May 28, 2012

Memorial Day: In History, Memory, Quilting, and Deed



Memorial Day in the U.S. is a federal holiday, formerly known as "Decoration Day" a day of remembrance for those who have died in our nation's service. We set out flags and flowers, we visit cemeteries, and we remember all of those who served our country.

The first memorial day was observed in 1865 by liberated slaves at a race track in Charleston, South Carolina. The site was a former Confederate prison camp as well as a mass grave for Union soldiers who had died while captive. A parade with thousands of freed blacks and Union soldiers was followed by patriotic singing and a picnic.

The origins of Memorial Day most likely lie with General John A Logan, a northerner of the Union Army, who was so impressed by the way that the South honored their fallen soldiers that he decided the northern states needed a similar day. Reportedly, Logan said that it was most fitting, since the Greeks, had honored their heroes with laurel and flowers, that the grave of every soldier in this land be decorated on a special day and, if he could, he would have made it a holiday.On May 5, 1868 in his capacity as commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, a veterans' organization, Logan issued a proclamation that "Decoration Day" be observed nationwide. It was observed for the first time on May 30 of the same year.

Due to lingering hostility after the Civil War, many southern states did not recognize Memorial Day until after World War I although the name Memorial Day" was first used in 1882.Given its origins in the American Civil War, Memorial Day is not a holiday outside the United States. Countries of the Commonwealth, as well as France and Belgium, honor members of the military who died in war on or around Remembrance Day(November 11.) The United States uses that date as Veterans Day (formerly Armistice Day) and honors all veterans, living and dead.

Memorial Day is currently a national holiday celebrated in almost every State on the last Monday in May. A law passed by Congress with the National Holiday Act, P.L. 90, 363, in 1971 to ensure a three day weekend for Federal holidays. In 1915, inspired by the poem "In Flanders Fields," Moina Michael replied with her own poem:

We cherish too, the Poppy red
That grows on fields where valor led,
It seems to signal to the skies
That blood of heroes never dies.

She then conceived of an idea to wear red poppies on Memorial Day in honor of those who died serving the nation during war. She was the first to wear one, and sold poppies to her friends and co-workers with the money going to benefit servicemen in need. Later a Madam Guerin from France was visiting the United States and learned of this new custom started by Moina Michael and when she returned to France, made artificial red poppies to raise money for war orphaned children and widowed women.

This tradition spread to other countries. In 1921, the Franco-American Children's League sold poppies nationally to benefit war orphans of France and Belgium. The League disbanded a year later and Madam Guerin approached the VFW for help. Shortly before Memorial Day in 1922 the VFW became the first veterans' organization to nationally sell poppies. Two years later their "Buddy" Poppy program was selling artificial poppies made by disabled veterans.

In 1948 the US Post Office honored Moina Michael for her role in founding the National Poppy movement by issuing a red 3 cent postage stamp with her likeness on it. Since the late 1950's, on the Thursday before Memorial Day, the 1,200 soldiers of the 3d U.S. Infantry place small American flags at each of the more than 260,000 gravestones at Arlington National Cemetery. They then patrol 24 hours a day during the weekend to ensure that each flag remains standing.



Today, many Americans use Memorial Day weekend to also honor family members who have passed away. Church services on the Sunday prior to Memorial Day may include a reading of the names of members who have died during the previous 12 months.

The southeastern United States continues to celebrate Decoration Day as a day to decorate the graves of all family members, and it is not reserved for those who served in the military and this is usually celebrated the week before the official Memorial Day Weekend.

This year, my husband and his brother continued their yearly tradition of bringing my mother-in-law to visit the cemeteries where her veteran son is laid to rest, having died of cancer 22 years ago at the age of 53, as well as the others she has loved in this lifetime.They visited cemeteries in three cities...Stayton, Albany and a small pioneer cemetery, named after my husband's family, near Scio. All of this, in spite of the fact that my MIL is wheelchair bound and has to bee lifted in and out of the car, since she cannot stand.

We all cut whatever flowers and flowering branches we might have in our yards, each year... for her to place on the graves, a lifelong tradition in our family. While in reality, they are doing the placing and she sits in the car and watches. The cemeteries are hundreds of years old, the ground rocky and uneven and hilly. But they park where she might still watch them and they all remember those they have lost...and those that have served.



My own proud veteran father has been gone for almost two years now, but I think of him and bless him for all that he gave ..to our country, to our family, and to me.



Whether we celebrate Memorial Day, Decoration Day on the last Monday in May, here in the US, Remembrance , Armistice ,Or Poppy Day on Nov.11 in the Commonwealth or ANZAC Day on April 25 in New Zealand and Australia....or just a day of remembrance on all of our special days, wherever we live......I simply remember the loss of all who have died in service to our country and thank them .....for all of their places in history, and for all of their places in our own lives.

And I almost always take a few hours to work on patriotic quilts, utility bags for use in our veteran's hospital by bedsides or on wheelchairs, , neck rolls for positioning them in their beds, and sometimes a red or gold star flag for families who have served and families who have lost a loved one.



While my free spirited heart strings quilted quilts shown in this post....need no patterns...just one of those purchased fabric panels that come with four medallions and lots of scraps, my Free Patriotic Quilt Patterns sites both on my primary blog, here...and my Free Quilt and Quilt Blocks Blog found by clicking there, have all of the free patterns for making the bags, neckrolls, and banners.



And for string quilting: String Quilting:Tutorial and Free Patterns



And here are the Directions For Making a Blue or Gold Star Service Banner

Happy Memorial Day, and many thanks and blessings to those families who have served our country as patriots.

Please become a follower at my primary blog: With Heart and Hands
as all patterns, posts, and memories, are updated here.


Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in the Liberated Quilting Challenge and make or donate small art quilts to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

May 26, 2012

Swept Away



Some weeks are so much busier...lots of house work, lots of yard work, lots of computer work,huge piles of charitable giving projects work...and then of course, there's family and life challenges that we all deal with.

Sometimes, as fate will have it, blogs and blogging will suddenly become even more challenging. I will be deluged with email asking me to do things, make things, donate things, join things, etc. etc. and then I go to various group settings and they ask me to make things, donate things, join things. Oh my goodness! For a lady who almost never sleeps, it can be occasionally over whelming. As someone told me, 'it's because you do so much already, I figure it would be easier for you to do it than me.' Ha! I can only say to that ;)

But then something wonderful happens. Sometimes it's a wonderful surprise, a reminder that there are really good and giving people still left in the world. Those who want to support us, or lift us up as we struggle with our own lifting up of others. And those people and their gifts of generosity from their hearts remind us of the good that still exists in the world.

Today, I want to thank just such a special person. Paula (The Quilter) Denee of Colorado wrote me a while back and told me that she had a piece of Alaskan fabric that somehow came from a store in Juneau (!) and that she had hand quilted the sweet little panel of designer fabric by Lynn Blaikie of the Yukon area of Canada (our Eskimo art has always kind of cross cultured here and there between Canada and Alaska) and Paula thought of me as she was working on it and asked me .....flat out asked me..would I like it when it was finished? She named it 'Windswept' but I was just plain 'Swept Away' by the offer!

Would I like it?
No....
I would LOVE IT!!!



And not only did I love it even more in person, I rearranged my sewing nook to give it a place of honor. And boy...does it ever fit in! Perfectly, as if it belonged there. Because of course, it always did. It just did :)

Paula..I'm now calling her 'Bless her heart, Paula' has, in the past, also sent me a pair of magical socks and a pair of wonderfully warm slippers..both of which she also made.

Paula's, gifts are better than Christmas. They are gifts 'just because' she thought of me. Thank you so very, very much Paula!

I go into my sewing nook every single day, multiple times a day. And each and every time I go in I say "Bless her heart." to Paula."

And I do!


Links:
Lynn Blaike batik fabric panels
Lynn Blaike art prints
Lynn Blaike, use of Batiks and native culture in Canada


 My own Links, Photos, and Free Tutorials from my sewing experiences in Alaska:

Links to Making Kuspuks in 2010:
Kuspuks Go to the Capitol
Kuspuk Fridays, KTUU, Anchorage News...our classroom work featured as State Legislators wear their own kuspuks every Friday they are in session!

Links to Making Kuspuks in 2009
Sewing Kuspuks Again!
Kuspuks
Links to Making Kuspuks in 2008:
How to make a kuspuk

Kuspuks Make Front Page News

Juneau Empire Photos: Parka party 01/18/08

video: scroll on left menu choice of 'Creating Kuspuks'




Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in the Liberated Quilting Challenge and make or donate small art quilts to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

May 22, 2012

Goodbye, Sweet Sophie!

Oh, it's hard to lose a pet..even when that pet is a chicken! I loved my sweet Sophie! As the Alpha female, she was usually the first one out of the coop in the morning, and the first one to lead the others back into the coop at night. We only had Sophie for three years. But she was strong, and independent and attentive, and would follow me around the yard with Penelope and Matilda following her. And so, of course, I loved her...just as I do all of our pets. They are part of our family even if they live in their own little chicken house and not inside with us! I was so sad when she died and I do miss her. And of course, it's not quite as hard as loosing a pet you are closer to than a chicken..but you wouldn't believe how much fun chickens can actually be and how attached you can get to their silly quirkiness. So, if you've every lost a small pet and felt an attachment to them, you have to know that I'm whispering 'Goodbye, sweet Sophie and thank you for all of the lovely cream colored eggs and your funny ways!" Sophie would stand up on our back deck apple crates and peer into the living room, she would knock with her beak on the patio door, and she was always the first one to come a runnin' when I cooked spaghetti noodles just for her! When my husband gave me my prayer flag arbor arch that he'd made me for this last Mother's Day, Sophie was the first of all of the chickens to cross under it. She stopped in her tracks ...right in front of it....for at least ten minutes, just chicken thinking about life, perhaps..or maybe she even had a chicken glimmer of knowing she was ill, and would soon be going over the Rainbow Bridge,! Now some people think chickens are stupid..and they say that ALL the time. Heck, I've been known to say it when it would start raining, and they all gathered on the deck on the apple crate instead of heading for their dry coop. But then again, I wouldn't go into a dark chicken coop just because it was raining, either. So, maybe they're not stupid..just optimists that the sun will come out tomorrow..and maybe even in just a few more minutes! After all, that's how we make rainbows! So, sweet Sophie..as you travel Across the Rainbow Bridge just remember we thought you were something special, you were part of our little pet family and we miss you! Loved you, sweet Sophie..even if you were just a chicken! For my other dear ones: Prayer Pocket Pillows and Praying for a Miracle Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in the Liberated Quilting Challenge and make or donate small art quilts to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

May 18, 2012

Zombie Brains: A Dream Within A Dream



Ami Simms, founder of the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) has added a new feature to the AAQI line-up of Quilts For Sale.

Called Sales on the Road, it is an experimental project in which all of the quilts that you see on this page will be offered for sale at the May 22 meeting of the River Country Quilters Guild.

If this additional sales idea proves successful, AAQI will invite other individuals or groups to take limited numbers of quilts for sale at other specific times and places.

Please do note, that these quilts are not meant to be purchased online as they are being set aside for this special sale. But do take a look at all of them, and if you are a member of the River Country Quilters Guild...... or come in as a new visitor or guest....I truly hope you will consider a purchase of one of these great little quilts....see all of them on this AAQI Sales on the Road page ....but especially of these two quilts from my own Liberated Quilting Challenge!!!


I love BOTH of our quilts and while they are SO very different, they still have SO VERY MUCH IN COMMON! They would be fabulous displayed on your own art quilt wall at home!

So, please consider purchasing BOTH Jude and my quilts :) What an awesome contribution this duo would make towards funding Alzheimer's research! Remember, the profits from the sale of all AAQI quilts go to fund our cause.

Zombie Brains and A Dream With A Dream

When I think about it, isn't that pretty much how we feel on the days when our own minds are frazzled and disconnected? We are in such a crazy place where not only our mental abilities collide.... but so do our abilities to tell what is real, and what isn't. But what about the person with Alzheimer's Disease?

Alzheimer's Disease is very, very real. It's victims live in a shattered world of illusions, and altered realities. Memories become either hazy and dreamlike..often even beautiful or places we have never been, things we never really did... or overly exaggerated and anything but beautiful... with hallucinations and false memories of things that may, or may not, have even happened.

Both of these quilts will be for sale at the May 22 meeting of the River Country Quilters Guild. Please buy both of our quilts and help us make a difference in the reality of the 5.4 million victims of Alzheimer's Disease by continued Alzheimer's research funding!!!



8669 Zombie Brains
Jude Edling

Blue Earth, Minnesota USA

Width: 9" Length: 11"
Materials/Techniques: Batik, novelty fabric, fusible and glow in the dark thread.
Artist Statement: This is the third in my Brain series. It glows in the dark.



9400 A Dream With A Dream

Michele Bilyeu

Salem, OR USA


Width:
8.75" Length: 11.5"

Materials/Techniques:
Designer cottons and batiks with applique, ink jet printing, Shiva oil sticks, metallic threads in free motion quilting, and golden beads.
Artist Statement: Edgar Allen Poe once wrote, "All that we see or seem, is but a dream within a dream." I wanted to create a deep, but still magical little quilt that brought the viewer into that dream...but allowed them to still see the golden nuggets of hope within.

Dedication: For my mother, who married my father 62 years ago, to share his life, his dreams, and his search for a golden future together. Alzheimer's might have changed those dreams, but it didn't completely destroy them. She dreams of him, and loves him, still.

Michele Bilyeu Quilts With Heart and Hands for the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Join in my Liberated Quilting Challenge...and buy or donate a quilt, today!! We are changing the world...one little quilt at a time.Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in the Liberated Quilting Challenge and make or donate small art quilts to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

Liberated Heartstrings



For me, my best and most favorite quilts of all, are always the ones that I give away. I seldom know where they are going, or who ends up wrapping themselves up in one. But in my heart, these are always my favorite projects and my favorite gifts from the heart.

So, for Amy's Spring Quilt Festival, I selected this colorful string quilt that I have shown many times before. I still love it and while I have remade it several times, this photo is the one that makes me smile!

This baby quilt was made for and donated to a wonderful organization here in Salem called Liberty House. Made with leftover bits and pieces of strips and strings and then appliqued with my own simple cut out flower shapes and their center circles. The sewing down of the flowers created the fast and easy machine quilting and allowed me to make it very quickly.

It was donated to to a local child abuse prevention center that has an intake center for children who have been injured by child abuse. Each child is given a small donated quilt and a little teddy bear or similar stuffed animal. I can only hope that the donation of my quilts to this wonderful organization and these precious children helps to alleviate some of their fear and perhaps even gives them a bit of comfort and the feeling of being loved and wrapped up and protected.

And I can only pray that their parents or others who have hurt these children will some how think about why complete strangers reach out to love and help their children that they, themselves have somehow failed. May the parents be reached and helped, the children find love and acceptance, and through counseling may they all somehow have their lives forever changed for the better.

String Quilting: Primers and Free Patterns


Most recent blog posts:


Zombie Brains: A Dream Within A Dream




Prayer Pocket Pillows



Praying for a Miracle



Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in the Liberated Quilting Challenge and make or donate small art quilts to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

May 17, 2012

Prayer Pocket Pillows



Our lives are filled with challenges, pain, and even great fear. But if we strive to maintain hope, and stay as positive as we can during hard times, we can also be amazed at the power of connection, of prayer, and the belief that miracles are right here around us... and just needing our heart's connection to them and to their manifestation.

I am reminded of those ever increasing challenges as I am Praying for a Miracle for my sister-in law, Rebecca Savikko in Eagle River, Alaska who needs the donation of an O+ positive kidney that has high antibodies titers. To have this type of blood type and therefore available kindey for donation would involve someone who has also had trauma, or infection, or many blood transfusions which they survived and became healthy again and are willing to donate one of their kidneys so Becky might have a chance at living without constant and eventually limiting kidney dialysis.



But I am also praying for my dear friend's son, Kelly Ball,
who as in an extremely serious accident on April 15th.

Kelly Ball, age 32, is fighting for his life after being hit by a car in a marked crosswalk with flashing lights in Corvallis, Oregon. He was simply crossing the walkway when a car driven by an elderly gentlemen who saw the crosswalk, saw the flashing lights, but said he did not see Kelly as he drove right threw and into Kelly throwing him many yards, breaking bones, injuring internal organs and causing severe brain trauma.

Kelly's mom, Patti, has been my friend for over 40 years since we lived across the hall from one another in college at OSU in Corvallis, Oregon. She is an amazing woman with a wonderful family and a life with challenges, just as so many of us have. We have been there for each other through so many of these challenges ...in both of our lives... and now we must simply face this new one. For even when we live apart from others, even if we only see them occasionally, there are these amazing heart strings of connection that energetically and spiritually connect each of us to those we care about.

This is the second severe accident her son has been in. He was also hit by a car when he was 12 years old and coming down a hill on his bicycle and a car failed to see him on his bike and hit him. That accident also put him into a coma, caused a stroke, and created lifelong epileptic seizures and weakness on one side of his body.

He came through that, relearned all that the accident took away from him got a job, an apartment, and now working at OSU, he was simply crossing a marked crosswalk and had this happen.

Kelly has been in a coma since April 15th. He has only moved a couple of toes and finally opened his eyes for the first time on Mother's Day...for his mother...which meant the world to her. He then went back into the coma state and has had no other responses except for the wiggling of a couple of toes last week. I have been praying for him, reading his Caring Bridge journal kept by his family on status, sending lots of love, and messages, and waiting for signs that he might first live through it, and secondly show any signs he might come out of the coma and then after that, we will just pray for a recovery and full healing of his traumatic brain injuries.

They were able to get him off of the respirator, he is breathing on his own but we need a healing for his brain and his body that will allow him to come back to his mother and father, a grandfather, two sister's and a young nephew...all who love him very, very much.

Like myself, his parents have lived challenging lives where they too, have become the care takers of parents with Alzheimer's Disease, they too have faced the challenges of children, and illnesses, and accidents and more. Patti has not only cared for both of her parents, in her own home for five years, she then cared for her mother-in-law and now her father-in-law, all while teaching full time and doing an amazing job of that.



Please join me as we simply lift up our spirits in common good and wish for healing for all and peaceful spirits and hope filled hearts as they find their ways through these challenges. Thank you for all of you who have taken the time to leave comments of support, send emails of encouragement and affirmed my belief in the powers of connection and manifestation.



Making My String Pieced Prayer Pocket Pillows
I write a message of love and hope and place those little messages in the pockets on the back. Like my prayer flags hanging on my garden arbor, they give physical connection to a spiritual realm where miracles are just waiting to be invited into our lives.

Praying for a Miracle

May 5, 2012

Supermoon, Vesak, and Cinqo de Mayo



Whenever the universe lines up multiple events, holidays, or astronomical occurrences at one time, everything seems to speed up and become a bit larger than life to bring our priorities to our attention. So, I'm paying attention to all of the magical signs and symbols of synchronistic coincidences, today!

Astronomically, today marks a full moon which while known this month as the flower moon, and in this case one which is also known as a Super Moon. Now, it is not as portentous as the last one that I blogged about as it is not our largest super moon, and so the gravitational pull between earth and moon does not create fear of any severe weather conditions, but it does present us with the opportunity to view a lovey, full and super sized moon in all of her feminine glory.

As tonight's moon will be closer to earth than at any other time this year, (but not in the past two decades as last year's super moon was!) it will still be beautiful and potentially spectacular. Due to the moon's egg-shaped orbit, there are times when our natural satellite is at perigee—its closest to Earth—and at apogee, its farthest. Thus, the term "Super Moon" was coined in 1979 to describe a full moon that coincides with perigee—something that happens about once a year, on average.

During this week's perigee, the moon will be 221,801 miles (356,955 kilometers) from our planet, and that close approach will happen within minutes of the official full moon phase, which occurs at 11:35 p.m. ET. As a consequence, this translates into it appearing as much as 16 percent bigger and 30 percent brighter than other full moons of 2012—not a huge amount, but definitely noticeable,

It is also a Buddhist holi-day called 'Vesak' the day which is dedicated to honoring Buddha (Gautama Buddha or Siddhartha Gautama Buddha) the spiritual teacher on whom Buddhist spiritual teachings are founded. The word "Buddha" is a tittle for the first awakened being in an era. In most Buddhist traditions, Siddhartha Gautama is regarded as the Supreme Buddha or awakened one.

In his birth, his holy principles of seeking to lead a noble life according to the teaching by making daily affirmations to observe the "Five Precepts"...commitments to abstain from harming living beings, stealing, sexual misconduct, lying and intoxication.

However, on special days, notably new moon and full moon days, Buddhists observe the Eight Precepts to train themselves to further concentrate on the practices of morality, simplicity and humility.

Wonderful values for any day, but on a super sized kind of day..perhaps even more important to think about. A lovely time to focus on personal values, simplicity and lack of excess in our lives!

And of course we may celebrate 'Cinqo de Mayo' , where in Mexico it is called "El Día de la Batalla de Puebla." ...The Day of the Battle of Puebla. For us in the U.S. is more of a celebration of Mexican heritage and pride, and to commemorate the cause of freedom and democracy during the first years of the American Civil War.

In the Mexican state of Puebla, the date is observed to commemorate the Mexican army's unlikely victory over French forces at the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862, under the leadership of General Ignacio Zaragoza Seguín. Contrary to widespread popular belief, Cinco de Mayo is not Mexico's Independence Day—the most important national patriotic holiday in Mexico—which is actually celebrated on September 16.

A Super Saturday...a full Super Moon, Vesak, and Cinqo de Mayo. In any language, any belief system, any culture...wonderful things to pay attention to and appreciate!

shown above:
Part of a small format art quilt that I created recently for the Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) as part of my dedication to donating to that cause.


Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in her Liberated Quilting Challenge for the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

May 1, 2012

Happy May Day!

 


 


Ever since my children were young, we have practiced the tradition of collecting and giving May Day flowers. We would make pretty little baskets or paper doily cones, fill them up with whatever flowers were available in our yard or from the shrubbery, and then hurry to set them by our neighbors doors, knocking to alert them, then running and hiding as quickly as we could. We always expected the tradition to be returned back, and we always enjoyed being 'surprised' anyway. 

It became a contest to see who would remember the date first and get their flowers first to the door. We looked forward to May 1st, every single year, with great anticipation. The origins of May Day, like many of our holidays come from ancient times and cultures. 

The Druids believed it was the day that divided the year into half and to celebrate this milestone, they lit huge bonfires to signify the burgeoning of the springtime sun. Every one passed through the smoke for purification and good luck. When the Romans came, it changed to a worship of Flora, the goddess of flowers. In her honor, everyone celebrated for five days, April 28 to May 2. 

Bit by bit, the celebration of the Celtic Beltane, and the Roman Floralia combined. With the advent of the Puritans in the British Isles, rites changed, once again. The old ways may have been put away, and new ones came in, but the tradition of flowers and merriment continued. 

The tradition of the giving of flowers and dancing around the Maypole (known as 'The Tree of Liberty"during the French Revolution) continue today in many countries and have simply come to signify a welcoming in of Spring. 




Once my children grew up and had families of their own,  I started making little baby or small care home lap quilts to give away instead. It simply became my new way of expressing an old tradition and welcome in the advent of Spring and new life. 








These went to a new young mother with her first child just born, and to another child, same father, whose other child was in foster care.

And then, one May Day, I had a nice long visit to an adult foster home where I sat and drank tea with 3 seniors, all in their 90's, and visited while they ate their breakfasts. You learn so much from others, if you just take the time to care!




And of course, nothing older adults love more than a nice visit, some pretty flowers, and a good conversation shared by all! 

Another May Day, I was the one who had a surprise visitor! Definitely the biggest May Day surprise most people could have. I opened my fron door and a neighbor's escaped pig waltzed on in (no doubt hearing in his own head the classic waltz of all time, The Watlz of the Flowers!  Ha!

Oh what fun one can have on a holiday most people don't recognize, know the history of, or celebrate!


Happy May Day to all of you!