Thursday, January 16, 2020

A Delightful Day in the Dirt at Lisa's Farm

If you see three emus, you are almost there.


I’m not talking about a zoo. I’m talking about something amazing in the land just north of the US-Mexican border: ranches and farm land.

Over the weekend I worked at Lisa’s farm for half a day. I found Lisa through the Craigslist ad she posted to find locals who want to volunteer at her farm.

My gardening passion is growing and has become a fascination with farms. Lisa’s need for help and my interest in learning about farming came together on a clear, sunny morning.


Lisa’s is the fourth farm I’ve visited and the second farm where I’ve volunteered my help (I will blog about helping on the other farm soon).





Lisa’s South Bay farm is one-quarter of an acre. The farm sits on land that is part of the Tijuana River Valley Regional Park, which includes a huge community garden, the largest in the county. The handful of farm plots like Lisa’s were designated in 2018 as an experiment overseen by RCD (Resource Conservation District). The farms may be relatively new but the 201 garden plots on the land date back decades. Each garden plot is 30’ x 30’ and the effect is a beautiful patchwork quilt of green wonderland. As I drove toward the farm, I noticed the variety in each garden plot. Some have hand-painted art or signs, many have garden sheds and bird feeders and one has a French door as the entrance. I saw sugarcane, flowers, berries, sweet peas, sunflowers, dragon fruit, banana trees, tomatoes, gourds, roses and lots of vines in the garden plots near Lisa’s farm.



Once I arrived, Lisa showed me around and I asked her if I could write about the farm in my blog. Milliseconds after she agreed, the questions began, and we talked while I worked. I helped at Lisa’s farm for four hours, creating garden beds along her fence line. I shoveled approximately twenty wheelbarrow loads of horse manure compost and dumped it into long, two-foot wide beds before raking it smooth. By the time I finished I had a very good upper and lower body workout and I’d enjoyed hours of peaceful time outdoors. As I told Lisa, it feels good to work my muscles, and I like falling into bed at night knowing that I worked hard. I also like seeing evidence of my effort, and seeing a garden bed that wasn’t there before is satisfying.

Not the most scenic photo ever taken, but these are some my my compost hauls.
I'm not some china doll, watching from the sidelines. I'm there to make a difference! 



The farm is within earshot of ranches, so we heard horses whinnying and a rooster crowing. We saw an egret on the hunt, and a ruby-throated hummingbird whizzing toward Lisa’s bird feeder again and again.











As I shoveled I asked Lisa whether she came from a family of farmers and why she moved to San Diego. Here are a few of my questions and her answers:

Sarah: When did you start farming on this land? 

Lisa: I started this project six months ago, in July of 2019. By this coming July, this will be a jungle!

SarahWhat’s your vision for the farm? 

Lisa: I have ten foot by four foot garden beds, and I envision vining produce growing eight feet tall. There will be eighteen circular garden "rooms" around the perimeter of the farm. Each room will be twelve feet across and will have curved walls, with produce growing up the walls and onto the chicken wire ceiling. You will be able to walk through each room to the next one. 
Each room will have its own mix of produce. 

Sarah: What are you growing right now?

Lisa: Presently there are tomatoes, spaghetti squash, artichokes, red chard, kale, papaya, parsley, oregano, thyme, chives, tarragon and guavas growing.

Sarah: You’re retired, but you’re not interested in slowing down. What made you decide to gear up for a really full future, including building a farm from scratch?

Lisa: This is a not-for-profit CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) farm. People are invited to experience the farm with field trips, picnics, cooking demonstrations and volunteering to maintain the farm. I want to feed people who are struggling due to food shortages in San Diego County. I want to provide them with high-nutrient foods so that they can be healthy and build a positive future. The walkways I have marked throughout the farm are wide, and so people using wheelchairs can come into the farm and experience it, too.

Sarah: What are some of the reasons people have given for wanting to come volunteer on your farm?

Lisa: They all just like to help. Many want to learn about farming. Some do it to get some fresh air and exercise. At least two volunteers were new to town and wanted to connect with others.

Sarah: Your farm is still in the beginning stages, but it already has such a creative and personal feel to it. Among other things, you’ve created a patio “room” in the middle, bordered by potted trees and plants of all kinds.

Lisa: Yes, I wanted to create a private area to sit and the trees help with privacy. My walls include potted Norfolk Island Pines, which I brought with me when I moved from Seattle years ago. Surrounding the garden “room” I have ornamental plants.  

Sarah: This farm is not large but it still is a lot of land to nurture. It takes courage to do this.

Lisa: Well, I come from a very entrepreneurial family. I was born in upstate New York, where my family had a horse and Christmas tree farm. My dad was a professional artist and when I was two years old we moved to Cape Cod, where my parents opened the largest art gallery on Cape Cod.

Sarah: One common thread in your family’s endeavors is risk. Being a farmer is risky. There’s a lot that is out of your hands. Being an artist is hard. Opening a gallery was another chance your parents took. They were not afraid to try something others would label as too uncertain. I like that you absorbed from your family that taking a chance was allowed. I think it led you to where you are now, dreaming big, rather than counting reasons not to build this farm.

Lisa: My family always had a garden. Many years ago, I decided to move to San Diego. My son was leaving for college and I was ready for a change. San Diego is the ideal place to live, year-round. I like this farm. I love watching all the birds fly overhead. This area has a huge variety of birds because it is adjacent to the Tijuana River Estuary, a protected wetland where migratory and wintering birds make their homes.

Sarah: Can I come back in a few months and see how the farm has continued to change and grow?

Lisa: Yes. There is going to be a lot of growth in the coming months. I’m excited about the future of this farm: growing food, sharing with others and eventually bringing the community together for events at the farm.








Friday, December 20, 2019

Let it Snow…



Here in San Diego there will not be a white Christmas. But it’s cold by my standards and I’m wearing layers and a knit hat as I type. Brrrrr…

My art students have been working on Winter Wonderland art pieces, and I thought I’d share a few pieces of their art.

I have photos of art from only three of the nine grades I teach. This is because after teaching this week I was grading and returning hundreds of pieces of art. Photos were not on the top of my mind. But I hope you enjoy the small collection you’ll see.



My youngest students did mixed-media Christmas trees. They colored the tree, and then decorated it. Each tree was supposed to have seven or eight plastic beads as ornaments. However…certain first graders were very excited about the beads and some students used far more than their allotted share. (I can’t really blame them—and I’m glad they were enthusiastic about the project.) But when I realized we had a bead shortage, I needed a Plan B because my next class (Kindergarten) would get a measly two beads per kiddo. And that would not do. Even Charlie Brown’s minimalist Christmas tree had more cheer than that. So I announced to the kids that we were going to use small pieces of Origami paper as ornaments. As everyone knows, Plan B can be even better than the original plan. (Just ask Santa. Rudolph was his Plan B, and hey, the rest is history.) I really like the colors and patterns of the origami paper on the trees.



My older students made mixed-media winter scenes using paint and paper collage techniques. We started out by flattening paper cupcake liners and folding them so that the kids could cut symmetrical snowflakes. 

4th grade artist




4th grade artist

4th grade artist

4th grade artist

We needed a relatively quick project as this quarter is very choppy, with Thanksgiving and Winter breaks. All the snowflakes are unique and I think the kids did a terrific job. The eighth graders’ work was more finessed, but I like all the snowy scenes the kids created.

8th grade artist

8th grade artist

8th grade artist

8th grade artist
Wherever you are, whatever you’re celebrating this month, be merry and bright.

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Wacky Wednesday #97: Loma Theater Bookstar

This is a painting I did of the Loma Theater twelve years ago.

This week’s costume is especially interesting if you live in San Diego and you know the building I’m channeling. (If not, sit tight and read on. I think you’ll find it cool, even if you don’t have a connection with this theater or San Diego.) I’m dressed as the Loma Theater Bookstar, a book store housed within a beautiful former theater built in the 1940s. I think I first saw this building in the late ‘90s, while driving to a mural-painting job. The theater was closed in the 1987 and eventually the book store moved into the space. The marquee was preserved and the inside of the theater retains some original elements. From my very first glimpse of this building, I was intrigued.  





My husband saw the film E.T. at this theater in 1982. This kind of theater evokes memories for my generation because when I was a child in the 80s, there were still big movie theaters around. The last time I saw a movie in a big theater was in 1996 or ‘97. I still remember what I saw and where. That was about the time that multiplexes were being developed. The multiplexes of today are practical—I can’t deny that. But allow me to indulge in some memories of where I saw movies as a child and teen: cavernous theaters with red velvet drapes and an Old Hollywood flair. As a child I didn’t go to movies often but the memories from those experiences are stamped into my brain. Can you imagine how huge a 1000-seat theater seemed to a six-year-old? I was so small and the screen was gigantic. The sound swirled through the huge room and enveloped you. Seeing a movie in that kind of theater was dramatic. 









A dozen years ago I stopped outside the Loma Theater Bookstar and took photos of the façade. I love old theater marquees. I dig the neon and the majesty of these buildings. From my photos I started painting a series of old theaters. I’m embarrassed to say that I did not finish some of the paintings I started. But here on my blog I do not pretend that I’m perfect and it’s refreshing when we share our human moments. When I couldn’t get the effect I wanted I put the painting aside (for years!). But these days I’m motivated by attempting something intriguing and finishing it. I accept that my art and I don’t have to be perfect. So I’m going to finish the paintings I started years ago. My costume and my painting are going to work together to celebrate this beautiful building.

This costume was made entirely from supplies I already had at home—fabric, paint, cardboard, pipe cleaners, hot glue sticks—so my total cost was $0.

The theater marquee and my marquee.

Would you like to know a little bit of history about the Loma? The theater was built in 1945 and according to two different accounts, it had either 1188 seats or nearly 1000. It was the creation of architect S. Charles Lee, who designed many motion picture theaters on America’s west coast. The theater has an Art Deco design, a style popular in the 1920-1940s, that used industrial imagery along with geometric shapes, repetition, detailed decoration and vivid colors. The beautiful ceiling murals inside the theater still remain (touched up, but in the original design). The last movie shown at The Loma was in 1987. These days, reading books printed on paper rather than a tablet is less common than it once was, so it feels especially fitting that a classic past time like reading can be nurtured within a classic building.



Photo courtesy of Shelley Hospitality.

A photo of the Loma Theater in 1957.


                              



                     


Ceiling murals inside the book store.
                             
Detail of the ceiling murals.
                            

The details on the Loma’s facade appealed to me from the very moment I first saw it. I love architecture (older buildings as well as new designs). As a teenager I began taking photos (using film!) of buildings I liked. Now I can indulge my interest without having to buy film, and I have hundreds of photos of beautiful old buildings in San Diego as well as other cities. Creating a costume inspired by a gorgeous old theater brings together several of my interests and it is a pleasure to pay homage to this building, to the theaters of my childhood, and to San Diego history.


                  


Monday, November 25, 2019

Plenty to Appreciate

1st grade

Somehow it’s already November, which means that my art students have been creating cornucopia drawings for Thanksgiving. I explained to them about the symbolism of this curved horn: that it represents bounty in America. All of my students did this project, from Kindergarten through eighth grade, and that’s more than three hundred students. I had the youngest two grades color in shapes I drew, and they cut and glued the fruits and vegetables into their scene. 


1st grade

I won’t include three hundred drawings in this post but I thought it would be fun to show the variety in these drawings. I’m always amazed at how many interpretations of an idea the students have. They all used a photo as reference, but they were not required to copy the photo. I told them just to use it as a reference for layout or shading or ideas. Allow me to brag for a minute—aren’t these kids talented?! 

2nd grade--I like the playful feel this piece has

Younger kids don’t have the fine motor skills that older students do, and you can’t expect a first grader to draw like an eighth grader. But the younger kids have a charming style of their own. They aren’t inhibited and they sometimes feel more comfortable experimenting with color and scale than the older kids do. I think there’s something to appreciate in each piece of artwork.


3rd grade
3rd grade

4th grade


4th grade--I love this student's free use of color

4th grade

5th grade--the continuous "spill" of color delights me

6th grade

6th grade


7th grade
 
7th grade--such a beautifully-drawn scene

7th--I like how this student filled so much of the page

8th grade--wonderful use of shading

Our country isn’t perfect—no place, no person and nothing is—but I’m so grateful to live here. Happy Thanksgiving to everyone…

8th grade