28 May 2021

another option

 


This used travel trailer, a Gulf Stream Vintage Cruiser, was actually for sale at an affordable price, located near us. So we took a drive to Conroe to look it over. It had already sold but we were still able to go inside and check it out.

We LOVED the retro feel! This one had sea foam green trim inside and out, including a huge refrigerator/freezer in the same color. It also comes with teal or red trim, or an old-fashioned “woody” look. But this one’s floor plan included a queen-size bed plus bunk beds — sleeping a total of 6. More than we need . . . I found other floor plans on line and drew one we thought we’d prefer.

We are not seriously ready to buy at this time, but I’m jotting down what we find and like in my sketchbook to refer to later.

27 May 2021

travel possibilities

 


For a couple of weeks now we have been talking “pros and cons” of getting a small travel trailer. Then on the drive towards Hillsboro last week, we saw this Scamp 16’ Casita — LOVE❣️

Unfortunately they are very hard to find. We’d prefer to buy used — Scamp owners tend to hold on to them. One very good reason is that the repair parts stay the same; if something on an old model needs fixing, parts can easily be found. And even before the recent market shortages, the factory only make a limited number each year. Buyers might be on a waiting list for well over a year or more. A bit pricey too. But so darned cute, very lightweight to pull and fits under the existing carport. This model’s floor plan has a dry bathroom and separate dinette so we could leave the one on the end in “bed mode”. (My scale is off; the end dinette turns into a full-sized bed.)

24 May 2021

chuck wagon building

 


This sketch is from last week, but we have had very spotty internet. Options are extremely limited here in the country, and what service there is has maxed out on capacity with so many doing work and school from home, and tv streaming.

We took an unexpected road trip north to bring Michael and Mikala home. They had flown to Kansas for a cousin’s graduation but their flight home was cancelled. So Michael’s father drove them down; we met him part-way to bring them on home.

Early in the drive, Bill stopped at this convenience store for coffee — overpriced and bitter, but the building murals were cool. In my view, a covered chuck wagon; on the other side, Texas Longhorns!

17 May 2021

a new (to me) wildflower

 

As I was mucking donkey poo in the north pasture yesterday, I checked on the progress of a recent wildflower find growing there. When I first saw it, I wondered how a squash came to be planted in the middle of the enclosure. Not being sure of what it was, I waited and watched, hoping the goats would not eat it.

Near as I can tell in my Texas wildflower field guides, I think this is a buffalo gourd. Still waiting to see if gourds actually form.

Bill brought me the first ripe grape tomato from his garden — I quickly sketched it with my pen and ate it before adding color. (If you look closely, you’ll see a pencil reminder to smudge the lightly-penciled-in white highlights that I forgot to erase!)


10 May 2021

weekend sketching

 

This morning I added watercolor to this random sketch done yesterday on the back patio — I was talking with my mom on the phone while swinging slowly on a porch swing (just to make things interesting?). The bags of plant food and garden gloves are sitting on a plant stand next to the swing but I left that out — keeping it simple!

And this unfinished sketch is on the back of the page — from Saturday, I had just started to sketch 2 boys playing corn hole when they left. Our daughter and son-in-law were hosting a party for the senior FFA kids since the school cancelled their regular banquet.

08 May 2021

what’s in front of me

 

Back to simply drawing whatever is in front of me in a continuous contour line.

Also known as avoiding cat grooming time.

06 May 2021

a beautiful “new” book

 

After what seemed a very long wait, I received this beautiful book today, from a used book seller here in Texas. (It took longer for them to mail it to me from Dallas than it takes for ordered items to arrive from the UK!)

Published in 2011 by The Daughters of the Republic of Texas, this book contains lithograph copies of over 100 watercolors of native Texas wildflowers, painted in the 1840s and 1850s and bound in a book by Eliza Griffin Johnston as a birthday gift to her husband.

Below are 3 of my favorites: white prickly poppy, Western Indian paintbrush, and of course, Texas bluebonnet.







02 May 2021

after playing . . .

 


My desk and palettes are a bit of a mess after playing . . . so I sketched it.

I also jotted down a quote that I found on Favian Ee’s Facebook page because I wanted to remember it to think on later.

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