Old suitcase + paint = incredible! Artwork by Chris Roberts at Red Piano Too Art Gallery on St. Helena Island.
Ready to go again.
I have been up now for I don’t even know how long. It feels like 100 hours. It feels like two hours. CreateAthon is drawing to a close for another year. This year a record number of volunteers did a record amount of work. It feels like we did so much but had so many more ideas that could have come to light if we’d only had just a little more time.
I have no big takeaway from the past day. Just that I cannot wait to do it all over again next year.
CreateAthon 2011
Today I am in the WECO with 33 other creative professionals who are all working on behalf of CreateAthon, the marathon pro-bono effort created by Riggs Partners 14 years ago. What’s more, there are national partners scattered all across the US who are doing exactly what we are doing in their own communities.
I am struck by the tasks that lie waiting and the sheer volume of work and ideation that will be come to life today. Even us seasoned volunteers will admit to being afraid. But there’s no time for fear. We face a long day and night.
It’s not so much that there’s work to be done, there’s so much good to be done.
I am lucky to be a part of this. Please follow along on our adventure on Facebook, Twitter and on the CreateAthon blog.
Car talk!
“Handwrite” for more meaningful digital interactions.
When I came back from SocialCrush I had a letter on my desk from Lisa Gergely of Emulsion Arts. The address on the envelope was handwritten and inside was a handwritten note card thanking me for having lunch with her last week. It’s a tangible reminder of a company I enjoy working with. It punctuates the fact that they are talented people who care about their craft and their customers.
It’s ironic that I have just come back from a fantastic, two-day onslaught of social media training and education only to blog about a handwritten letter. But this is what all that social hub-bub is all about. Relationships and meaningful interaction.
Many scoff at social media saying it’s a way to avoid contact and conversation. And they will continue to say just that. My mindset is different. For me, social media is another door to get to know more people and gain exposure to new information and ideas. While at SocialCrush I met people I already “knew” on Twitter: @colacitygirl, @techherding, @egw74, @ryalcurtis, @nicolebcurtis, @RickCaffeinated, @willimac and others. I had many face-to-face conversations that were made possible by Twitter.
Nurturing personal relationships with customers, clients and co-workers is far better for business than starting a Facebook page or a blog. Trust, attention to detail and simple interactions like this letter are the ultimate plug-ins.
Be sure they are part of your business strategy.
A small gift.
I have a lot to do this morning but I got sidetracked by my coffee mug. Not so much the need to fill it but how much I love this mug that was a college graduation gift 19 years ago. When I graduated from the University of SC, this was my gift from Burgin and Mark Riley. We’d been friends throughout high school and college. Back then, I was clearly in a cow phase. The cow phase has passed but my love for this mug has not.
When a saw them last week, they couldn’t remember the coffee mug. Their only recollection is that every time I have seen them over the past 10 years, I thank them for my college graduation gift and take great delight in letting them know I start every workday with it in hand.
It just goes to show you, some gifts and thoughts have real staying power. A gift that seems cursory to you may touch the recipient’s heart. So much so that 19 years later, they’ll still talk about it.
Solar Decathlon spotlights Appalachian ingenuity.
If I wasn’t a writer, I would be an architect. It absolutely fascinates me.
I live in and love my 1957 atomic ranch despite its glaring efficiency inadequacies. I love new modern like this affordable collaboration of Celtic Works and Studio 2LR. I covet the Lego Fallingwater set. Sometimes I even drive by the tiny Lustron house off Trenholm Road for absolutely no reason at all.
So when I got the chance to take a guided tour of Appalachian State University’s entry in the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon, I immediately donned a hard hat and followed faculty advisor and friend Dr. Jamie Russell for an inside look at designing and building a zero-energy home.
But first, a little bragging is in order. Appalachian State’s Solar Homestead was one of 20 entries selected in the world. They are the lone representative from the state of North Carolina and they are competing against several state-wide, multi-university teams. And, even though ASU’s entry is the only one without the support of an engineering or architectural program, they are not phased at all.
Every two years, the U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon challenges collegiate teams to design, build and operate solar-powered houses that are cost-effective, energy-efficient and attractive. The contest educates the public about energy-efficient construction, provides a unique experience for students, encourages collaboration among the disciplines, and showcases a whole-home approach to building design and construction.
You can learn more about ASU’s Solar Homestead here or watch this beautiful video that showcases the project and the many smart, bright minds behind it. Keep up with construction on Facebook and Flickr. Even better, visit The Solar Homestead and the other 19 entries in person from September 23-October 2 on the National Mall in Washington, DC.
And what will you see in The Solar Homestead? Wood flooring repurposed from storm-damaged white oak trees at the Biltmore Estate — trees older than the estate itself. Photovoltaic outbuilding modules that power the main home. Several advances in solar power generation that I can’t even begin to explain or understand.
But the best thing to me is that Appalachian spirit of self-sufficiency. They’re not just in it; they are in it to win it.
Camp love.
I am a South Carolina girl. I was born in Ohio, but most of the big stuff happened SOTMDL. The vacations I remember were beach trips, day trips to Lake Murray or road trips to Florida. There were First Weeks spent in Myrtle Beach and school leadership retreats in North Myrtle or Pawleys Island. A few family vacations to the barely-populated, chain-free hamlets of coastal North Carolina.
But there is one vacation experience I have come to know and love with a passion no hotel can muster: camp.
My husband’s family has deep vacation roots in Upstate New York. Generations have relaxed and unwound on the shores of Sandy Pond, just off Lake Ontario. Just outside of Syracuse near the Hughes epicenter of Central Square, the family camps are ancient by today’s standards and a little shabby with a minimum of chic. And that’s just the way they should be. No granite, no leather furniture and no air conditioning.
At camp, life doesn’t completely stop. There’s always something to do. Think about what’s for lunch. Read a book. Take the boat across the pond to swim in the lake. Go fishing. Eat a Byrne Dairy ice cream sandwich. Play golf. Maybe take the kids to the Oswego County Fair if you’re there around the Fourth of July. Lure your spouse out for a date night to the Wayside bar (down the road) or the Dinosaur (down the highway).
It’s a charming, out of the way place where generations have played, married and retired. Change is usually incremental and that’s part of what you love. The houses are much the same as they were fifty years ago.
For the first few years I went, showers were tagged on to swimming. Going water skiing? Bring the shampoo and wash your hair, too. Chances are, it’s been a few days since you washed it.
You just can’t wash off the camp feeling though. You’re born with it. Or in my case, you marry in to it. My mother-in-law has an uncanny knack for knowing the year in which each of her children and grandchildren first dipped his or her toe in Sandy Pond. Since you can’t stay away, it’s usually sometime after their baptism but before their first birthday.
There’s really not much at camp. The barest minimum of furniture, dishes, food and everyday luxuries that we can’t seem to live without at home. Yet, camp has much that’s out of reach at home. The most important thing being all of us, together.
For a short time, the Turners are not scattered all over the east coast. We are all together in the one place where people with the last names of Hughes, Turner, Fitzpatrick, Johnson and Ashcroft have gathered for years. Siblings, grandparents, spouses, cousins and a whole schmere of grandchildren. My husband and his siblings sit on the same couches and chairs their grandparents sat on years ago, they read the same dusty books their parents read, their children ride the bikes they themselves rode years ago.
At camp you’re surrounded by reminders of people loved and lost. Grainy photos, favorite chairs and coffee cups, and stories that time cannot seem to fade. They’re all there with you … sitting by the fire, skimming across the lake, cooking hot dogs on the grill, helping you round up a fourth for a late afternoon round at The Elms golf course.
It’s better than a simple vacation because it’s steeped for so many years. It’s reached a level no amount of luxury can usurp. It’s a family tradition. One we hope our boys are lucky enough to share with their children, too.
Sitting on green grass eating Byrne Dairy ice cream sandwiches while surrounded by years and years of love. That’s camp, in a nutshell.
As the green grass grows.
When my husband and I got our house seven years ago, I was very pregnant with our first born and our minds were elsewhere. After a few years, the front yard started to show the neglect.
A once-green lawn slowly gave way to weeds and crabgrass; the Earth below became brittle and compressed. And that’s when the ants moved in. At one point, we pretty much threw our hands up and mowed the weeds (and dirt) and called it a day. And that’s how things went for a few years. These days, though, I have two wild young boys who love dirt and wide open spaces. I need the front yard to keep my house from becoming a barn.
Last year, we found a roadmap for getting the grass growing again in Family Handyman magazine. I was initially drawn in by the headline: Whip Your Sorry Grass Into Shape. But after we both read the article and choked on an estimate for sodding the front yard, we thought we should give it a shot. What did we have to lose?
I’d venture to say we completed half of the recommended measures, got our centipede grass analyzed by Clemson Extension Center and kept it watered for the most part last year. We did see some improvement, too. This year, we are following the plan again and the changes are pretty dramatic already. Hopefully, we’ll make it through the entire plan, and on Mr. Lawn’s schedule. We’re almost halfway there.
As I was puttering in the yard this morning, I was thinking about where the effort lies in getting grass growing again. It’s not the grass itself; it’s the soil. Grass doesn’t grow well in arid, compacted ground. Beyond a cactus or yucca, what does? With nourishment and attention, crunchy ground gives way to soil that’s soft, rich and more nurturing. Then, nature lends a hand. With stronger roots, grass will flourish, retake ant hills and choke back weeds.
Watching our yard fight its way back to life has been an amazing lesson. You’d think the grass we had wouldn’t stand a chance at being healthy again. But rather than scrape it off and start over, we put efforts toward strengthening the foundation we had. And those efforts are paying off.
This could be the year I have to ask the great Google how to get those pesky grass stains out of my kids clothes.
Reasons to be grateful.
I posted a Facebook status earlier today about something being one of 100 things I am grateful for today. About that same time, I thought it would be fun to think of the 99 other things I am grateful for. So I did. I thought it would be hard to make it to 100 but it really wasn’t. Give yourself a treat and think of things and someones you’re grateful for. Then tell ’em!
Here are 100 of mine (in no particular order other than the top seven):
- My wonderful, wonderful husband who gets too many to-do lists and not enough thank you’s.
- My two healthy kids who make me laugh deeply and often.
- My parents, parents-in-law and grandparents who took (and still take) great care of me even though they don’t have to.
- My sister and absolute favorite brother-in-law ever (this is a provable fact)
- The many friends we have who are more like family
- That I work in very close proximity to my mentor and one of my favorite people on the planet
- The Unfortunates
- Snoring dogs
- That I can end a sentence with the word for
- The Chrysler building
- My neighbor who got me gardening and introduced me to Pinckney’s Produce
- The Arts, in general
- My kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Amstutz, in particular
- Bookmobiles
- The WECO building sign
- Atomic Ranch magazine
- Bacon
- Smart tennis instructors
- Midcentury Modern anything
- My iPhone 4
- My dirigible computer case from Brokesy
- That I get to do something I love every day
- Breakfast for dinner
- Kids’ artwork
- Crayons and coloring books
- The smell of brand new tennis balls and shower curtains
- A gas range
- A “cool” station wagon
- That we got an accountant
- Augusta National
- Star Wars action figures
- Etsy
- That locally grown food is as cool as it is good
- Books
- Camping
- My new tennis racquet
- Fair food
- Ladies’ quad
- Freedom, infrastructure and the many things my taxes afford me
- People who like to make decisions
- Calendars, list and organizers
- Forest Lake Garden Center
- My time as a bartender at The Village Tavern
- The Kingsman’s cheese steak on Texas Toast
- Texas Toast
- Birthday cake
- The Tour de France
- Vanity Fair magazine
- The children’s book, The Little House by Virginia Burton
- The right to vote
- Forsythia, which blooms just when winter’s gone on long enough
- Artists
- People who support the arts
- When people get the giggles
- Harmony School
- Corn on the cob (in season)
- My garden
- Birdfeeders
- Good fonts and paper
- Hot dogs and cheeseburgers especially when both are on my plate at a picnic
- My Wednesday Weight Watchers group
- Books and libraries
- Cool hilarious people like Stacey and Joey Leroy
- That I met Chris Daly in summer school in 1986
- Kids’ birthday parties
- #gamecocks
- The coffee cup college graduation gift from the Riley’s that I have used almost every day at work since 1992
- Steve Spurrier quotes
- Folding baby laundry
- Bourbon
- The sound of laugher from anyone, especially if they’re laughing so hard there is no noise
- Divided plates
- College football
- Keyboard shortcuts
- The statue of Mickey Mouse and Walt Disney holding hands
- Farmer’s Markets
- That I can read and write
- Create-A-thon
- Coffee
- My 1957 ranch house
- Fair Haikus
- Avocados
- Guster
- That there’s a developer trying to bring Richland Mall back to life
- Taco trucks
- The original Tick cartoon show
- Fallingwater
- Legos
- Optimists
- Simple, ultra-smart logos
- For people who can read and play sheet music
- Inspiration
- My Star Wars car sunshade
- For anyone still reading this
- People who “save” old houses
- Fragment sentences
- Cheese
- That I actually enjoy running
- For the hundreds of other things I don’t know I love … yet!