Sunday, September 8, 2013

Vacation

So, way back in June we went on our first real family vacation. I wanted to post some pictures because it was really fun. We'd been on trips together before, Ottawa, Montreal, Victoria but this one felt different somehow. I think it was because it was just us, and we were going new places together. We rented a car and went camping for a week. At the end of the drive, we ended up in the Okanagan where my cousin married her bride and we all had a lavish time in a winery resort. Not bad at all!

We kind of fell in love with Pemberton


Narin Falls in Pemberton. 
My parents lived here in a tent in the eighties and biked to their jobs in Whistler 



Lilloette with its desert mountains, wild sage brush, and glacier greens. 

Whoot. 


Littlest hobo

Family Portrait at Spence's Bridge train tracks

Sock Monkey and Sebastian had some long heated conversations on the cabin-fever drive to the Okanagan


Probably the best photo I've ever taken


Sebastian and Alex made this weird sculpture on the shore of Lake Okanagan

I'm thoroughly terrified on this horse. It had been many years since I rode. I seem to always choose the fat grey horses who stubbornly eat the whole time. In the end, it was worth the fear


Spirit Ridge Resort. Look at all those grapes! The place was absolutely crawling with my family and old family friends. A strange but awesome way to end a camping trip

The brides! My baby cousin on the left. 

Crazy Eyes cops a feel

Sad home

Oh okay, where do I begin? 
Summer brought some changes here on the Coast, some good, some challenging. 
Bad blogger that I am, I didn't capture any of them! The most recent event in our lives is that we're losing our home. Our landlords sold their house up the road and without much warning announced (apologetic and empathetic, which helps a bit) they're moving back in here. It's been an emotional time. I really didn't see it coming, though maybe we should have. We've really fallen in love with this house and neighbourhood in the last year and a half, and more than that, are so sick of moving and reestablishing ourselves every year or two especially now with a child. I guess in retrospect it's just a house, and we'll be fine, but the news was really shocking and it feels like enduring a death of some sort. The hardest part is leaving the garden that we put much labour and attention into. Losing the 1700 sq. ft, full ocean view, proximity to good friends, huge bathtub, writing cabin in the garden, several extra spaces for guests, bedroom as large as some people's houses, private balcony, hot tub and cherry trees hurts a bit, too! Yep. It's hard. 
But really, it's the disruption of life. We've had a bit of a crazy last few years after moving across the country and with me commuting into the city and being in school full-time, both of us working all the time and trying so hard to be writers and good parents. We've moved, aggh, dare I count? The ratio of houses to years favours houses. We were just looking forward to staying put for a while. 
But, so, that's not going to happen. We didn't have it in our hearts to find a new home to set up for the long haul so we went to the bank, got pre-approved for a mortgage, and chose a new home we can only assume will be pretty temporary. Our sights are set on stability, but we've got some time before we'll be rewarded. We're not making enough money to buy much at all on this market, but we're not too far off. In the meantime, we're going to work our asses off to save money and look more financially stable on paper then buy a tiny cabin in the woods where we can garden for a decades. That's the plan anyways. We'll see what happens. 
So, now we're packing. We're leaving at the end of the month. Hard to believe that a week ago we had completely different standards. This morning I dug plants our of the garden. Next, we'll harvest all the food we can (we'd just planted a full winter garden) and bag all our soil, dismantle as much as we can and move some stable beds to my parent's yard. It's hard to dig up plants I spent so much attention establishing in the crappy soil here. I don't know if they'll survive, most are too big for long-term pot dwelling and I'm not sure they'll take to transplanting well. But I did it, because I didn't want to walk by some day and see all my plants replaced with pristine landscaping. 
Our new yard is a tiny forest where someone has wild crafted around cedar trees. There might be room for some kale or herbs, but I'm not sure I have the energy to do it again just yet. The property we'll live on has beekeeping on the roofs and chickens, and permaculture gardens and is right in the heart of Roberts Creek so all in all, I think it will be an easy-going move. We'll be closer to culture again, just a stroll to a cafe and restaurant and post office and corner store and health food store and the farmers market. Ironically, this tiny village is going to feel like being urban again. I think it will all be fine. We'll adapt. The space is small, we've lost over 1000 sq ft and I'm nervous about how it's going to affect our creative space. It's a point of anxiety for me, not having a quiet space to write and freelance. And we'll be quite isolated from the town beyond the little village so we might need a car. But we'll see. I'll sure it'll all be fine. 

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

The Great Pumpkin Experiment

It's official. We harvested our first Galeaux D'eysines pumpkin last night at dusk a couple of months ahead of normal pumpkin schedule. It's a little strange to have our first pumpkin curing on the table along with our first cherry tomatoes and zucchinis. I planted this bed with the permaculture technique of "The Three Sisters" which means runner beans, corn and pumpkin. Our first corn is emerging and the beans are forming flowers. It's nice to know all the permaculture techniques we experimented with this year have had impressive results compared to the more traditional methods already set up in the garden. The pumpkins are so early there will be plenty of time for a fall crop of snap peas to put some nitrogen back into the soil. Now, if only the kale would grow...


Thursday, July 4, 2013

Summer photos


Keats Island, photo by G-parents


Box Kid.


Kale stalks and garlic scape necklaces. 

Monday, June 3, 2013

The Great Pumpkin Experiment


Remember my pumpkin experiment? Putting pumpkins in the ground two months early against all expert advice? Well... It's looking pretty lush now. This garden bed is amazing. It gets full sun from sunrise to sunset, and is a raised rock bed which means the soil is incredibly warm. We'll be eating pumpkins all winter long at this rate. I've also planted some corn and runner beans amongst these monsters. This trio is commonly referred to as The Three Sisters. 
The squash rambles and suppresses weeds, the beans act as a nitrogen fixer for the soil, and the corn provides a stake for the beans to run up. 


Tattoos


I convinced Sebi that his friends accidentally gave him a real tattoo (as seen on forearm). I even went as far as to stage a fake phone conversation confirming that his friends had a "real" tattoo in their house and now it was missing, so it must have ended up on Sebi by accident. Sigh.
I have a relentless ability to tease, I don't know what's wrong with me. Anyways, he was kind of concerned but tried really hard not to show it. Then my dad caught wind of my joke a few days later and said, "Listen kid, she's messing with you." So, now we're back to just loving fake tattoos. 
This glittery snail is the best. A beautiful little hippy girl painted it on him with a stencil at the farmer's market the other day. She was a pro. I think he's going to get another one tomorrow.