![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhPgIFUS0gd6reKt60u37kSEr87wlBZkOOPmZQ-C1E4Pf6te7u6xqiieM4fpnf0W_dFlXcrBkr5W9h9SPg6K8aIDlWcwRKZllG1YTZ6QUopws7XBgFgM2AGnTzVHYZTNVOyY8Zy6nZ2or0/s200/IMG_2406.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj0Wwqrhbgb0e-kw9UcKm8fHEii9B_WnBf3XYIqA8v-sRD_PmHNUCXXSqflAWhoN9ViX1PREnZqhlKF5A-H34PZbZrdhuaKmJG7UB3Z3V-KXH7DsAxfbniCh_NaGOVPRnFAZ1TUu0BI3mQ/s200/IMG_2405.jpg)
There is an organic farm we belong to and May through November get pretty much all of our vegetables there. Also flowers. Many I dry. Organic flowers - soo lovely. So I started making little dry arrangements in 2" clay pots, and then shells. And then Tom Truelove - our local tree man - brought an interesting log and I used that.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_inll06I899xwddhdS2a7hLnCFhft0r1qpNng6848PH9i6x-ZFXnkQGvl_DuWo99udzOj1zxqGkqoxl4biNCHPwoRNteZV0KXjp9vd2AlNbbpXWFHhXf8-MmgtAjVS2WvuIlWsEznjhc/s200/IMG_2421.jpg)
No comments:
Post a Comment