Fortune

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One of my favorite costumes at the Pug Party and Parade was the Pug dressed as Chinese takeout. The costume was original and fun. The owner was also happy to pass out fortunes. She said they all read the same, "If you feed your pug well all will be right with the world." A cute and funny sentiment and not far from the mark, at least in my household.

I smiled when I received it, tucking it into my pocket but when I was typing it out tonight to share here, I really thought about it -- what a simple thing to bring peace and happiness -- being well fed. We humans always want more. Dogs live in a world of expectation and satisfaction, wanting food, finding peace when it comes. A constant state of faith, the impending realization of good fortune.

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Too Many Photos, Too Little Time

Ugh, only a few short months have passed and once again I've managed to fill my computer with so many images that I can't do anything until I take them off. Getting the message that my start-up disk is full and Bridge in Photoshop won't even generate any thumbnails because it is so full. So, no new pics tonight.

Also, it's midnight. I just got home and I have to be up and at 'em to  head to the Pug Parade in just a few short hours. So, my apologies but you'll have to wait for me to resolve my computer problems before any new and exciting posts. Fortunately, I should have some interesting pics of the Pug Parade when I return as well as some great shots of my niece Ellie that I took today. So stay tuned and enjoy the weekend.

Pug Parade

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Big weekend ahead. On Sunday, my friends Joan and Jane, and I are headed to Chestertown, NY for the annual Halloween Pug Party and Parade. It's another day of costume contests and lots of pugs and I'm sure I'll have plenty of pictures to post. I plan to bring Alfie and Waffles (not sure what they'll be wearing yet. I have some simple Halloween collars as well as more elaborate costumes) and maybe the puppies as well as Joan's dog Egg and Jane's pug Fanny May, maybe more.

Also, had good news today. The original owner for Waltham's Little Trump, one of the puppies, fell through, but one of our friends, a couple who has three other of Joan's pugs, wants to adopt him. We are meeting them on Monday afternoon to turn him over. Although the friends live in Massachusetts, they have a condo in Sugarbush not far from Joan, so we will be able to see Trump regularly. Only catch, our friends want to rename Trump, Critter!

I have a lot of writing to do as well this weekend, so I may not get to post much, so I thought I'd leave you with a couple more shots of the puppies from the other day.

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Puppy Memories

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The puppies will be leaving soon, all but one of them to new homes. Gryffndoor will remain. Tonight, Joan has begun the baking and the preparation to send them off with goodies and food. Like hobos, each leaves with a tiny bag.

But, they are not hobos. We have carefully chosen their homes and most we will see again. Maybe not little Kensington. He's going to a person we do not know, but I will ask for his owners' address and send Christmas letters and hope that his owner answers and sends back photos. And, if he does I will place them in a scrapbook and we will ooh and ahh over them as a mother does a baby picture and say "isn't he cute?" "my ,he has grown" and "he looks just like his mommy."

He may get a new name. Margot will. Most often do. Even when I first took Vader, before I knew Joan well, I changed his name. He was originally Zag to his brother Zig. But for a time, these were Kensington and Margot and will remain ours and we will sometimes talk of them and always remember.

Often with time the names and litters become jumbled in our memories as will these and we will have to nudge each other and ask was that so and so's litter? Who was the father? And, one of us, often me, will remember or take out a paper that tells or consult the scrapbook. We may have the story wrong or the details confused -- was it Margot with white on her paw or was that Indigo from another litter? But they are not lost to memory only mixed and married to a host of other puppies who were also loved and are gone.

Each has formed Pugdom. So now I can tell stories of dogs I've never even known because they have become real to me. Mookie, the big black male who won many shows and Shandi, the pug Joan claims was gay, and Patty Albee who didn't like to show. They all lived and died before I came to know Joan and yet, I can paint you a picture of each.

In the days ahead, certain specifics about this litter will become cloudy, but right now I can tell you that it is Margot with the right, white paw, that Kensington is a lovebug, sweet and gentle, that Trump has the most wrinkles on his head. I can pick up from the squirming black mass on the ground the one I want and present it to you, "Here's Kensington or here's Gryff." And, you will look amazed. "How do you tell them apart," you might ask. The love that helps me make those identifications never fades. It becomes a trace memory and some part of it lingers so I will always be able to reach out and grab them still.

These are the creatures and characters that have opened up a whole new world for me and so we send them off into the world to live and breathe whole lives. And, somwhere in their tiny animal minds, in the scents and sounds they have storehoused and hold dear, I think we remain and travel with them. So, if they were to see us again they might pause and ask isn't that so and so? I remember that smell, that voice, that hand, that touch. She gave us food or a belly rub and they may sigh before barking and moving on with one last wag of their tails.

Writing Prompt: Flight

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You do not live in the northeast long without witnessing the seasonal migration of Canadian geese away from our cold climes; their journey a harbinger of winter's rapid arrival. Late last Sunday afternoon, I felt less witness and more participant as the rush and roar of them seized something primal in me, sweeping me up in their journey. My sister-in-law and I were out shooting photos, when we felt a gush of wind and an assault of noise. SQUAWK! SQUAWK! SQUAWK! SQUAWK! I barely had time to lift my camera to the sky and snap this photo before they passed by.

What must it be like to heed such a call, to know when it is time to move and when to return? Often I have thought I could take flight if I only knew the direction, if I had inside me such an unwavering beacon. And, in that moment part of me lifted and soared to the possibility. And, part of me stood anchored to home and hearth, to the familiar. And, I'm not sure one path is preferable. We always dream of the flight, but there can be steel in the staying, seeing a path through. The geese? Perhaps they know the best of both. They come and they go, choosing here and there. And, I can look up and go with them and I can plant my feet and discover in both air and ground the totality of who I am.

Writing prompt: When have you stayed? When have you gone? And, how did you know it was time to do either?

Dogs & Pics

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I traveled to Montpelier, Vt. to interview a real estate attorney for an article I am writing. After the interview, I decided to wander the streets of our state capital and ended up visiting The Quirky Pet, a small, but charming pet store filled with all sorts of delectable goodies for your dog. One of the best things about The Quirky Pet is their dog-in-residence. Aria is one of the owners' three Bergamasco Sheepdogs. I spent some time with the owner talking dogs and sharing Facebook photographs.
After leaving Montpelier, I drove to Quechee for a photography meetup and critique where I share a few of the fairy wing photos of the pugs and a couple of pics of my niece, Tori. I saw some friends I hadn't seen in a while, Jean and Renee and a former teacher, Carla. Carla told me that she had channeled me this week when she went to take a close-up of a cow. "I was right up to it's nose. I thought this is a Kim shot," she said. I was of touched that my work was so distinctive that a certain type of animal shot made her think of me. As one of the photographers showed some of his shots of flowering succulents, my friend Amy made me laugh. "I love the word succulent," she said. I was thinking the same thing. I think if we had been in school together we would have gotten in a lot of trouble.

All in all a satisfying day and one truly dedicated to both dogs and pics.

Poetry in Motion

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Another shot from the other day. You saw Alfie and Waffles taking time to stop and smell the roses. They loved the flowers, checking them out, sniffing them, pawing them and yes, eventually eating them. Here, Waffles grabbed one in her mouth, quickly spinning away to keep Alfie at bay.  I love the play between light and color, motion and stillness.

Winter is Coming...

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They say it is in spring that we awaken and blossom. In Vermont, I think it is in late fall. We come alive as leaf-peepers and colors fade and trees are stripped bare. A silent siren call rings throughout our former green mountains now turned to rust.
"Winter," it warns. "Time to prepare."

And, although we may "piss and moan" as the saying goes, we rise to the occasion. These are the days of gray skies and brown earth, cool frosty mornings, even colder nights. It is the time where air begins to hang thick with wood smoke. It rises from chimneys and assaults the nostrils, a specter of approaching winter. It promises warmth and home.

We get to work, as busy as our animal cousins, shoring up for winter. Sheds and garages transform into storehouses for lawn furniture, summer tires, gardening supplies. They now look fed and content, their bellies full. We buy and stack wood and stack wood some more. Backs, hands, and feet ache, but eyes gleam and Vermont hearts swell. Somewhere in our New England spines we know this is the way things are supposed to be.

They say that humans come from dust and to dust we will return, but here in New England, I think it is snow and ice and cold that forms us and cold is our inevitable end. And, even I, as a child of summer, who was born on Long Island to a mother raised on the water, who hates to drive if there is a flake in the sky, feels the stirring in my blood.

"Winter is coming. We are almost home."

Waffles' Sweater

I brought Waffles' sweater to my friend Joan's yesterday, which was probably not a good idea. Everyone was so eager to see it complete that they urged me to finish it and I probably ended up making it too short as a result. I was also a little uncertain how to finish it off and made a few minor and thankfully unnoticeable mistakes. It does, however, fit her. I still want to add some embellishments and am going to work on those later tonight, but here she is for now.
Now, that I have one under my belt and some of the details of how to make these are coming back to me, I think I'll try another for Waffles before beginning Alfie's. The new one I may make in more fall colors.

Fortunately, although she seems to hate putting it on, Waffles really seems to like wearing the sweater. She ran around in it, playing with my niece and nephew in the back yard.

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Two Potters

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Today, I took my sister-in-law, Gretchin, to visit Two Potters (www.twopotters.com) gallery and kiln on Christian Hill in Bethel, Vt. The two potters are husband-and-wife Nathan Webb and Becca Van Fleet Webb. I first met the couple a few years ago when writing an article on their business for Upper Valley Life Magazine. At the time, they were recently married and had moved to Nathan's home in Bethel where they planned to build their own kiln, which they have since done.

I fell in love with two of them right away -- their work, their home, their story. I have been returning almost every open studio weekend since and often before many birthdays and holidays to purchase their work. I am getting quite a collection. Today, Gretchin walked away with a wall hanging and I bought the three pieces pictured above.

Nathan and Becca's home is not far from my property. Their view is expansive, their kiln a work of art itself. Their small, yellow studio welcomes guests. "Shop locally," a sign reads outside. Their dog, Lego, bounds across the yard. It is easy to fall in love with this place and the creative life these two are building.

As I am getting ready to leave I tell the two I am in search of a pumpkin and Nathan recommends going up past my land to a local farm. I feel like neighbors. I am happy to support these artists and their work, to take a piece of their creative life home with me to share and enjoy.

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