Flora & Fauna & ***
As has been previously related to some of you, Rebecca will be the featured artist at Z.A.A.P. (http://www.zaapart.org/ ), one of our art organizations in Muskingum county. (We invite all of you to come to its June auction fundraiser.) Mrs.T worked quite hard this winter to complete several paintings – of trees, of course – for that show. Because they have a shipper right in Bucerias, we arranged to have the paintings shipped back by ***, one of the biggest and most reputable services in the world. What followed has been discouraging and disheartening. And none too beneficial to R's psychic health. Below you will find a much compressed description of the events; she really is in mourning. As you can see in the following pictures
http://www.flickr.com/photos/9151458@N07/sets/72157626797189920/
three paintings did not arrive in good condition. We know the original packing was substantial; it was registered as weighing 70kg (almost 160lbs). The paintings arrived at our house in cardboard boxes with the bubble wrap in shreds. The photos do not really show the extent of the damage. The two extensively damaged works have a cut/puncture - a cut that went through a piece of cardboard (by the label on it evidently from repacking), through the bubble wrap, through the back of one painting, and through the front of another. A third painting had its canvas stressed out of shape. All in all, not the careful shipping we expected. There were many calls and emails, including several to our shipper in Bucerias. Right now the paintings are being repaired and Mrs.T will attempt to repaint the damaged areas, but the paintings never will be the same.
You will notice that the editor has replaced the name of the world renowned shipping company with ***. The editor felt it not wise to put the name in print as that might bring legal repercussions.
For those of you in
Here is Mrs. T's synopsis of events:
"Art is long and time is fleeting", or something like that. At any rate my art was quite fleeting, or maybe it was flitting. *** lost my 10 pictures that I had painted in
Dan and I have been really enjoying our home in the woods. One of the nice things is all the animals. Our pond has been visited several times by a pair of wood ducks. And yes, we do have a turtle this year. Exactly what kind I don't know because every time I try to get close he dives. We have lots of birds, including wild turkeys who wander by occasionally. The last time this happened there was a male strutting around displaying his tail feathers for a couple of turkey hens who didn't seem all that impressed. I think the prettiest birds are the scarlet tanagers. We have a red tail hawk and a pileated woodpecker. (A very large bird -dt.) The noisiest is the whip-poor-will who repeats his name seven zillion and three times each evening and morning. (As good as an alarm clock –dt) The phoebes have eggs in their nest - an engineering marvel - outside Dan's office window.
Of course our largest visitors are the deer. The other morning about 6 AM I was peacefully sleeping. Dan grabbed me, "Rebecca. Rebecca." he called in a stage whisper, "Look!" (She always wants to see the wildlife –dt) I slowly sat up and peered bleary eyed over the headboard. There were two deer meandering along our driveway. They would stop and graze every few feet. How nice. Suddenly I realized that they were stopping every few feet to munch on another clump of my lilies! I leaped out of bed and ran out on the front porch and started yelling at them. "STOP THAT!! BAD DEER!!" They froze for a moment, their tails flashed up and then they leaped down over the hill. When I came in Dan had a funny look on his face, I think he may have been trying not to laugh at me. (I cannot deny nor affirm that comment –dt) Be that as it may, a few days later when four more deer wandered up the path they turned when they came to the lilies and sedately ambled down the hill, leaving my lilies strictly alone. I guess I told them!
It must be true that April showers (and May rains also –dt) bring May flowers because I have a lot of lovely flowers this month. My irises are lovely; I have at least four different varieties and thank goodness the deer don't eat them. I had some lovely allium which I planted last year and they bloomed very enthusiastically. My lilies of the valley are slowly spreading, (Don't you love the way they smell?) I bought five new evergreen trees at the Dawes Arboretum plant sales. (Dawes is one of the premier arboretums in the country. www.dawesarb.org The very historical Dawes family includes ambassadors and a vice president; one of them even rode with
Well, we shortly are going off on a 3-week vacation. First to
Dan and Rebecca
www.casa-de-terrible.blogspot.com
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