dandelionfarmreviewwinter2012.wordpress.com
The Dandelion Farm Review, Winter 2012 Edition | A literary magazine of poetry
The Dandelion Farm Review, Winter 2012 Edition. A literary magazine of poetry. February 16, 2012. The Dandelion Farm Review. February is a white flower, a snowdrop hunched to the earth. February is a Steller’s jay feather on browned leaves, easily missed. February awakens song from the wine-colored finches preening atop the tallest cedar, and the juncos scattered in the sedges, flashing white tail feathers. Winter invites introspection, to ask yourself why? The Dandelion Farm Review. The Twenty Ten Theme.
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The Dandelion Farm Review | Winter, 2015
The Dandelion Farm Review. March already. Unseasonably warm and sunny puts the farm into overdrive, while inside, looking out the window, putting together this new issue, there’s a lingering chill. I feel like a ghost, hovering, transparent, as though if someone looked in this window right now, they’d see nothing but words appearing on a screen, letters scattering themselves like seed without the aid of fingers tapping the keyboard. Return to The Dandelion Farm Home Page. Leave a Reply Cancel reply.
dandelionfarmsc.blogspot.com
Building Dandelion Farm
This is the page that started it all - and from this little bitty farm came Proverbs 31 Winery! We are a reservations needed winery - not a big destination winery! Write us at proverbs31winery@yahoo.com Instagram: proverbs31winery web: http:/ proverbs31winery.com/. Saturday, August 15, 2015. Ticket Sales Are Live! We are getting ready for our grand opening - the day when we are ready to sell some Peach Melody wine. August 29, 2015. And Geeze Louise, what a lot goes into something like this! Well, for sta...
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Home Page
We have bought our farm and we are in the process of selling the old house to raise funds for the federal paperwork. Then my friends, we will be able to put together a commercial kitchen as needed. and sell this lovely wine. Right now we can share, but not sell. Some of our recipes are over 300 years old. Some are hand-developed by Peg - not available in other books - but some were handed down from other cultures and others adapted. We hope to please, and delight!
dandelionfarmspring2014.wordpress.com
The Dandelion Farm Review, Spring, 2014 | A Journal of Fine Poetry
The Dandelion Farm Review, Spring, 2014. A Journal of Fine Poetry. Spring passed by me like a frog slipping into a dark pond. I found myself busy. Patrick Loafman, editor. Return to The Dandelion Farm Review Homepage. May 19, 2014 at 10:46 pm. I’m a fan of Perchik. Published him in an early ALBATROSS. Another fine issue. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). Notify me of new comments via email.
dandelionfarmstead.com
dandelion farmstead
Living in the moment while dreaming of our farm*. Monday, April 27, 2015. I just got off the phone with my dear friend, and our greatly appreciated egg farmer. i refer to her in all her wonderousness on instagram. she is the provider of all the freckled eggs, and all the beautiful flowers. fox belly farm is her home, jennifer is her name. if you are in the portland area and want eggs and a warm, genuine interaction- find her on the facebook. Friday, April 17, 2015. I have no idea. instagram is so muc...
dandelionfarmsummer2012.wordpress.com
The Dandelion Farm Review, Summer 2012 | A Literary Magazine of Poetry
The Dandelion Farm Review, Summer 2012. A Literary Magazine of Poetry. July third. It rained all night. By morning, I’m at the window, looking out at the strawberries that need harvesting, corn that needs more sun, spinach bolting because of too much sun. Clouds sink with the weight of water. A Wilson’s warbler stutters on one note. I open the window. Humid air washed clean from rains blows in. A Wilson’s warbler stutters on one note. Connect with Patrick on Google. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Get every ...
dandelionfarmsummer2013.wordpress.com
The Dandelion Farm Review, Spring 2013 | An Online Journal of Fine Poetry
The Dandelion Farm Review, Spring 2013. An Online Journal of Fine Poetry. Growing tomatoes in the Northwest is humble work, starting seed in late February, carrying the seedlings to the greenhouse each morning, bringing them back into the warmth of my home at night, babying them. I sing to them in the morning. A few days ago it snowed. Yesterday it was seventy-five in the greenhouse. Spring on the Olympic Peninsula. And today, as I gather another issue of poets, I think of how raising tomatoes can teach ...
dandelionfarmsummer2014.wordpress.com
The Dandelion Farm Review, Summer 2014 | A Journal of Fine Poetry
The Dandelion Farm Review, Summer 2014. A Journal of Fine Poetry. Skip to primary content. Patrick Loafman, editor. Return to Dandelion Farm Review Home Page. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. The Twenty Eleven Theme.
dandelionfarmwinter2014.wordpress.com
The Dandelion Farm Review, Winter 2014 | A poetry journal
The Dandelion Farm Review, Winter 2014. Cheryl A. Van Beek. Winter Edition, 2014. Winter peels everything down to its essence. The cottonwood stripped of leaves silhouetted in failing light, wind tumbling the hollow body of a beetle, a golden-crowned sparrow sings a few notes, then silence, like the white spaces in a poem – maybe what’s not written is more important than the words that are left, once language is whittled down to its core. Patrick Loafman, editor. Return to Dandelion Farm Review Home Page.
dandelionfarmwinterreview2013.wordpress.com
The Dandelion Farm Review, Winter 2013 | A literary journal of fine poetry
The Dandelion Farm Review, Winter 2013. A literary journal of fine poetry. Patrick Loafman, editor. Return to The Dandelion Farm Home Page. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. Notify me of new comments via email.