- June 12, 2026
- 5 Comments
Since I was a little girl, this most beautiful hymn has always been one of my favorites:
It came to mind as I put together today’s post because it feels like a celebration of exactly that—bright and beautiful things in the garden, and second, our little creature great and small—our pup’s first vacation to Carmel By The Sea.
- June 05, 2026
- 23 Comments
This week’s post is a little bit of everything I love—a sweet craft project, a garden and pup update, a relaxing desert getaway, knitting works-in-progress, a few movie and book favorites, and some meal planning to keep the week running smoothly. It’s a mix of themes that reflects life around here, so let’s jump in…starting with knitting, naturally.
The scarves above and below are both about 2/3 finished. Above is Just A Scarf and is next to my bed when I want to knit at knit before bedtime. Below is Emporium. I'm keeping this in the family room at this time and work on it during TV time after dinner. I also took it to Palm Desert and got a lot done there. Both knits are just a blast to make.
- May 01, 2026
- 10 Comments
- April 10, 2026
- 14 Comments
- April 03, 2026
- 14 Comments
This week the sun has been brilliant and the air warm, and we decided it was time to get going on the garden. I've had misgivings all month about the work ahead of us. It's a big job, and this year—and if I'm honest, the last few years too—I've wondered if I still have it in me. I worried that something I'd loved for decades might no longer be enjoyable. The idea of falling out of love with the garden made me so sad.
We've always promised ourselves that when gardening stops being easy, we won’t push ourselves. Still, it was hard to ignore the overwhelming weeds. I wasn’t looking forward to all the bending, and I wished I hadn’t let things get so out of hand. I also wasn’t happy about my husband digging the beds.
We could hire people to do the worst of it, but for us gardening has always meant handling the good with the bad—the fun along with the not-so-fun. Still, a sunny day, an empty calendar, and a handful of pretty seed packets were enough to change my mind.
After planting myself in a particularly weedy spot with an audiobook in my ears, I started with no enthusiasm—just one weed, then another. But somewhere along the way the familiar rhythm returned, and I thought, oh yes…this is why I love it. My hands moved almost on their own and my mind was quiet. It’s a kind of garden meditation, and it felt so good to have my gardening mojo back.
I'm happy to say I'm looking forward to another gardening year, and I hope you'll come along with me. It's still early in the season and there’s a lot of growing left to do.
- March 13, 2026
- 11 Comments
Last weekend we were downtown for dinner, and friends who lived but a stroll away from the restaurant invited us over for dessert. We said yes (obviously) and were treated to her family's traditional birthday cake, Flo Braker's Butter Almond Cake. She served it with boozy cherries and whipped cream served from her bar cart, which for the evening had been transformed into a dessert trolley. It was absolutely charming. My husband is very fond of almond cake and he said this was the best. The recipe can be found in Flo's book, "The Simple Art of Perfect Baking" but an almost exact adaptation is linked here.
That dessert led us down Memory Lane, revisiting some of our favorite recipes. We remembered Yotam Ottolenghi’s giant meringues, which I made for our dinner group in March 2020. I remember the evening clearly because we spent much of it talking about a new virus and wondering whether we should lie low for “a few weeks.”
The following night we met another group of friends and had the same conversation. Driving home that Saturday night, we reluctantly agreed we should probably stay in for a while—but the next day the decision was made for us. The country went into lockdown.
I had taken plenty of photos that night, but somewhere during those early weeks everything else took over and I forgot all about this dessert. Thanks to last Friday night’s reminiscing, though, I’ve rediscovered it—and now finally have it to share.
- February 13, 2026
- 15 Comments
This week I’m back with more knitting—a sweater I had the pleasure of test knitting, Desert Days by Briana Arlene. It has several features that make it a great knit: it’s worked top-down with short rows to shape the upper back, and it uses clever invisible increases for the bodice.
The sleeves are the real showpiece. In the original design, they’re worked in several colors using a mix of stranded and mosaic techniques, along with both knit and purl stitches. The effect is striking, with an American Southwest vibe.
- September 26, 2025
- 7 Comments
- July 03, 2025
- 12 Comments
- May 31, 2025
- 14 Comments
- April 09, 2025
- 10 Comments
- March 28, 2025
- 5 Comments




























