Just in case you forgot.
Thursday, January 28th, 2010
In the middle of winter, it’s hard to imagine what the future will bring in a relatively short time.

Having four seasons is like moving to an entirely new place every few months.

Amazing!

In the middle of winter, it’s hard to imagine what the future will bring in a relatively short time.

Having four seasons is like moving to an entirely new place every few months.

Amazing!

Cold outside, cozy inside.

Fragile windows frame the frigid beauty of Maine’s winter.

Even while taking a shower.
If you can’t be in Maine, here’s a way to see what it’s like to wake to a sunrise with the sound of a lobster boat in the background.


The sky often merges into the water, and you can’t tell where one stops and the other begins.

Within the gorgeous gardens on Maine’s garden tours, the architecture, art, history, and people, can amaze as well.
Here are just a few glimpses of the Camden Garden Tour on a very overcast, and sometimes drippy, last Thursday. (Getting used to a new camera.)

Fantastic fish swim on the boathouse of the Patti & Bruce Westphal’s Garden on Rockport Harbor. The home was filled with a very amusing folk art collection that expanded into the garden.

Andre the Seal loved visiting this lobsterman’s house. Fish (the edible variety) were of interest to him as well.

Nancy & Ben Allen’s lovely renovated Victorian home and overflowing perennial garden in Lincolnville.

The fences at the Berwick Hill in Rockport are as classic as the gardens.

The pool at Berwick Hill surrounded by luscious flora at the home of Dyke Messler & Rickey Celentano.
Apologies for spelling, grammar and context errors recently. Rushing too much is the excuse.