Sunday, May 19, 2013

SPRING/SUMMER CRAFT FAIR SCHEDULE
Hi Everyone,
Dancing Madrone Soap Co. will be back in Mendocino at Heider Field , at the corner of Little Lake and Ford St. by the Post Office, for this years 3 Mendocino Street Fairs.  The fairs are all Saturdays.  May 25 (Memorial Day weekend), July 6th (July 4th weekend), and July 27 (last weekend of the Mendocino Music Festival).  Time: 10am - 4pm each fair.  All fairs will be at Heider Field this year.

If you have any specific soaps or toiletries you want me to bring for you please email me by the day before the fair.  If you are in Mendocino on any of those days please stop by and say hi.  

Enjoy the spring,
Kathy Lieberfarb

Thursday, May 16, 2013

 
GARLIC & POPPIES
 
I've been picking the garlic scapes and shallot scapes as they become ready.  I used them in a compound butter along with preserved meyer lemons, lemon zest, & parsley.  The poppies are spreading around our place and we love them. 
 

http://gardening.about.com/od/herbsatoz/a/What-Are-Garlic-Scapes.htm

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

DANCING MADRONE SOAP CO. BACK AT THE WILLITS FARMERS MARKET THIS THURSDAY

Dancing Madrone Soap Company will be back at the market this Thursday, May 9th. I'll be at the market every 2nd Thursday of the month. This week will be a large selection of clearance soaps. Soap slices, full-sized soaps, Honey Bee soaps, Luffah Glycerin soaps.  The market goes from 3pm - 6 pm.

Saturday, May 4, 2013

HERB INFUSED OILS AND SALVE

Third great blog post from Mountain Rose Herbs.

http://mountainroseblog.com/diy-herbal-salves/
MAKING INFUSIONS AND DECOCTIONS

Another great blog from Mountain Rose Herbs.

http://mountainroseblog.com/medicine-making-basics-herbal-infusions/
MAKING TINCTURES AND EXTRACTS

I've been making tinctures and extracts for me and my family for many years.  I love the plants and the process of making them.  Below is a tutorial from Mountain Rose Herbs on making tinctures and extracts.  Mountain Rose Herbs is a very trustworthy company and a great place to get supplies.

http://mountainroseblog.com/guide-tinctures-extracts/

Sunday, April 14, 2013

WHITE DEER

I've seen these deer many times in the morning from 101 and up close when visiting friends near Ridgewood Ranch.  They are so cool.
 
 
 
Spotting fallow or white deer is a special treat for most area residents. Usually they are glimpsed out of the corner of one's eye as you speed down Highway 101 on the Ridgewood Grade.
While these deer are not native to the area, they have been a local fixture since 1949. The herds band together in familial groups of from 10 to 40 depending upon forage. They were first brought to the area by Charles Howard of Seabiscuit fame. He purchased them from William Randolph Hearst's zoolike residence in San Simeon. They escaped from captivity and have made their home in the area for more than 70 years.
Fallow deer , or Dama dama, are one of the most commonly domesticated deer in the world. The species originated in Turkey and Iraq and was brought to England by the Romans.
Mendocino County's fallow deer are born a light brown with white spots and become a light cream color in their first year. The deer coats typically darken during the winter.
The males have palmate or flattened antlers, which they shed each winter. Males and females make sounds similar to a dog's bark when distressed. (photo by Steve Eberhard)
Spotting fallow or white deer is a special treat for most area residents. Usually they are glimpsed out of the corner of one's eye as you speed down Highway 101 on the Ridgewood Grade.
While these deer are not native to the area, they have been a local fixture since 1949. The herds band together in familial groups of from 10 to 40 depending upon forage. They were first brought to the area by Charles Howard of Seabiscuit fame. He purchased them from William Randolph Hearst's zoolike residence in San Simeon. They escaped from captivity and have made their home in the area for more than 70 years.
Fallow deer , or Dama dama, are one of the most commonly domesticated deer in the world. The species originated in Turkey and Iraq and was brought to England by the Romans.
Mendocino County's fallow deer are born a light brown with white spots and become a light cream color in their first year. The deer coats typically darken during the winter.
The males have palmate or flattened antlers, which they shed each winter. Males and females make sounds similar to a dog's bark when distressed. (photo by Steve Eberhard)