May!
That lovely month when ev'ryone goes
Blissfully astray.  

 I did say, "Rabbit, rabbit!" first thing today but I also remember listening to Julie Andrews sing  The Lusty Month of May on our Broadway cast LP* of Camelot.   

(*LP -- yet another archaic term from the 1960's.)




April was  productive in terms of quilting.   My April OMG was to make the Trip Around the World quilt.







 I made six quilts from Villa Rosa Designs patterns for the VRD Six Quilts in Six Weeks challenge.  






I finished the guild mystery and made an I Spy quilt for Baby D, due in July (shower at the end of May).


Barb-the-quilter quilted these for me.  I made the red/green earlier this year and the homespun Aunt Vina's Favorite in 2024.  

The stash report.  Fabric IN, April:  5-3/4 yards, $27.32.  Fabric OUT, April: 60-1/2 yards.

Fabric IN, YTD:  6-1/2 yards. $37.32. Average: $5.24/yard. Fabric OUT, YTD:  259-1/4 yards.  Net DECREASE: 252-3/4.  

I feel very virtuous. 

My goal for May is to make at least two dozen placemats for the 2027 Rotary project.  I have a batch underway.  

Linking up Finished or Not Friday  OMG for May

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Midweek: two finishes

 Yesterday afternoon I gave the New Zealand travelog for our AAUW travel group.  All went well.  In the evening I attempted to repeat the presentation via Zoom for P.E.O. but my computer screen kept blacking out.  My P.E.O. sisters were very understanding, I logged back in on my iPad, and the meeting proceeded without the program.  I have a Geek Squad appointment later today!  (And as I type this the computer screen is fine, but I'm going to keep that appointment.)

# # # # # In the studio:  two finishes!


The guild 2026 mystery quilt. 

 The back is a vintage print ($1.75 for 5 yards at a sale.)

The tropical print and the Big Bang stars go together.  I've just read Sea People, a book about the way people settled all the Polynesian islands.  They used celestial navigation to find their way across the open ocean.    




I had to buy fabric -- gasp! -- for the border.  I don't know the baby's gender but bright works, right? Right!


I added a strip to make the back wider.  



Linking up with Wednesday Wait Loss

(Thanks for the shout out, Jennifer!)




P.S.  On Monday Julie and Rachel (who live in central NH) went up to Passumpsic Cemetery to visit Stevens.