Monday, October 13, 2014

How to Crochet a Christmas Lavender Ornament


The doll on the left is crocheted with doublestitch;
the doll on the right is crocheted with treble stitch.

Supplies Needed:  Crochet Thread #5,
Crochet Needle #5, Dried Lavender on Stem
 and Scissors
Glue and Wooden Beads
Body: chain 15. Close with slip stitch. Then three rows of treble crochet (or double crochet). Then five rows of chain 5 (4) and single stitch in loop.

Arms: Tie about 18 inches of thread around bead and 9 chain stitch crochet both threads.
Tie the thread off by pulling it through the loop and then fasten on either side of crochet body.

Hat: 5 chains, join with slip stitch. Then chain 4 (3), and 19 treble crochet (dc) twice. two chains then sc in next treble crochet (dc), sc. Finish row. Then rows 5-9 are treble crochet (double crochet) in each sc making two rows. This is the brim. For the hanger, chain 40 and attach to top of hat. Be careful where you place the hanger because the ornament will tip too much if placed too far back. Glue the hat onto a wooden ball.

Take a bunch of lavender, tie it off and place in skirt. Take a short piece of thread and tie around doll, tie down arms to side and tie ends into a bow. Break off the extra lavender stems and apply glue. Tie a small length of crochet thread around the arms and tie a bow.  (This holds on the lavender as well as holds the arms down.)


 We are now ready to assemble the head to the body. Let dry and, voila, a Christmas ornament!



Not only the varigated purple and purple, but try other colors of thread!  

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Death Comes With a Pounce... In Memory of Little Duck, Zeus and Nellie

My precious Little Duck, Zeus and Nellie were killed today by a dog.  If the dog had been hungry, I could more readily accept and move on.  But the dog was not hungry;he deliberately killed those little ducks in a frenzy for the sake of killing.  How frightened those babies must have been.  

Nick took the shovel and dug the holes in the flower bed around the flag pole.  We buried Little Duck, Zeus and Nellie together. 



Death comes with a crawl, or comes with a pounce,
And whether he's slow or spry,
It isn't the fact that you're dead that counts,
But only how did you die?

(From "How Did You Die" by Edmund Vance Cooke)

Good bye, my precious Little Duck
Good bye, funny little Zeus and Nellie 
You will always be a moment of wonder to me.

The Saga of Little Duck...continues

Little Duck has been with us now for one week.   We brought the three ducklings--Little Duck, Zeus and Nellie--outside.  We then sat out there most of the day under the tree watching the three little ducks.  When we brought them in, they had clean shavings, water and feeders full.  Baby chicks didn't seem to miss them.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Where Did You Come From? The Saga of a Little Duck


This is the story of Little Duck.  We do not know where she came from:  we only know she is here and we feel blessed that she is now part of our lives.  The first time we saw Little Duck, she was frantically running north in the middle of the lavender field at Hearth Cricket Farm on August 30, 2014 in the middle of the day. What was a baby duck doing out here all alone in the middle of the lavender field?  The baby duck became entangled in some weeds and I cupped by hands and scooped her up.  "Where did you come from, little duck?" I asked.  "How did you get out here?"  She did not struggle but looked out at me with such acceptance of her circumstance.  Such a tiny creature in such a large field and all alone.  I walked towards my husband and daughter who were working the tractor and the weeder.  My daughter looked up, "What's ya got there, mom?" she asked.  "Guess!"  I whispered.  I couldn't talk; I was participating in a mystery: this tiny wisp of life was bigger than the moment I was in.   "What?"  my husband and daughter shouted in unison.  I tried to talk again.  Kristi saw the little yellow tail sticking out the other end of my cupped hands and exclaimed, "A baby chick."  I shook by head side-to-side.  "No," I mouthed.  I opened my cupped hands very slowly until they could see the tiny little fuzzy yellow head with the button eyes and little bill that still had the "egg tooth".  "A duck!  Where did you find a baby duck?"  I told them the story and we started looking for a nest.  My husband was sick, thinking he might have run over a nest of baby ducks.  But, as hard as we looked, we couldn't find any other ducks.  My younger grandson, Jake, curiosity getting the better of him, came over.  Then, my older grandson, Nick, came walking across the field to see what was going on.  "Well, grandma", Nick said as he threw his arms around me.  "You now have your duck for your pond."   I was overcome with emotion:  a duck, a perfect little yellow, fuzzy baby duck that just appeared from nowhere!  There she was sitting in my hand as quiet as could be with those button black eyes.  She was just what I wanted!

We started looking under the bushes, under the weeds, in the trees, outside the field in the grasses lining the roads, in the goat pasture, in the rocks--anywhere the little fellow might have come from so we could put her back with her family but to no avail.  No other baby ducks; no nest; no mother.  A mystery!  My daughter fetched her carrier; we put straw and some water in the carrier and sat it out in the field as the little duck cried for her family.  We listened to her calling for her family but there was no answer; no other cry save the one from the little duck trapped in a carrier.  Finally, we brought her to the house. She was shivering and we knew we had to do something more for her or she would die.  We watched in amazement as she climbed the walls of the carrier:  what kind of duck climbs like that--using the claws on the end of her feet to hang on to the sides of the carrier... and what kind of duck has claws!

Kristi and I dragged the horse watering trough into the hallway, lined it with straw and hung a heat lamp up.  We put water and baby duck in the trough and she immediately sat under the heat lamp.  My husband and Kristi went to town and purchased food and, since babies shouldn't be alone, Kristi bought some baby chickens to keep the baby duck company.  Under the heat lamp, baby duck stopped shivering; she also liked swimming in the tiny plastic tub I put in the trough.  With the coming of the baby chicks; however, we took out the plastic tub because we were afraid the baby chickens would drown.  Poor baby duck!  We put food in:  the round plastic container and the metal oval container held duck food; the  long red container belonged to the baby chicks.  But, baby chicks are little pigs and didn't care what the food was in:  they wanted it all!  One baby chick decided she was queen of the hill, climbed up on the metal oval container, right in the middle of the food, and went to sleep. We decided to name baby duck Jesus (if a boy) and Jesusa (if a girl).  A most precious gift, a mystery was our little Jesus/Jesusa and we wanted to give her/him a fitting name.

Kristi inquired among her friends and they asked if there were any marks on baby duck.  "No," Kristi said.  The answer coming from Kristi's friends was that if there had been marks on baby duck, then it was likely that a bird of prey--hawk, most likely--had snatched baby duck and, for whatever reason, had released her over the lavender farm.  Another response was that, if there were no marks on baby duck, a crow most likely snatched her, couldn't hold on to her and baby duck fell to the earth.  Since we were there, the crow couldn't reclaim his victim and flew away.  Crows have a regular flying pattern around here so this seemed to be the most likely answer.  However, we have wanted (and looked for) ducks for a long time and prefer to believe Jesus/Jesusa is a gift from heaven (and we definitely do not want to look a gift duck in the mouth, so to speak).


Jesus/Jesusa and Jake--we love baby duck

We were on a roll for ducks!  A friend told Kristi that a friend of hers had a mama duck who was mean to her babies and that we could have them if we went and picked them up. "How much?" we asked.  "Free!" was the answer.  Free is a very good price and so Kristi, Jake and I piled into the car and headed to Prineville to pick two more baby ducks up.  "You have to catch them," they said.  "Okey, dokey.  No problem!" we responded.  Kristi plugged in the address on her gps and away we went down the road, carrier in the back full of straw and passengers in the car with visions of waddling duck tails in their heads.  We pulled into the driveway, Kristi and Jake hopped out of the car, the fellow came out of the house and all three hopped over an electric fence and walked  to an outbuilding.  The fellow handed Kristi this huge butterfly net and said, "There they are!" as he pointed to two little ducks waddling behind four bigger ducklings who were behind the mama duck who had adopted the two littler baby ducks.  I saw the butterfly net go down, I saw Kristi getting the baby duck out of the net and handing it off to Jake.  I saw Jake as he hopped the electric fence (I cringed each time he hopped that fence) and gently put the first baby duck into the carrier and then hopping the fence again and running across the lawn to his mom who had captured the second baby duck in the butterfly net.  Kristi handed off the second baby duck to Jake who hopped over the electric fence a fourth time (careful, Jake) and put the second baby duck in with her sibling.  Kristi thanked the fellow and then she and Jake came back to the car (fifth hop over the electric fence for Jake, second hop for Kristi) and put the little baby ducks in the back of the car.  Off we went, happy as we could be with two--a little bit older than our baby duck--baby ducks.  We talked over names for the two older baby ducks and Jake named the two ducks Zeus and Nellie.  Where that morning I had no ducks; I now had three!  Could life get any sweeter!

We came home and put Zeus and Nellie in the trough with Jesus/Jesusa.  The baby chicks were little beasts--pecking and just being annoying--towards the two older baby ducks.  "Who are you?  Where did you come from?  You smell funny!"  We could almost hear the baby chicks saying to the older baby ducks.  The older baby ducks took the pecking and the annoying little baby chickens for as long as they could and then they started defending themselves.  "Oh," I thought.  "This doesn't look so good!"  But as time went on, things settled down and the babies started behaving themselves and getting along.
Baby Duck with Baby Chicks

Baby Duck with Two Older Baby Ducks

Where did little baby duck come from, I ask myself.  It is a wonderful mystery that, more than likely, shall never be explained.  We can conjecture but, sometimes, we need those moments of wonder.  Sometimes, like baby duck, it's just best to accept the circumstance.  Sometimes, I forget to just be thankful.   I am thankful for this little duck.  Welcome, Little Duck, to your new home.  We make you kindly welcome.


Tuesday, August 12, 2014

2014 Long Stemmed Lavender Varieties Ready to Harvest (Instructions on Drying Lavender Included)

Lavendula x intermedia 'Grosso'.
The principle of drying flowers is to 
remove the moisture from them while 
retaining their original shape and color.

Five long-stemmed lavender varieties, Lavendula x intermedia 'Grosso', 'Gros Bleu', 'Edelweiss', 'Impress Purple', and 'Super' are ready to be harvested.  U-pick is $5/bundle; I-pick is $8/bundle (a bundle is 125 stems).   We also are offering an English lavender, Lavendula angustifolia' Purple Bouquet.  This lavender is beautiful in wreaths.  All six of these lavenders hang dry well. 

Still Waters Lavender is open Wednesday-Saturday, 10a-6p. 

Please provide your own cutting utensil.
"Flowers of lavender quilted in a cap, comfort the brain very well."
-William Turner, written in 1551-



Lavendula x intermedia 'Gros Blue".
Good air circulation will ensure that your flowers dry as quickly as possible, 
which will result in better color preservation and cut down on the possible growth of mold.   

Lavendula x intermedia 'Edelweiss'.
Cut the full length of the stem.
Strip all leaves from stems.
Lavendula x intermedia 'Impress Purple'
 Gather lavender into small bunches,
fasten each bunch at the end with a rubber band
.

Lavendula x intermedia 'Super'.
Hang the bunches so that air can pass between them.
Lavendula angustifolia 'Purple Bouquet'.
Hang the bunches away from direct light.


 L.ang 'Purple Bouquet''.
If there is too much light, cover each bunch with a paper bag,
tying the open top of the bag around the stems with string.
It takes approximately two weeks for lavender to dry.

"Nothing is ever wasted if it makes a happy memory."

Monday, August 11, 2014

... The Weapons of a Farmer are Mighty...


Did you know that one knapweed plant can produce up to 25,000 seeds per year?  I read that little tidbit in a pamphlet I picked up at the Deschutes County Fair this year.  Along with knapweed, we have some other nasty noxious invaders that are a scourge to us as well as to our animals.  Internet searching, reading everything we can get our hands on, talking to various agencies and scratching our heads for answers on how to get rid of the weeds is a constant war for my husband and I and we plan on winning.  Not only do weeds threaten our plants economically, they threaten our land ecologically.  Also, weeding  is time consuming and we needed a victory yesterday.

Earlier this spring my husband and I saw a YouTube video of a weeder, found on a FaceBook Page devoted to lavender farmers.  He called the lavender farmer in Washington State who had one of these machines and then called the company who made the machine.  The company, located in Quebec, Canada, answered speaking French...oops!  Thank heaven the fellow on the other end could speak and understand American English.  He told my husband of a distributor in the USA--Oregon, to be exact, and the third call my husband made was to the Oregon company.  They had one left; we said "sold" and the next day were on our way to Woodburn, saw it, asked questions (one important question for us was whether it could be used with drip irrigation), and, in about a week, it was home.  
daughter driving/husband's "dry run" on weeder

it's working?  it's working--whew!  It is working!



Easy to attach/easy to use

Good visibility  for seeing drip irrigation











.....SO FAR, SO GOOD....  One more weapon in our arsenal to defeat this enemy!

Monday, August 4, 2014

We No Longer Have Crafting Lavender for Sale



We currently have six varieties of English Lavender (Lavendula angustifolia) ready for harvest: 'True Hidcote', 'Melissa', 'Sachet', 'French Fields', 'Croxton's Wild' and 'Peter Pan'. English lavender has a sweet fragrance and  these six varieties were planted especially for crafters. Each variety (cultivar) has a unique aroma and we invite you to come and walk the field and experience the different sweet fragrances for yourself. Note that these six varieties were planted in 2013, came through -32 degrees weather this last winter along with the 90 degree weather we're having now and they still have two more years of growth before being considered mature plants.  Still Waters Lavender is located at 3990 NE 33rd Street; Redmond, Oregon 97756. We are open Wednesday-Saturday, 10a-6p. Price for one (1) bunch: U-pick is $5; I-pick is $8. (A bunch is considered 125 stems). Please bring your own cutting utensil.   


'True Hidcote', med. purple
'True Hidcote', popular in lavender lemonade

'Melissa', pink flowers (buds are white)


Melissa is also used in culinary; adds a "peppery" flavor.

'Sachet', lt. purple

'Sachet', prized for its sweet fragrance used in filling of pillows


'French Fields', med. purple
'French Fields', so named because of its resemblance to the lavender fields in France

'Croxton's Wild', buds are white; flowers are purple

'Croxton's Wild', beautiful plant; please do not feel obligated to do anything with them.

'Peter Pan', med. purple

'Peter Pan', compact; good for patio

Thank you for visiting our website.  We hope to see you soon.