I finished these quilts last week – my first projects upon bringing home the new PFAFF after the Christmas holidays – but am just getting around to posting about them now. Two quilts for two pregnant friends made with the American Jane fabric line Punctuation. I am pretty much in love with all retro imagery in fabric and also fabric that includes writing or textual motifs – so this line and the alphabetical center panel thrill me to no end. I am quite pleased with how these turned out (I am pretty limited in my quilting skills) – and used them as an exercise in how different quilting stitches work on my machine. These measure 38 x 54 inches.
More detail:

B. and I took ourselves a little post-holiday break this weekend and hopped the ferry to Bowen for a much-needed overnight escape. Just the two of us, hiking Killarney Lake, hot-tubbing in the afternoon and cooking a gourmet dinner and breakfast in our little rented cabin….
All within 45 minutes of our home! I really do love that aspect of where we live – so close to getting away all the time – and Bowen is just a bus and ferry-ride away. I’m thinking summer dinners at Tuscany after work sound like a nice treat – and we can make it there and home in time for bed.
In March we have scheduled an overnight to Lummi Island in Washington state to have dinner and stay at the Willows Inn on their Sunday-night special (dinner, overnight and breakfast for $235). Another close-by spot – just across the pond from Bellingham by county ferry.
Even as I outline my spring projects for the next few months, I’m eager for little adventures away from home as well. I absolutely love packing up the car with B. and hitting the road – for an afternoon, an overnight, or a couple of weeks – it’s all about the little intimacies of travel and exploring new spaces (as close to home as they might be). And we both note at the end of our little sojourns – how much closer we feel, how much more relaxed. It’s almost always possible to make time for an overnight – and one of the essential pleasures of our life together.
In a temperate climate that doesn’t get much snow (like ours), January/February are the best months for looking at the garden’s “bones” and thinking about what structure might best support new plant growth come the growing season. With the ground frozen and most foliage dead (and cleaned out), this really is the best time to find out what’s going on out there and look for opportunities to get a few tasks done before the real work of March and April being. Yesterday was my day for doing that – so let the spring cost tally begin! After all the work we put in last spring and summer, you would think that the work out back is done – but alas! Not only do I see room for improvement, but I also want to start keeping bees this year – so there’s more prepping to do and that starts about now.
In order of priority and timing the spring projects include:

Total spring costs: $650-700
Now, those are the “must-haves”. Other projects that are not spring dependent include:

These projects will happen as cash-flow allows.
And of course, that isn’t even getting started on the front yard which is also in a state of needing some help about now – our first plan of action to be digging in a pond once the ground is ready to be dug. I think this year we will be lucky to get in the pond, some border plants on that, and a couple of raised beds for winter veggie gardening (I have totally given up on our backyard for winter veggies as it gets almost no light after the September long weekend). Just as the backyard has been a multi-year project, so will the front yard take some time to come together. Again, I’m thinking bones… the pond and a couple of structured beds first…. a pathway or two…. So many things to do in the next few months but I’m excited to have another spring of projects to continue towards my goal of having a private oasis, a food-producing backyard, honeybees and an example of healthy, urban space.

For the sake of showing off – here is the gazebo we built over the hot tub in December. I notice from the angle of this photo that it doesn’t look exactly square – but in fact it is. I’m looking forward to the spring when everything doesn’t look quite so bleak out back – and in particular have great plans for growing vines up and around this thing. The new gazebo gives us a lot more privacy anyhow – and really enhances the hot-tubbing experience!

According to Slavoj Žižek, the four riders are:
Also in the introduction to Living In The End Times, he points out, “The progress of capitalism, which necessitates a consumerist ideology, is gradually undermining the very (Protestant ethical) attitude which rendered capitalism possible — today’s capitalism increasingly functions as the “institutionalization of envy.”
I am quite excited to get into this book which I ordered before Christmas and am just now getting around to reading.