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Community Housing Upgrades

We’ve had a colony of house sparrows living in various housing units in our back and front yards for years. The most popular condo has been a 10-unit complex sitting on a flagpole high above our deck right near the feeding stations. It’s provided housing for many sparrow families. This particular apartment building has been in disrepair, although each year I’ve made an effort to patch it up.

As is often the case, it has become easier to call it a “tear-down” and rebuild from the flagpole up.

A rep from Sparrow Realty awaits a client

The old building had one huge design flaw – it was really difficult to get at the individual apartments to do a yearly “Marie Kondo” treatment. My carpentry skills are shaky at best but I built this one in two parts. What you see – the facade with the holes – is just that, a facade. The whole thing lifts right off its base, revealing the apartment units inside. Once the facade has been lifted off, everything inside goes right to the discard pile. Then it’s just a matter of dropping the shell back on. Easy-Peasy (sort of…..you have to do it from a ladder).

The new building features 8 units rather than 10. I eliminated the attic “loft” apartments. As well, I added giant washers to the outside of the holes to prevent our squirrel friends from gnawing out bigger holes and moving in.

Within a few minutes of installation, reps from House Sparrow Realty were onsite showing the new apartment to clients. Although the new building is a significant upgrade from the previous digs, not to worry, rent is subsidized so all house sparrows can afford it. Units are available on a first-come-first served basis.

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Hummingbird 65

Here’s our latest mosaic project – our first hummingbird!

Hummingbird 65

This mosaic was made with a combination of smalti glass tiles and broken crockery and tiles, on a plywood ground. It’s 53 cm at it’s widest point. You can see photos of many of our other mosaics here.

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And then this happened….

This happened last weekend (social distancing)…..I hadn’t realized Tuffy P took pictures until the other day.

Rose Yerex on dobro, Greg Yerex on bass, Ted Myerscough on guitar and me on banjo….assisted by George and Ruby of course.

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19

Today is our 19th Anniversary. I feel blessed to share my life with someone as all-around fantastic as Sheila. We’re creating quite an adventure together!

After we got married in 2001, Sheila and I took off to Newfoundland for our honeymoon. Thanks to our friend Jim, we had a great house to stay in at Pouch Cove. Each day we found different places to go for walks and make drawings and watercolours. Here are a couple of the little watercolours we made, one at La Manche and the other at Bauline.

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Ron’s New Balance and Sock

Ron’s New Balance & Sock by Sheila Gregory

Sheila came across a watercolour today called Ron’s New Balance & Sock she made back in 1995. Join me in my time machine and I’ll tell you about what we were doing when she painted it. The Ron in the title is our old friend and teacher, the late Ronald Langley Bloore. Back in the day, a group of us – most often me and Sheila, Ron, Tim Noonan and Ardis Breeze, would do what we called Sunday painting. We’d pack up some drawing and painting gear and a lunch, and Bloore would often have along a wee bit of Retsina just because. Off we’d go, driving somewhere away from here, looking for places we could walk and draw and paint and enjoy the day.

Bloore with his painting kit

We would often look for broad vistas, only to watch Ron do beautiful pencil drawings depicting whatever he found on the ground by his feet. Most of the time we didn’t have a specific destination in mind, and that was part of the fun.

In the sumachs with Sheila and Ardis

I loved those days we spent together Sunday painting. We did it for years on and off. Once we even rented cabins up north and spent a weekend at it.

We found some beautiful spots
Tim with a completed watercolour
Bloore telling stories

Somehow, Bloore was the glue that kept the Sunday painting going. In my mind, Ron was not only an abstract painter, but perhaps the most committed abstract painter I knew. Known as “the simple painter”, he made painting with white on white a lifelong practice. I recall being so surprised at his enthusiasm to go out and sketch and later paint in nature.

Sheila recalls that she painted Ron’s shoe on one of the last painting trips we were able to take with him. He was experiencing neuropathy which made walking the woodland trails increasingly difficult. One day, instead of the desert boots he favoured, Bloore was sporting a pair of brand new New Balance shoes which offered him additional support.

We continued to draw and paint outdoors after Ron’s health made these trips too difficult for him, but it’s those days with Bloore I think of when I think of Sunday painting. I’ll leave you with one little anectdote. We were somewhere near Grimsby, Ontario and we had pulled over to the side of the road in an effort to draw some vineyards. Bloore had a little portable stool he carried in his painting kit. He was sitting on it, hunched over a pencil drawing. A car pulled up beside him, and the woman behind the wheel looked at Ron and asked if he needed any help. Without blinking, Ron said to her, “only if you can help me with this drawing”.

If you would like to see more pictures from those drawing and painting trips with Bloore, you see some here.