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Saturday, 22 June 2013

Making a Woodland Hut

We spent a couple of days this past week working on a woodland hut.
Building the hut get everyone involved!

Proudly showing their work to their cousin who is visiting from Albania.

cousin Era swings Matilda till she's dizzy!

Nola made her own mini version for the fairies :)

On an expedition for big fallen logs for the main structure.
 


With Aunty

My woodland girl!

It has been quite a reunion. The girls had never met their cousin before and it has been 3 years since we last saw their Aunty.


Cosy.




Emmy carved a sign for their newly "leaf waterproofed" abode. It is now officially "The Hut"

Wednesday, 19 June 2013

Mitten Strings and Prayers








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I have been enjoying the gentle spirit of "Mitten Strings for God" which I discovered through a link at lovely Amy's Blog "To Love"

Here is a noteworthy quote ...
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 "Not a day goes by that I don't still need to remind myself that my life is not just what's handed to me, nor is it my list of obligations, my accomplishments or failures, or what my family is up to, but rather it is what I choose, day in and day out, to make of it all. When I am able simply to be with things as they are, able to accept the day's challenges without judging, reaching, or wishing for something else, I feel as if I am receiving the privilege, coming a step closer to being myself. It's when I get lost in the day's details, or so caught up in worries about what might be, that I miss the beauty of what is.” 
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And another...
" “When we focus on what is good and beautiful in someone, whether or not we think that they "deserve" it, the good and beautiful are strengthened merely by the light of our attention.” 


The children have been captivated by Granada's Prayers of the Earth ever since we borrowed it from the library some months ago.

 It is a book about death and coming to terms with death, a concept that seems to awaken consciously in children around the age of seven or so.

But somehow the book is also about life, and how to sense it and live it fully and abundantly by simply slowing down to listen.

Yesterday was a sad day, Boo's butterfly "sequin" renamed "Sequin the Brave and Determined" since it was born with an injured wing, passed over to the other side.

Boo had raised Sequin from a caterpillar and fed her on orange slices and banana from her own hand. She told me that when she looked at Sequin, Sequin, looked at her and followed her gaze.

She loved Sequin very, very much.

She spent so much time caring for her and having conversations with her over the last couple of days.
She was inconsolable.

My sensitive, beautiful, soulful Boo.

And we all covered her with love and comfort.

we didn't try to distract her or cover it up with a movie or and ice cream, we just let the tears fall as they had to do.

I told her that Sequin new how much Boo loved her and although she couldn't communicate it with words in this world, if Boo listened closely she would hear her speaking to her heart and telling her "Thank you" for all the tender care she had given her from where she is now; A place beyond words and limitations.

I told her that many people, look at that which is broken or different, or vulnerable as useless, or worse, something that should be ignored.

But she saw value in Sequin, she saw beauty and strength and bravery, and love.

She saw something priceless and eternal in her.

I also told her how, some beings live only briefly in this world.

Their light is bright and illuminates our lives so brightly we will forever see with greater clarity and love with deeper love because of them.

They are our sacred teachers and and guardians and they will always be close to us.

She asked me if Eliyana  (a baby we lost through miscarriage) would now have a butterfly to play with in Heaven, I told her yes.

And smiled myself at how our now 3 year old little girl would have her own butterfly.

A small messenger on flight between worlds.

We read "Grandad's Prayers of the Earth."

And for the rest of the evening Boo was buried in it's words and images.

Boo came running in from the garden this morning, her voice clear as a blue sky and a smile upon her face,
"I can hear Sequin!" She said matter of factly as children are prone to be with all things profound and extraordinary "She is with me still."



Friday, 14 June 2013

A photographic Journal ...




Boo says I should explain that Chicken of the Woods is a mushroom :)



As soon as we arrived at the lake Nola was wanting to throw all caution (and her clothes) to the wind and paddle. Yes we've got to the fearless stage already.

After some breathless moments and zealous squealing, which caused the neighbouring ducks to chatter, quack, ruffle their feathers and hastily gather their ducklings to the far bank, she found a nice sitting stump where she could gleefully throw twigs and leaves into the water without hindrance.

Nola, thankfully, loves to find little tree stumps or cosy spots to sit upon. She'll say "Nola size, Nola size", when she finds one that takes her fancy.
Although there were still a couple of close calls as the moss near the sloping edge was especially slippery and she enjoyed the sensation of sliding on it a little more than was ideal for a Mama who had forgotten to pack a change of clothes.


Boo found a place to begin her nature art project.

She became instantly industrious, gathering and composing, and arranging and re-arranging without interruption.

I love watching her focus on something deeply.

She is a thoughtful child and needs time to be alone and unhurried.




There was hardly a soul in sight.

There is a magic that happens when you just sit still in the middle of nature.

You notice all the intricate worlds of insects, silently growing plants, underwater life and the profound simplicity of the animal kingdom.



These ducks played with both girls.

Mama duck watched contentedly from some distance as they bobbed and dipped for twigs and leaves.
They came so close and even let Boo touch them!

I can't adequately describe how thrilled Boo my little bird lover was by this interaction. It was beautiful. I was so grateful.

Mama duck seemed to trust us with her babies.

I said a quiet thank you from one Mother to another.



Of course, it wasn't long before the shoes were discarded in favour of bare feet on damp,cool moss and, squidgy, dark earth.



 I love these toes.

The nails are a bit wonky, she has a thing for nibbling on her toenails.

Not a habit that will wear well with age perhaps but somehow irresistible cuteness for a squishy two year old.



Fresh water clams are prevalent here and the water's so clear they're easy to find.


 Boo's flora and fauna waterfall from two angles.



I love her bark and wood chip "fungi" emerging from the tree stump from it's circle of green fern leaves!



 Boo says it looks like a giant  buried pine cone :) I think this is true. And all the better for it!


Woodland delicacy.

The hues of wild and woodland flowers are so incredibly nuanced and hardly ever replicated by their cultivated cousins.



Streams just make me want to take off my shoes and paddle.


This squirrel spent the whole time nibbling away while watching us intently and quite calmly from the corner of his beady, shining eye.

Boo has a way with animals.

She got close enough to touch him but didn't.

He quite slowly and nonchalantly, for a squirrel, ambled up the pine next to her looking down from every branch on the way up as if to say, are you going to come and play then?
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Five minutes after this picture was taken, a full blown thunderstorm descended upon us.

We took shelter beneath a graciously large Beech.

It was well past lunch and we were all starting to notice it after about 10 minutes of thunder, lightning and pelting rain and the sense of adventure had worn somewhat thin for certain small members of the expedition.

Boo, resourceful as usual, went into scavenger mode and plucked a handful of young, tender beech leaves  and insisted we should keep our strength up. We gladly obliged and wiled away the next 5 minutes chewing.

(They are quite fibrous)

"How do they taste to you?" asked she (with certain trepidation).

"Mmmm, Very healthy." I replied.

Luckily she seemed adequately satisfied with this answer.



Sunlight after rain in the garden.

Bejewelled sunlit rain drops.

 I love to focus in on one close detail and let the background fall into bokeh. A word I've only just learnt the name of.

Now all my blurry photos have their own technical terminology!

I always thought there was something romantic about blurry pictures anyway.


 Nola never tires of the outdoors.

She is also very diligent with her watering of the flowers, which is an admirable thing, although they didn't really need it after today's downpour.

Still, I didn't have the heart to tell her.

She has her very own pink watering can after all.


Nola adores Fina and idolizes her every move. Fina loves to "learn" her everything she knows.

Lord help me :)




And then they found  mud.


Yes, I am now the proud owner of my very own backyard swamp!

Children and mud are, for better or worse, the very best of play fellows. 

I now have a very interesting looking porch and bathroom.  

Matilda did however declare it "the best day forever!"

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Our nature art inspiration... 


Tuesday, 11 June 2013

Counter





Every act of beauty is life giving.
A counter to all that is dark.

It pulls back the curtain saying 
This is not the only room.


There is a garden too.
Clothed in green shoots and tender leaves.

Water it.