To order a copy of any of our beautiful annual coffee table photo books, please visit: Powderhorn365, The Books.
"Nom, Nom, Nom" This corn is tied to a tree branch and dangles about four feet from the ground. The squirrel craftily pulls the string up to him and plucks niblets off of the cob. This, in turn, keeps them from raiding the bird feeder.
"Otis Serving It Up" What/Why: The Powderhorn Empty Bowls Dinner benefited the food shelf at the Division of Indian Work and Kidz Cafe. Attendees picked out a handmade ceramic bowl, made a donation of whatever they thought was fair, ate soup, and took home a new bowl as a reminder of how many people in our community have empty bowls and nothing to fill them with.
"Moving a clay oven for Empty Bowls event" Neighbors and friends helped Michael Ziomko move a 700+ pound clay oven created by him and others. Bricks line the inside bottom. Getting this from his backyard to the park building was more difficult than it looked, yet the teamwork was tremendous. I had to leave before they got it into the truck. Shari Albers called to tell me they were successful and no one was injured. It will be used for the first time to make bread for Empty Bowls on Friday, November 5, 2010, at the Powderhorn Park Building, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. From a website about Empty Bowls: "Come together with your friends and neighbors to end hunger in our neighborhood! Pick out a handmade bowl, make a free-will donation, enjoy homemade soup and leave with your bowl — now empty — a reminder that there are bowls that need filling in our neighborhood… and that you’ve done something to help fill them! The proceeds will benefit the food shelf at the Division of Indian Work, our neighbor at 10th Avenue and Lake Street, Sisters Camelot, and the Powderhorn Park kitchen upgrade." No one will be turned away.