July Garden Update

Dear Liza,

It has been such a busy summer, I feel like I am squeezing gardening in between everything else! But veggie plots are relentless, both in the care they require and the joys they give.

This week, I have good news and bad news. Some of my yellow squash are being hit with a blossom end rot. I have looked it up and the solution seems to be ‘maintaining a consistent moisture level’ in the soil. Easier said than done, but we’ll try. We have harvested several of the tasty squash and want more!

The good news is that we are having free salads every day from the curly lettuces and raddichio, which we combined with that lovely squash and some basil from M.J. down the way. The currents and anise are from the community plots of the Blair Community Garden.

Our first tomato, “Isis Candy” by name, came ripe and was delicious.

We are finally seeing success in pumpkins, with “Ribsy”, our fourth named pumpkin. His predecessors (Beezus, Ramona and Henry) shriveled, but this fellow is resting on a step of the ladder and seems happy. The newest pumpkin, “PickyPicky”, had started forming four feet off the ground and needed shifting to the top of the ladder. We’ll see how he adjusts.

And finally, the two gigantic dahlias, Laverne and Shirley, are ready to pop! They are both nearly four feet high and were threatening to topple over last week, until we improvised a support from an old tomato cage.

Now, it looks like they will stay vertical long enough to bloom, feed some bees, and recharge their roots for next year.

And that’s the news from the garden!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Portland Pride

Dear Liza,

This past Sunday, I got to visit the Portland Pride festival at Tom McCall Waterfront Park. Specifically, I got to visit Auntie Katie at the Books with Pictures tent. Doesn’t she look great?

It was a record high of 95F, and everyone was wearing their summer rainbow clothes.

A lady let me take a picture of her rainbow tee shirt which showed off her huge snake and flower tattoo.

Katie’s tent had a just a small chunk of her inventory from the shop. As we visited, sales were great and everyone was so cheerful.

After I got Katie a cold drink (and had one myself), I wandered around a bit, pleased at the variety of goods and services being offered and all the businesses being represented. This young mom posed in front of the tent from University of Oregon, my old alma mater.

I even got to pet Caesar, the No-Drama llama, who we’ve seen at other events. Caesar is a therapy animal who visits hospitals and other places where a calming influence is needed. He’s soft and fluffy and very popular.

I was starting to feel the heat, and headed back to the bus stop. There seemed to be a continual parade going on, full of happy, proud, rainbow-dressed people. It was a good day.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Bastille Day Fête at Jameson Square

Dear Liza,

On Saturday, Auntie Bridgett was selling her art at a table in Jameson Square. The Alliance Française organizes a Bastille Day celebration that is playful, musical, artsy, and very busy!

Since the Alliance supplied the tent, table and chairs, it was an easy set-up. Grandpa Nelson drove us to the northwest part of Portland and unloaded, then headed home.


There were hours of happy people-watching as hundreds of kids and families played in the fountain. A delightful program of live music, ranging from Cajun jazz to French pop, kept the mood lively.

Auntie Bridgett’s table was busy all day, and she sold a lot of cards, books, and artwork. My favorite painting, “Á Paris”, went home with this lovely lady. I was sad to see it go, but that’s what it was painted for. It was Bridgett’s most successful selling day ever!

I spent most of the day on a bench in the shade close by, to give Bridgett support if needed. I also enjoyed a conversation with Alan, a fellow Francophile (person who loves and appreciates French things). When I needed a snack I walked down to Via Delizia for an éclaire and iced chai latte. It was perfectly delicious and I felt very spoiled.

Later in the afternoon there were even fencing lessons for kids from a local fencing club. It was amazing. Full face cages and nice bendy epées kept everyone safe while providing a really good time.

Thanks, Alliance Française! We’ll see you again real soon.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Frog and Snail for Bastille Day

Dear Liza,

Bastille Day, which is France’s national celebration of its Revolution, was this past Friday, July 14. Auntie Bridgett and I walked down to Frog and Snail on Hawthorne to celebrate.

It has been a hard year for French restaurants here in Portland. Bistro Agnes snd Suzette are gone, and another favorite, La Moule, closes at the end of July. We wanted to do our part to keep this little French cafe in business!

Frog and Snail is not a fancy place, but it is delightfully funky and informal. Named for two French specialties (frog’s legs and escargot) it has artwork celebrating this friendly combination on the walls.

And most importantly, the food is amazing! I had a Farmer’s Daughter blonde crepe (made with wheat flour), and Bridgett had the same fillings in a buckwheat crepe. Spinach, mozzarella, roasted mushrooms, pesto créme fresh, scallions, romesco and avocado all joined to make a perfect lunch. It was so filling, we both took some home for lunch the next day!

We ate, people-watched and chatted with the owner, Chad Bernard. Then we had to get home so Auntie Bridgett could finish preparing for the BIG celebration of Bastille Day at Jameson Square on Saturday.

Of course, I will tell you about that tomorrow.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Icelandic Art at the Nordic House

Dear Liza,

I had been in the Nordic House building just a few weeks ago, but during the Nordic Fest it was full of people wandering around, craftspeople selling their wares, and all the hubbub of a festival.

On a regular Monday, it was much more quiet. The Broder cafe was open and a dozen or so folks were having lunch and chatting, some in what I assumed to be Swedish, Danish, or other Nordic languages. I asked a secretary where the Danish conversation group was meeting, and was kindly told that the schedule …. had been changed. For the afternoon group, I needed to come back in two weeks.

Sigh. Big sigh. Disappointed to the point that I had to step outside sigh. I found a seat, ate my apple, and decided to make the most of my trip. I went back inside.

The secretary had said something about ‘a new show’ and indicated a room, so I went that way.

I discovered a whole world of Icelandic art of that combines textiles and books, amazed that two of my own favorite crafts are actually contemporary Icelandic art!

These were all pieces by women artists, either native Icelanders or local Portland artists using Icelandic techniques. There were woven pieces made into books, and books that had been stitched to enhance the text. More than a dozen pieces combining painting, printing and stitchery, bound into paper books. My brain was on fire.

I was no longer sad about missing the group. I realized that if I had attended the group, I would not have visited this art on my own and been able to see it in this way. As so often happens, the unexpected, the mistake, was a gift.

I read about the artists, who had such distinctive names as Anna Greenwood and Helga Brynjolfsdottir, took a few dozen pictures, and checked my bus schedule. It was time to go.

I will return in two weeks for the conversation group, with more Danish under my belt.

Love,

Grandma Judy

En Route to the Nordic House

Dear Liza,

A few weeks ago, I learned that the Nordic House here in Portland offers Danish conversation groups for language practice. Since I want to learn Danish for when I visit you in Horsens, I signed up online and, on Monday, looked up schedules for the #14 to the #45 and headed off.

Along the way, I got to see this remarkable contrast.

This old building was originally built for William Ladd’s estate back in 1883. The very elegant carriage house is now a restaurant called The Raven and the Rose . The newer building is an office building, built only about 15 years ago. Strange neighbors, to be sure, but these contrasts are one of the reasons I love Portland.

As with most adventures, timing is everything. I managed to miss the #45 by minutes and found sustenance at a nearby Starbucks to wait for the next bus. I am not usually a fan, but hey, any Pain au Chocolat in a storm.

The next bus came on time and I had a long ride through woods and the smaller towns of Multnomah Village and Garden Home out to the Nordic House.

I got off at the Fuglbro (I looked it up, it means Birds Nest) bus stop and nervously crossed busy Oleson Road and walked up to the beautifully carved doors. I was about to speak Danish to real Danish speaking humans!

I’ll tell you what happened inside ….. tomorrow.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Books with Pictures ComicCon, 2023 Part 2

Dear Liza,

During the Books with Pictures Comic Con, the garden saw a lot of action!

Two lovely people with the unlikely names of Bugchampciri and 2broke4cosplay (these are their Instagram handles) organized and judged the costume contest. Kids from about eight years old to adults in their thirties came to strut their cosplay stuff.

Everyone looked incredible and got lots of compliments on their outfits. What was even more amazing was the dozen or so folks in costumes who weren’t in the contest, but just walking around shopping and chatting.

Later in the day, the garden hosted an Art Battle, with cartoonists in competition to draw the best improvised ‘toon. I watched Ron Chan and Kate Faris drawing “Creepy Farting Tacos” and it was delightful.

After lunch, Douglas Wolk ran a trivia contest. I didn’t get to see it, but was told by several contestants that they had “arrived with confidence” and had been “quickly humbled” by the difficulty of the questions. Douglas is an Eisner Award-winning comics expert. He doesn’t mess around.

The last panel of the day was Nola Pfau, Laura Hudson and Douglas Wolk discussing comics criticism… that is, how to think about, talk about, or write about comics as a genre of literature and art.

For the closing act in the garden, Lizzy Kirby sang delightful, original songs, my favorite having “Meow, meow, meow meow, meow meow” as its chorus. We all joined in, of course.

For part of the day, Kestrel had her art table set up near the garden, as well, doing small sketches for folks for tips. She did very well and retired early.

Here are just a few of the folks on clean up duty…me, Katie, Kenny and his daughter Vanessa, and Mads. Kenny’s wife Jessica took the picture, and was working, too. Katie’s staff member Elizabeth was down the street folding and lifting tents into the garage. The whole day was an amazing tour de force of teamwork.

Something as complicated as a ComicCon takes dozens of people who are good at their jobs working really hard. I am very proud of Auntie Katie and her companions for the work they did.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Books with Pictures ComicCon, 2023 Part 1

Dear Liza,

This past Saturday was the second annual Books with Pictures Comic con, held at Auntie Katie’s bookshop. Of course, Auntie Bridgett set up her Auntie Beeswax booth.

The whole day was busy, fun and exhausting! Happily, it went very smoothly, mostly because of Katie’s wonderful staff and dozens of volunteers. Here is Alex, who was on the morning shift, getting everyone’s tents set up.

Once everyone was set up, I took a few minutes and gave the garden a good watering. Our weather has been very hot, and the garden was going to see a lot of action during the comic con.

The food carts that are behind Books with Pictures were doing a fine business, with everyone enjoying sandwiches from Underbite and waffles from Honeycuspe.

Auntie Katie was busy all day, making sure vendors had everything they needed and that visitors felt welcome.

There were fifty different vendors showing buttons, books, stickers, cards, patches, earrings, clothes, magnets, zines, games, and all sorts of handmade goodies.

Staff member Nico even designed a pamphlet that had a map and list of vendors and a schedule of activities that were going to happen in the garden.

We got to meet a lot of interesting and friendly people and see wonderful art, and by the end of the day we were pretty much wiped out. Until next year, BwPcon!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Going to See the Hops!

Dear Liza,

Did you know that the Portland area has a professional baseball team? Well, it does!

And last week we drove west about 11 miles to Ron Tonkin Field in Hillsboro to see our Hops play the Vancouver Canadians. It was a lively night out.

The Hops are the High A level farm team for the Arizona Diamondbacks, an official professional team, and it shows. The playing was great, and so were the amenities… Scoreboards, food, drinks, restrooms, all very up-town.

Grandpa Nelson had gotten us tickets along the first base line so we would be in the shade for the evening game. Our weather has been in the high nineties and he didn’t want us to get roasted! We were warm, but not uncomfortable.

As the game got started, we saw that the Hops players had chosen their own ‘walk up’ music (that plays as that player comes up to bat), but the visiting Canadians walked up to music chosen as a play on their name. A Canadian player named Spain walked up to Robert Goulet’s “Red Ships of Spain”, and Cade Doughty walked up to Julie Andrews’ “Do Re Mi” from “The Sound of Music”.

It was delightful, these odd snippets of music coming around with the batting order. During the evening we also heard bits of “Uptown Funk”, “Zorba the Greek”, “Sugar Sugar” and “I Love Rock and Roll”.

Besides following the game, there were other diversions, like a bus tire rolling race, karaoke sing-along, and air guitar contests. These were video-broadcast to the big screen so everyone could enjoy the fun, even if it was happening across the stadium.

The sun went down, and the Canadians’ Cade Doughty made their only run in the 9th inning. By then, the Hops had scored 11. It’s always fun when ‘our’ team wins, even if we just met.

We gathered our things and joined the flow of folks out into the parking lot and Auntie Bridgett drove us home through an orange sunset.

Summer in Portland is amazing, active, and wonderful…. If you have the stamina!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Tempest in the Park

Dear Liza,

Summer is Shakespeare season here in Portland, and last week Laurelhurst Park got a few. First, Original Practice Shakespeare performed The Tempest, Shakespeare’s last play. Grandpa Nelson and I headed over.

In this production, Mikki Lipsey played Prospero the Wizard. Prospero has been stranded on a desert island for twelve years with her daughter Miranda. She has enslaved two magical creatures, the lovely Ariel and the monstrous Caliban, to do her bidding.

Prospero conjures up a tempest which causes a ship carrying her old rivals from Milan, including the Duke’s son, young Ferdinand, to crash on the reef. Of course, Ferdinand falls in love with Miranda !

As the play goes on, two different sets of underlings decide to kill their masters and take over, but drunkenness and foolishness get in the way. By the end of the play all is well, and Prospero casts aside her staff and her magic books. This was Shakespeare’s way of saying farewell to his own magic of playwriting and retiring to Stratford.

Watching plays in the park is always interesting. Since the actors are dealing with airplane noise, dogs and other distractions, the audience has to work harder to suspend our disbelief and get into the story.

But we also enjoy the parade of happy humanity as it passes through the park. Cyclists, dog walkers, families and skateboarders keep things lively!

And as the sun went down and the play came to a close, we packed up our chairs and popcorn and head home. Another summer evening well spent!

Love,

Grandma Judy