Inspiring nature- and beach-lovers
Growing up in Ohio, the beach was a miraculous, fantasy land that I rarely experienced. Upon arriving at my grandparent’s Eastern Kentucky home after the frequent five-hour drives, I would immediately run inside to find the treasure that sat atop a bedroom dresser. I lovingly gazed at the miniature beach scene of sand, seashells and a dried seahorse set inside a glass globe until the reality of mountainsides to climb and streams to wade drew me outside. Looking back now, I doubt that my grandparents, who raised 10 children through the depression by farming and coal mining in Appalachia, ever had the opportunity to visit a beach. Most likely a gift from vacationing relatives, the small globe surely represented their only view of the ocean and its relaxed lifestyle.
At age 7, I rode with my parents to Panama City, Fla. The reality that I was actually going to a real beach sunk in with the excitement of purchasing my new red Keds and a pastel-colored plastic pail at a tourist shop along the way. I spent the heavenly days floating on an air mattress in the gentle waves and scooping the sugar-white sand. Years later, I continued to steal away to the garage to play with the white sand in a Styrofoam cooler that Dad had brought home for me from that trip.
Far from the beach though I may have been growing up, I enjoyed my tomboy’s life of summers spent with feet stained from the mulberries “down back,” playing in the rain, and exploring the fields and forests beyond my home. Kentucky visits brought more adventures, oftentimes shared with my cousins, such as catching craydads, crossing rickety wooden footbridges, exploring hillsides and the cliffside “cave” on my grandparents’ property.
My second real beach visit came at age 16, tagging along on a Virginia Beach vacation to babysit my nephews. This time I proudly donned thongs (our word for flip flops in those days) with straw-grass footbeds and red velvet straps. Reliving my first beach trip, I spent hours floating on my belly on a raft in the water, which gave me what my sister-in-law has since referred to as “lobster legs.” As a sunburnt redhead, I certainly didn’t fit the vision of a beach native, but I longed to remain there among the grass and trees that grew over mounds of sand that reached to the ocean, watching the waves.
The beach remained only a distant dream through the many years of college, jobs, child-rearing and military reassignments, interspersed with occasional travels to places of awe-inspiring natural beauty such as Innsbruck, Austria; Taos, New Mexico; Canyon de Chelly, Arizona; and Estes Park, Colorado.
The final military assignment brought me to within an hour’s drive of where my “lobster legs “were born. This location and the changes brought by the passage of time have allowed my beach-living dreams to awaken and grow. I have developed a passion for surfing, even though after spending four years’ worth of free time learning, I’m still a kook (beginner). I spend hours and days at the oceanfront. When I lay my head down, visions of rolling waves appear before my eyes. I fall asleep to the sound of seagulls calling and surfbreaks on the sand.
I’ve fallen in love with the color, textures and images of the beach. Flip flops now are my everyday attire for much of the year, along with lots of board shorts and rash guards, pastels, canvas and water scenes of every type. My Taos-inspired décor of Navajo rugs, pots and ladders is gradually giving way to surfboards, seashells and seahorses throughout my house.
I have always enjoyed bringing home found treasures as a way to keep my adventures close, and I now comb each shoreline for seashells, driftwood, seaglass, stones and more. As much as I have embraced this new world, I have not forsaken my first love of forests, trees, streams, and mountains, and they continue to yield inspiration, shapes and colors as well.
These treasures and experiences find their way into my macrame creations, which I use to pay homage to the amazing, living beauty of the outdoors.
My hope is that they will, as my grandmother’s globe did for me, inspire and keep alive the dream for other nature-loving, wandering, wannabe beach and forest dwellers.