Sunday, August 29, 2021

Weekly update: turkeys, flowers, scraps, OMG, and reading




It's been too hot and too humid for energetic explorations.  I stayed closer to home today with a walk in the ravine at the end of our block.   

Jewel weed, lobelia, elderberries, and an aster. 


On the street on the other side of the ravine I saw a car come forward, back up, come forward, back up, and come forward again.  It was Glenn and Patty. She rolled down the passenger window and said, "Wild turkeys behind the red house!" and they drove on.    

This is as close as I could get -- I don't know the people who live in the red house. 

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The church rummage sale (see Friday's post) ended with $5-a-bag on Saturday.  I filled a sack with shirts that I'm now deboning, to use Bonnie Hunter's term.  

Earlier in the month I sent a gallon bag of 1.5" strips to Cathy.  I dumped the rest of them out of the bin and sorted them -- longer (10" +) and shorter. (How do they curl up into little balls?)  I ironed ALL of them.  The long ones became units for my new project based on Bonnie's Bitcoin pattern.  (I bought the digital pattern when it was released.)



The longer strips were enought to make 18 72" columns.  They are 2-1/2" wide (2" finished).  Sewing them all together per the pattern would yield a piece 36 x 72.    I could make more columns but that would require either cutting lots and lots more strips OR putting these away and waiting for the bin to fill up.  I don't want to cut more and I don't want another UFO.  I have an idea!  (Hint:  it involves red.) 

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I'm pleased to report that I finished both parts of my One Monthly Goal for August:  the wedding quilt and the guild challenge.  

(I've already written about these. Just scroll back to read about them.) 








The week's reading included a history, a mystery, and a thriller.

Burrough, Tomlinson, and Stanford skillfully skewer the Heroic Anglo Narrative of the Battle of the Alamo. 

Mexico's northern province was considered a backwater outpost of the Spanish and later Mexican empires. In the early 19th century Anglo-Americans from the southeast began settling the cheap (=free; they didn't buy it from the Mexicans) land to raise cotton. Large-scale cotton farming was feasible only with slave labor.   The Mexicans were adamantly opposed to slavery. The Mexican army and the Texians (as they called themselves) clashed at Goliad and again at a mission church in San Antonio -- called the Alamo. The battle was brief and disastrous for the Americans and their Tejano allies. (The later battle at San Jacinto was the decisive one.) No sooner had the smoke cleared than the legends began. 

Over the decades those legends became enshrined as foundational heroism. Twentieth century battles of the civic kind were fought over how to preserve the site, honor the dead, and interpret the causes and the outcome of the entire war of Texas independence. 

It's no spoiler to say that scholarship has revealed the true story to be quite different. As the authors say, "Jim Bowie was a murderer, slaver, and con man. William Barret Travis was a pompous, racist agitator and syphilitic wretch. Davy Crockett was a self-promoting old fool who was a captive to his own myth." They add, "We are seven generations past the Texas Revolt. When Texas celebrate the bicentennial [in 2036] Hispanics will make up the majority of Texans."

Serious history laced with wickedly good humor (the irony of Mexicans in the 1830's fearing hordes of Americans crossing their borders) combine for a great tale.


A team of intrepid senior citizens help the local police solve a murder at their retirement village. In the process they solve a historical murder and uncover international criminal activity. This was such a treat! 

I look forward to reading the Club’s second caper which is coming in September.


Peter Swanson writes another suspenseful page-turner. "Life was restarts, one after another, and some were good, and some weren't," contemplates Alice Moody as she and her stepson Harry each seek to discover who killed her husband/his father. "Now" and "Then" chapters describe Harry's actions and Alice's hidden past. 

(I read his Eight Perfect Murders a couple of weeks ago.) 





Linking up with Oh Scrap!       Design Wall Monday Monday Making

One Monthly Goal   

8 comments:

  1. The Bitcoins are so much fun to make. I think I have enough for a lap/throw. I've got tons more strips I could make more from. I'm interested to see how you'll add in the red.

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  2. Good for you in investing in Bit Coins! Although I must say it's way to labor intensive for me. I'm looking forward to seeing how you add some red!

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  3. That is a great price for the shirts. Seeing the shirts and the bit coin pattern together like that makes me think I should be able to combine those. I have recently bought some shirts and the bit coin-type project is on my list of quilts to make. I might use my shirts for bit coin.

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  4. I really enjoyed your photos from your walk, Nann! That BitCoin quilt is intense!!!

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  5. You are brave to make Bonnie Hunter quilts. I like looking at her designs, but can't stand that much repetitive piecing of the same block.

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  6. You play with your bitcoins and I'll play with my legos!

    I don't see wild jewel weed around here but I have LOTS of wild elderberries. Hubby used to make wine and I used to make jam but now that we are old and gray we leave them to the birds. A few years ago a wild turkey scared me when I was walking through our woods. It flew out of a tree and at that time I had no idea they even went up into trees. North of us they are very destructive in farmer's fields.

    I've been reading Irish historical fiction. And am almost finished with book three of The O'Neill Trilogy by Olive Collins. I've enjoyed all three books.

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  7. I've made several quilts like Bonnie's some years ago but her name is the cutest, hands down. It does take a lot of pieces. Congratulations on meeting both your August goals and thanks for more book reviews. I must read the Alamo.
    Our wonderful legislators were going to tear it down until a group of women banded together to save the site. Now the legislature wants to take it back... because they handle these kinds of things so well. Grr.

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  8. I've played a little with the Bitcoin strips too. I'm thinking it will take me years to make enough for a whole quilt. LOL But I have pulled another UFO off the shelf and am making some progress.

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