Skye claimed the appaloosa gelding. And Grace was fine with that. The only way to really know an older horse won't endure a horrific ending after a life of faithful service is to make sure of that yourself...to keep them. She started by trying to get him cleaned up. Skye took one of the near-antique halters and a long leather line from the tack room. The leather was starting to crack, but she found a halter that fit. She washed the spotted gelding as best as she could but the scuffs and scratches he had all over his body didn't appear to be ordinary dirt. For the most part, they did not come off. And then, for the evening, she found him a place in the barn, and put on a blanket...a little big for him perhaps, but he did not seem to mind. He was patient, kind, and appeared to be enjoying all the attention. He was sound...his legs were straight and unblemished, he showed no signs of arthritis. Grace got a nice surprise when her second ever custom model horse won the MEPSA Mini Makeover contest. It had been Skye's idea to enter the contest, and Grace chose not to object...but she surely wasn't thinking she would win. Her prize made her feel a bit better about giving up her little roan mustang...a resin by one of her favorite artists, Kitty Cantrell, small enough to put on her night stand, and happily, another mustang. Mustangs seemed to be playing a big role in their lives lately. Which is where the mystery comes in. Grace and Skye poured over a map of the back country, but no matter how expansive the forest, it was surrounded by development. So where wild horses were coming from in this day and age was a bit of a mystery. Grace figured the BLM holding facility in Ridgecrest was the nearest potential source, providing they had lost some horses (and all of them stallions)...but Ridgecrest is a solid 120 miles from Chilao. Realistically, it was impossible that the horses were coming from Ridgecrest directly. But they were coming from somewhere. On July 18, after a long and brutal heat wave, the sky was wonderfully cool with clouds. Grace rode out early on one of her favorite mares, Sheza Looker, in the hopes of catching another glimpse of the wild horses. The morning ride did not disappoint. Grace watched from a distance as big rain drops came dancing down from the sky. A stallion emerged, one Grace had never seen before; a sort of dark palomino appaloosa, with big hooves and a generous profile; and the dust rose as the rain pummeled the parched soil. And so she named him. Petrichor. Petrichor would not be alone for long. The little bay roan that Skye named Crazy was quick to approach the new arrival. She watched from a distance as the smaller bay stallion tested and sought to engage the bigger, light colored stud. He was pushy, that horse named Crazy. The big stallion squealed and pawed back but seemed uninterested in all-out war. With a sudden lunge he pushed the little bay back...but he didn't follow up with an attack. Eventually the two stallions moved out of view, more or less in the same direction...like being together was better than being alone, but not exactly like old friends. On July 25, Grace went out again looking for the wild horses. She rode out before dawn, borrowing Precious, one of Skye's favorite and most unflappable mares. Finding the stallion named Petrichor would not prove difficult. He seemed more interested in Grace than the mare. Wary but not frightened. There was a moment when, in their dust dance, Petrichor was very close, and held the upper ground. Grace kept moving to the left, talking in a calm voice, as though she knew him like an old friend on an ordinary day, no special effort to be soothing, just talking. He reached his neck out for a moment, almost touching her with his nose...then, as if a distant sound had caught his attention, he drew back and turned away, casting a glance at Precious as he trotted off in a big, stiff stallion trot. Grace wondered if he really had other business to attend to, or if he just felt the need to make an exit. Either way, it was a very good first encounter.
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It was the best of times. And it was a busy time. There were horses to be prepared for the show ring. They would need to be photographed to their best advantage, and for that, Grace needed the weather to cooperate. And she also needed to restore wind-ravaged fences and arena footing. In the high desert, you either live in a place that collects soil, or a place that loses it, based on the wind. And the ranch was prone to losing soil, such that keeping arenas soft and full of good riding material was no easy, one-time task. When it was too hot out for riding, shoveling sand and building arenas, the girls stayed inside, working on the life-size Bremen Singers resin by Kitty Cantrell. All the while the girls worked to prepare the horses already in residence, there were new arrivals coming. Grace brought home a trailer full of horses in June, most of whom were disbursed. But two of them stayed on...an Andalusian stallion, and an aged appaloosa gelding. The Andalusian was fabulous. And really big. There was no headstall that would fit him, and he came without a lot of information...like, his level of training, his temperament, his breeding history...so Grace went out of her comfort zone entirely, making a rope bridle after the fashion that Skye had taught her and climbing on the big mulberry grey steed bareback. She told Skye that if it didn't go well, he too would be for sale. The rope bridle offered vague instruction to the stallion. Reading Grace's body language, he moved forward, in a graceful, measured ad highly animated fashion...a passage. Therein were the answers Grace sought. This was a highly trained horse. Easily worth his price. At least for now, he would stay. Skye didn't want to know what Grace had paid for the appaloosa. She just wanted to make sure he stayed. He was obviously a mature horse, very quiet, with gentle eyes. He was covered in scratches and little scars and caked on dirt. Once upon a time he had been someone's performance horse, but that time had passed, and now he needed some love. The appaloosa appeared to be sound. Skye's first ride on him was a night ride, under the stars. Grace chose Ono, who was coming along so well under saddle. It was, they were told, the time of year when the Milky Way was visible in the eastern sky. And indeed it was. So were a million other stars. Perhaps they would have seen even more had they traveled deeper into the forest, further into the darkness...but the beauty and magic they saw was enough. Several hours later they were riding again, at dawn. Skye let the appaloosa rest and chose Precious, a 1996 Thomas Bainbridge quarter horse mare, for their next adventure. Grace had seen hoofprints that were not of her own making. She had a hunch they were the hoof prints of a wild horse, or horses. And she had a hunch of where to go looking for them. The squealing and clattering of hooves on granite gave them away. There were two wild horses, stallions; a chocolate palomino the girls recognized as Highlander, almost certainly with draft influence, and a smaller, wirey, active bay roan, scarred form head to toe, dancing along the edge of granite escarpments and testing the big palomino tirelessly. And then, sensing the presence of the girls...perhaps by sound, or smell, or even the slightest movement form their hiding place among the rocks...the stallions turned as one and fled, the squealing and sparring forgotten as they headed back into the chaparral. Redbird Ranch is hosting its first ever online model horse show. It is the inaugural show of a series that will be hosted by multiple model horse hobby people and culminate in a Championship Show. Grace and Skye will be helping to get the word out in the model horse community. You can learn all about the show here: www.ponybytes.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=95 We also have an event on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/885896502093181?ref=newsfeed There was about to be a lot of work to do. Grace would be in charge of choosing and presenting over two dozen horses for Breyerfest Online, and Skye had talked Grace into participating in the MEPSA (Model Equine Photo Showers' Association's) Mini Makeover. So the girls did the smart thing. They got in some riding time while they could. Grace chose a Paint stallion that she nicknamed Ono for the day's ride. He got the name because when he arrived he wasn't having any part of anything. He didn't want to come out of the trailer. He didn't want to move around much in the turn-out pen. And then once he did get moving, he didn't want to stop. He didn't feel like greeting anyone...his response when taken to his stall...oh no. No no no. It took him several days to get acclimated. Once he did, Grace found him to be highly alert and a bit cautious, but willing. They rode out at dawn under a cloudless sky that would quickly warm. Grace had found a thing. The high desert is full of things that point to a once thriving past. Whole towns. Mining operations. Ranching outfits. Caverns, tunnels, hideaways. Grand theaters and outdoor amphitheaters. And those are just the things still visible. An older past lay erased by wind and fire and time. Covered by a thin layer of soil, indigenous settlements and bandit's hideaways are forever under foot in this harsh paradise. Tiburcio Vasquez lived in Chilao for the better part of 18 years, holding out against a changing world. Before the colonization of California, five different tribes - maybe more - made the resource-rich region their summer home. The structures that remain are from a much more recent but equally vacated past. A time when Albert Einstein had a favorite chair at Mount Wilson Observatory and the Mount Lowe Railway catered to a constant stream of tourists. (Late at night, or sometimes just before dawn, you can still hear the train whistle blowing, crisp and clear). A time when whole communities resided in the forest; when the asphalt ribbon of Angeles Crest Highway was brand new, when there was a community here. The girls rode toward the thing. Ono stopped at some distance from it, looked long and thoroughly, finally continued forward. Baron and Hobo were the first to enter. It was a massive sort of vault, made of huge slabs of local stone, concrete and iron. It was cool inside. Dark. Deep. Empty. Skye and Precious went in next. There was not enough room for two horses to turn around if anything went sideways inside. Grace and Ono went next. Ono was brave. Grace had him go about a third of the way in. That was enough. That was exceptional, really, for what Grace was pretty sure was a green-broke horse. Back at home it was time to get the MEPSA horses ready. The mini contest is a benefit for MEPSA. The horses entered become the property of MEPSA and are used as prizes or fund raisers for the club. Skye was donating her first ever custom model, a resin draft foal that was gifted to her by Deb and Randy Buckler of Resins by Randy. She told Grace it was somewhat traditional to give away your first piece of artwork. Now, she couldn't recall if that was a Native American tradition or an artist tradition or even where she'd learned about it being customary, but she was convinced it was the right thing to do. Grace was conflicted about donating her horse, her own second ever piece, a bay roan mustang sculpt by Summer Prosser that Grace named A Little Crazy. But it was hard to argue with Skye's benevolence. The third horse was being donated by the owner of Redbird Ranch. Soon as the photo shoot was over, the horses would be packed up and shipped off, and there would be other things...many other things...to take up space, talent and time. aSpring, however short-lived, is a magical time in the Angeles. It was a busy time for Grace and Skye. There was the work of the ranch itself, with new horses coming in and selections to be made among the horses already in residence. Grace's goal was to position the ranch as a reputable and premier stud farm with a separate western performance element. The bulk of her charges were draft, stock, Spanish and sport horses. But there were also a smaller number of Arabians, and horses that did not fit into a specific program, and of course, here and there, the rescue horse. There was also art. Both Grace and Skye had caught the bug. When the riding day was done, pencil, paint and pigment called out to them. And Grace wasn't one to do things in a subtle way. She purchased a life-sized sculpture with no less than four animals...The Bremen Town Singers by Kitty Cantrell...because if painting one is fun, painting four will be a blast... Skye meanwhile was also beginning to explore her heritage, such as she understood it. When she came across a series of posters and books designed for young native students, she became aware of less than romantic realities. The stories and posters sought to bridge a cultural gap between native youth and their ancestors. They addressed the negative impacts of the changes indigenous people have endured in the recent past - the replacement of an active lifestyle and wholesome food with reservation life, commodity groceries, and a dominant consumer culture that places little or no value on traditions, on spiritual connection, on land, on human rights. It was a lot to try to comprehend. At the same time that it brought up a mixture of conflicting feelings, it did not damper a dream that had been stirring in Skye. She wanted to make a regalia for riding. The whole thing. A proper dress and moccasins for her and a saddle and bridle for her horse. It was a dream complicated by reality, however. "Proper" meant knowing the specific style of your nation...the symbolic language spoken in the designs and the materials. And all Skye knew in a generic fashion was that she hailed from Oregon. And the horse issue also needed to be sorted out, although that was actually simpler. They were spoiled for choice as horses were concerned. And then there was the why. The motive. Did she want native regalia so that she could compete in shows? Certainly part of the whole spring fever involved the preparations they were making for a couple of online shows, and a live show at the ranch. Was she getting a bit caught up in that? Or was there something deeper going on behind her desire for a riding regalia? There was nothing wrong with wanting to compete in a costume class...but a competition-style regalia was not going to happen in time for the biggest of the shows unless they just went out and bought one made by someone else. The pony-horse Skye had chosen was sturdy and unflappable, and would have looked great in regalia, but he would not have been able to show in Breyerfest. Grace and Skye had a conversation about intention. Not about curbing it or redirecting it, but about understanding it. And sorting out the difference between a material goal (regalia) and a spiritual journey...becoming oneself. (Eckhart Tolle might suggest here that we already are ourselves, and so we don't need to go on a journey to find ourselves, but of course he would say it more eloquently, so let's just make some space for that idea...) Finally, there were some physical spacial realities. A proper ranch outfit was going to need a better tack room. And some updated tack. There were heaps and piles of vintage leather and big rusty buckles and clips, some of it usable, most not so much. Among the old leather there were other treasures. Each process, each task no matter how mundane, gave the girls opportunities to build their sisterhood. See more wonderful sculpture by Kitty Cantrell at https://kittycantrell.com There is a little back story on Jesse. In September 2015 we lost a dear friend, Jesse Gutierrez. He had some sort of medical issue that took his life. He was with friends, riding his motorcycle, up here, on Highway 2, in the Angeles National Forest, when it happened. He lived in some place like Bellflower so that he passed away here in his second home, on his favorite road, among people who loved him...not on a busy freeway...was a great blessing. There is an offrenda for him at Chilao School and a beautiful memorial where he passed away. He was a good friend to many and a good provider to his family. He worked hard and he played hard. And although in truth, I did not know him well, we had a mutual admiration and love for each other and we never missed the opportunity to say hello, to share a hug, a few words in his not exactly smooth English. I saw him just a few minutes before he died. He helped me water the hanging plants at Newcomb's Ranch. He had Simon and Richie help also. He took one of the hanging plants from me and his grasp missed the hanging wire and caught my hand. I recall it was a very strong grip, too much grip for the simple task of hanging a potted plant. Perhaps whatever took him was already affecting him. I don't know. None of us will ever really know. About fifteen minutes later, he would leave us. I would learn about it via Facebook, from a post by Darren Martinelli. And I would cry for two years. And even now, the tears still flow. He is our highway angel, although in truth there are many. He is the one I call upon all the time. The horse Jesse was released a few days later. I tried to get one and couldn't do it. So Richard Rudman purchased the horse on the wildly inflated secondary market for me. The horse Jesse is a lot like our beloved Jesse. His face is slightly crooked, and he is not very big or flashy. But he's quick, responsive, hard working, kind. And as I grasped to hold on to something, and struggled with overwhelming loss, denial and grief that I could not even really explain, I had the horse...and the broken bits of plastic from Jesse's helmet, and his motorcycle. In March, Grace decided she would campaign a horse for the Breyerfest Online Show, and the Model Equine Photo Showers Association. She had so many horses to choose from, and she started with the more obvious choice, Cookie, a black and white paint mare with all the potential credentials. Two things became obvious pretty quick. Grace loved riding and training and the real work of ranch life. But not showing. She didn't have or want the flashy attire of the show ring. She didn't care for the "pretend reins" that you carry in your off hand in many western riding show disciplines. She didn't like the super slow western lope. She didn't like having a horse carry its head so low that it looked like it was vision impaired and trying to find the ground. In short, Grace isn't show ring material. And she didn't give herself much time to choose a horse, or get photos of said horse performing in all of its potential classes....good photos that would stand up to judging. Finally, she did something sort of silly and ridiculous as professional horsemanship - or showing - is concerned. She went with her heart choice. And her heart choice was Jesse, the little palomino mustang. He was tough, willing, smart, and afraid of nothing. He was a natural with cattle. He had heart. Whatever you asked him for, he gave it one hundred per cent. He was honest and sure-footed. Maybe he wasn't very big or fancy, but he had everything else that made for a great horse. Cookie had all the same attributes...and she was big and real pretty. But Grace chose Jesse. Barrels, poles, roping, western equitation, western trail, open range stock work...he did it all. Grace knew Jesse was a long shot, both because of her own shortcomings in the show ring, and because she had given him so little time to be ready for the challenge. But maybe life isn't all about ribbons. Maybe it is about taking part. Maybe life is about the ride, the journey...not just the destination. National Model Painting Month (Jennifer Buxton's NaMoPaiMo) goes like this. During February, the shortest month of the year, you paint a model horse, of any scale, from start to finish. You cannot start painting before 12:01 AM in your time zone on February 1. The goal is to have the model completed before 11:59:59 PM on February 28. NaMoPaiMo happens on Facebook. It is not a contest. Nothing bad happens if you do not complete your horse. But it is a commitment. You must commit to a model and a color. And you must do that in advance. You don't get to keep changing your mind. You commit. And that is that. There are random prizes. They are generally very nice. But that is not why people from around the world participate. People participate for the fun, the challenge, the motivation, the sense of community. People participate because they have never tried to paint a horse before. People participate because they are well known artists and their work will get a ton of exposure. People participate because it is an unparalleled chance to be a part of an equine art community and to learn from experts and peers in the field in a friendly atmosphere. And then there is Minis Painting Minis, its own institution within NaMoPaiMo. Grace chose to paint an arab mare in foal that had been languishing on a shelf for many years. She ended up needing a lot more work than Grace anticipated, and there was some concern that she might not get her done in time. And then there was Skye's horse, the little draft foal. For both of the girls it was a first time experience. Skye's youthful enthusiasm drove her to finish her foal well before the end of the month. Grace had some unexpected motivation...a buyer. Her NaMoPaiMo horse - and her first ever artistic creation - sold before she had it completed. There is another common phenomenon that happens when thousands of people try to engage in an art project in the dead of winter, and that is things that don't go to plan. We would fall into that category in 2021. The idea is that February is typically a quiet month, but for us it would be a month of life-changing family medical issues. NaMoPaiMo became a hallmark of personal triumph over circumstances...or at least that was the intention. For the owner of Redbird Ranch, that meant completing a hair by hair roan traditional scale resin. At one point, in the middle of the night, huddled in the garage on an old couch with three dogs, instead of doing the tick-tick-tick pencil strokes of a hair by hair pattern, said certain owner, in a semi-conscious state, wrote "CRAZY" on the side of the horse. And so was the horse named. Grace and Skye would finish their horses on time and in fine style. NaMoPaiMo unleashed their inner artists, and we all look forward to doing it again in 2022. She came from Massachusetts by way of Colorado, on a windy day in January 2021. Elecktra Field, affectionately known as Little Elecktra, was touring the country, and her arrival coincided more or less with the beginning of NaMoPaiMo. Elecktra's arrival directly coincided with a wind storm - not as bad as the winds of Thanksgiving, but enough to keep girls and animals indoors for several days. Grace was a bit concerned about Skye. Would she get possessive over Grace? Or material things? Thankfully, no. Skye was eager to make new friends, or in this case, family. If Elecktra was Grace's cousin and Grace was Skye's adopted sister, then Elecktra was Skye's cousin also. And happily, Elecktra made good family. She was easy going, open minded, grounded, confident. While the wind howled outside the girls talked and talked. Skye decided Elecktra should have the top bunk. That way Skye could play with the animals and whatnot. As soon as she mentioned it, Elecktra climbed the ladder and lay down. She pulled her hat down over her eyes, took a long, deep breath...and fell asleep. The weather provided an ever-changing backdrop for Elecktra's visit. The wind blew for several days. Skye ventured out alone to meet Mikki, (Makakanta N'antaka) while Elecktra and Grace discussed art and NaMoPaiMo and horses. She returned with gifts...a buffalo robe for Grace, a gourd bowl, a healing crystal, and for herself, a bear fetish. A winter storm loomed off the California coastline, but before it made landfall, there was time for riding, and ride the girls did. Grace had virtually unlimited horses to ride...but only one western saddle rig. Laurel Dedes made sure Elecktra could be properly entertained by sending a staggering array of tack, including two western saddles that Grace could keep. And so they rode. They rode the firebreak that stretched for miles through Chilao. They rode into Mikki's neck of the woods on a windy, chilly day that would prove more cold than Skye's wardrobe could accommodate. She would wind up resting at home for a little bit to recover from that ride. Grace and Elecktra practiced western games. They raced Charmer and Windy Boy. They rode in the snow. It was a bit of magic, that January. They also showered some love on Skye. Had some more posters made to complete her side of the room. The girls made one of her dreams come true...sort of...Skye had been trying to learn how to ride standing up, but she just wasn't getting the hang of it. So they helped her practice on a lovely and patient draft, Snoqualmie Wilde (by Scarlette Wilde). It was fun! And really hard. There must be some trick to it that she didn't know yet. She did not have a horse to paint for NaMoPaiMo...but that was okay. She had a drawing tablet, and there were huge canvases in the old school house, and there was paint in one of the sheds...she could still do art. And then, a real surprise came. A resin foal called First Draft, a gift from Deb and Randy Buckler. (There are actually two First Draft resins, but Skye hasn't seen the second one yet). Elecktra didn't get to stay through NaMoPaiMo. She headed back across the country in early February to spend time with friends there. But the girls had all the fun they could pack into her visit, and she's welcome back any time. Elecktra is a portrait doll of Elecktra Field, by Anne Field, Field of Dolls Studio https://fieldofdolls.blogspot.com First Draft - Resins by Randy https://www.resinsbyrandy.com Skye was there when Grace arrived at Redbird Ranch. Grace had never really given the details of her occupancy much thought. Until recently. She reached out to Katy Niles, furniture maker extraordinaire, and ordered a custom bunk bed. One that would fit just perfectly in the remaining open space in her room. And match the one Katy had custom built for Grace. Grace was just putting the finishing touches on the bunk beds when Skye came in. "Whoa...wha...whose...you didn't say you were getting these!" "Well" Grace explained as she came down off the ladder, "Elecktra is coming to visit for a couple of weeks." "Elecktra?" "One of my cousins. From Massachusetts." Skye twisted around a little bit, fumbling for words. Skye had latched on to Grace from the moment she arrived in California. Skye was a natural with animals, a willing learner, always helpful, always hungry...and selfless. She was easily as excited to create a living space for Grace as Grace was to have one. She asked for nothing in return. But her longing for family was palpable. Skye went, young and nimble, straight up the ladder to the top bunk, and sunk into the softest mattress. "I'm from Massachusetts too, kind of." Skye said. "The Field family fostered me for a while. So, if Elecktra is your cousin, than you and I are sisters. Right? I mean, foster sisters...I mean, I'm your foster sister." There were a thousand ways to answer that question, but only one that was going to heal whatever wounds this strong and simultaneously fragile pre-teen girl was walking around with. "I hadn't thought of it that way" Grace said. "I guess you could be my foster sister." There was a warm silence. "Now hop down and give me a hand. I made something, and it's heavy, and now that the beds are here I'm not sure it's going to fit." And so the sisters shoved tables and shifted rugs and carefully, using an old towel beneath it, slid Grace's creation across the floor and into place; a lamp made of string lights and manzanita limbs, fitted to a resin base with a huge river rock to balance it. Grace plugged it in and it glowed like a Christmas tree...only somehow even more magical. Then Grace brought out some storage tubs, and a large paper tablet, with sheets lined on one side and blank on the other. "We'll have to use the tubs as chairs for now. And Skye, the tablet is for you." Skye's eyes were wide. Her lips parted but no sound came out. "And this" Grace said, lifting a primer grey model horse of considerable dimension onto the table, "is my NaMoPaiMo horse." More silence before Skye could speak. "Wow. Just...wow. An Arabian." Grace went about putting things away, stopping to gaze at her NaMo pony, getting lost in thoughts of how she would paint it. She heard a soft, child-like voice, just a whisper, not words that she could understand. Glancing up to the top bunk, she found Skye, smiling, admiring her new paper tablet, happily and quietly speaking, perhaps to herself, perhaps to the whole of the universe; legs tucked under the covers, content. A couple years back - six now I guess, or somewhere around there - Jennifer Bray Buxton got an idea. She started a thing called NaMoPaiMo...National Model Painting Month, on Facebook. Jennifer knew from the moment the idea unfolded that it would be a huge success. Overwhelming even. And right out of the gate, it was an international affair. Not a contest, not a competition, but a personal challenge to paint a model horse, of any scale, to completion in the month of February. Emerging spontaneously was an entire sub-division, Minis Painting Minis. Rock stars like Max and Christina Sutcliffe were on the ground floor of the movement. Enjoying Minis Painting Minis as a spectator sport was enough, I thought. Grace already had more horses to manage than she could ride in a week (or two weeks, or maybe a month). But Grace was interested. She'd never painted a thing in her life but clearly she was intrigued. There was just one problem. The girls were pretty much hard core horse geeks and did not have anything much to their names. They bunked in an old storage room and that was good enough. Sort of. It was all they had, anyway, so it was good enough. It was January. Grace started looking around. Inspired by Max and Christine, Grace decided to go for it, and do the NaMoPaiMo thing. But not without a proper place to do it from, because NaMoPaiMo is a very visual experience. It's all about sharing. Grace found a space. A big space. In good repair. It did take some cleaning but it cleaned up very nice. This would be home. This would be where the NaMoPaiMo magic would happen. Eventually. When she figured out how to get some furniture. And supplies. Skye was thrilled with the whole idea and leaped into action. She told Mikki (Makakanta N'nantaka), a dear friend and long time resident of Chilao, about Grace's new space. Mikki came and sat with the space and exchanged energy with it. It felt good. But winter was upon them and the space was cold. The cold was hard to ignore. Skye also summoned the help of the crazy-talented Katy Niles. Grace needed a bed. What would the most amazingly perfect bed look like? It would be rustic, it would be functional, it would be country, it would be light in color and made from natural wood. Katy got to work, and within a few days she delivered a creation that was absolutely perfect. Getting that big old bed past Grace wasn't easy, but we pulled it off. I made, however clumsily, the overstuffed mattress, the sheets and pillows. Skye worked tirelessly...actually, with amazing enthusiasm...to get the bed in place. Grace was, predictably, floored. Grace wanted the place to be uplifting and creative and friendly. We went through some of my rather considerable collections of images. She chose pictures not only of beloved horses and dogs, but of people - women and men who are inspiring, talented, outstanding humans. She chose images that reflected mountain life, and art, and the unfolding story of Redbird. When we were finished, there were enough images to fill the space with life and color. We shopped Home Goods and Michael's for other basic necessities. It wasn't too long before Grace had a space to call home, and a place to create. Christina's Max and Juno on Instagram: www.instagram.com/explore/tags/maxandjuno/?hl=en NaMoPaiMo on Facebook www.facebook.com/groups/234123470349077 Braymere Blog (Jennifer Buxton) braymere.blogspot.com |