Monday, September 27, 2021

WIN A PRIZE at the HUMBOLDT COUNTY AUTHOR FESTIVAL 2021 CHALLENGE

Take the Author Festival 2021 Challenge to get ready to Take Flight With Books in 2022!

Under normal circumstances, October 2021 would be another wonderful Humboldt County Children’s Author Festival, with authors, like me, doing in-person visits at schools and libraries.. But, because of the pandemic, the festival has been postponed a year. Instead, there will be a free virtual challenge for kids and teens that includes reading, learning about authors and their books, and writing, drawing or making video book reviews.
Author Festival 2021 Challenge begins Monday, September 20 and ends Saturday, October 23. To learn more and how to sign up, go to the Festival website: https://www.authorfest.org/home. Watch the video for an overview of the festival and a sneak peek at authors who have participated in the past. And when you sign up for the challenge you will find longer videos of all the authors–including me!
Have fun with the challenge! Everyone who completes the challenge wins a prize!
And get ready to Take Flight with Books in 2022.

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

A NIGHT UNDER THE STARS, Celebrating Camp Bovey

Family fun with live music, food trucks, crafts, singing, dancing.
I learned to love nature at Camp Bovey, the summer camp for kids and families of Northeast Minneapolis, located in the woods of northern Wisconsin. Come celebrate–in person or in spirit--at A Night Under the Stars with G.B. Leighton on October 1st at East Side Neighborhood Services and help the next generation of Camp Bovey families enjoy high quality experiences in nature. Every donation helps! Proceeds will go towards the Camp Bovey restoration campaign. Click HERE for the link to tickets/donations.
Camp Bovey
Camp Bovey is operated by East Side Neighborhood Services in Minneapolis and was founded by my father when he was the director. My first visit to Camp Bovey was in 1949 and I went there every summer after that until 1966, when our family moved to California. I went swimming, fishing, boating, made lanyards in the craft cabin, played Capture the Flag, and sat around the campfire listening to stories about the Hodag, a creature with the head of an ox, feet of a bear, back of a dinosaur, and tail of an alligator. The Hodag is the camp’s mascot. After I became a children's book writer, the Hodag became the subject of two of my fiction books.
Visiting Camp Bovey in 2018. Wearing my staff sweatshirt, saved from 1966.
I have been involved in a fund raising effort to make much needed upgrades to keep Camp Bovey the wonderful place it has always been for kids and families of Northeast Minneapolis. I’d love to have you participate. 



Wednesday, September 15, 2021

ROSALYNN CARTER BUTTERFLY TRAIL

Rosalynn Carter Butterfly Trail at Lake Lure, NC

From roses to succulents, pollinator gardens to art installations, the Flowering Bridge at Luke Lure, in the mountains of western North Carolina, is a wonder of nature and testament to the volunteers who turned an abandoned bridge into a beautiful floral walkway.


The Lake Lure Flowering Bridge is a stop along the Rosalynn Carter Butterfly Trail, which begins in Plains, Georgia, at the home of President and Mrs. Jimmy Carter. The mission of the trail is to promote the full life cycle of butterflies common in this area with a special emphasis on the monarch.

Monarch butterfly.

When Former First Lady Rosalynn Carter learned of the struggling Monarch Butterfly population and threatened migration from North America to Mexico, she called on her neighbor and friend Annette Wise for advice on planting the right native plants in her garden.  When friends and neighbors in Plains learned what she was doing, they wanted to provide habitat in their gardens to help pollinators. Eventually, a "trail" started of butterfly gardens one house at a time, one church at a time, one library, one state, and so on.

The more butterfly gardens that exist, the greater the population of Monarch Butterflies, which have been so threatened for the past several decades primarily due to the removal of milkweed plants from farms and properties.  Monarch butterflies need milkweed on which to lay their eggs. Otherwise, the cycle of life for butterflies ends.  All pollinators benefit from native nectar and host plants. Find out more about the relationship between monarchs and milkweed at my earlier post on this blog.
On an informational board at the beginning of the bridge is a panel describing common butterflies of the area.

I visited the Flowering Bridge and learned about the Rosalynn Carter Butterfly Trail on a trip to North Carolina in August. I was pleased to see information about the Painted Lady Butterfly, the subject of my book BUTTERFLIES IN ROOM 6.  It was a rainy day and I didn’t see any butterflies, but I am sure that when the sun comes out, the garden will be full of them, feeding on nectar produced by the abundance of flowers.

You can read more about my visit to the Lake Lure Flowering Bridge at my travel blog The Intrepid Tourist.

All Text and Photos copyright Caroline Arnold


Wednesday, September 8, 2021

PETER RABBIT AT LAKE LURE IN NC: Literature Comes Alive

Peter Rabbit Children's Garden at the Lake Lure Flowering Bridge, Lake Lure, NC

A childhood favorite book of mine, my children, and my grandchildren is Beatrix Potter’s The Tale of Peter Rabbit–a classic. I have read the story aloud so many times I almost have the text memorized. In the story, Peter does exactly what his mother tells him not to do: “You my go into the fields or down the lane, but don’t go into Mr. McGregor’s garden: your Father had an accident there; he was put in a pie by Mrs. McGregor.” This should be adequate warning, but Peter was a naughty rabbit and went “straight away to Mr. McGregor’s garden, and squeezed under the gate!” In the course of the story Peter is chased by Mr. McGregor (after eating his vegetables) and loses his shoes–one among the cabbages and the other amongst the potatoes. “He might have gotten away altogether if he had not unfortunately run into a gooseberry net, and got caught by the large buttons on his jacket. It was a blue jacket with brass buttons, quite new.” Luckily for Peter, he manages to escape and get home safely.
Door to the rabbit hole. "Once upon a time there were four little rabbits--Flopsy, Mopsy, Cotton-tail and Peter. They lived with their Mother in a sandbank, underneath the root of a very big fir tree."

Much to my delight, on a recent visit to North Carolina, I discovered a tiny Peter Rabbit at the Lake Lure Flowering Bridge, a floral walkway with themed plantings on a pedestrian bridge. Nestled among the plants in the Peter Rabbit Children’s Garden were tiny figures enacting the elements of the story–Peter, his family, the flower pots in Mr. McGregor’s potting shed, and the watering can where Peter hid until he sneezed “Kertyschoo!” 

Peter outside the gate to Mr. McGregor's garden. His coat and shoes hung up to "frighten the blackbirds."

Also on display is the tiny blue jacket that Mr. McGregor hung up along with the lost shoes “for a scare-crow to frighten the blackbirds.” It was wonderful to see the story come alive in a new setting and to be reminded of a favorite tale. 

Peter's mother on her way to go shopping. "Then old Mrs. Rabbit took a basket and her umbrella, and went through the wood to the baker's."

The Flowering Bridge at Luke Lure, in the mountains of western North Carolina, is a wonder of nature and testament to the volunteers who turned an abandoned bridge into a beautiful floral walkway. The project began in 2012, when gardens were first planted first at either end of the bridge and then in following years on the bridge itself. I visited the Flowering Bridge in August 2021, on a trip with my family. You can read more about my visit to the Flowering Bridge at Lake Lure at my travel blog, The Intrepid Tourist.

All text and photos copyright Caroline Arnold