Please join Still Waters Lavender at the OSU Extension Office, June 6, on the Deschutes Country Fairgrounds from 9a-4p. We will be selling a variety of lavender as well as some of our most popular products.
On June 13, we will be participating for a second year at the 6th Annual Rhubarb Festival held on the L & S Gardens, 50808 S Huntington Road in LaPine, Oregon. This festival is one of the most fun days with a homemade pie contest and brewery tasting contest. There is food and drinks available on site as well as a beer and wine garden. Music ranges from rock n' roll, hip hop, blue grass and country western. Festival hours are from 9a-4p. Come and expect a most unique experience!
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Another Time, Another Place: Central Oregon Saturday Market, May 23-24, 2015
COME JOIN US
Saturday May 23
&
Sunday, May 24
for the Opening Day
of the
Central Oregon Saturday Market
find us in the parking lot
across from
the Bend Downtown Library
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
May Flowers: Central Oregon Builders Association (COBA) Spring and Garden Show
This was our second COBA Spring and Garden Show. We take this time to thank all of you who stopped by our store, visited with us and purchased products from us. Please take time and enjoy the photos presented here today...
Gene and I arrived at the Redmond Fairgrounds at approximately 6:30 p.m. We thought set up was going to be Saturday morning so when Gene called and was told it was Friday evening, we scurried and packed everything into the car and pickup and away we went. I kept telling Gene it keeps us young but he just mumbled something and kept loading things into the back of the pickup.
Plants, plants and more plants. People loved the plants, lots of questions--good questions that made us stop and think. Lavender is being very well received in Central Oregon: likes our soil, likes our climate, deer don't like it and takes very little water (once established). It goes with anything and just about all parts of it are usable for something. Lavender! Culinary, landscaping, crafting! The only part of the lavender I'm not sure about are the roots: does anyone do anything with the roots of this versatile plant?
April 30, 2015--8:00 p.m. Set up. |
From top left to bottom right: moth repellents, linen pillows, travellers bags, brochures |
Plants, plants and more plants. People loved the plants, lots of questions--good questions that made us stop and think. Lavender is being very well received in Central Oregon: likes our soil, likes our climate, deer don't like it and takes very little water (once established). It goes with anything and just about all parts of it are usable for something. Lavender! Culinary, landscaping, crafting! The only part of the lavender I'm not sure about are the roots: does anyone do anything with the roots of this versatile plant?
Soap, lavender hydrosol, traditional lavender wands and our daughter's handcrafted lipbalm. which flew out of the basket ($3 nontinted, $4 tinted) |
Ashdene "I Love Lavender" china and the two different styles of wynesacs we carry. |
Chicken doorstops filled with lavender and rice... |
Friday, April 24, 2015
Yesterday is but a Memory but May 1, 2 and 3 are Tomorrow's Promises of More Good Things To Come
A couple of the printed linen (lined with muslin) pillows I made especially for sale at the Central Oregon Master Gardener Association Spring Seminar. |
This is one of my favorite sayings. William Morris was an English textile and wallcovering designer. He is best known as the founder of the Arts and Crafts movement which began in England in the late 1800s.
I am working on this saying of only
having useful and/or beautiful things in my home. I think it is one of those lifelong works-in-progress as far as it relates to me. Also what my husband considers beautiful and what I consider beautiful are sometimes at odds with one another. For instance, when he asked if he could put a dead elk head on my wall...
Kristi, my daughter, makes this wonderful lip balm. (I have some of it on my lips right now.) It is wonderfully soothing and quite reasonably priced. |
Still Waters Lavender will be attending the 2015 Central Oregon Builders Association Spring Home and Garden Show, May 1, 2, and 3, 2015 also being held at the Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center in Redmond, Oregon.
We attended this show last year and, it was such a good show, we signed up for another three-day event. We hope to see you there and, should you come, please come by our booth and let us know you saw this on our web site.
We make you kindly welcome.
http://www.connectiondepot.com/oregon/bend-redmond-sunriver/coba-spring-home-and-garden-show/
Thursday, April 16, 2015
"A Gift For You" (Women's Expo in Bend April 11, 2015)
On April 11, 2015, 7 a.m., Gene and I loaded our truck and our car and drove into the Riverhouse Convention Center in Bend, Oregon. We were helped at the door to unload our products, we were provided sustenance and our spot was ready for our arrival. The ladies who put on this event were made sure we were happy with our location and asked many times during the day if there was any way they could help or anything we needed. Our next door neighbors were some energetic exercise ladies and a t-shirt vendor. The exercise ladies had way too much energy but helped in making for a fun day. The t-shirt vendor had quality merchandise and it was nice to be placed between these two vendors. I think we complimented one another quite well.
On Sunday (the next day), we were off to the Oregon Lavender Association meeting. I hate the travel over the hill--this time we went over Government Pass--but wouldn't miss visiting and learning from the knowledgeable--dare I say wise--members. What an extraordinary group of people. We were home around 9 p.m. I thought we would be dead tired but both days were so different and downright exhilarating! Next Saturday, April 18, is the Central Oregon Master Gardeners show. They are such a good group: I can hardly wait!
The middle table with Ashdene "I Love Lavender" bone china, wine bags, moth repellents, lavender hydrosol, lavender essential oil, and sachets. |
A wedding in your future? --lavender is an excellent idea to use in decorating as well as food. |
On Sunday (the next day), we were off to the Oregon Lavender Association meeting. I hate the travel over the hill--this time we went over Government Pass--but wouldn't miss visiting and learning from the knowledgeable--dare I say wise--members. What an extraordinary group of people. We were home around 9 p.m. I thought we would be dead tired but both days were so different and downright exhilarating! Next Saturday, April 18, is the Central Oregon Master Gardeners show. They are such a good group: I can hardly wait!
Tuesday, April 7, 2015
Gone to the Birds...
There are herons in the pond,
Kildeer crying in the air;
Hummingbirds at the feeding station
And songbirds everywhere...
And I say to myself, "What a beautiful, most wonderful world."
I have been watching spring work her magic... a leaf here, a bud there... oh! and over there the tulips and daffodils are in full bloom bringing their colors to a cold and austere-looking land. I was wondering for a while whether they would make it out of the cold, cold ground but they were just little things one day and the next day, it seemed, they were up and showing their beauty and the promise that another spring had arrived on the high desert. We who were weary of the wait just needed to have a bit more patience.
We--my husband and I--are weeding the lavender and trimming back some of the varieties. Weeds, like time, wait for no man (or woman for that matter). While outside, on my hands and knees, the trill of a meadowlark caught my ear. I sat back on my knees and listened to the sounds of the morning: the quail were in my neighbor's yard across the way and the ravens gave their cacophonous sounds as they flew over the next door neighbor's pasture. High up in the heavens were two hawks, facing one another flying with their wings outstretched, their talons together crying their high pitched battle cry as they flew almost upside down. As I walked to the house, I saw a kildeer by the pond. Coming closer than I should, it scurried forward and gave its high-pitched call and scurried some more. A couple weeks ago, three kildeer were flying over the lavender calling to one another and, perhaps, summoning the remaining two (for a total of five kildeer) who we had last year. I believe they are making another nest in the lavender but I haven't found it yet. I suppose that a nest of baby kildeer is good enough reason to leave a patch of weeds in the lavender.
The other morning, I had a blue heron in the pond, standing so still that I would have missed him if he had not turned his head when I opened the door. I ran for the camera and tried to take a photograph but scared it away. In the willow tree near by the pond, songbirds--mostly sparrows--sang their sweet, sweet melody. They come down to the creek, along with the robins, to take a drink and a bath. I spend many quality minutes watching them as they frolic in the water. A friend of mine told me hummingbirds stayed all winter in her neck of the woods and she leaves a feeder out all year, bringing it in only at night when it freezes. I decided to try that this year. Usually, I put the hummingbird feeders out on April 15--tax day. There's just something satisfying in putting those feeders up on that day: my way of turning the page from a past necessity to a present liberty for another year. I was wonderfully rewarded a few days ago at seeing a scraggly little hummingbird come to the feeder and stay for the longest time. I wondered how far he must have flown to look so rough and I was glad the food was ready for him. He has not been back, to my knowledge, but I think of him every now and then and wonder where he is now.
A glimpse of a bluebird flying over the dry lot caught my eye a couple days ago. They are such pretty little birds. And, today, a friend heard a meadowlark off in the distance, singing its pretty refrain as we were getting into the car. "What is that" she asked. I answered. We listened, my friend and I. And in the distance, the pretty little bird identifiable by its yellow breast and "V" breastplate sang as it welcomed spring.
Spring has indeed worked her magic: in the budding of the trees, in the kaleidoscope of color and bounty of flowers and in the beautiful songs of the birds. And I say to myself, "What a beautiful, most wonderful world."
We--my husband and I--are weeding the lavender and trimming back some of the varieties. Weeds, like time, wait for no man (or woman for that matter). While outside, on my hands and knees, the trill of a meadowlark caught my ear. I sat back on my knees and listened to the sounds of the morning: the quail were in my neighbor's yard across the way and the ravens gave their cacophonous sounds as they flew over the next door neighbor's pasture. High up in the heavens were two hawks, facing one another flying with their wings outstretched, their talons together crying their high pitched battle cry as they flew almost upside down. As I walked to the house, I saw a kildeer by the pond. Coming closer than I should, it scurried forward and gave its high-pitched call and scurried some more. A couple weeks ago, three kildeer were flying over the lavender calling to one another and, perhaps, summoning the remaining two (for a total of five kildeer) who we had last year. I believe they are making another nest in the lavender but I haven't found it yet. I suppose that a nest of baby kildeer is good enough reason to leave a patch of weeds in the lavender.
The other morning, I had a blue heron in the pond, standing so still that I would have missed him if he had not turned his head when I opened the door. I ran for the camera and tried to take a photograph but scared it away. In the willow tree near by the pond, songbirds--mostly sparrows--sang their sweet, sweet melody. They come down to the creek, along with the robins, to take a drink and a bath. I spend many quality minutes watching them as they frolic in the water. A friend of mine told me hummingbirds stayed all winter in her neck of the woods and she leaves a feeder out all year, bringing it in only at night when it freezes. I decided to try that this year. Usually, I put the hummingbird feeders out on April 15--tax day. There's just something satisfying in putting those feeders up on that day: my way of turning the page from a past necessity to a present liberty for another year. I was wonderfully rewarded a few days ago at seeing a scraggly little hummingbird come to the feeder and stay for the longest time. I wondered how far he must have flown to look so rough and I was glad the food was ready for him. He has not been back, to my knowledge, but I think of him every now and then and wonder where he is now.
A glimpse of a bluebird flying over the dry lot caught my eye a couple days ago. They are such pretty little birds. And, today, a friend heard a meadowlark off in the distance, singing its pretty refrain as we were getting into the car. "What is that" she asked. I answered. We listened, my friend and I. And in the distance, the pretty little bird identifiable by its yellow breast and "V" breastplate sang as it welcomed spring.
Spring has indeed worked her magic: in the budding of the trees, in the kaleidoscope of color and bounty of flowers and in the beautiful songs of the birds. And I say to myself, "What a beautiful, most wonderful world."
Thursday, April 2, 2015
Shows and Expos in April
Still Waters Lavender is happy to announce they will be attending the following shows:
On Saturday, April 11, we will be a vendor at the Cascade Women's Expo, located in the Riverhouse Convention Center, Bend, Oregon. Doors open to the public at 10a and close at 4p. This one day FREE event will be the largest gathering of women in Bend and will offer services and products of interest that match the needs of women as well as their budget. So grab your girlfriend, your mom, your daughter and come have some fun with us! Visit the Cascade Women's Exp website at http://www.facebook.com/cascadewomensexpo.
On Saturday, April 18, Still Waters Lavender is happy to be repeating its appearance at the Central Oregon Master Gardeners Spring Seminar at the Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center in Redmond, Oregon. The seminar hours are from 8a-4:30p; the Garden Market opens from 9:30a-4:30p. This is a great time to meet locals with helpful seminars as well as gardening items, especially good healthy plants. As an organization, the Central Oregon Master Gardeners Association promotes and supports local crafts and businesses. Visit the Central Oregon Master Gardeners Association website for more information (http://www.gocomga.com/)
On Saturday, April 11, we will be a vendor at the Cascade Women's Expo, located in the Riverhouse Convention Center, Bend, Oregon. Doors open to the public at 10a and close at 4p. This one day FREE event will be the largest gathering of women in Bend and will offer services and products of interest that match the needs of women as well as their budget. So grab your girlfriend, your mom, your daughter and come have some fun with us! Visit the Cascade Women's Exp website at http://www.facebook.com/cascadewomensexpo.
On Saturday, April 18, Still Waters Lavender is happy to be repeating its appearance at the Central Oregon Master Gardeners Spring Seminar at the Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center in Redmond, Oregon. The seminar hours are from 8a-4:30p; the Garden Market opens from 9:30a-4:30p. This is a great time to meet locals with helpful seminars as well as gardening items, especially good healthy plants. As an organization, the Central Oregon Master Gardeners Association promotes and supports local crafts and businesses. Visit the Central Oregon Master Gardeners Association website for more information (http://www.gocomga.com/)
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Gene and I are excited to meet new friends as well as see old friends. |
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