Love the Art Where You Live! #LocalArtLoves

Tempe light rail station art - hands

Local Art Loves

From now through the end of February, share your local art loves!

  1. Take a photo of art you’ve purchased from a local artist, made, or see around your neighborhood.
  2. Share it on social media (and follow along!), using the #localartloves hashtag.
  3. You’ll also be able to see what people shared from different places when I round it up here on Travelcraft Journal.

 

Phx First Friday art by Manny and Janet Burruel

For inspiration, check out what artists and art lovers submitted last year.

Your 2018 Local Art Loves


P.S. Post title is a bit of a nod to Kristin Tovar’s fabulous site, Why I Love Where I Live. Based in Tucson, WILWIL encourages everyone to find things to love wherever they are and get involved in their communities. 


Microblog Mondays logo

The Ultimate Date Night

Cucumber salad in Yuma

palms in imperial

Phillip and I arrive at the date garden just as the sun has dipped low enough to begin turning green farm fields gold.

Date night dinner yuma

The weather is perfect, a string quartet is playing, and long tables set with fresh flowers have been placed underneath the palm trees.

Date night dinner yuma

Date Night

This is Yuma’s Date Night. Held a few times a year, the evening includes a gourmet dinner by Chef Alex Trujillo with dates in every course, a drink ticket, live music, and a walking tour of Imperial Date Gardens, which hosts the event in conjunction with the Yuma Visitors Bureau (YVB).

Imperial Date Gardens

Imperial Date Gardens is technically located in California. But it’s just 25 minutes from Downtown Yuma and part of the same agricultural region. As I’ve mentioned before, Yuma is so close to the California border, you can cross it by accident.

Brother Deweys date beer

Mark Briones from the YVB welcomes everyone as they arrive, letting us know how the evening will go – and that there are date beer (!) samples at the bar.

bruschetta - Yuma Date Night

Of course, we have to try that. Then we find seats, while servers make the rounds with appetizers.

Date palms at sunset

Between bites of bruschetta, bacon-wrapped dates, and corn fritters, Phillip chats with the people sitting next to us. I watch the sky through the dark silhouettes of palm fronds, as it turns more intensely pink by the moment.

Imperial date boxes

Tour

Before dinner is the tour, and it, fittingly, begins next to a date palm.

Imperial date gardens

Imperial Date Gardens expert Raul Peraza shares the history of their acres and acres of trees, which are all descended from 9 that came from Morocco and were planted here in 1935.

Date picking equipment

He explains how they are hand pollinated and de-thorned by skilled workers on specialized cranes with a platform that wraps around the tree trunks, allowing them to access every side. The fruit is thinned and covered with bags to protect it without pesticides.

Dates

We move inside the warehouse where the dates are sorted, packed, and frozen. Since freezing doesn’t negatively affect the flavor or texture, any date you purchase has probably been previously frozen.

Yuma date night

When we walk back outside, the sunset has given way to blue twilight. Our path is lit by string lights and our table by candlelight. The Silver Strings Quartet resumes playing a mix of classics and show tunes and pop songs.

Silver strings quartet Yuma

Drinks

Phillip goes to get us drinks. He brings me something pink he says is a margarita, but actually tastes like lemonade. (Did he pick up the wrong glass?)

We both prefer the date beer we had sampled earlier, Brother Dewey’s by College Street Brewhouse in Lake Havasu City, which is kinda crazy since I’m not usually even a beer drinker.

Dinner

Each night has a fixed menu that typically remains the same all season. While they can accommodate for food allergies with advanced notice, the nature of eating a catered meal in the middle of a date grove means no one’s going to ask you how done you like your meat, for example.

The deal is basically that they just keep bringing you awesome food from a highly regarded chef. Besides the key ingredient of the dates, we had no idea what we’d be eating until after the tour when Chef Lucy Sedano came out to announce the menu.

Chef Lucy

First was an elegantly presented cucumber-spinach salad with dates, tomatoes, feta, and housemade vinaigrette.

Date night salad

For the entree, we’re served a full plate with both a pancetta-wrapped filet mignon in wine sauce and a marinated chicken breast, along with asparagus atop bleu cheese mashed potatoes.

Date night entree and dessert

It was followed by a delightful date bread pudding. The meal finished with a Kahlua date shake, served in a champagne flute.

Every bite was delicious. It got a little sweet (even for my sweet tooth), but definitely melt-in-your mouth good.

As people filter out, we were each given a small box of dates, so we could savor the tastes of the region a bit longer.

It was a gorgeous evening with amazing food and definitely worth the trip.

Date palms near Yuma

– More Date Info –

Imperial Date Gardens

  • Store sells bulk dates and other local products, as well as date shakes.
  • Open Monday to Friday, 8am – 5pm.
  • Free tours may be offered seasonally (not during summer).
  • Address sometimes listed as Winterhaven, sometimes Bard or Imperial Valley.

 

Date Night Tickets

  • Yuma Date Nights will resume this fall.
  • Tickets for Date Night and other Visit Yuma tours are scheduled to go on sale November 1.
  • Date Night tickets tend to go fast, so plan to purchase them in advance.
  • Watch for updates on visityuma.com or sign up for their newsletter.

Edited to remove Bard Valley Date Growers Association, who is no longer part of the event.


We were guests of Yuma Visitors Bureau. Thank you to Linda Morgan, Steven Hennig, and the Visit Yuma team!

Share your #LocalArtLoves!

Ceramic art by Robin Ray.

What art do you love in your part of the world?

Between now and Valentine’s Day (February 14th), I’ll be sharing some of my local faves, and I hope you’ll do the same! Keep an eye out for art in galleries, coffee shops, libraries, and even outside.

Local Art Loves

Post photos of the local art you love and/or your own work with #LocalArtLoves.

Art is so important. Let’s celebrate what people are creating in our communities!

I’m looking forward to seeing art from your town, and I’ll share a sampling of your Local Art Loves here too.

 

PS If you blog about it, feel free to add a link when you comment here.




 

Microblog Mondays: Write in your own space

 

Upcycled Cards

Valentine's day card

I cut up a card from my mother-in-law.

Card

It wasn’t anything against her – she writes the sweetest little notes. I just happened to see it when I was thinking about cards for the Love Letters project, and I decided the balloons on the front were just the right colors to be upcycled into Valentine’s hearts.

So the card got cut up to make more cards. I’m pretty sure my mother-in-law would approve.

Upcycled cards

Have you found any interesting things to repurpose lately?

PS If you wanted to participate in the Love Letters campaign, making cards for housebound seniors, you have until 2/10 to mail them in. Sign up at dosomething.org/loveletters for details.

Microblog Mondays: Write in your own space

Love Letters on Wheels

Did you make construction paper Valentines as a kid? Well, I just found out about a great reason to dust off the Fiskars and start cutting out paper hearts again.

Meals on Wheels will be delivering handmade Valentine’s Day cards to housebound seniors, as part of their Love Letters campaign on DoSomething.org. While the card-making part of the campaign is definitely targeted to kids/teens, I don’t see any reason we can’t all channel our inner child and join in too. (Someone who’s 90 probably sees the rest of us as kids anyway.)

image

Sign up at DoSomething.org/loveletters for guidelines and a list of participating locations with mailing addresses, and then make your card(s), put them in envelopes (if you don’t have enough on hand, here’s how to fold your own envelope), and mail them in by February 10.

A volunteer used to deliver Meals on Wheels to my grandpa and even bring treats along for the dog – making both of their days.

If you’re outside of the US and Canada, I bet there’s a nursing home or senior center in your area that you could deliver handmade cards to.

I think this is a beautiful way to spread some love.

[UPDATE: Cards don’t have to be in individual envelopes.]


Microblog Mondays: Write in your own space