Cactus Catus
Spiny, drunken, foul-tempered felines, woo!
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Doctor Who Tour de Fat!
Just came back from biking in the Tour de Fat!
It was great, and we did end up managing to get all our costumes together so we went as a big Doctor Who group.
My dad was the TARDIS, my mom was a weeping angel, I was Amy Pond (I think I was the least necessary or recognizable of the group and I had to wear a miniskirt and high heels so in hindsight I wish I'd gone as a female Castiel XD) and my brother was the Tenth Doctor.
There were a surprising amount of DW fans around, IMO, and people were either shouting stuff about police boxes and police (if they didn't know about Doctor Who) or shouting about DW and the Doctor and stuff. We even met a guy who showed us his tattoo of the TARDIS going through a wormhole on his side. It was really cool, a good way to see just how many people were fans of DW!
So anyway. I had a lot of fun, I definitely want to do this again next year (without the uncomfortable and inconvenient costume).
It was great, and we did end up managing to get all our costumes together so we went as a big Doctor Who group.
My dad was the TARDIS, my mom was a weeping angel, I was Amy Pond (I think I was the least necessary or recognizable of the group and I had to wear a miniskirt and high heels so in hindsight I wish I'd gone as a female Castiel XD) and my brother was the Tenth Doctor.
There were a surprising amount of DW fans around, IMO, and people were either shouting stuff about police boxes and police (if they didn't know about Doctor Who) or shouting about DW and the Doctor and stuff. We even met a guy who showed us his tattoo of the TARDIS going through a wormhole on his side. It was really cool, a good way to see just how many people were fans of DW!
So anyway. I had a lot of fun, I definitely want to do this again next year (without the uncomfortable and inconvenient costume).
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Back home!
(This is a post from yesterday, written on the flight home,
with the assumption that we would have internet when we got back, though we did
not. So it’s a little late to be posting, but better late than never. Plus, I’ve
been neglecting this blog too much).
Well, we’re finally (almost, actually, since I’m writing
this on the plane, via Word document) home and it’s time to reminisce about the
trip.
All in all, it was great. We got to go to the pool, the
beach, the zoo, Disneyland, the old neighborhood, and to just hang out in
California for a week. I brought my tablet so I drew a bit (though no animating
got done, I’ll have to catch up on that once we’re home and I have an actual
drawing setup) and I also continued to work on The Scamble, which I will talk
about more in a bit, though just sort of idly messing around with ideas for it
rather than trying to work stuff out since most of the time I was too busy with
other things.
It was hot, of course, and I could live with the heat but it
was not enjoyable. We went to the beach a couple of times, and it was great
swimming in the water and being in the waves, and we went to the pool too,
though that was less exciting and get-buffeted-around-by-water-y. Basically, we
did plenty of water-related things to survive the 95-or-so degree temperatures.
We visited all the old haunts, the Wild Animal Park (now
named the Safari Park and unfortunately very disappointing), went on a walk
along the shallow river in Fallbrook (though the paths were eroded and without
Fang, who died a couple weeks ago, it was lacking) and, of course, spent a day
at Disneyland (which has remained the same and was great).
Oh, and I saw a live coyote, a dead coyote, some big owl
with feathery ears (possibly a great horned owl, though I’m not sure what their
range is), plenty of lizards and other small birds, heard a rattlesnake, and of
course saw tons of animals at the zoo.
Now I’m on the plane to home, gazing out over some dry,
tan-colored desert-y place, possibly California or maybe Utah (I suck at
geography, however, so if we were flying over the moon I might not know) and
thinking about various creative and homestead-related projects.
I’m dreading all the processing work that surely awaits us
at home (not to mention my stupid fall allergies), and the backlog of fruits
and vegetables to be picked and preserved (there’ll be tomatoes to sauce,
raspberries to pick and freeze, zucchini to harvest and dump on unsuspecting
neighbors, and maybe even corn or onions or potatoes to process, who knows). We
also have the half (or maybe quarter, I’m not completely sure) a pig that we
bought from a local small farm here waiting for us when we get home, and while
I’m looking forwards to being able to eat pork and bacon and ham and such
(since lately it’s been nothing but hamburgers, and for the past week in
California I’ve been almost 100% vegetarian*) but it’s going to be a challenge
because we’ll have to learn how to make the bacon ourselves (which sounds like
a fun and terrifying adventure at the same time) .
*I’ve been eating meat only if I know where it comes from,
nothing store-bought.
We’ll also be home just two days before the Tour De Fat bike
race (in which people dress up in crazy costumes and bike around town) and we have a great group costume theme
thingymagig planned, all Doctor Who related, me being Amy, my brother being the
tenth doctor (because he has some strange grudge against the eleventh or
something, I don’t really know), my dad being a dalek and my mom being a
weeping angel (with the TARDIS being pulled behind us on the bike trailer).
However, since we have only two days and we have barely
anything done I expect to end up going as Castiel, from Supernatural, (this
year’s Halloween costume) since I already have a trenchoat about the right
color and of course a tie, white shirt and black pants are easy to come by. I
probably shouldn’t be so pessimistic, but at the very least we’ll be able to go
as a half-completed Superwho group.
(Sort of) speaking of Halloween, November is coming soon (though
I can hardly believe it’s almost fall again) and I was excited to realize that
I might have a story to write for NaNoWriMo again (which is great, because I
was completely out of story ideas all summer and feeling like I wouldn’t have
any stories to write for NaNo), the Scamble!
Of course, I have to finish working on the world and
characters and premise and finally plot in two months but now my goal is to
have the world and story (though I’m not sure how I’m gonna write it, I was
sort of thinking of making it a series-like thing with separate books for all
of the Scamblers’ adventures) finished by November. And I think once we get
home I’ll have enough time to really work through the current snag I’ve hit! (And
even if I don’t get a plotline finished before NaNo, I think this is the sort
of story where I might be able to try and write it as I go, without any
storyline whatsoever).
Even if I don’t get even the world finished before November,
I think I still want to try to write for NaNoWriMo, and I will probably just
end up kidnapping some of my half-completed characters and throwing them into
some sketchily-built world and hope it works (which, now that I say it, sounds
like a horrible idea but a lot of Wrimos write that way, right?).
Either way, I’m pretty excited about November, and heck,
even winter (more time for artistic work, and it’s perfect timing as I’ve
started to want to work more and more on improving my writing and drawing just
this last week) despite the short, cold, greenery-less days it brings.
So, I suppose I should actually introduce the Scamble more
now, which is the current name of a story/world mix project I’ve been working
on for exactly (unless I am wrong in which case I am extremely sorry about my
horrid math skills) eighteen days now.
It started out one day as one of those great
flash-of-inspiration things that never actually happens to anyone (except this
time it did) where pretty much the whole world and premise for the story and
characters just appeared out of the blue (in the case of the Scamble, while
doodling a completely unrelated scribble
of the vaguely-mammalian creature at the top of this post) on the 12th
of August at, if I had to guess, 1:00-2:00 PM (I know this because I drew it
right as we were leaving to go to a concert). After the initial flash of
inspiration I only had to work a bit on the mechanics of the world (which were
already thought up, previous little ideas for how magic would work and for how
animal-people might look that I’d thought about but never had a world to use
them in) before moving on to characters (the current challenge for me and the bane
of my existence) and just exactly what the Scamble is.
Ah, the Scamble. I’m not quite sure myself what it is, but I
suppose I should explain the basic idea behind it.
It is a sort of, magic store. A junkyard for magical
objects, Robert or Maggie might call, but really what they do is they retrieve,
find, repair or destroy magical and cursed objects (find or repair in the case
of the former and destroy in the case of the latter).
Yes, in the Scamble world (which at the moment is modern-day
earth) there is magic (and animal people, called fen), and it is a very
valuable thing (or rather, magical objects and other minor magical things like
spellbinds and charms are) but also a very dangerous thing, in the case of
curses, cursed objects, and pain magic, or even fire and accidental magic.
I still have yet to get all the characters worked out, or
exactly what the people at the Scamble do (or what is even needed for people to
do) and whether or not they are related to the government at all, and I’ve
started to stray pretty close to Warehouse 13 territory, I think, so I’ve been
sort of cautiously tiptoeing ahead, afraid to make any big decisions about the
story or world (which is like being afraid to go out of the house in case you
are locked out even when you have the keys in your hand) but once I get home
I’ve promised myself I’ll work on it more, and more seriously, and I’ll not be
afraid to be decisive about the world and what goes and what stays.
Basically, California is great, but it’s also gonna be great
to be back home, and it’s really, really great to be finally back to working on
stories and worlds and writing!
So, as I look out the airplane window over shadowy canyons
and red, scrubby hills crisscrossed with winding roads obscured by the
occasional white wisp of a cloud (can you tell I love flying and being able to
get a bird’s eye view of everything?), I bid you few people reading this
goodbye, and good luck writing (or drawing or singing or dancing or sculpting
or picture-taking or sewing or anything-ing)!
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Wait what when did time pass?
So apparently I am really bad at time (actually I'm convinced it has something to do with the TARDIS and amnesia) and we're flying to California! Tomorrow! I thought we were going in like a week or something but apparently not!
This is actually really bad timing because A) I have just started really seriously working on The Scamble (work that requires me to write shit down, in fact), B) I have just started to get used to my new self-appointed duties as raspberry picker and processor and C) I don't really feel like traveling at all after that trip to Ireland.
Nonetheless we are leaving tomorrow for California and will be there for a week or so (not sure how many days exactly).
I will bring my tablet and computer but I still have a feeling this will mess up my work on The Scamble (and the El Paso AMV though it was barely being worked on in the first place), which sucks because I've just gotten into the groove of this whole "writing down the mechanics of the world" thing.
Can you tell I'm not that enthusiastic about this trip?
I'm sure it will be nice when we get there, though, and I'm looking forwards to the ocean and stuff.
This is actually really bad timing because A) I have just started really seriously working on The Scamble (work that requires me to write shit down, in fact), B) I have just started to get used to my new self-appointed duties as raspberry picker and processor and C) I don't really feel like traveling at all after that trip to Ireland.
Nonetheless we are leaving tomorrow for California and will be there for a week or so (not sure how many days exactly).
I will bring my tablet and computer but I still have a feeling this will mess up my work on The Scamble (and the El Paso AMV though it was barely being worked on in the first place), which sucks because I've just gotten into the groove of this whole "writing down the mechanics of the world" thing.
Can you tell I'm not that enthusiastic about this trip?
I'm sure it will be nice when we get there, though, and I'm looking forwards to the ocean and stuff.
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Bikes and Bows
Got a new bike today - finally.
I haven't ridden one in so long, years probably, so it was weird to just go out, buy one, and start riding again.
I like how much easier it is to bike and how little effort it takes to go so far, and especially now with my fall allergies it's better than running because I don't get as much pollen and crap in my lungs, but I still don't really like it as much as running - it's a bit nerve-wracking and hard for me to control a bike, and not as nice as running in that way (I almost crashed twice trying to navigate small spaces) and it isn't as fun as running, for me. I guess it doesn't do the whole endorphin release thing that running does (if running does do that, I don't remember)? But it still was a workout (for me especially because I'm way too out of shape) and it was really great biking around up to other neighborhoods with the view of the plains there.
After biking my dad and brother went out back to shoot arrows, and I joined them. It fun and challenging (and a little scary once you realize that despite the dull, practically nonexistent tip the arrows we were using could still go through cloth and probably skin). I finally got the hang of it after about maybe 20 shots and actually hit (and got the arrow to stick into) the target. I did however whack the inside of my arm plenty of times with the bowstring until I managed a good stance. I've got a nice big bruise on the inside of my elbow now. Despite that, I want to practice more - it was fun and archery like a nice hobby/skill, even if I'm only derping around in the backyard with a bow we got off of craigslist.
Well, anyway, not much else to write about. It's been nice out the last couple of days, not blisteringly hot like it's been most of the summer. I also saw the first Canada Geese since spring today, the first big sign of winter. I've just gotten into the groove of summer and it's almost fall. Figures.
I've beenslacking a little less
working on the rabbit cages and the first one is
closeishkindofnotreallybutnottotallyveryextremelyfarawayatleast from
being done, and I think I might've just managed to work out the big
snarl of character creation with the Scamble (a new story I've been working on) and hopefully there won't
be many more tangles with that. Art-wise I haven't animated
anything in a while and I keep telling myself I'll finally work on that
genderswapped Psych minicomic I have thumbnailed out and ready to go,
but I don't do anything and I just keep feeling more and more guilty
about not drawing or or being horrible at art. Which of course makes me
want to draw even less. Ugh. I wish my inner
asshole/slavedriver/nitpickingsonofabitch would just let me do whatever I
want without guilting me about it all the time (even if all I want to
do is watch Teen Wolf) >:I
And, uh, yeahhhh... I finished watching Supernatural a while ago and since my Tumblr dash has been covered in Teen Wolf stuff lately I decided to try and watch it, despite the name. I still feel kind of embarrassed and idiotic when I say "I'm a fan of Teen Wolf", even though I like the show and I think the general consensus is that it's a good one.
Anyway, yeah, life is average to good here. Just pretty uneventful.
- Willow
I haven't ridden one in so long, years probably, so it was weird to just go out, buy one, and start riding again.
I like how much easier it is to bike and how little effort it takes to go so far, and especially now with my fall allergies it's better than running because I don't get as much pollen and crap in my lungs, but I still don't really like it as much as running - it's a bit nerve-wracking and hard for me to control a bike, and not as nice as running in that way (I almost crashed twice trying to navigate small spaces) and it isn't as fun as running, for me. I guess it doesn't do the whole endorphin release thing that running does (if running does do that, I don't remember)? But it still was a workout (for me especially because I'm way too out of shape) and it was really great biking around up to other neighborhoods with the view of the plains there.
After biking my dad and brother went out back to shoot arrows, and I joined them. It fun and challenging (and a little scary once you realize that despite the dull, practically nonexistent tip the arrows we were using could still go through cloth and probably skin). I finally got the hang of it after about maybe 20 shots and actually hit (and got the arrow to stick into) the target. I did however whack the inside of my arm plenty of times with the bowstring until I managed a good stance. I've got a nice big bruise on the inside of my elbow now. Despite that, I want to practice more - it was fun and archery like a nice hobby/skill, even if I'm only derping around in the backyard with a bow we got off of craigslist.
Well, anyway, not much else to write about. It's been nice out the last couple of days, not blisteringly hot like it's been most of the summer. I also saw the first Canada Geese since spring today, the first big sign of winter. I've just gotten into the groove of summer and it's almost fall. Figures.
I've been
And, uh, yeahhhh... I finished watching Supernatural a while ago and since my Tumblr dash has been covered in Teen Wolf stuff lately I decided to try and watch it, despite the name. I still feel kind of embarrassed and idiotic when I say "I'm a fan of Teen Wolf", even though I like the show and I think the general consensus is that it's a good one.
Anyway, yeah, life is average to good here. Just pretty uneventful.
- Willow
Sunday, August 5, 2012
More fruit is being harvested, more work is being procrastinated on, and more chickens are being raised.
The first whispers of fall are here, in the form of cooler days and nights, and dew on the grass in the morning. I'm glad for a break from the unusually stifling heat but sad to know that summer will be over soon, and it's a bit of a shock to realize it's August already.
The raspberries have started to produce more, and so have the feral apple trees that we glean from each year -- and while the bounty is great it's another sign that autumn is getting nearer and nearer.
We've been picking and freezing (or jamming or eating or drying) tons of apples, zucchini and raspberries, and soon there'll be pears and asian pears to pick as well, as the trees out front have fruit that is starting to finally ripen.
Unlike nature, I've made no progress on any of my real life projects - neither the rabbit cages or the fox skin that has been sitting in the freezer for about two months have been touched since before the trip, and I really need to tan the latter and finish building the former.
I'm sort of stuck like a deer in the headlights on the fox skin thing, since I have absolutely no idea what to do and haven't yet got up the courage to pull the thing out, defrost it, and go from there. The fox was the first and so far only thing I've skinned, and it was at the same time surprisingly easy and surprisingly hard. The skin peeled away from the meat without much fuss in most places, but the hardest part was making the first few cuts into the skin, since I'm not very strong and the skin was. The fox was a young, roadkilled dog and unfortunately his head had been ruined and ground into the asphalt by cars. However, the rest of the pelt was fine so we have a headless, pawless skin in the freezer to tan now. I think I'll call him Vincent. I'm also happy to say that, aside from the pulverized and disgusting head, the only thing that really bothered me about skinning the fox was the smell, though I did feel bad for the fox at least he didn't just rot on the side of the road. Now he's been a good learning experience (and proof for me that I could theoretically butcher rabbits at home, since I was pretty much completely fine with the guts and such) and he'll make a nice little pelt to hang on the wall once he's tanned.
The tanning part is the tough part though. I'll eventually get around to it.
At least I have a good reason for not working on the rabbit cages or the fox skin -- animating! I think I'll restart or possibly just give up on the Sherlock thing, but I've started another animation, this time to "El Paso" by Daniell Ate the Sandwich, a local singer/songwriting here. I've been getting more and more youtube subscribers (I'm at 81 right now) and I hope I can finish the short one minute twenty-five second AMV before or soon after I hit 100 subs, but who knows. At the moment it's just a nice way to get better at animating and I'm learning a lot!
We're also going (more trips, yay >:I) to California in a couple of weeks, so that might throw a wrench in my plans of finishing it before too long, especially at the pace I'm going at which... isn't that fast (on the other hand, I've become a master at procrastination).
The gardens are looking great and they are as wild and overgrown and lush as usual...
...But there's not much to say about them - plants aren't the most interesting of things.
However, there is some chicken-related news...
They are fuzzy and feathery and loud and annoying and we've actually had them for a while now but they are still so cute!
The four new chicks are Baji, Anna, Castiel and Chipmunk; A light Brahma, a Rhode Island Red, a Black Sex Link and an Easter Egger, respectively.
They have been growing like weeds and are already close to pullet stage, and they love running around the yard picking at the grass and clover, though they aren't quite sure about what is good food and what is not - at the moment they all seem to think that dried leaves and bark chips are quite the delicious and rare find, but they'll learn in time.
Well, that's about all that's been going on around here lately, and I don't ever know how to end these, so, uh...
Have a good day, everyone?
-Willow
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Home sweet home.
Finally, finally, home!
It's so nice to be back, under the big, beautiful blue skies of Colorado and in our nice house with all our animals and electronics and things. And oh, how I missed you, laptop! Good lord do I hate typing on touchscreens.
So now there's a TON of stuff to do, not just unpacking and getting settled in after the insane trip but also taking care of the garden and doing all the stuff that was already on the to-do list BEFORE we left for two weeks to let everything get overrun and insane. Like tanning the fox skin sitting in our freezer, or animating, or finishing a little mini comic project that has sat around getting dusty for wayyyy too long, or making the rabbit cages that need to be made.
Speaking of rabbit cages, I came to the realization this morning that there really isn't anything keeping me from getting rabbits anymore -- no big trip overseas to use as an excuse for not getting them, nothing holding me back from starting my own rabbitry. I'm both stupidly excited and unreasonably terrified by this.
In other equally terrifying and exciting news, the garden has literally exploded while we were gone.
Well, not literally, but close enough. There are overgrown plants everywhere and the tiny sunflower sprouts that were scattered around the yard when we left have shot up and grown into monstrous, bee-attracting flowering things. The hollyhocks have also flowered, along with the lamb's ear and all of the old overwintered carrots and the weeds which were left unattended over the trip. The zucchini and such have grown so much and there's an unidentified squash of some sort that in only two weeks managed to sprout out of the compost pile, sneak through a garden bed full of potatoes and volunteer catmint, and climb over the neighbor's fence into their yard.
The other, purposefully grown plants are doing well, too, and the raspberries need some serious managing as they've finally started to grow and fruit and have managed to escape and grow around, under or over the ropes we put up to stop them from doing just that. The potatoes, tomatoes, onions, and miscellaneous other plants in the garden have also gotten a lot bigger over the two weeks we were gone, and now the yard looks like the perfect, beautiful, fruit-bearing jungle it's supposed to be.
I've really missed the chickens and the cat and the dog (who missed us even more, the poor, separation-anxiety-stricken thing) and of course the house. And I've gained a new appreciation for deserts and arid places with warm sun and big skies like Colorado. Which surprises me because I love cold, wintry, cloudy, rainy weather (or at least, I did before we spent two weeks in a place that is like that constantly).
Speaking of Ireland, and London, I should probably talk about that for a while now, huh?
Well, the trip didn't really feel like a vacation to me so much as a mission to see as many things as possible in two weeks -- there was no real relaxing, just running around seeing things (not that those things weren't completely amazing and awesome). But it was also not very vacation-like because I, at least, didn't really need a vacation. If anything, being away from home for two weeks just made me love (and, while we were gone, miss) home even more, and realize how happy I am where I am. It's just so wonderful here, and it's a nice thing to realize that I'd rather be here in good ol' Colorful Colorado than in London or a small, quaint, Irish village.
Ireland, speaking of Ireland, was beautiful, and green, and constantly rainy, which was a godsend for us, having come from a place that was literally on fire when we left it. The grass and forests were lush and it was so cool to be able to just hop in the car and drive a couple miles to a medieval castle that you could walk around in, or to the rocky, windswept beaches of Ireland (god do I love the ocean) or to a forest full of strange new plants and animals (if it weren't for the temperature, in some of the woods we walked through you'd think you were in some tropical rain forest, with all the rain and the giant, mossy trees with their novel, strange-shaped leaves).
In fact for the first few days it wasn't even the amazing landscape and all the crazy places you could go to that were the most interesting. It was just the fact that you were in a different country, where even if they didn't really speak a different language, they had accents and drove on the other side of the road and used kilometers instead of miles and had different electric outlets and toilets and currency and all the stores were EUROPEAN STORES and they actually sold gooseberries in them because holy fridge you were in IRELAND.
Also, did I mention I loved, loved, loved, loved being near the ocean? It was so cool to look down off of the edge of a sheer cliff to see the wave-battered rocks below and think of mermaids (the real, evil type of course) and sea monsters and sharks.
I think I must be a Selkie or something and they just hid my seal skin really well. That would explain it.
London was also great, though by the time we got there, after a week of running around Ireland like mad, I, at least, was pretty exhausted and felt like I needed a couple days of rest, not a week of traveling around the city on foot.
We got into London late on a Friday night, I believe, so as we stumbled around pulling luggage and trying to find the apartment where we were going to stay at we passed people everywhere, forming long lines to get into night clubs and hanging out smoking and laughing and bustling around (speaking of smoking, I don't think I've ever been in a place as smoky as London! Yuck. Everywhere, cigaret smoke. I think I breathed in more smoke in one week in London than I ever have in my whole life).
I was very intimidated by the city at first, but by the third day in London I was really liking it and was unfazed by all the hustle and bustle and people. It was so cool to see all the awesome graffiti everywhere, and all the people hanging out, and to shop in the Spitalfield's Market, and I didn't mind the grungyness of the city, even where we were (which was pretty grungy).
I also loved the pigeons there. I don't really know why, and I kind of felt like an insane person for constantly freaking out about the pigeons there, but I found the pigeons really, really awesome and fascinating, and in fact they are the only other thing that I wish we had here (the first being an ocean, of course). It's just so interesting how diverse they are, looks-wise, when they aren't even domesticated. There are brown pigeons and grey pigeons and black pigeons and white-speckled pigeons and all sorts of other mixtures of those colors and us humans didn't even take and make them that way. It's really fascinating (and makes it interesting to think about drawing or writing about them).
We went to the British Museum, the National Gallery, rode on the London Eye, saw Big Ben, saw Buckingham Palace and the changing of the guard, walked across the Thames, and went on a small Sherlock Holmes-themed tour to the real 221B Baker Street, the Sherlock 221B Baker Street (actually 187* North Gower Street), Speedy's Cafe and Bart's Hospital.
*Fun fact: 187 is the penal code for murder.
And in the middle of it all we all got sick, so we lost a day stuck inside with some generic cold or another, watching TV (which, while you expect it to be all sorts of BBC stuff, Doctor Who, Sherlock and other British things, turned out to be Star Trek: Voyager and NCIS).
But aside from that one day of sickness everything was great, and it was just amazing to go into the British Museum or the National Gallery and just see all these amazing works of art or old artifacts just there, out in the open, for the public to view free of charge (I got to see, in person, a bog man, a Monet, a handful of ancient Greek statues and a Van Gogh, among other amazing things).
All that said, though, I was so happy when we finally got home last night, not only because it meant a chance to sleep after staying up for over 24 hours straight, but also because I really did miss Colorado,
and the gardens, and the animals, and now that we're home I'm excited to settle back into the old rhythm of things, to start drawing again (two weeks of doodling without any references takes a surprisingly huge toll on your ability to draw, I've noticed, so I've got to re-learn a few things about anatomy), to start working in the garden more, and to finish some of my old projects and start new ones, such as sorting through and editing and uploading some of the videos and pictures I took of the trip, or looking for a place to get some Champagne D'argent rabbits.
It's great to be home. It really is.
It's so nice to be back, under the big, beautiful blue skies of Colorado and in our nice house with all our animals and electronics and things. And oh, how I missed you, laptop! Good lord do I hate typing on touchscreens.
So now there's a TON of stuff to do, not just unpacking and getting settled in after the insane trip but also taking care of the garden and doing all the stuff that was already on the to-do list BEFORE we left for two weeks to let everything get overrun and insane. Like tanning the fox skin sitting in our freezer, or animating, or finishing a little mini comic project that has sat around getting dusty for wayyyy too long, or making the rabbit cages that need to be made.
Speaking of rabbit cages, I came to the realization this morning that there really isn't anything keeping me from getting rabbits anymore -- no big trip overseas to use as an excuse for not getting them, nothing holding me back from starting my own rabbitry. I'm both stupidly excited and unreasonably terrified by this.
In other equally terrifying and exciting news, the garden has literally exploded while we were gone.
Well, not literally, but close enough. There are overgrown plants everywhere and the tiny sunflower sprouts that were scattered around the yard when we left have shot up and grown into monstrous, bee-attracting flowering things. The hollyhocks have also flowered, along with the lamb's ear and all of the old overwintered carrots and the weeds which were left unattended over the trip. The zucchini and such have grown so much and there's an unidentified squash of some sort that in only two weeks managed to sprout out of the compost pile, sneak through a garden bed full of potatoes and volunteer catmint, and climb over the neighbor's fence into their yard.
The other, purposefully grown plants are doing well, too, and the raspberries need some serious managing as they've finally started to grow and fruit and have managed to escape and grow around, under or over the ropes we put up to stop them from doing just that. The potatoes, tomatoes, onions, and miscellaneous other plants in the garden have also gotten a lot bigger over the two weeks we were gone, and now the yard looks like the perfect, beautiful, fruit-bearing jungle it's supposed to be.
I've really missed the chickens and the cat and the dog (who missed us even more, the poor, separation-anxiety-stricken thing) and of course the house. And I've gained a new appreciation for deserts and arid places with warm sun and big skies like Colorado. Which surprises me because I love cold, wintry, cloudy, rainy weather (or at least, I did before we spent two weeks in a place that is like that constantly).
Speaking of Ireland, and London, I should probably talk about that for a while now, huh?
Well, the trip didn't really feel like a vacation to me so much as a mission to see as many things as possible in two weeks -- there was no real relaxing, just running around seeing things (not that those things weren't completely amazing and awesome). But it was also not very vacation-like because I, at least, didn't really need a vacation. If anything, being away from home for two weeks just made me love (and, while we were gone, miss) home even more, and realize how happy I am where I am. It's just so wonderful here, and it's a nice thing to realize that I'd rather be here in good ol' Colorful Colorado than in London or a small, quaint, Irish village.
Ireland, speaking of Ireland, was beautiful, and green, and constantly rainy, which was a godsend for us, having come from a place that was literally on fire when we left it. The grass and forests were lush and it was so cool to be able to just hop in the car and drive a couple miles to a medieval castle that you could walk around in, or to the rocky, windswept beaches of Ireland (god do I love the ocean) or to a forest full of strange new plants and animals (if it weren't for the temperature, in some of the woods we walked through you'd think you were in some tropical rain forest, with all the rain and the giant, mossy trees with their novel, strange-shaped leaves).
In fact for the first few days it wasn't even the amazing landscape and all the crazy places you could go to that were the most interesting. It was just the fact that you were in a different country, where even if they didn't really speak a different language, they had accents and drove on the other side of the road and used kilometers instead of miles and had different electric outlets and toilets and currency and all the stores were EUROPEAN STORES and they actually sold gooseberries in them because holy fridge you were in IRELAND.
Also, did I mention I loved, loved, loved, loved being near the ocean? It was so cool to look down off of the edge of a sheer cliff to see the wave-battered rocks below and think of mermaids (the real, evil type of course) and sea monsters and sharks.
I think I must be a Selkie or something and they just hid my seal skin really well. That would explain it.
London was also great, though by the time we got there, after a week of running around Ireland like mad, I, at least, was pretty exhausted and felt like I needed a couple days of rest, not a week of traveling around the city on foot.
We got into London late on a Friday night, I believe, so as we stumbled around pulling luggage and trying to find the apartment where we were going to stay at we passed people everywhere, forming long lines to get into night clubs and hanging out smoking and laughing and bustling around (speaking of smoking, I don't think I've ever been in a place as smoky as London! Yuck. Everywhere, cigaret smoke. I think I breathed in more smoke in one week in London than I ever have in my whole life).
I was very intimidated by the city at first, but by the third day in London I was really liking it and was unfazed by all the hustle and bustle and people. It was so cool to see all the awesome graffiti everywhere, and all the people hanging out, and to shop in the Spitalfield's Market, and I didn't mind the grungyness of the city, even where we were (which was pretty grungy).
I also loved the pigeons there. I don't really know why, and I kind of felt like an insane person for constantly freaking out about the pigeons there, but I found the pigeons really, really awesome and fascinating, and in fact they are the only other thing that I wish we had here (the first being an ocean, of course). It's just so interesting how diverse they are, looks-wise, when they aren't even domesticated. There are brown pigeons and grey pigeons and black pigeons and white-speckled pigeons and all sorts of other mixtures of those colors and us humans didn't even take and make them that way. It's really fascinating (and makes it interesting to think about drawing or writing about them).
We went to the British Museum, the National Gallery, rode on the London Eye, saw Big Ben, saw Buckingham Palace and the changing of the guard, walked across the Thames, and went on a small Sherlock Holmes-themed tour to the real 221B Baker Street, the Sherlock 221B Baker Street (actually 187* North Gower Street), Speedy's Cafe and Bart's Hospital.
*Fun fact: 187 is the penal code for murder.
And in the middle of it all we all got sick, so we lost a day stuck inside with some generic cold or another, watching TV (which, while you expect it to be all sorts of BBC stuff, Doctor Who, Sherlock and other British things, turned out to be Star Trek: Voyager and NCIS).
But aside from that one day of sickness everything was great, and it was just amazing to go into the British Museum or the National Gallery and just see all these amazing works of art or old artifacts just there, out in the open, for the public to view free of charge (I got to see, in person, a bog man, a Monet, a handful of ancient Greek statues and a Van Gogh, among other amazing things).
All that said, though, I was so happy when we finally got home last night, not only because it meant a chance to sleep after staying up for over 24 hours straight, but also because I really did miss Colorado,
and the gardens, and the animals, and now that we're home I'm excited to settle back into the old rhythm of things, to start drawing again (two weeks of doodling without any references takes a surprisingly huge toll on your ability to draw, I've noticed, so I've got to re-learn a few things about anatomy), to start working in the garden more, and to finish some of my old projects and start new ones, such as sorting through and editing and uploading some of the videos and pictures I took of the trip, or looking for a place to get some Champagne D'argent rabbits.
It's great to be home. It really is.
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