Ohlone Art Camp

Ohlone Art Camp Silk painting, embroidery, mosaics & more! 3 RULES: have fun, slow down, and no erasers allowed bec If you are a returning camper, it’s good to see you again!

I want to take this opportunity to welcome you to the Ohlone Art Camp. If you are new, I look forward to introducing you to my favorite thing to do...creating art! Ohlone Art Camp started in 1997 at Ohlone Elementary School but moved to my backyard studio during remodeling at the school in 2001. I kept the name “Ohlone Art Camp” because I am sure that Ohlone Indians once lived in my neighborhood;

I have found arrowheads, bones, and seashells in my yard! I believe in running a low-key, calm, and fun camp. Children are under so much pressure nowadays and I am happy to offer a fun space where they can set their own pace and create some amazing art projects. So much of our lives is filled with “hurry up, we’re going to be late!” so in my camp I believe in slowing down and taking time to think about what you would like to do and then creating – slowly and thoughtfully. I have no such thing as “late” to camp (with the exception of pickup times!!) so that the pressure is off of everyone. I believe that there are no mistakes in art... I tell children that no matter what comes from the brain, it is something that they have created and whether they like it or not, I guarantee that parents and even the person sitting next to them will! I no longer use the phrase “Good job!” as I find children are more interested in hearing my questions about their use of color or what a specific design element means...it prompts some amazing conversations! Children find great joy and often become highly animated in relating their artistic endeavor and in describing their masterpieces! It gives them a great sense of accomplishment and pride. I have two big, wonderful dogs, Sugar and Kita (sadly, we lost Mogley last spring); a beautiful corn snake named W***y; and two Chinese Silkie chickens, Sophie and Lucy. The vegetable garden is always in state of planting and young hands are welcome to help! If your child wants to do some reading, they are welcome to find a spot and do so. We will discuss one new word per day and find interesting subjects of conversation which in the past have ranged from King Tutankhamun to travels in Shanghai! We can bring out the encyclopedia (yes, I still have a set!) and cruise the world! Remember that art is so limited if not completely cut out of school curriculums and it is a critical form of human expression which fills a need in children for a multitude of reasons! I offer out-of-the-ordinary art forms with the silk painting and embroidery classes plus a variety of additional crafts such as mosaics and mask making. Classes and camps fill up quickly so get your registration in right away and reserve your spot! I look forward to seeing you soon!

04/02/2026

Here’s a little slice of brilliance mixed with eco-friendly innovation: a beer company created an edible 6-pack ring that’s safe for sea life. For years, we've been horrified by images of animals getting trapped in those plastic rings, and this is the perfect answer to that environmental disaster. Instead of suffocating sea creatures, they can now munch on these rings as a snack—making it a win for both us and the ocean!

Honestly, can we talk about how long it took for us to come up with something this simple but genius? Imagine a world where sea turtles and fish no longer get stuck in these plastic nightmares, and instead, they get a bite-sized treat. This kind of solution should’ve been rolled out ages ago, but hey, better late than never!

On top of being innovative, it’s also kind of poetic—drinking a beer and saving the environment at the same time. I mean, if you’re going to indulge in a cold one, why not do it with the planet in mind? Cheers to that! 🌊🐠

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03/30/2026

🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰

There's an American Toad in your garden right now that just woke up from five months underground. It weighs less than a couple of ounces. And it ate thousands of pest insects in your yard last summer.

It'll do it again this year if you give it three things.

A toad hunts the soil surface every night — slugs, beetles, ants, cutworms, earwigs, pill bugs. It targets pests exactly where they do their damage, on the ground in the dark, and it returns to the same garden bed night after night for the entire growing season. A garden with a couple of resident toads has noticeably less slug damage and fewer chewed seedlings than one without.

The toad doesn't need much. But without these three things it moves on to a yard that has them.

🐸 Three things the toad needs to stay:

1. A shelter — a broken clay pot turned upside down with a chipped edge for entry. Place it in a shaded spot near the garden bed, under a shrub, beside the compost, or along the fence. The toad needs a cool dark humid hiding spot to survive daytime heat. Without one, it leaves. A flat rock propped up on one side or a short section of PVC pipe half-buried in soil works too

2. A water source — a shallow dish sunk into the ground near the shelter with about an inch of water. A terra cotta saucer works. Toads don't drink the way you'd expect — they absorb water through permeable skin on their belly by sitting in the dish. Change the water every few days to prevent mosquito breeding

3. No chemicals in the bed — slug pellets kill the toad that eats the slugs. Lawn herbicides and pesticides leach into garden soil and are absorbed through the toad's permeable skin on contact. The single most effective thing you can do for garden pest control is stop spraying and let the toad work

🐸 Why this works better than products:

- The toad hunts every night from spring through fall without reapplication. A chemical treatment works once and needs repeating
- The toad targets the pests that are active on the soil surface at night — exactly the ones that damage seedlings, eat lettuce, and chew roots. It's hunting where the damage happens
- A toad that finds shelter, water, and chemical-free soil in your garden becomes a resident for years. It returns to the same hiding spot every morning and the same hunting route every night
- The broken pot, the saucer, and the decision to stop spraying cost nothing and take five minutes to set up

One broken pot. One shallow dish. No spray. The toad handles the rest 🌿

Well well well…. The cards begin to fall….
03/17/2026

Well well well…. The cards begin to fall….

A senior US intelligence official appointed by President Donald Trump abruptly announced he is stepping down from his post on Tuesday, citing misgivings about the administration’s war with Iran.

I’ve had the dreaded tomato worms before but never saw these little eggs. I’ll make sure to save them when I get my toma...
03/17/2026

I’ve had the dreaded tomato worms before but never saw these little eggs. I’ll make sure to save them when I get my tomatoes in this year!

Hello. I’m the Braconid Wasp. Sorry I look like a tiny "stinging" fly hovering around your tomatoes.
I don't want to sting you. I want that giant green Hornworm. I am a parasitoid. I lay my eggs inside the caterpillar, and when my babies are ready to grow up, they spin those little white "cocoons" on its back.
I can wipe out an entire generation of tomato-destroying hornworms in days.
Once those white cocoons appear, the caterpillar stops eating immediately. It becomes a living shield for my young. I am the most effective "biological strike" against the biggest pests in your yard.
What to do: If you see a caterpillar with white "eggs" on its back, DO NOT KILL IT. Leave it there! Those are my babies, and they will hatch to protect your garden for the rest of the season.
I’m sorry my methods are "gross." But your tomatoes are safe because of me.

Hahahahahahahaha!!!
03/17/2026

Hahahahahahahaha!!!

03/17/2026
03/15/2026

WOW!!!!!!!! What a gift for his family....

Address

245 Wilton Avenue
Palo Alto, CA
94306

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

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