I love to watch the sun go down from the Sandhill Cemetery. Last night I drove there from the Tiny House on Baby and took some photos of the area.
When I got home I looked at the images and was quite surprised to see this one of Baby in the sun.
I love to watch the sun go down from the Sandhill Cemetery. Last night I drove there from the Tiny House on Baby and took some photos of the area.
When I got home I looked at the images and was quite surprised to see this one of Baby in the sun.
Someone wonderful and tiny came to visit her Aunt at her Tiny House today.
Tiny lovely Violet!
It was nice to spend the morning with her and her mom.
Here is a hint as to what I will be doing this weekend. Leo and Hj are helping.

This chestnut brown, colonial, steel siding, was purchased at Glen Supply in Kingston. Nice young men brought this out to me. Though this looks like a little pile is 15 feet long and is about $1450 worth of material.
I awaken. The sun has not yet pushed the darkness to the forest floor. There is a noise. I quickly realize is Minnie, whose trachea is collapsing and she is terrified trying to find her airway. I do the only thing that I can do for her, which is to calm her. I pet her from her head down her back to her tail, slowly, over and over. I calmly reassure her. “You are OK Minnie. Sweet little Min. Pretty little Mosie. Baby Button Face. Good little Minner. It is OK good girl.” I lay next to her, diagonally across the bed in the loft of Tiny House Ontario with my head in the window. When it is just the dogs and I here, I very often sleep like this, so I can watch the forest shadows dance through the night. Minnie finally starts to breath normally and when she does she turns to look right at my eyes. She does this for a long while, big saucer eyes with her giant ears laying back flat on her head still, she looks relieved. I am sure she is thanking me for my help.
It is a terrifying illness to which we lost a beautiful little boy, Klein, last February. Minnie has a very mild case when compared to his. Thankfully. We do not medicate her at all or keep phenobarbital on hand for her. Hers is simply not severe enough to warrant this drastic medical interference. Klein was on the stuff nearly the whole of his short life. He sounded like a train when he walked and if we brought him into public people stopped to stare. He really loved people. He was sick and he grew fat though we watched his diet closely, he was Stealth. He would always make it into the dining room with the children when they were small and was what our vet calls “an easy keeper” which means that he did not need much food to live. In human beings we call this a slow metabolism. The only thing that made Klein angry was wasabi peas. He was a great wasabi warrior.
I look at my watch. It is 5:12 am. Minnie and I look out the window together. The sky is brighter now but the forest is still all shadows. The black has turned to grey with hues of green now. It will incrementally change according to the neighboring rooster and the thousands of songbirds who help the sun chase the shadows down into the ground so that the sun may nourish the forest with its light.
Minnie cuddles herself down into the bed for a nap and I join her. The wind and the birds are our lullaby.
It has been raining off and on for the past few days since we had the heat wave. It means that I sit inside of Tiny House Ontario and read. The rain is great for the garden which is growing great. I think I should be able to have salad for supper tonight, and so begins the start of the 0 mile diet.
During a lull in the rain, I weed the garden and note that the chicken wire over the part of the garden which had big seeds that the critters dig, is difficult to pull weeds out of. I have to wait until they are a little bigger and come up through the wire. That is my story, I am sticking to it.

When I was out checking on the garden I noticed that the dragon flies are using my soffit to hide under.
As for what I have read while I am shut-in and cuddling with the canines. Shirley Gibson-Langille’s Landscapes and Inscapes which is an utterly charming book which melds her paintings into the history of the Kingston area. Augustin Burroughs This is How which is LOL funny, but also astute! The guy tells it the way that it is, and I sort of fear that he is probably right about a lot of issues. Lastly Anaïs Nin In Favor of the Sensitive Man which is a rather 1970’s look at men and women, but still somehow interesting. I will begin another tonight.