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A day before the big storm, there was a brief time of sunshine. It lit up this germander, a drought tolerant shrub that looks great in spring and horrid in summer.
That evening, Jackson did not want to be put away. He decided to walk the other way and then attempt to catch his own dinner. I walked around the yard calling for him, and of course, he ignored me. However, I found him. Can you see his tail?
He was very intensely focused on some quail which feed around dusk, which is when we feed our cats.
Dude, I am watching you, and you are not going to catch a quail.
He showed up at the front door looking for entry to the workshop where his dinner was waiting. Michael walked him over, and put him away for the night.
The next day was so intensely green and my leaning tree was in full bloom. (It’s a flowering pear, one of the earliest trees to bloom and one of the last to hold its color in the fall.)
Eventually I made it into the workshop (the cats’ safe place at night) to get a little painting done.
The first one is called Below Terminus Dam. I love this view in spite of it not having snow-covered peaks in the distance. Some years there are poppies on the distant hills; it is too soon to know this year because we are having a real winter.
This is the commissioned piece, now finished. (The right side looks darker because I am casting a shadow on it.)
This is the painting that was giving me trouble. I’ve decided that it is finished now.
This concludes today’s post about your Central California artist enjoying spring, her recalcitrant cat, her yard, and painting her favorite Tulare County scenes.
Thank you for visiting my blog today.
2 Comments
Jana, the photo of the white chairs beneath the flowering pear tree would make a beautiful painting! All you have to do is turn the pavement into a pond. Always enjoy your stories and photos and always interesting behind the scenes views of the artist at work. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you, Laurie! You are right about the white chairs making a nice painting. Probably won’t attempt it, though, because of so many others in the queue, others that have buyers waiting.
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