Bonfire Night excitement

Bonfire Night Sparklers in ScotlandThis week the temperature dropped and the promised iciness of a few weeks ago is now here to stay. The morning frost that covers the garden has seen off the last off my nasturtium flowers that had been cheerfully hanging on while the mild weather lasted. Over much of the farmland round here strips of pine and fir have been planted as wind breaks. It is at this time of year that the larch that peppers these plantations shows up clearly, glowing gold against the dark green.

Our plans for Bonfire Night festivities were seen off by heavy rain last weekend so we switched to today. Little Owl was beside herself with excitement, declaring loudly that she was so so happy as she bounced through the kitchen pulling on her gloves and hat. Beneath a clear starry night we danced around with our sparklers and for the first time I’m sure I felt the baby move. Little Owl’s excitement is obviously infectious.

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Morning sickness

Mouse in the Cornfield illustration by Hannah Foley www.owlingabout.co.ukAt first Little Owl was quite perplexed by my Morning Sickness (read All-day Sickness). She would grab my shoulder and ask me what I was looking for down the toilet. Now she just quietly shuts the bathroom door on me and carries on playing.

The thing that doesn’t help is being told that the sickness is normal. It really doesn’t feel normal. Apparently a full 25 per cent of pregnant women never have any sickness at all and then a whole other proportion only experience it mildly (my sister – grrrr!). So, it might well be ‘normal’ but it isn’t at all necessary. You can carry a healthy baby to full term without vomiting your guts out for months on end. Thank goodness for contraception – in another life I might have spent many long years vomiting endlessly! I know…I’m lucky to be pregnant and I’m not out of the woods yet, but being grateful doesn’t stop me wishing some clever research bod would put Morning Sickness at the top of their ‘To Do’ list.

Here is a new picture I have produced recently. It’s called Mouse in the Cornfield and it’s available to buy framed and mounted from the Flat Cat Gallery in Lauder or you can purchase unframed and unmounted prints from me by emailing me at: hannah@owlingabout.co.uk. You can see a larger version of the picture on my website here.

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A brace of pheasants

A sketch of a brace of pheasants by Hannah Foley (hannah@owlingabout.co.uk)This pair appeared on our doorstep this week. Our next door neighbour has been beating for one of the local shoots and brought us home a souvenir. Little Owl took one look at them and said they made her sick. Nevertheless they went into a stew, which we all ate for lunch today and she wasn’t sick. Of course she didn’t know they were in the stew but she also doesn’t know how often she’s eaten a lot of things she normally swears are disgusting, such as most vegetables you’d care to mention. I don’t know where I’d be without a blender and she’d probably have scurvy!

According to our next door neighbour there weren’t many birds in the woods for the shoot. It’s been such a mild autumn that there’s been plenty of berries and seeds for them in the fields. I brought the bird feeders in this weekend and scrubbed them in hot soapy water to prevent disease, but we’ll hold off putting them out just yet if there’s still enough food around.

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Expecting

raspberrywineAre you all still there? Did you survive the storm? Apart from it being a bit blustery here yesterday we knew nothing of it. We listened to the radio in awe as reports came in from the south of double decker buses being lifted off the road and fallen trees. Down in Devon my mum and dad got away with a loose fence panel and a bit of disconnected guttering.

Here is a glass of Big Dreamer’s raspberry wine. He let a few people try it out before he bottled it. The bottles will go away in the cupboard now to finish off. Isn’t it a gorgeous colour? I didn’t have a taste however, because we are expecting a baby in the spring! We’re very excited, although it hasn’t been much fun so far. I was exactly the same with Little Owl…nausea, vomiting, fainting, exhaustion. It’s like having flu and a really bad stomach bug rolled into one, and it goes on for weeks and weeks and weeks. People ask you if you’ve tried ginger and you want to batter them over the head, if only you could stay upright long enough to get to their head! Anyway, it does get better and eventually it does pass (although I’m not there yet), and it is all completely worth it in the end. It is, it is, it is.

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Searching for brown

ink trialsYesterday a chill wind blew. It was laden with portents of ice and snow. Today the sheep dogs lounge in the sun on the steps from the farm yard. The weather is warm and mild again but we draw in our collars knowing what can’t be far away. At least our wood shed is now neatly packed. My mum and dad helped us stack the logs away and it’s possibly the tidiest the shed has ever been. When one bit of wood toppled off the top of the pile and narrowly missed Little Owl, she blamed my mum for trying to hit her with a log. Despite my mum’s protestations of innocence (amidst stifled giggles from me and Dad) Little Owl glared at her warily and repeated her conviction to Big Dreamer when he got home from work. Poor Mum – oh to incur a small child’s wrath!

This afternoon I’m on the hunt for a particular consistency of brown ink but I don’t think today’s the day so the hunt continues.

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Christmas Cards

Winter Animals Christmas Cards 2013 by Hannah Foley (hannah@owlingabout.co.uk)This morning we went elderberry picking for another one of Big Dreamer’s home-brewing projects. The hawthorn bushes up the lane are already a lovely yellow and full of red berries. The air was damp and mild. It felt very autumnal. As always, the best elderberries were just out of reach so Big Dreamer climbed up into the trees to bend the branches down for us to collect them.

We also gathered a few pounds of apples from the farmhouse garden. These apples are absolutely horrible to eat. They are solid as rocks and the shock of their bitterness on your teeth turns a person rigid. These will be going to chutney. I’m not allowed to say any more about that because Big Dreamer has plans to enter the resulting chutney in his family’s annual Christmas Chutney Challenge (they have a cup and everything!) so I mustn’t give his secrets away.

My Christmas cards are back from the printers and available to buy. You might recognise the design from a wedding invitation I did last year. It was so popular I decided to turn it into a card. A pack of ten cards with accompanying envelopes is Β£4.99. The cards are A6 in size (landscape) and read Happy Christmas inside. You can see a bigger picture of the design on my website here. If you’d like to purchase some of my Christmas cards please email me at: hannah@owlingabout.co.uk.

My limited edition hare prints have now sold out so I have produced some cards. These cards are blank inside and measure 125mm square. I am selling these individually at Β£2.25 each. Again, you can see bigger images on my website here. Please email me if you would like to purchase some. If you live locally these cards, and individually wrapped Christmas cards, are also available to buy from the Summerhall shop in Edinburgh and will soon be in the Flat Cat Gallery in Lauder.

Hare Cards by Hannah Foley (hannah@owlingabout.co.uk)

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Bright moon

Photograph from a life drawing class run by Hannah Foley (hannah@owlingabout.co.uk)Here is a photograph from my life drawing class last night. At the beginning of the class I set the students some exercises using collage to help them develop their understanding of shape and the human body.

On the way home I had to keep my nose glued to the steering wheel because a thick fog had descended. As I left the orange glow of the city and drove into the proper night of the countryside the near full moon caused the fog to glow. It was such an odd visual spectacle. Slow-moving plumes of fog were eerily lit from above. Even the red light at some mundane road works took on a sinister edge. Who might come roaring out of the luminescence while I waited for the lights to change? Halloween is not far away! I was glad to put my imagination firmly back in its box as the comforting lights of home came into view.

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Colder days

Moths by Hannah Foley (hannah@owlingabout.co.uk)The temperature has dropped in the last few days and we are unusually unprepared. The chimney needs to be swept and the wood shed is bare. These are now urgent items on my ‘To Do’ list. So what have I been up to?

It’s been a funny old time for me and in a strange way I feel I’ve learnt more about who I am and what I’m about as an illustrator in the last few weeks of getting on with it than I did during the whole of my degree. Of course that’s not true and I probably wouldn’t be in a position to learn these things if I hadn’t been to art college but still, it’s a been a good time of reassessing priorities and finding new points on my internal compass. So, there’s various different things in the offing that either will or will not come to anything but here are two things I can tell you about.

First, I am teaching a life drawing class to university students one evening a week. I was pretty nervous when the course started but they’re a fabulous group and I feel very privileged to be a position to encourage and direct their creativity. I’m amused to find so many things my tutors used to tell me in my life drawing classes suddenly clicking into place. I don’t know if teaching will form much of a part in my future but in the mean time it’s great experience.

Secondly, I’m volunteering one afternoon a week for the Cyrenians as an in-house illustrator for one of their teams. The Cyrenians are a fantastic Edinburgh-based charity who originally started out working with homeless people but now work with just about any vulnerable group you’d care to mention, from drug addicts through to the elderly. I’m working with a new team who have been set up to start the Scottish Centre for Conflict Resolution. You can find out more about it here. It’s an incredibly exciting project to be involved in. I’ll be doing anything from illustrations for publicity through to reportage illustration of some of their events to document the process of starting the centre. It’s going to be a brilliant learning experience for me but it’s going to stretch me big time. I’m terrified and thrilled in equal measure!

A note on the birds: I’m going to come back to it in the spring. It is just too hard trying to learn bird song when the real birds aren’t singing and I really do want to do it properly. So, there’ll be a brief hiatus and I’ll return with the Blue Tit next year.

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Wildwood

Wildwood book cover by Hannah Foley (hannah@owlingabout.co.uk). All rights reserved.This week skeins of pink-footed geese have been spotted over the farm, making their way south to their winter feeding grounds. Although many pass us by, for some the east coast of Scotland will be their destination and they will stay with us until the weather warms sufficiently for them to return to their breeding grounds of Spitsbergen, Iceland and Greenland.

This week I’ve had my nose so deep in Wildwood by Roger Deakin that I completely forgot about my songbird of the week. It’s captivated me, and to such an extent that I redesigned the front cover for fun. Its existing cover is very nice but these are the sorts of things illustrators do for fun so here it is.

Reading Wildwood caused me to stumble on a lovely blog called Dovegreyreader Scribbles. It’s written by a self-proclaimed Devonshire-based bookaholic and sock-knitting quilter, who used to be a community nurse. She wrote a post about how Wildwood made her look with new eyes at the hedgerows around her house and this is how I came across her blog. If you like countryside, books, knitting, quilting, and generally nice people who write well I recommend it wholeheartedly. While I’m recommending blogs I’d also like to mention the Devon Fine Fibres blog (the connection is that they’re from the same county). Lesley runs a very special farm where she produces Merino wool from a unique herd of Bowmont sheep. Her blog is so down-to-earth and full of the intricacies of farming life. If you’d like to get away from the headlines and find out what life ‘down on the farm’ is really like, she’s a breath of fresh air.

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A lack of blackberries

The Tale of Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter

The Tale of Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter

This weekend was warm and bright with a lovely crispness to the air that reminds us autumn is here. A maple in the fields turned deep red almost over night and many of the trees round about are starting to develop patches of fiery finery. We planted hyacinth and daffodil bulbs in pots ready to bring indoors later in the season to cheer the dark winter months. Big Dreamer cut the lawn and Little Owl and I tackled the weeds. Due to a complete lack of even moderate success I’ve given up on growing winter bedding from seed so instead we went to our local garden centre to buy some plug plants. Some cheery pansies to liven up a grey winter’s day are a psychological necessity in Scotland.

We also headed out to find some blackberries for Big Dreamer’s latest batch of homebrew. Blackberries don’t grow anywhere on the farm and I’ve yet to find them anywhere else in the valley. It’s something I don’t understand because I tend to think of them doing well in all sorts of sites, from rural hedgerows to urban wasteland. We have plenty of wild raspberries but no blackberries. I even bought some plants from the garden centre. One died and while the other is alive, it isn’t any bigger than when I put it in so can hardly be said to be thriving.

So we motored out to some recommended spots, which of course, everyone else knows about too. I had been hoping for enough to make a crumble as well as the homebrew but the bushes had been well and truly gleaned. We came home with only a handful but lots of bright plump rosehips, which Big Dreamer intends to try instead. Still, I was disappointed. Of all the summer fruits, blackberries always seem the most comforting to me. Perhaps it’s because they appear so much later in the season, when thoughts turn to comforting fires in the grate and frosty mornings. And of course there is this image from The Tale of Peter Rabbit, imprinted on every child’s mind. Flopsy, Mospy, and Cotton-tail are the ultimate symbol of comfort and smugness as they tuck into their bread, milk and blackberries, while Peter is put to bed and fed camomile tea one tablespoon at a time. It’s only now, as an adult, that I think what an odd concoction they were having for their supper. Was it all mixed up together like a pudding or did they eat each bit separately? I’d sooner have had gently steaming crumble with custard. Mmmm!

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