Sunday, February 24, 2019

Rose Glen 10, a homecoming



Serfina series author Robert Beatty has a new book

Books! Books! Books! 

The Rose Glen Literary Festival in Sevierville attracts more authors, books and readers every year. Yes. Good old fashioned books made out of ink on paper, blood, sweat and tears every time you get a rejection letter. This was the tenth annual Rose Glen and I have not missed any of them. Bigger and better. Always. 

The luncheon keynote speaker, Robert Beatty—author of the best-selling "Serafina" series—was there with his new book, Willa of the Wood. His talk could have been titled, "An overnight success, and it only took 38 years." Yes. It really did. 

A huge thank you to CEO Brenda McCroskey, Carroll McMahan, Amanda Marr, Chad Branton and the rest of the staff at the Sevierville Chamber of Commerce for all the work it takes to organize an event of this size. And thank you volunteer and writer Renea Winchester, from the other side of the mountain, for introducing me. 

Since I was the first keynote speaker and have been to all ten festivals, I was asked to speak of my remembrances of the first nine. I was actually born roughly four miles from the convention center and yesterday was my birthday, so it was a homecoming for me. Plus, I got to visit with many, many longtime friends I have met over the years at Rose Glen.

But more than that, over the past ten years I have bought some absolutely wonderful books, gems too numerous to mention in detail but none more so than "Riding to Newport" by Donnie Lamon. It is hard to find today, but worth the search. 

And a huge hug of thanks to all who stopped by my author table for a chat, buy a book or piece of artwork.

Renea Winchester's blog post focuses on the "sense of community" that Rose Glen fosters and small towns do it so much better than large. Click: delightful.

For more about the lineup, click: 2019 Rose Glen, or here's a quick peek:




Sevierville Convention Center
Robert Beatty speaks at the luncheon banquet
With everyone's favorite author, Luke Copas
Michelle McMahan surprises this speaker on his birthday
Thank you to all who attended my Rose Glen remembrance talk
Is Knoxville's beloved Sam Venable thinking about retiring? No way
With my longtime Rose Glen friend, Jordan
Commemorative Rose Glen note cards by Chris Myers
With Smoky Mountain series author Dr. Lin Stepp
And Dr. Stepp's Smoky Mountain books
Commemorative 2019 Rose Glen ceramic 
Jack Neely and Paul James' Knoxville History Project books


And how good could a festival be without a cheerleader and a basketball player?
Right, Olivia and Annetta?
Local author David Brill was at Rose Glen with his latest
Carroll McMahan, Amanda Marr and Luke Copas draw for door prizes
Local books discovered at earlier Rose Glens
With Luke Copas and Heartlands Bill Landry
And, of course, my three books were there



Saturday, February 23, 2019

Rose Glen number 10





Good morning. 

Today is the tenth annual Rose Glen Literary Festival in Sevierville.  I am one of many featured authors and will speak at 9:15 about the history of the festival. I was born in Sevierville... and today is my birthday. What a way to celebrate! I was also the luncheon keynote speaker at the very first Rose Glen in 2010. 

So come on down to the Sevierville Convention Center at 202 Gist Creek Road and buy a bag of books. Show your support for the wonderful authors who will be there.

Here's a look back on the first nine years.















Thursday, February 21, 2019

valentines with feathers







It is that time of the year!

If you think that your backyard birds only come and go from your feeders we need to look at that. There's a lot going on out back that doesn't include suet. 

Join me tonight at the University of Tennessee Arboretum—901 S. Illinois Ave, Oak Ridge—and we'll talk about 

bird courtship, mate selection and pair-bonding. 

Yes. It's that time of the year.

Hint: It's always nice if he brings her something to eat.





Wednesday, February 20, 2019

the eagles are courting





Thirty years ago, this post would not have been possible. But due to the efforts of TVA, TWRA and Bob Hatcher, and the American Eagle Foundation in Pigeon Forge, there have been several bald eagle sightings in the Tennessee Valley the past few weeks. 

Jennifer Roder and her family saw one flying over downtown Sevierville and in the past week, I have received photos from Barbara Brauch taken in Tellico Village and yesterday from Linda Knott taken near her home in Philadelphia, Tennessee. 

Both Brauch and Knott saw two eagles together but this is courtship season and that is what you would expect...and with luck, more eaglets. 

Thanks, Jennifer, Barbara and Linda!




Tuesday, February 19, 2019

driveway blue





Not the best photo of an Eastern bluebird that you will ever see. No prize winner. But the point is where the bluebird stood. Rock solid. 

I live in the woods and the intensely blue bird was standing in my driveway as if to claim it for its very own. Bluebirds do not nest in the woods or claim the woods as their territory, they are field birds but there he was. Brazen. I stopped the car. Got out to take a quick photo with my cell phone and he did not move. 

Next thought: Was he injured? I moved in front of my car and he flew away. Oh, so this WAS just a territorial thing and I was on his turf. But didn't I just pay the property taxes? I have had many bluebirds in the past month coming to my suet feeders and heated birdbath. And I was playing "Color of the Blues" by George Jones on the car stereo, so maybe it was indeed a sign that I was now living in blue's country.  

Not sure. Time will tell but I do have multiple bluebird boxes out for the chickadees and wrens. We'll see. I need to find my copy of "Kind of Blue" by Miles Davis to mellow out this posting.

On a wet, drab, gray, dreary day..celebrating all things blue. 


Sunday, February 17, 2019

safe trip Betty!





"In the swamp,
in secluded recesses,
A shy and hidden bird is warbling a song.

Solitary, the thrush,

The hermit, withdrawn to himself, avoiding the settlements,
Sings by himself a song.

- From When Lilacs Last in the Door-yard Bloom’d

by Walt Whitman



Our friend Betty Thompson is moving to Kansas but before she left she sent me two photos of a hermit thrush. 


Safe trip Betty!




Sunday, February 10, 2019

History Project goes public





Knoxville's history has gone public, very public.

The Knoxville History Project was founded by longtime Knoxville historian, newspaper columnist and author Jack Neely with Development Director and author Paul James. They are keeping our history alive with public exhibits.

The Knoxville History Project’s Downtown Art Wraps keep on getting better. This is the fifteenth in the series that takes ordinary gray traffic boxes and turns them into outdoor history lessons. Added in early February, this exhibit honors a local naturalist! The original painting of an arresting Red-tailed Hawk was by artist Earl Henry, a dentist whose office was located adjacent to this spot at Main Street and Locust in the Medical Arts Building in the 1930s.

It is best to see the wrap in person, but if you cannot here is the history lesson. 


Earl O’Dell Henry (1911-1945)

Immature Red-tailed Hawk, 1944
Original: Tempera on Board, 13 5/8 x 16 inches

Earl Henry, a local naturalist and self-taught artist, is often better known as the Knoxville dental officer who perished on the ill-fated USS Indianapolis at the end of World War II.

After his boyhood discovery of vividly illustrated wildlife cards found inside Arm & Hammer Baking Soda boxes, Earl began drawing birds. His wooden bird carvings drew acclaim while studying at Knoxville High School. He developed the art of taxidermy while a junior member of the East Tennessee Ornithological Society and that expertise informed his painting of birds.

After studying dentistry in Memphis, Henry returned to Knoxville and set up practice across the street from here in the Medical Arts Building. In 1942, he joined the U.S. Navy, serving on active duty initially at the Naval Hospital at Parris Island in South Carolina. There, he honed his artistic ability using tempera paints on boards, and later incorporating detailed background landscapes, reminiscent of the style of John James Audubon, providing richer and more sophisticated natural settings. 

Cmdr. Henry lost his life at sea at age 33. He died on July 30, 1945 aboard the USS Indianapolis shortly after the vessel delivered uranium for the first atomic bomb used in World War II. The ship was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine and sunk within 12 minutes. Henry was not among the survivors. He was one of two Knoxvillians on the ship – the other being Knoxville Journal photographer Kasey Moore. Two of Henry’s final works, “Kentucky Cardinal” and “American Eagle in the Pacific” were painted aboard ship in 1944 and his artistic legacy remains part of the ongoing story of the USS Indianapolis.


Examples of Earl Henry’s artwork and mounted birds are on display locally at Ijams Nature Center. Read more about Earl Henry and other Knoxville naturalists from the past at: Naturalists.

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

cup o' suet at West View





Fellow birder and school teacher Tim McGrath hosts an after-hours Environmental Club at West View Elementary School in Knoxville.

Recently, he inviting me over to lead the students in a suet-making workshop. All we needed were old shoelaces, sticks, donated coffee cups and some yummy ingredients to make enough bird feeders for each student to take one home. 

It was great fun. Thanks, Tim.










And thank you Wild Birds Unlimited, 7240 Kingston Pike, for donating 
activity books for each of the kids.