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Category Archives: Postcard Art

Carla

11-Apr-07
Carla

Stuff of real life ahead…just a little warning.

I have a loyal reader named Brian who has a blog called BeanQuest. I found BeanQuest by chance one day and became attached to Brian’s writings. His wife, Jennifer has a blog called Jennifer’s Nest as well. They both share stories about family and struggles…stuff we all deal with.

Well, Brian and Jennifer’s dog, Carla, passed away not too long ago. Trust me if you don’t own a dog, that’s a struggle of high significance.

Being a dog lover, I really…well, I know it sounds odd for a guy…I really hurt when I hear about somebody’s dog passing away. We have a dog that is very dear to us and I know how it is when one passes. It’s hard. Quite surprisingly hard.

My father-in-law makes the comment frequently that “if ya’ll ever tell Rosie she’s a dog, she’s gonna be real disappointed.” And so it goes for those of us who love our canine friends like family.

When I read about Carla’s passing, I decided I wanted to do something for Carla and for Brian and Jennifer.

Carla’s in a good place now. But we on this side sometimes take it hard…and wonder. So I sketched up a postcard of Carla from a photo at BeanQuest and wrote a little message on the back to “Mom and Dad”. It’s in the mail.

That’s what I like most about art…it can communicate in unique ways.

Postcard

Hopefully, it’ll make things a little better for them. I think Carla would like them to know she’s OK.

Brian and Jennifer are getting a new pup soon and Jennifer’s hoping Carla will send them the “right one“. I think she will. Nobody in heaven would know better than Carla which pup would be best for them. I think she’ll put in her two barks worth to get her point across.

And yes, I do believe good dogs go to heaven. Not much reason in us goin’ if they don’t.

Spring Break Tips

05-Apr-07
Tips For Spring Break

The Florida sun is hot spring breakers. Here are a few helpful tips and reminders.

  1. Hat bill to front when outside, half-circles on forehead look stupid
  2. Sunscreen is for your skin, not for squirting off balconies
  3. Pass out in shade, not sun
  4. Belly flopping into pool makes sunburn sting really bad
  5. “oooh ooooh, ahhh ahh” takes on new meaning while making out with sunburn
  6. It is hard to be cool when you are red
  7. peeling is soooo not cool

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Spring Pines

02-Apr-07
Spring Pines

Being a native son of Georgia, I was raised around pine trees and azaleas. The azalea was the de facto standard shrub when I was a kid.

Everybody used them, and they still do, but now they are usually up against the house more often than not. That’s because developers here always clear-cut a chunk of land before building a new neighborhood. So the “landscaping” usually ends up next to the houses with most of the lawns manicured and cordoned off by driveways. There are neat straight hedges and very specific “areas” for landscaping and flower beds.

Occasionally though, you can find little jewels as you drive down the roads.

Such was the case today as I traveled on a side street that crosses between two major thoroughfares several miles apart. An older home on a few acres had a wooded area buffering it from the road.

Many years ago, the owners decided some azaleas would look nice amidst the big pines there. Today, it is a strikingly peaceful scene in an otherwise fast-paced suburb.

I saw it first at 45mph and was so surprised by it I decided to give it another run with my camera hanging out of my window. I got a reasonably good shot and painted it up on a postcard this evening.

When I was a kid, we would visit my uncle Dink and Aunt Winnie in the country. Mom and Dad, Dink, Winnie, Grandma Idel, and Grandpa Gordon would sit out under the huge pines in the front yard, in those cheap folding chairs with the nylon webbing…and talk about things.

I would lay in the grass and look up at those tall pines with the sun filtering through. Azaleas were here and there…always near the pines.

This scene reminded me of that.

Tale of a 10-Year Old Sniper

31-Mar-07

It was 1968. I was 10 years old. It was August and the day was beginning to cool off as dusk approached.

I was stationed just outside Smyrna, GA in a special ops camp called Westwood Circle. Specifically, 119 Westwood Circle, a sophisticated military operations facility disguised to look like a single story brick ranch with a Ford and a Buick in the driveway.

The disguise worked. We were undetected…so far at least.

I had just been issued a highly specialized, Crossman Co2 Bee-Bee rifle, five Co2 cartridges, and a pint carton of round bee-bees from my Commanding Officer, General West, a Five Star.

He said the weapon and ammo had just come in at the provisions depot in town. The civilians knew that place as the Western Auto Store. Another clever disguise. We soldiers knew it as our lifeline.

He said the weapon had my name on it and there was a reason. He wrote it on there with a magic marker so the other soldiers in the platoon would know it belonged to me. I knew why he didn’t want the other soldiers to have it. It was because I was the chosen one. (And it was because it cost $14.99.)

I still remember his fateful words that day in August, 1968…”Be careful with this son. You could put somebody’s eye out.”

I humbly took the sleek, lightweight, pistol-gripped rifle and walked to my post at the edge of the broken terra cotta patio with the aluminum suncover and fake wrought-iron posts. I installed the first Co2 cartridge and listened to it hiss loudly as the firing valve penetrated the cold, tin seal of the cartridge. It scared the hell out of me. I didn’t know it would do that. Then I poured the ammo chamber full of the round, golden bee-bees and took my post.

These were not just any bee-bees. These bee-bees were meant for marksmen…snipers. They were round, with no flat dimple like the civilian issue bee-bees. They were accurate, deadly accurate. They were designed to fly straight…and not miss their mark. I was glad that day…in August, 1968, that I had been issued such a weapon and such bee-bees. For I was about to meet the enemy face to face.

There was a renegade soldier, an AWOL, who was known to have stolen documents. Valuable documents. Special ops documents. Documents that could reveal our location to the enemy. I could tell you more, but I’d have to kill you. Suffice it to say, we were all in great danger. That’s why I was chosen. That’s why the weapon of choice had my name on it.

As I stood my post and chewed my bubble gum, I realized it was time to make my rounds. I jumped on my bike and headed into the yard down toward the sandbox, without my rifle (the provisions officer forgot to procure a strap). It was then, about 20 feet from the sand box that I saw him…the enemy. The renegade, The AWOL, GI Joe. His head was just above the yellow sand mound in the left side of the sandbox.

Quietly he stared at me, his red hair and blue eyes glaring. He was dirty and worn. He had obviously been outside, alone, for quite some time. He looked…desperate.

He knew we had each reached our day of destiny. I dropped the bike and ran for the patio and the rifle. I pulled the rifle into position from behind one of the fake wrought-iron posts, thinking I would be pelted with his gunfire or a grenade. But no. Not a shot.

He had not moved. He still glared from the same position. His red haired head still peeking over the yellow sand mound.

The bastard was daring me to shoot him! Daring me to test my mettle! He was certain I would back down and forsake the platoon…forever branded a chicken.

I was 40 feet from him now, crouched low, my cheek against the peeling paint of the fake wrought-iron post. I began to sweat as I squinted to see him hidden in the sand box. The intertwining limbs of the yellow bell bushes behind him made good camo. He was hard to see now. I began to wonder if I might miss…if I might fail.

Then I remembered the words of General West when he handed me the rifle…”Be careful with this son. You could put somebody’s eye out.”

It was at that very instant that I saw the bastard’s blue right eye glisten in the low, evening sun as though it were a bullseye.

I snapped the trigger!

Pssssst! The Co2 powered bee-bee took flight! The enemy fell back! Was it over?

I blew a bubble, and ran to the sand box, rifle poised. Would this renegade, this GI Joe, be faking it and pump me full of lead when I came over the horizon? Somehow I knew, no matter what happened, I would still make mess that night.

He lay there in the sand, silent, eyes open, no rifle, no pistol, no knife. I picked him up, shook him gently, and knew with the sound of the bee-bee rattling in his head, that he was gone.

I had met my calling. I had served my task. It was time for supper.

Watermelons for My Brudder

29-Mar-07
Birthday Watermelons

My big brother, who is eleven years my senior, hits the big 6-0 today.

Man, let’s see. It’ll be eleven whole years before I reach the big 6-0. The big 6-0 sure is a looooong way off for me. Gee, it must be somethin’ to be the big 6-0…hmmmmm…I can’t imagine. Our Momma was just saying the other day, “I can’t believe D will be SIXTY!”

Wow. I mean hey, I hope he can still read this…ya know?

It’s alright though…he’s pretty durn wealthy. He’s got me on that one!

Yep, he’s got a great big neah-ne-neah-ne-neaaaaaaah-neah! on that one.

But he don’t flaunt it as they say here in the South.

So we’uns all still love him and he knows I’s just kiddin’ with him.

Anyway, Big Brudder has this thing about watermelons. Well actually, we both do and we go back and forth about it. So, I thought I’d send him a trailer load of them this year for his birthday.

Yes, that’s a trailer in the sketch, not a pickup truck. Being inventive like we are here in the South, we just whack off the truck part when it quits and make a trailer out of the rest.

So happy birthday Big Brudder. These is all you git…and you can keep the trailer.

Sneeze, Cough, Wheeze

29-Mar-07
Sneeze, Cough, Wheeze, pollen is in the air

It has been in the high seventy’s and low eighties here in Georgia for a couple of weeks now. We even broke a record high for March one day.

This warmth has caused the grass to grow. It has also caused everything to take on a pale greenish yellow cast. That’s because dang near anything that is exposed has a thick coat of pollen on it.

This natural chain of events means I have to once again start cutting the dad burn grass. I did so Wednesday evening.

Can Something Be Learned From Cutting the Grass?

Of course! As I cut the grass, I noticed I was leaving a cloud of yellow billows behind me. Sometimes, this is due to flatulence, but not this time. It was the pollen.

By the time I had finished, complete with blowing off the driveway with my high powered, professional leaf blower, I had created a mystical wonderland of swirling pollen clouds and sent them traveling towards the neighbors’ homes. (I’m always finding ways to create stuff).

So, seeing as how the pollen was invading my life, causing myself and others to sneeze, cough, and wheeze, I decided to find out about this stuff and see if I could determine what a grain of pollen actually looked like. Google to the rescue.

Some People Have Unusual Interests

Electron beam microscopy provides images of eeensy, weeensy things in great detail. The link above takes you to one of those off the wall scientific research places where a group of people has bothered to make it their goal to photograph lots of different grains of pollen with an electron beam microscope. How interesting eh? Sounds like a great idea for a date.

Well, oddly enough, some of these little grains are quite unusual and interesting.

I chose to sketch this particular pollen grain because it looked “itchy” and “sneezy” to me. I mean look at it. Get a few hunerd thousand of those thingys up your nose and you’re going to sneeze pardner.

So I now know what is going up my nose during pollen season. It helps to know one’s enemies.

In the process of sketching it, I decided to see what plant creates the little buggers. Turns out it’s a “Henbit Deadnettle” (who names these things?? What do they smoke??). I found some photos of it here and a photo of a bunch of it’s seeds. The seeds were equally as interesting as the pollen grain so I sketched one of those as well. I don’t think I’ve ever seen seeds that were spotted like a Hereford cow.

So there you have it folks. Another day of learning by sketching the mundane things of everyday life. Now if I could only stop sneezing.

Japanese Maple Leaf

28-Mar-07
Japanese Maple

Ever pressed any leaves? My wife does. Then she forgets about them.

I found this one buried in a stack of books and stuff, one of my piles I was searching through for something else today. I didn’t find what I was looking for but I found this leaf.

I really didn’t get the color so well. The shape is accurate. It’s actually a very red wine color but opaque. That, as it turns out is fairly hard to replicate in watercolor unless one spends a lot of time on the painting.

Seeing as how it’s just a sketch, I can live with the inaccuracy of the color. The main thing is I was inspired to study, sketch and record something…thus learn.

And so I did…