New work:

A little preview of some of the pieces I will be listing in my shop today at 4PM MST. I’ve been ignoring the world, keeping my head down with my nose pressed tight to the grindstone in the studio. I’ve been fiddling around with new techniques and ideas, giving myself a lot of space to roam. These new prong settings are something I’ve been playing around with. They are a really beautiful way to elevate simple stone settings. Should I keep on with them? I’m also on the botanical train right now because my green thumbs are in a serious twitch. What will your gardens grow this summer? I hope you’re planting some flowers.

Springing

Friends! Sorry for going radio silent for a stint! We’ve been running at full throttle here since the start of March — which came in like a lion and remained a lion and went out like a lion and then April came in like a lion, too. It was a proper snarling, growling pride! But the rumors are true, at last it’s springtime on the steppe and while we have had more squalls than sunshine here I cannot complain as the desert is as green as Iceland and the wildflowers have started to sing color into the landscape. It’s heaven. It’s such heaven that I feel absolutely restless. I want to be outside all day long, every single day, rolling around in the grass, draping my bones and sinew over the living earth, and sneezing every other minute. I choose heaven when I’m able.

The sheepherders have been rolling through on their way to the high country, the sight of them continues to thrill me. It never gets old. The geese are laying. The chicks have almost outgrown their brooder. My iris patch is alive and well and my roses are leafing out. Pumpernickel’s belly seems suspiciously plump with potential piglets. The horses are growing sleeker each time I brush them. Abundant life, all around. I join in the mighty chorus and sing aloud everywhere I go.

Robbie has been hustling to get our place ready for the growing season and I want to offer up heartfelt thanks for your kind support this spring. With my studio work we have been able to buy up all the used haying equipment we need to take over our haying operation here. We’ve had a neighbor cutting and baling for us the past few years and with our scant hay profits we’ve barely been able to cover the cost of our irrigation bill so it will nice to have a couple bags of bullion in our overall pockets here from hay sales this fall, something to show for our work. There’s an old saying that if you want good hay, you need to do it yourself, and it’s so true. The secret to good hay is handling it as little as possible and we’re looking forward to being hay masters here. Thank you again. We’re never going to be wealthy people in the worldly sense because so much of our work revolves around home economy or farm economy (which is not a part of cash economy). Our wealth is on the pantry shelves and in the chest freezers and in my medicinal cabinet and in the fermenting crock…but boy do we eat well, boy does our livestock live well, and boy are we thankful for this place we’re calling home while we’re on this beautiful Earth! We’re just so glad to be here.

Before I forget, we were admitted into the Ketchum farmer’s market and will be selling garlic in person in July/August this summer. We are registered as a joint booth which will allow me to also sell some jewelry if my inventory allows. I’m looking forward to it so much, it’s going to be a hoot. I hoped to do a couple big art shows this summer but I’m finding I need more time to settle into our new life here and rest and recover and reinvent myself.

I have other thoughts to share with you, especially regarding our transition out of the wildland firefighting lifestyle we lived for 15 years but for now, the sun and the wind and calling and I must head outside to commune with nature and collect nettles on the riverbank. I hope you are all well. I carry you in my heart.

The Glimmering Dark

I woke up two nights ago and looked out our bedroom window to see inches of fresh snow had silently fallen in the dark. The words, “Come in from the glimmering dark…” popped into my mind and I rolled over and wrapped an arm around Robbie and fell back to sleep. In the morning, I made these earrings and I’ll make a few more pairs today. They’ll be in my shop on February 28th @ 1PM with a few other items. Thank you kindly for helping us keep the lights on around here. With your support we keep on living our lives and building our dreams.

+Of The West+

River Breaks

The world seems perched on the edge of spring along the Snake River. I love to ride my horses this time of year for a few reasons:

  • My horses are fat and rude and require my attention. It is extremely satisfying to watch them trim up and respond to our partnership.
  • The blend of warm sunshine and cold winds is so refreshing.
  • The sun is slowly peeling back the snow and ice and there are many fascinating treasures to find from winter kill to freshly dropped antlers. Every time I ride I uncover a mystery!

I know the country around our farm so well now, I can tell you something special about almost every nook and cranny in the river breaks, but I still ride out the hayfield gates expecting the unexpected and I’m rarely disappointed. What excellent fodder for my logic, my observation and deduction skills, my ability to hypothesize and make conclusions! It’s a wonderland for the mind out here.

Have you found or observed anything interesting on an outdoor adventure lately? I found a deceased badger yesterday and spooked a coyote off it. I’ve been badger obsessed for years and this discovery was precious to me. Look at those claws and teeth. Such fierceness.

What’s new:

Entering back into studio work has been slow! I gem shopped the Tucson show (see above photograph for a small sample of what I brought home with me) and am looking forward to diving into designing and making in 2022!

On a related topic, allow me to offer up some unsolicited advice to the working artists and small business owners out there:

If you are going on an extended journey or taking extended time off work, prepare your studio/business for your departure by resupplying your work space with everything you could possibly need to ensure effortless re-entry into your work upon your return! This will allow you to not squander time trying to conjure supplies out of thin air as well as shipping materials which can be rather annoying.

I’m set to squeak in a shop update before February ends. Look for a few pieces on my shop shelves on the 28th @ 1PM MST.