Columbines and Irises #OpenBook Blog Hop

January 5, 2025

Now that it’s the new year, tell us a favorite holiday memory. (Any holiday!)

There’s over a foot of snow on the ground, and the winter holidays are over.

Every morning for the past week or more, I’ve had to clean off my Jeep before going anywhere. So let’s talk about a special Fourth of July from over a decade ago. (Side note- why does a decade sound like a longer time than 10 years?) Anyway, that year the Fourth of July fell on a Friday, and we decided to make the drive up to the mountains, one of our favorite things to do.

There were several routes we’d take from Cheyenne, WY, most of them going through Walden, CO, then to Fort Collins, and returning to Cheyenne. (Or the other way around.) I made a game of it – how many routes could I find to get to the same places? I jokingly called them my smuggler’s routes. Several of them weren’t available in the winter, when snow covered the mountain passes.

Back to the memory.

That year, we took off early in the day. The round trip took about 4 hours of straight driving. We never drove it straight. There were many possible stops along the way. Perhaps Jelm. Maybe the green house along Route 230, owned by the state of Colorado. Or Cowdrey Reservoir, where we first spotted the flock of yellow-headed blackbirds. Or one of the many small pull-offs along the way.

One of them was where I spotted the first wild columbine I’d ever seen. I’d heard of them, of course, but it was like spotting a legend. Then it became a quest, looking for more along the road. Wildflowers of many shapes, sizes, and colors bloomed everywhere we looked. I don’t know the names of most of them, but the pictures I took that day are backed up in three places.

That same trip, I spotted a field of irises on a side road out of Walden. Not just a few scattered plants here and there, but a wetlands area filled with them. (To consider how unique that was, Walden is in a high desert area – elevation over 8000 ft.)

I don’t remember how long the trip took that day – probably closer to ten hours if you consider the stops for meals and exploring. It wasn’t long enough, but we ran out of daylight.

Feel free to share your favorite memories in the conducts. Other authors will be sharing theirs on their blogs, found in the links below.

As always, please stay safe until the next time.

Goal accountability. (From last week’s blog.) I broke 25000 words and did some basic editing on my WIP. I feel good about it.)

January 5, 2025

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Childhood Memories in My Stories #OpenBook Blog Hop

Jan 24, 2022

Do any of your characters have a favorite toy from their childhood? Do you?

Easy answer to this question is no, I haven’t written childhood toys into any of my stories. But, as always, there’s a gotcha! Not toys, but Harmony, my librarian-turned-internet researcher, has many of her childhood books.

I mention her collection of Nancy Drew in the stories, but she’s kept many other books as well. She’s got a copy of The Three Musketeers that was given to her by her uncle. A few of the James Bond books were added to her library when she was in high school.

There’s one small section of a shelf with children’s stories. Dr. Seuss is there for sure, along with Where The Wild Things Are and many others.

And it’s not a toy or a book, but Harmony also has her mother’s African Violet—well, at least a plant that is several generations down from the original cutting. She’s kept it alive through crisis after crisis.

And me?

I’ve still got a few things from my childhood, if you count high school. Coming from the middle a large family, most of our toys were passed down from one child to another as they were outgrown, just like our clothes. I never was attached to dolls or stuffed animals and had no desire to keep them. I’ve held onto a magnetic chess/checkers set I used to take to school, although I never played seriously, and a few books I claimed as my own from the shelves in the attic. (I may have previously mentioned the Narnia books I ‘borrowed’ from one of my brothers and never returned.) And I still have some of the embroidery thread that was my grandmother’s. (I know, it probably is unusable.)

I’d love to hear what childhood toys or belongings you’ve held on to. Tell us in the comments if you like.

This is the part where I suggest you check out the posts from the other authors on this hop and see what toys their characters might have. Just follow the links below.

As always, until next time, please stay safe.

Jan 24, 2022

Do any of your characters have a favorite toy from their childhood? Do you?

Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use #OpenBook when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.

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