Hello, Susannah. I discovered you yesterday through Brooke Mcalary's Slow Living Resources post, and I must say I am utterly hooked. For now, I am saving your posts to read and work through when I have more time (formal employment comes to end on 31st July).
I am going to be doing training with a woman here in England called Ali Foxon who wrote a book called Green Sketching, so your work is right up my street.
As I work through, I will pop back and give you feedback!
Hello Debs, Thank you so much and welcome to Cricklewood. I look forward to hearing from you in the future. I just looked up Ali Foxon - I love it - "green sketching" is absolutely the right term isn't it? Have fun in the field.
What an exciting adventure! I'm eager to hear if she's a crabapple or a regular apple in dire need of some pruning and feeding. Not that you'll know either I suppose, but was it planted as a shrub, or as a seed from a kiddies experiment. Such mystery!
I know, right? I suspect she was planted as landscaping. Last year I left the apples alone for the deer, but this year I may take a sample to dissect and research to see if I can tell what kind of apple it is. The quest continues...
Hello, Susannah. I discovered you yesterday through Brooke Mcalary's Slow Living Resources post, and I must say I am utterly hooked. For now, I am saving your posts to read and work through when I have more time (formal employment comes to end on 31st July).
I am going to be doing training with a woman here in England called Ali Foxon who wrote a book called Green Sketching, so your work is right up my street.
As I work through, I will pop back and give you feedback!
But I just wanted to say thank you!
Hello Debs, Thank you so much and welcome to Cricklewood. I look forward to hearing from you in the future. I just looked up Ali Foxon - I love it - "green sketching" is absolutely the right term isn't it? Have fun in the field.
What an exciting adventure! I'm eager to hear if she's a crabapple or a regular apple in dire need of some pruning and feeding. Not that you'll know either I suppose, but was it planted as a shrub, or as a seed from a kiddies experiment. Such mystery!
I know, right? I suspect she was planted as landscaping. Last year I left the apples alone for the deer, but this year I may take a sample to dissect and research to see if I can tell what kind of apple it is. The quest continues...