The better to seed
you with, my dear
So we have come to the inevitable finish…the last week of
Summer Hours…the Bifocal Friday season finale.
And of course, nothing says summer send-off like the
Minnesota State Fair.
Drew and I had plans to go on Saturday, because we had
tickets to the Weezer show. But all the annual excitement and build-up to the
Fair had us thinking about a project we had kept meaning to do all year and
hadn’t gotten around to yet…SEED ART!
The crop art show in the Horticulture Building is a State
Fair highlight for most Minnesotans, and we are no exception. So we decided
this last Bifocal Friday would be the day we would finally become seed artists
ourselves. Too late to enter in this year’s fair of course – and maybe our
quality won’t even be up to snuff for entering in next year’s competition. But
we felt compelled to give it a go.
I had taken the whole day off – in fact, most of the week
because it was my birthday week. So we set out early Friday morning seed
shopping. Well, actually first we started with coffee at Ma Petite Cheri bakery
in the Seward neighborhood of Minneapolis. It’s a sweet little spot on Franklin
Avenue that we’d never been to before, and the coffee was good but sadly the
promise of the Croque Monsieur-style pastry was not fully delivered upon. We
took our coffee to go and strolled Milwaukee Avenue, that historic vest-pocket treasure
of a neighborhood, two city blocks of perfectly preserved small homes built in
the 1880s on quarter-sized lots which front onto a grassy pedestrian mall with no direct automobile
access.

Onward to the Seward Co-Op Grocery, where we knew we would
find bulk bins of edible seeds of all sizes, shapes and colors. Here’s the
bounty we ended up with:
Back home, we poured everything out into little bowls, got
out our various glues and tweezers and picks and pushers, and got to work.
Here’s how mine turned out at the end of the day: a Dios de
la Meurte head in honor of the change of seasons coming up soon as we turn the
corner into fall and winter.
Drew’s representation of his HandEye Creative business logo
is still a work in progress – those individually aligned grains of Forbidden
Black Rice take forever to maneuver into place, and the Split Red Lentils are a
real challenge to wrangle.
What has NOT been a challenge has been to find something fun
and interesting -- new and different or old and cherished – to do with my
Bifocal Fridays. I’ll spend the next nine months working hard five full days a
week, and dreaming of next summer’s adventures.