Sun pressing through

The sun waits for no one. My plan was to paint today. However, I awake to a frosty cool soft winter-blue sky with the sun pressing its way through the firs. We have had rain and fog for days. Change of plan. I shall be devouring a late breakfast and then out trek around with camera over my shoulder. (First figuring out why my camera won’t download today’s image, leaving me to use a photo from about the same time of year and day from last season – we have no snow today.)

View full resolution image here.

[updated 11:58 am adding this morning’s image that has now download after much tinkering]

View full resolution here.

Sprout Question: When are you most inspired to seize the moment?

© 2010 Terrill Welch, All rights reserved.

Liberal usage granted with written permission. See “About” for details.

Purchase photography at http://www.redbubble.com/people/terrillwelch

Creative Potager – where imagination rules. Be inspired.

Potatoes to Potato Salad

January rains keep the mist close to our strawbale, timberframe house here on Mayne Island. Daylight feels like it may never arrive today on the Southwest Coast of British Columbia, Canada. I hardly notice. Early this morning, I set off on a memory journey to a hot July day in a more northern part of the province. The year is 1966. I will soon be eight, as my birthday is near the end of August. My younger brother and I are staying with our grandmother Mona (Granny) at the family homestead on the Stuart River.

It is early morning and haying time. My grandfather has already left for the fields. We are in the garden with Granny gathering vegetables for potato salad. Already the sun has licked the dew off vibrant green broccoli leaves as they reach skyward from their well-spaced rows. Butterflies loop their way from one plant to another searching for any hidden dampness. Thankfully, it was too warm for the multitudes of mosquitoes which would savagely dive bomb our skin again come evening. I hear bees buzzing in the tall borage plants that are leaning their fuzzy foliage out into the path near the entrance to the garden. Keeping my bare legs clear so as not to get accidently stung, I follow barefoot behind my Granny as she thins, picks, prunes and digs things up to go in her large basin that we will then take down onto the wharf in the river and wash for slug, cut worm and aphid expulsion.

My brother went directly to the carrot patch pulling up one carrot after another. The ones that are too small he pokes back into the ground – until my grandmother turns around and catches him.

“Ack!” She exclaims. We always froze mid-movement when she (or our mother) made this sound.

“If you pull them out you have to eat them.” She pauses to ensure my brother is looking at her and really listening. He is only five.

Her voice softens as she continues “When you pull up the carrot it won’t grow anymore even if you put it back in the ground. Look for the bigger ones and only pull what you are going to eat.” He nods and following her example, begins to look for the fatter tops of the carrots showing slightly above the dusty soil.

We gathered new potatoes, carrots, peas, radishes, a few green beans, small onions, parsley, and sprigs of dill. Having washed everything in the river, our wet feet prints follow my grandmother’s up the wood dock towards the house. We now had all the makings for a potato salad. We were going to have a picnic, complete with Tang orange juice and lettuce with sugar on top for dessert. The older eggs (as they were easier to shell than fresh eggs) had been boiled earlier and were cooling in cold water. The fresh cow’s cream had soured on the counter overnight and Granny had made mayonnaise from scratch.

Using the propane stove, she steamed the vegetables and drained them to cool. The wood cook stove had been allowed to go out after Granny had made us pancakes and moose burgers for breakfast. The rest of the day she would use the propane stove to try and keep the house cool.

Laying newsprint out on the kitchen table we helped to shell hard boiled eggs. My first one got grey and grungy from the ink off the newsprint. But dipped in the pot of water beside us, it came out shiny white again. My brother’s eggs broke in half but that was okay. Chopped up no one would notice. Granny rubbing the inside of her large heavy mixing bowl with fresh garlic and began to slice the soft fragrant items into its smooth surface. With our knees on our chairs and our noses close to the bowl, we watched. First, the potatoes with their jackets still on, then the eggs (with three eggs set aside for later), then the carrots, then the pebbly peas and snapped green beans. They were all sliced into a pile one-on-top-of-other into the bowl. The crisp red radishes and onions were next adding to the mountain of colour and smells.

In a measuring cup, equal amounts of mayonnaise and sour cream are combined with a dash of dried mustard, salt, pepper, lemon juice and shopped dill and parsley. With a twist of the spatchula, the whole works is plopped onto the pile already in the bowl. We are in awe. What a mountain. What a bowl. This is going to be a great picnic. Squirming around we keep our itching fingers out of the mixing. Once folded and mixed, the salad was flattened with the base of the big spoon. The three eggs that had been set aside were sliced and placed on top. Then the whole shebang was sprinkled with paprika – beautiful.

Our Potato salad was taken to the root cellar and set in the ice box to cool and let the flavour mount. The ice had been harvested from the frozen river during late winter and cut into large blocks. The blocks were then placed in the root cellar and covered with sawdust for cold storage during the summer. There was no refrigeration.

We had two whole hours to wait until it was time to pack up the picnic. After stopping to inspect the baby garter snakes sunning themselves on the top of the root cellar, we came back to the house and slide up to the table again. Taking paper, pens, pencils and crayons, we drew mountains of potato salad. Page after page filled with squiggles, circles, and colours depicting how potatoes became potato salad. My brother even had talking potatoes in his drawing.

Sprout Question: What delights and inspires your child-like creativity?

© 2010 Terrill Welch, All rights reserved.

Liberal usage granted with written permission. See “About” for details.

Purchase photography at http://www.redbubble.com/people/terrillwelch

Creative Potager – where imagination rules. Be inspired.

Butterfly mornings writing “Mona’s Work”

With my toes wiggling under the same wool blanket that my mother made me for my birthday one year, I look at the photo of my painted toes from several summers ago. From present, to mid-life to childhood, I’m drawn back into my memories of my grandmother Mona. I began writing Mona’s Work in September 2007. I need to finish it. Today is a writing day.

I allow the blanket made in colours gathered from one of my gardens to drift me back to a place full of butterfly mornings…and wild flower afternoons.

I’m back where the hay is being cut in the field and I am making potato salad with my grandmother using new potatoes, radishes and green onions from her garden. I leave you here to enjoy this beautiful song by Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions off of “Bavarian Fruit Bread”, as I go off to my day of writing.

Sprout Question: What objects and memories do you keep close to spark your creativity?

© 2010 Terrill Welch, All rights reserved.

Liberal usage granted with written permission. See “About” for details.

Purchase photography at http://www.redbubble.com/people/terrillwelch

Creative Potager – where imagination rules. Be inspired.

Surprised Oil Painting

My photo shoot yesterday produced mixed results in the low and uneven afternoon light. However, sitting quietly with one of the images, during the editing process, lead me down an interesting path. After several turns, a shoreline photo is transformed  into a black and white oil painting of Bennett Bay on Mayne Island.

View the full resolution of Bennett Bay Mayne Island  here.

When we are prepared to be surprised and allow an image to call us forward, not just in the beginning of the creative process but all the way to the end, sometimes magic happens. I almost through this original photo image away even though I liked the composition because the mood was different than I wanted. But I just couldn’t get myself to press the delete button and I started to play with the image instead. First, I made the image black and white (as it was almost there already). Then I used a simple program to change it into an oil painting – nothing complicated, just editing tools I had at hand. With a bit more fine tuning, I now have an image that is no longer “really” a photo or ‘really” an oil painting. Setting these judgments aside – I am happy with the end results.

Sprout Question: What creative process might you try if you set your initial judgment about what is legitimate “creative work” aside?

© 2010 Terrill Welch, All rights reserved.

Liberal usage granted with written permission. See “About” for details.

Purchase photography at http://www.redbubble.com/people/terrillwelch

Creative Potager – where imagination rules. Be inspired.

Unfolding Image

Do you too carry a tension between placing your bum-to-seat, setting to work, and that of placing yourself in the proximity to your inspiration and allowing your work to unfold? I find there is a place for both in creativity.

View the full resolution of Arbutus Puzzle here .

Like the image Arbutus Puzzle, the beauty and strength is in the over and under of the creative tension between purpose and approach.

What pulls this working tension into creative bliss is the certainty of what is not yet know. With either approach, I must show up – fully. I must be ready to set aside other distractions, and other thought processes. Yet, the cast-aside thoughts and emotions will appear deep in the images that are captured or created. They are the under workings of my muse. In that I trust.

Today is a bum-to-seat morning. I am clearing my painting table in the studio to paint when daylight comes.

[Updated 11:23 am PST with progress from inside the studio]

Many times in the creative process it is not about getting “it right” but rather about “getting it started.”

This afternoon I shall place myself under the trees be they wet or dry and allow the images to call me forth.

Sprout Question: What is your approach to an unfolding image today?

© 2010 Terrill Welch, All rights reserved.

Liberal usage granted with written permission. See “About” for details.

Purchase photography at http://www.redbubble.com/people/terrillwelch

Creative Potager – where imagination rules. Be inspired.