The significance is hiding in the insignificant.
Appreciate everything.
—Eckhart Tolle
1. For the third year in a row, we attended a couple of Jane's Walks in Windsor. Jane’s Walks celebrate our local communities: "neighbourhoods, and the people who live there.” This year Windsor’s festival, the last weekend in April and the first one in May, was the fourth largest in Canada, pretty good for a smaller region. One of the two we did was in Butterfly Lane, a nondescript back lane in Walkerville, which is a neighbourhood in the east end of Windsor.
| Homeowners gave permission for artists to paint on their fences or garages. |
Local artists did the beautiful butterfly artwork in the lane to raise awareness of brain injury in their community. There were many beautiful pieces.
Isn’t this garage wonderful? I especially love the tree on the left!
Some of the artists were in attendance, so it was really neat to hear their thoughts on what they had painted. Another one we did was a walk along the Detroit River in the west end of Windsor, the Sandwich Town neighbourhood. It was fascinating to hear and see all that has been done to restore habitat, shoreline, and improve the space for wildlife and people on the Windsor side. It was pretty neat for my husband, as it was his old stomping grounds from when he was a kid.
2. This story about the opening of Saskatchewan’s first traditional birthing lodge on a First Nation is just so good. I first read about it thanks to Tod Maffin’s Saturday newsletter where at the end he gives a whole slew of good news articles in several categories. This is Truth and Reconciliation in action: funding has come from the federal government, though more is needed. I love that the only registered midwife at the lodge is from Ghana. (sidenote: Tod Maffin is an excellent follow on Instagram/YouTube, and a worthwhile subscription to his weekly newsletter.
3. I just love redbud trees. I think they look like fairies decorated them. Ours seemed to last longer than usual, maybe because of the rather cold spring.
| Look at the truck for a size comparison! |
4. Many of you will remember how I celebrated for several years my quilt distractions, aka squirrels, which I coined a DrEAMi (Drop Everything And Make it) with the graphic depicting a squirrel. Well, I think squirrels are pretty amazing little buggers. Yeah. Amazing. Also annoying. Hence the oxymoron term! This bright girl from Guelph, ON, took her family’s fascination with squirrels to another level, and has now made it to the Canada-wide Science Fair happening in Edmonton.
5. When I read this piece of incredibly good news in another of Tod Maffin’s Saturday newsletters, not a glimmer, but a veritable fireworks went off in my heart and soul: Ontario has become the first province in Canada to ban the cruel practice of doing invasive medical experiments on dogs and cats. Rufus and Zora approve. Now they would like the BSL (Breed Specific Legislation), specifically against pitbulls, struck down.6. I had my yearly ophthalmologist appointment this month, and seeing this Canada flag proudly displayed at the entrance gave me a glimmer of pride. It wasn’t there last year! In the constant musings about taking us over, these quiet Canadian displays of pride (not normal—we aren’t a flag-waving/bearing/ fixated country) in our sovereignty are wonderful and needed. My ophthalmologist used to have offices on both sides of the river, but now just practices in Windsor. Eyes all good once again, hooray.
7. Every once in a while I walk through the empty lot at the end of my street to gaze at Lake Erie. What a little hit of joy to see these tulips this spring! I wonder who planted them there...
| I’’m so grateful I have this view at the end of my street, off a fairly decent bluff, a mere ten houses away. The colours that evening were pretty spectacular. |
8. Speaking of flowers, my pink columbine is pretty gorgeous! It was a little too shaded last year, so although I haven’t moved it, MacGyver has cleared out a little bit around it, so hopefully it will continue to be a happy little camper.
9. Speaking of happy little campers! Zora has placed herself for a morning nap a few times now in my yoga/reading room. She’s a sun-loving doggie, reminds me of my beloved pitbull, Rocco.
Last of all, but most important, I’m so grateful for the means to fly to Alberta to see our beloved Brady graduate from grade 12 (note: one graduates from an institution; the institution, be it a university or high school, graduates its students. This grammatical lapse drives me insane these days). I’ve finished his lion quilt, and its wrapped and ready to fly with me out west!


I'm 64th in line for Lady Tremaine. So I understand how long the wait can be. However, some books are worth the wait.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy your time with your grandson. How your travel goes smoothly.
Loved the story about the girl who studied squirrel vision! I read it to Mike, and then we looked at our bird feeders, and laughed because they are yellow. Of course the squirrels are attracted to them! Happy Graduation to Brady - enjoy your trip!
ReplyDeleteYou live in an incredibly beautiful area and then you and MacGiver have these wonderful green thumbs! Tulips are so beautiful and sometimes I am able to see one of mine all the way through the cycle...provided the deer don't find them or the squirrels don't did up the bulbs. I was 142 on the wait list for The Correspondent. Then the library acquired 10 more ebook copies and the line moved faster. It was still 5 months of waiting.
ReplyDeleteI love Kira's squirrel research! Unfortunately, it doesn't help us much - our feeders are plexiglass and dark green... Your columbine is a beauty, as is your redbud! When do you head out west?
ReplyDeleteI adore redbud trees, too! We have on in our front yard and a very small baby sapling we just planted in the backyard; hopefully it grows into a beautiful tree in 5-10 years!
ReplyDeleteSo many fun and pretty things to be grateful for. It's almost full summer here and we have lots of yellow and orange flowers to enjoy. Congrats to Brady on his graduation. Best wishes to him on his next adventure.
ReplyDeleteAnother wonderful month for you. I know I won't remember everything I wanted to comment on. I'm glad you were able to get the lion quilt done for Brady. Those grandwith seeing the ones kids do have a way of growing older too fast.
ReplyDeleteI love redbuds and wish I had planted one years ago when they weren't so expensive. I have to be content with seeing the ones growing throught our village. and I have enjoyed seeing them in the forests in North Carolina on my drives home from FL (which I didn't get to do this year because of cataract surgery).
Unlike redbuds, I have plenty of columbine in my gardens. They pop up all over the place. Some years the deer and rabbits chew them and right now the leaf miners are having a field day (or salad bar), but the blooms are still there, cheerful as ever.
I know I've commented before on Black Wolf, but it was chilling to see how prescient Louise Penney was.
I hope you have a great visit to Alberta.
Pat