Grounds for Sculpture

Grounds for Sculpture

Yesterday we spent several hours with our dear friends wandering Grounds for Sculpture. We had made a couple of trips before to Storm King Mountain before, and it is quite lovely, but GfS is stunning. The art is all over, both out where you can see it, and hidden in unexpected places (so if you see a break in the foliage, you have to take a look!), and the gardens are incredible. Here are a couple of pics:
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No sculpture here, but it’s just so darn pretty.
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Water figured heavily in a lot of the work. This isn’t part of the water garden exhibit, but tucked away in the middle of a whole maze of works.
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Lots of the sculptures encompass the landscaping as well. There was a lot more in this exhibit, one of several that were 3D renderings of paintings. We all had some fun becoming part of the scenes!

Must go back again. . .must. . .go. . .back. . .we tired out before we got to see everything, and it was well worth the trip.

Serendipity!

Serendipity!

So, we’ve been organizing, rearranging, culling out useless stuff bit by bit. Audrey got a loft bed, so we disassembled the old one and rearranged her room. We decided the IKEA Pax units weren’t working for fabric storage (or much of anything else) in the family room, so we reassembled my garment racks, and I got all my fabric hung up. I was trying to figure out where guest linens would go. We have no basement, the attic reaches extreme temperatures, so I don’t like to store a lot of things there, and our closets are maxed out. Suddenly, it occurred to me that our sofas in the family room were pretty much like open boxes, with the open end on the bottom, and I had all these baskets we’d taken out of Audrey’s room. . .voila! Not only do the linens and extra blankets fit into the baskets, which fit under the sofas, but even the massive queen aerobed fits under the sofas. Our guests sleep in the family room, now all the stuff we keep for guests to sleep on is in the family room! Woohoo!

Well, this was days ago, and I’m working my way around the house. I look at the kids’ closets, realize that we could fit some more shelving on top – and it just so happens that wood from the bed and/or Pax units could be used, and will work nicely because they’re laminated – easy to clean, and a surface that will make it easy to slide things in and out. I’d already thought of using some of it to put in hubby’s closet, which has a truly bizarre arrangement that makes a good three feet hidden and not terribly accessible. My thought for this was that we’d put in a shelf above the suitcases and use one of the metal baskets we’d had in the Pax so we could put less-needed stuff way in the back, and pull out the basket to get at them when we wanted. Bit by bit, less stuff is going into the dumpster.

Now I’m getting a bit convoluted. Fortunately, the Adderall is hitting me at this point, so I’m not getting all squirrelly and dashing about not knowing where to start. I know I want to make better use of the laundry room, which has not only the machines and a sorting/folding area, but also houses the spare fridge and freezer, extra cleaning supplies, cleaning tools, party ware, pet foods, treats, medicines, pond supplies, my computer and files and books and software, and all the paper, notebooks, pens, pencils, glue, string, stamps, envelopes and other stationery your heart could desire. So I pretty much can’t do much with the laundry except wash and dry it. No room. *sigh* Plus, all the ironing is in my sewing area – where the ironing board and iron are. Having ironing and mending sitting there and staring at me really puts a damper on my desire to sew – gotta do the work before the fun stuff, right? So I bought another ironing board I can hang on the wall in the laundry room, and I already had another iron. Now for a place to hang stuff. I had gone out to Linens N Things with my 20% entire purchase coupon (BTW, Linens N Things and Bed Bath and Beyond not only accept one anothers’ coupons, but they don’t really expire, even though they have expiration dates. Hang onto those things – don’t throw away one store’s because you have only the other nearby, and keep them until you use them!) but couldn’t find a wall mount for hanging up the stuff for ironing.

So. . .I hop onto amazon.com, and after ordering a rack I can use to hang clothes both for ironing and for drying smaller items, and remembering to get a couple of books, it occurs to me that maybe I should look for some other stuff. I finally find door-mount spice racks narrow enough for my kitchen cabinet doors. Cool. Ordered those. But I have to pay shipping, so I check the vendor for other stuff. Lo and behold, they have a closet expander – a rod that hangs from the regular rod so you have two levels. I had tried one before, but it hung so low that it was useless. There was plenty of room under the top rod, but not enough under the expander the actually hang stuff. This one adjusts. And while I’m at it, let’s see if they have rolling craft carts, and if the wheels are big enough to be useful. Woohoo! A collapsible one with 4 inch rubber wheels for less than half the price of an official “craft cart”. Hauling that polymer clay stuff has gotten pretty rough. I’m on a roll here, and see some inexpensive under bed boxes. This is difficult, because our bed has only about 5 inches of clearance from the floor. Bummer. These boxes are too tall. . .but it comes to me in a blinding flash of inspiration (ok, not really blinding. . .) that I have two more wire baskets from the Pax. Not only are they both low enough, but lengthwise, they fit side to side under the length of the bed. I can finally get the sheets and blankets out of my closet. . .more room for clothes!

Several good things have happened. I have gotten items I needed, and the cost of shipping does not exceed the cost of the items. I have repurposed more things, so there is less to throw away. I have found new places for things I have to keep, reducing the overall clutter. A fine way to start the day, indeed!

Nature vs. Nurture?

Nature vs. Nurture?

Ed Brayton at Dispatches from the Culture Wars has a post about Stephen Bennet’s (of Concerned Women for America, of all things) e-mail condemning Mary Cheney’s and Heather Poe’s new baby. Ed’s post and the following comments are good, thought-provoking reading. My feeling is that Mary Cheney is probably the only good thing ol’ Dick has ever produced.

On the CWA site, Matt Barber outlines a similar viewpoint, but I’m a bit confused. . .it seems he thinks that Mary should have done the right thing, denied her sexuality, and settled down with a good man to raise children. She’s a public figure, after all, so she should be sending out good moral messages, regardless of how miserable they might make her. He supports the idea that the sperm donor should be raising this child and poses the question, “One wonders if Ms. Cheney has ever contemplated what her childhood may have been like if she had been denied her own father. ” Oh, I can think of a few things. In fact, if more people denied Dick Cheney the world would be a remarkably different place.

These Concerned Women and “like-minded men” have a whole site that seems to be devoted to mandating what goes on before, during, and after sex. If you look at their Hot Topics, there is exactly one topic, with a measley two articles, that doesn’t address the evils of non-monogamous, non-marital sex, sex education, birth control and abortion, or various forms of biological research. And for an organization of concerned women, they certainly seem to be opposed to women’s rights in general, judging by their full section of articles opposing CEDAW (Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women).

As with the message that Ed cites, all these other essays and soundbites are simply trying to make it sound that it’s a good thing to support a traditional Christian family with a married mother and father and legitimate children – so much so that discriminating against anyone outside of the mold is not only justifiable, but should be encouraged and even legally required. The writing style suggests that this is so incredibly reasonable that only a crazy or immoral criminal wouldn’t be able to see how clearly it was right. It’s unpleasant stuff. I suppose it’s better than death by stoning, though. A little.