Showing posts with label Jenna Rose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jenna Rose. Show all posts

Wednesday, 5 September 2012

Back Forty Living in the Lanark Highlands

A while back it was mentioned here that I became a scout bee this spring and left the hive and Hamilton and moved to the country in Eastern Ontario. I thought I would pop in and give a little tour of where we live and what we've been up to these past few months.


Tucked back in the woods in the Lanark Highlands, an hour west of Ottawa, is our little board and batten house.  Originally built in 1867, it's now renovated into a cozy open concept home with a little loft and a wood stove.  When we first moved here it felt like we were at a cottage, and some days, especially when we have a fire on outside and it smells like summer camp, it still does. But most of the time it feels like home and we can't believe we've only lived here four short months. 


We have a few acres of forest, where we have been chipping away at building trails, and a few acres of field, which are now filled with goldenrod that I hope to harvest soon for dyeing. There are a few dozen apple trees, lots of wild berry bushes, and a couple little ponds where our dog swims everyday.  The land behind us is mostly hay fields, with nothing on it but old barns.  We walk the fields daily and often try to time it for when we can see some of the most amazing evening skies. Between the sunsets and the storm clouds it's pretty great how much of the weather and the sky we can see out here.
  


With fall on it's way were preparing for winter. We're canning all our vegetables, stacking wood. It's that kind of work that takes labour and time and we don't really mind because there's something nice about readying yourself and your home for a new season.


When we first moved here one of the first things we did was put in a garden. There had been sheep on this land for over ten years so we were pretty confident we had good soil but since this was our first vegetable garden we didn't want to bite off too much. We kept the garden small enough to manage as beginners, but big enough so we would have a nice selection of veggies to eat and preserve this year. At first it was cute. I laid hay on the rows and made trellises with found sticks.


But everything grew so well that many of the supports didn't hold, plants went horizontal, and we can barely walk down the rows anymore. We've learned a lot from this first garden and now that we know how well things will grow we have plans for an even bigger one next year.

 
The garden sits between the house and the old sheep barn, which we have converted to a studio for my screen printing business. It's bright and airy and really is a special place to work.  I often head out with a coffee first thing in the morning as the sun is rising. I'm finding it such a nice creative time of day. I used to really like having the studio separate from my home, but I am really starting to appreciate this new set up and being able to easily work early morning or late into the evening if I want to.

    
Having my husband, Jeff, working from home too makes it that much better. Along with the farm we also took over a cheese making business called Back Forty Artisan Cheese. Jeff apprenticed with the previous owner over the winter, learning the recipes and tricks of the trade and he is now a full time Cheese maker, creating raw sheep’s milk cheese in the commercial kitchen off the side of our house.  
 
 
 He makes four different kinds of cheese. The Highland Blue is a milder blue cheese with a nice buttery flavor. I never even used to like blue cheese until this one. It is so good. The Bonnechere is semi-firm with a toasted rind- he actually torches the rind with a flame.


He also makes a feta and a white rind cheese called Madawaska, which is slightly creamy under the rind and chalky in the centre. It is my favourite cheese in the world. It's pretty amazing always having such yummy cheese on hand. We've had lots of visitors this summer, including a few of the Bees, and each time the one thing we know we'll definitely be serving is a cheese plate. No one seems to mind.

Wednesday, 25 January 2012

The Bees at Home: Projects in Progress II

We're into January now - one of the best times for crafting. There's snow on the ground (sometimes, at least!), and the air is cold, so sometimes it's nice to just stay in and make something. We thought we'd catch you up on on what's going on in some of our craft spaces...

First, Jen is making this amazing 'junk mail cross-stitch'. She brought it to knit night on Wednesday, and was explaining some of her reasoning behind this little project. One of the 'men of the beehive' is a mailman, and it's really personified the postal system for her. Thinking that the postal workers probably see a lot of 'no junk mail' posters', she wanted to add some personal time and energy to her sign. It also relates the very tactile quality of sending mail and that of cross-stitch. It's so great, Jen!

(The book she used for the alphabet patterns can be purchased here.)

As you might know, part of our identity in the Beehive is 'homesteading' - participating in a lifestyle of  sustainability and self-sufficiency. It's been amazing to see different members of our craft collective tackling these amazing and practical art forms of old, like canning, mending, natural dyeing, farming, and now weaving! Hollie is in the middle of a weaving class and has so far wrapped about 1700 metres of textile, prepped the loom, and should start weaving next week.


In other very exciting news, our very own Jenna Rose was a Featured Seller on Etsy last week! Jenna's handmade housewares and accessories are so beautiful, and regularly and proudly sported by members of the Beehive. Everything she makes is hand screen printed in house, and the illustrated designs are thoughtfully created by Jenna as well. I could go on and on, but the Etsy interview is a great read, so make sure you check it out here.


Lastly, you can always count on Kate to be working on at least one (but more likely three or four!) amazing project...this time it's paper piecing with hexagons. Basically, paper piecing is a hand-sewing technique that is used to improve accuracy when working with shapes that have difficult angles. You fold lightweight cotton around paper templates, and baste them in place. Once everything is whip-stitched together, you press the whole piece, remove the basting, pop out the paper pieces and voila! Super cute quilt top/pillowcase/placemat/table runner/whatever you want.


So, there are a few things that are going on in the background, here at the Beehive. We'd love to see what you're working on at home, or which projects you have on your radar. Just post your link in the comments. Happy crafting!

(You can see 'Projects in Progress I' here...)