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Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Snakes, why does it always have to be snakes?

Wow! This is Post #400 for my blog! Thanks to those who've stayed with me all these years. I hope you enjoyed my pages.


The next morning I headed back to the Everglades. I wanted to take an Airboat Tour. The NPS had its own tour but stopped offering tours after damage from a hurricane. Three concessionaires still offer them and they are all authorized by the NPS so to me, it is a valid option for touring. All three are along the same road heading toward the park and I chose this one because it was the first in line! 😁 I purchased my ticket but still had some time to kill before loading and they suggested the pre-cruise entertainment of a wildlife demonstration. The pseudo-ranger was handling a variety of snakes and other nasty things. There is an alligator locked up as well. It was a bit sad knowing that these animals were being handled as toys rather than the beautiful lifeforms they are. 



I based this layout on another of the 101 Sketches book (page 51). I used an older pack of CM papers called Vitamin Sea. I looked through all of my tropical and beach packs and liked how the background paper reflected the thatched hut look of the performance area.  The top border is a laser cut from the theme pack. The bottom border is a set of punched circles that I cut in half. The full circle title sticker works perfectly with those and pops given that it's a full circle. The snakes are from a pack I bought years ago. If you remember my odd wanderings in Greeley Colorado where I found a rattlesnake dress, this uses up the snakes I bought for that page. 

Friday, January 19, 2024

Anhinga Trail with no Anhingas

 My next stop was the Royal Palm Visitor Center. I wanted to walk the Anhinga Trail here as it is well known for viewing wildlife. Strangely I didn't see any of the birds for which the trail is named! I did have to stop and think about parking there after seeing the vulture warning sign (no damage to the car this time luckily). The trail is lovely, fully paved, and not terribly long (a little less than a mile). I do recommend it. Even though one of my first sights was a gator in the pond area at the head of the trail! (That's a zoomed-in image--I did NOT get close to any).



I returned to the 101 Sketches book for this layout (page 105). I chose the paper collection called Serene Waters. This not only has regular paper and stickers but some vellum paper as well. I chose 2 printed pages for the background and then layered the striped vellum on top for the left and right edges. I wanted to mimic the water flowing across the grasses. The top borders are laser-cut borders. I bought 2 packs so that I could mirror them across double-page layouts. Something to consider when you add them to your shopping cart!

Tuesday, January 16, 2024

Alligator Alley

I left the Corrigan beach party as I needed to head to Florida for a conference with the Health Professions Network. I had a couple of extra days, so I flew down early and visited some national parks. My first stop was The Everglades. I learned that this park is NOT a swamp as many would have you believe. The water source is continually moving and is in fact one of the slowest-moving and widest rivers anywhere. I learned a lot about the park at the Ernest Coe visitor center. There was a movie as well as a set of displays in the visitor center. I also joined a ranger as he walked around the porch with us pointing out some of the flora and fauna of the area. And that's where I saw my first alligator! (He's by the tree on the left page photo).



For these 2 pages, I returned to wallpaper as a technique. As I sometimes do, I started with the right-hand page. That is one of the Scrapbook Customs papers that I bought (I think I have at least 30 parks represented in my stash). I like that one of my photos from the porch was similar to the background of the paper so that went in the "sky" section of the paper. Because I wanted to keep the Everglades sign I only had enough room for a journal box. For the left page, I needed a place to display the unigrid. CM had recently released some travel pages and Florida was among them. This page with the outline of the state in the corner matched well with the Scrapbook Customs page and I was able to add a few more photos. The alligator embellishment was from the CM pack but the title, camera, and wildlife stickers were from the coordinating Scrapbook Customs sticker pack.

Friday, January 12, 2024

Following Their Footsteps

Jim and I reached the beach! It's not a popular spot for sunbathing so there were many pristine areas. I found a few different sets of animal tracks in the sand. We had the option to do a "loop" for the return trip and we did. Along the way, we saw some interesting trees or perhaps it's early driftwood?



This layout uses paper from Sweet Summer and a sketch from the CM 101 Sketches book (a promo from earlier this year). I can't show you the sketch, but if you have the book it is on page 45. You can see from the photo below that there is an 8 1/2 x 11 pocket page between the 2 pages of the layout. While I used the same background pages, the topics were slightly different, so I didn't mind separating them. The wavy borders are one laser-cut piece that I snipped to the length of the column. The seashells are a border punch from CM. I punched them on ivory-toned paper and then inked them with a bit of brown ink on a dauber to give them some texture. The stickers on the pocket page are from the Eastern National scrapbook kit

While there I took time to complete the Junior Ranger book. Below is a photo of me being sworn in by the rangers.



Because the background paper was so scenic, I chose only to add a couple of stickers from the Junior Ranger sticker book (available at most national park gift stores). The reason I needed the pocket page was the size of the junior ranger book and certificate. 

Tuesday, January 9, 2024

The Road Least Traveled

While in Rehoboth, Jim and I took a day to drive down to Assateague Island National Seashore. I thought I had been to this park before, and likely I had visited the visitor center, but apparently, most of my time had been spent at Chincoteague. I don't ever recall seeing so many of the native horses, nor of them being so close to the car!

We hiked to one of the beaches along a trail. At one point, they were trying to build a resort in the area and there was residual macadam from the roadway that was to be used to enter the site. The idea was abandoned but the road, or bits of it, remain. You can walk on some parts of it--indeed it is the bulk of the trail we chose. 



This layout is based on a sketch from the CM 101 sketches book (page 104). The sketch calls for a series of diamonds on the left side and when I saw the print on this paper, I knew it was the perfect fit. I believe the background pages are old CM. I didn't purchase them though--my sister and I had taken all of our unused scrapbook supplies to sell at a specialty yard sale earlier this year. This paper didn't sell so I took it for my own stash (I think it was my sister's though it could have been my mother's). I liked the way the blue pulled out the sky and our clothing in the photos. A touch of green matched the grasses as well. There is a 2nd paper that forms the mats for the right side of each page. It keeps a bold pattern from becoming overwhelming. The "Road Trip" die cut and horse sticker are from the Eastern National scrapbook kit.

Friday, January 5, 2024

It Was Once

My next National Park Trip was part of a long vacation in September 2018. Jim's family had planned to go to Atlantic Beach as usual, but a hurricane had ripped through the town just the week before and they were still in cleanup mode. So we hastily researched alternatives and decided to head to Rehoboth. In that area, I chose to refresh my First State stamps from the Ryves Holt House in Lewes, DE. Jim and I took a tour of the building which had served as an inn. Some of the original supports and doors were still in place-something I didn't discover on my first visit 2 years prior. 

But between this trip and today, the house is no longer part of the First State National Historical Park! In March of 2021, this site was removed due to a legal problem. As part of the NPS rules, buildings must be on land owned by the same entity as the structure. Unfortunately, the building is on land owned by the church next door. So until that changes, this is no longer an NPS site! I'm glad I visited it while I could.



This layout is from a kit I purchased from the Paper Loft. I love that their papers have a muted tone to them. It works so well with a variety of historic visits. I thought the tones of this matched the house's red and the wood pieces' browns. It's a simple enough layout to recreate. Just cut 12" strips of paper or cardstock at 7" and 5". Do the same for a piece of patterned paper and mix them so that there are 12" of each per page. I've done something similar on other layouts, sometimes with 2 sheets of decorative paper.

Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Even Smaller than the Dinkie

Happy New Year to everyone and thanks for joining me for another year of National Park Scrapbook page posts! 


The last layout in the series highlights the smaller trains on display this weekend. In one building the local model railroad groups created a large display. Outside, someone brought their personal-sized yard train and in another building, there were Lego train sets. These were of particular importance to my dad and nephews.



This layout is based on one of Noreen Smith's 1-2-3 layouts (July 2017). You can still see the video here. I used a pack of CM paper called "Essentials" which had a foiled dot pattern and some bright colors. They don't say Lego on the pack but you can tell that's what they were thinking when they made the papers. I used 2 different shades of cardstock. I liked the blue but since one set of triangles was the exact same shade, I chose to move those to the right side of the layout and use a green cardstock base. Normally you would flip over and use the back side to decrease the "matchy" problem. But the back was large strips of white and yellow and wouldn't mix too well. I think this turned out fine in the end though.