A Quick Winter Update and a Reminder Spring is Coming!

So I admit I didn’t get out much this winter but I still have been busy figuring out what to do with spring once it gets here. I have scheduled myself to visit more ruins, castles, haunted places, light houses, quirky one-of-a-kind mom and pop shops, perhaps a few farms, as well as more nature trails and museums. Who knows, I might even indulge in another passion – food! And to add to the excitement I am expanding to my repertoire of photos and writing with my very first video! I am hoping future videos will include interviews with more interesting local personalities, or at least with more subject matter than just me blathering on! ENJOY!

If you are enjoying Catching Marbles please consider donating to my limited gas money fund so I can continue going on and sharing my adventures with you!


An Invitation to a New Adventure and a Request for Help

Hello again dear readers and followers! I have had SO MUCH fun this summer bringing you out to see the wilder spots of New England! And your responses to this have been amazing! I am hoping you’re still enjoying the journey because I am about to embark on another. You see my life fell apart about eleven months back in a big and serious way. I lost my beloved farm due to circumstances beyond my control and now I want to start a new one in celebration of all that is good and wonderful in New England. And this time it’ll be far better because I want to start it just as much for all you as I do for myself. It’ll be an educational farm and intentional homesteading community. If you’d like to learn more or possibly support my cause please feel free to visit my GoFundMe page: https://www.gofundme.com/help-fund-an-educational-farm And if you cannot donate but still want to support my bold ideas please share! share! share!

Thank you again for all your support, your suggestions, and all the beautiful and positive thoughts you have sent my way. May your journey be wonderful and your mind be at rest.

 

UPDATE: The GoFundMe didn’t fly so I have continued my efforts elsewhere. I have added a donate button to this blog to help me pay for gas money and keep it going and in the meantime I still work towards my homestead with my future farm’s website Through the Looking Glass Farm – there I started a video blog to philosophize the life and a store to sell my art (as well as others) and homesteading creations. Any support means the world to me and I thank you all for following my journey.

 

If you are enjoying Catching Marbles please consider adding a dollar or two to my limited gas money fund so I can continue going on adventures and sharing them with you! Thank you!


Peterborough Farmer’s Market

Decided to check out the Peterborough Farmers Market to see if it was worth setting up there sometime. They only had a handful of vendors but they were very nice people and with a surprising range of products you may actually buy (not three tables worth of toilet cozies which is more normal.) They had people there selling all manner of plants – flowers, vegetables, herbs, and plenty of sellers of organic and free range eggs, sheep, and beef. I was pleasantly surprised! They also had a woman selling granola… which is soooo Peterborough to me. All and all it wasn’t bad. I still don’t know if it’s the appropriate venue for what I have but maybe. Doesn’t hurt to try I guess.

If you are enjoying Catching Marbles please consider adding a dollar or two to my limited gas money fund so I can continue going on adventures and sharing them with you! Thank you!


 

Rindge Farmer’s Market

Well, if I want to be  part of the community again I think setting up at the farmer’s market might be a good idea. Rindge’s farmer’s market is pretty sad, only a few vendors, but they’re great people with some lovely items and it’s a short venue – 3-6PM every Thursday. My mother had a bunch of soap she’d made last year which had lost their labels and most of their scent so she wanted to have a sale table of $1 soaps. I wanted to set up some of my art and baked goods but since moving I have noticed all my stuff is missing! I don’t know where my completed works are, I don’t know where my supplies are…. it’s a total mess. All I could find were some magnets. With that being said I felt I couldn’t go wrong baking some stroopwafels. For all you out-of-the-know stroopwafels are a kind of syrup filled cookie made in the Netherlands. Dutch people are nutty for them – with good reason! They are delicious and insanely addictive. They’ve also recently started showing up in different countries. If you’re really lucky you can sometimes find them in the US at Wegman’s or in specialty shops. But what’s the fun in that when I can bake them myself? I thought the novelty of these cookies could catch on and if I could sell them and keep showing up at the market I could get repeat customers having no competition. If I am successful with that I can even start playing with it and make up new flavors.

So I started at the Rindge farmer’s market since it’s right in town. Most people had no idea what the strange cookies were, many people tried the samples I left out (and let me tell you – it was HOT that day, 86 degrees and I discovered the only thing better than a stroopwafel is an ooey-gooey melted stroopwafel! Good thing no one was making ice cream to put with them – I would have thought I died and went to heaven!) I was shocked how many people knew what they were – everyone who had traveled out of the country really… and all those people bought some cookies! Told you, they’re addictive. And they come with good memories so it’s really lovely to discuss past travels with new and familiar faces.

With such little pedestrian traffic I can’t say I made out like a bandit or anything, I made enough to pay for the table, but I am encouraged to try other local markets – perhaps in Peterborough and New Ipswich. I will be checking those out next week to see if I should set up a table there. I have a feeling Peterborough will have better customers for me because it’s a wealthier town more likely to have world travelers and people willing to spend money on art. New Ipswich is another heavy hitter for the area because it boasts better foot traffic.

Now I have started this year’s farmer’s markets, I have my garden growing, and am working on hauling out a work space for my art, I would say life is going pretty nicely at the moment. Sometimes I feel it’s all going by too slowly but then I grab my keys and take another adventure. That’s what life is all about – leaving joyous footprints wherever you go.

If you are enjoying Catching Marbles please consider adding a dollar or two to my limited gas money fund so I can continue going on adventures and sharing them with you! Thank you!


Farmer’s Market – Philadelphia PA

From the Rodin Museum we walked back to the subway and found ourselves at the Farmer’s Market. Oh it was lovely! I wish there were a Farmer’s Market that big back home… there was fresh everything… fresh fruits and veggies, fresh baked goods, a very expensive chocolate place with chocolate rats and anatomically correct hearts, and we even stopped to get a freshly made fruit smoothie which was really good. The only disappointment was the fact their Dutch Dinner Corner (or whatever it was called) wasn’t in any way actually Dutch, just as well they were closed.

I parted with Katherine after this. She gave me instructions how to take the subway back to the car and I gave her a sculpture of a bat, her favorite animal, I had made for her shortly before I left. I felt I should offer a gift as she was so helpful in taking us around and showing us the neat little nooks of Philly.

If you are enjoying Catching Marbles please consider adding a dollar or two to my limited gas money fund so I can continue going on adventures and sharing them with you! Thank you!


 

 

And so it Begins!

Ever since I was a tween I dreamed about going across the entire United States and soaking in everything it had to offer. I had grown up in a bubble – and as nice as that bubble was I wanted to know what else was out there besides the trees and stone walls of New Hampshire. Was it really like visiting another planet out West? Where the people the same all over? Was there anything that united this society besides the idea of country? As much as I longed to know the answer I kept my dreams to myself until at the age of 25 an opportunity arose and I figured it’s now or never.

Suddenly my freakish encyclopedic knowledge was actually useful! I picked lots of destinations – everything I had ever wanted to see from the geysers of Yellowstone, to the fossils of Butte National Monument, to the charismatic Robert the Doll in Key West. I was going to do it all.

A map was procured, one of those big pastel maps of the United States you see hanging in history and geography classes in every public school. Pins were stuck into desirable destinations like some sort of 2-D voodoo doll and then the waiting… the ungodly anxious waiting as the weather slowly creaked from one bone frigid season to something a little more livable. It begins!

If you are enjoying Catching Marbles please consider adding a dollar or two to my limited gas money fund so I can continue going on adventures and sharing them with you! Thank you!


 

 

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