Monday, June 23, 2025

Monday Mood: How am I doing?


I am enjoying my gentle daily routine, interesting walks, my time in the pool, and playing in the kitchen four times a week. World events are troubling - give me pause. I am struggling with travel plans for next year, and in light of the Sunday morning news, maybe I should wait for the smoke to clear in Tehran before I commit to anything.  

I have done some cleaning and organizing in my room, bedroom, office, studio all in one nice space.  I consolidated most of the paintings, prints, and frames into one location from four. Once a year the condo has a paper shredding truck on site, took over a massive pile of files yesterday.  Next year, I can shred the files from settling my father's estate, that will free up some space.  

I am physically feeling well, other than my daily sneezes, the hot humid weather brings lots of irritants. 


Sunday, June 22, 2025

The Sunday Five: Bicycles


1: Have you ever ridden a bicycle? 

2: How many bikes do you own? 

3: Have you ever bought a bike for someone else? 

4: Is there a "bike-sharing" or are there short term bike rentals available where you live? 

5: What can we do to encourage more people to ride bikes? 

My Answers: 

1: Have you ever ridden a bicycle?  Yes, thousands of miles starting when I was about 8 years old. 

2: How many bikes do you own? Three 

3: Have you ever bought a bike for someone else? I bought one for my nephews when they were growing up. 

4: Is there a "bike-sharing" or are there short term bike rentals available where you live?  Capital Bikeshare, I used the bikes for several years as part of my daily commute. 

5: What can we do to encourage more people to ride bikes? Build more protected bike lanes and ticket drivers who endanger cyclists. 

Please share your answers in the comments. 


Saturday, June 21, 2025

50 States in 52 Weeks: Missouri


Sorry, not the best photo, it was taken with an early phone camera.  

I have been to Missouri several times, starting as a child, going back in my late teens when I was exploring with my grandmother (she wanted someone to drive and didn't want to travel alone.) Sweet Bear and I went once, exploring my family history, and I have been to a conference in St. Louis - when the photo above was taken. 

My great-grandparents on my paternal grandfather's side, were married and lived in St. Louis in the late 1800's. He was a trust fund baby, he married, moved into a suite in a hotel, started a family, and lived really well, until the money ran out a few years later.  He then moved to a farm northeast of there, across the Mississippi River in Illinois, where my grandfather was born. Later moving to Detroit seeking Ford's $5 a day.  

The Mississippi River is not the geographic center of the country, but in many ways it marks the division between east and west. Missouri is about half way north to south on the country, with it's eastern border being the River, so in one way, Missouri is the center of the country. Because of the River, and later railroads, it was a major transportation hub.  When TWA was still flying, it was a major air transportation hub. (I flew TWA once, changing planes in St. Louis before they were merged out of existence.) 

Most of the state is rolling farmland. The start of the great plains. 

It is a moderate climate. If there was anything there, there, it would be a pleasant place to live. 

Friday, June 20, 2025

Friday Funny: The Miracle of Birth

 Caution: This is an attempt at Humor. 

There is no guarantee of success. 

While in Southampton, we witnessed a rare and exotic phenomena, something rarely witnessed outside of Oxfordshire, the miracle of birth of an exotic species. Our timing was pure luck, we had no idea when our ship moored that the delivery would happen just across the street and was imminent, let alone that it would go on for hours. 

The reproductive process starts vast distances away. Elves in Hollow Trees forge and finish parts. Gnomes quietly form body parts in the dark of night, with squirrels and ravens hiding them away before the light of day.  Some internal organs come from abroad, places Englishmen find foreign and exotic. The mating takes place in private, behind closed doors, in a location near lots of highly educated professors and students hoping to lead the free world someday. Gestation takes time, hours, weeks, months no one knows for sure. They enter the birth canal and move slowly through it. Hundreds even thousands of them inching along.  

Then it happens, one by one, one right after another, they emerge, like piglets from a sow. It is an awesome sight, new life beginning. Their coats shining and reflecting the light of day for the first time, their headlights flashing like eyes seeing sunlight for the first time, their flashers flashing signs of life. Some go right, some go left, some make a sharp U-turn, others straight ahead.  All will need to feed soon, or die. Some will spend their lives near where they are hatched, others will immediately board ships and venture far from the land of their birth for exotic lives in places like Chicago, and Phoenix. 

The birth of Mini Coopers






Thursday, June 19, 2025

The Thursday Ramble: Patience


I went out to Huntley Meadows one afternoon recently for a long walk. Heading out on the boardwalk over the wetlands I paused to watch this Heron who was fishing for a meal.  I waited for a couple of minutes, he moved forward very carefully, slowly lifting a leg out of the water, carefully slipping the foot into the water ahead of him, without a ripple.  I took a couple of photos and moved on. I walked out to the far end of the boardwalk and back, probably half-a-mile of walking, and the Heron was still there. Maybe 10 feet farther into the marsh, still fishing, still as quiet as a stone. 


This encounter got me to thinking about patience. Certainly the Heron is patient, slowly and deliberately waiting for the fresh catch of the day.  He waits for the prey to come to him, rather than trying to outrun it.  The bird exhibits incredible patience. And in the end it pays off with a good birdy life. 

I don't, I watch for a minute or so and if nothing is happening I move on. My brain thinks there is nothing to see here, nothing has happened, so nothing is going to happen, let's go in search of something worth seeing. And I move on. I am often a couple of steps ahead of the action happening behind me, or far ahead of me.  

There is a Facebook Page for Huntley Meadows, and photographers post amazing photos of Herons moments after they catch a fish. The payoff for the long wait. I envy those photos, and it would be easy to think, the photographer has a better camera or a longer lens, and that may be true, though this one was not that far away. What those photographers have that I lack, is patience. They stand there quietly as long as it takes, minutes, hours, days. They are there today, tomorrow, and next week if that is what it takes to be there at the the moment the magic happens. 

I should learn from the Heron, just as the bird waits for the right moment, so should I.   

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

My World of Wonders aka the Wednesday Ws June 18th edition

Where have I been this week?  The airport last Wednesday morning, well before sunrise. Huntley Meadows for a long walk. Around the neighborhood, down the hill, over the expressway, a nice hour walk, the gym, the pools - indoor and outdoor, a little retail therapy, Aldi, to VOTE - a primary for state offices in an off year election cycle. The farmers market. Trader Joe's. 

What have I been up to in the kitchen? Ham and cheesy scalloped potatoes, swiss steak, and fish pies. 

What is in a fish pie? I started by peeling and boiling potatoes to make cheesy mashed potatoes. The fish was halibut filets and frozen shrimp. The halibut was simply baked with a little Old Bay seasoning, 12 minutes at 375 (f). The shrimp was sauteed with butter and herbs. When the potatoes are cooked mash them with lots of shredded cheese. Make a simple bechamel sauce - butter and flour and milk, make it nice and thick.  When the fish and shrimp are cooked, mix in the with bechamel. Assemble the pie (I used individual souffle style ramekins) place the fish mixture in the bottom, top with the cheesy mashed potatoes. Bake in a hot over (425F) for about 20-25 minutes, until the potato top "crust" browns nicely. Allow to cool about 10 minutes, and serve.  The flavors are wonderful. The browning of the cheese in the potatoes brings an extra dimension of flavor. 

Why? Inspired by something I had in the oldest licensed pub in London.  Try it, you might like it. 

Who have I talked with this week? Sweet Bear, the water aerobics gang, the board at my former office, Emily, Martin, Karen, 

Weird thoughts of the week?  How have I survived to this ripening old age? There are so many things that could have killed me over the years. And yet, here I am, blogging away. 

What made me smile and evil smile this week? The sparse turn out for the military parade, while the counter protests drew tens of thousands. 

What else? In the elevator Saturday morning there was a young couple, probably late teens early 20's, he had long hair, a scraggly beard, both were wearing counter cultural black and had visible tattoos. I smiled to myself, and thought there is hope for youth, being wonderfully non-conformist - reminded me of me when I was that age - but they looked happier. In fact that had that smile on their faces like a young couple who had just discovered sex for the first time. 

Who seems to hate me this week? Rumba, I snatached him out from under my desk and physically removed him from my room the other day. He seems to be holding a grudge. When we set this one up, it asked if we wanted to connect it to Alexa, and I said NO, that is how it all starts, "Hal open the pod bay doors," "I sorry Dave I am afraid I can't do that." 

Who have I been watching on YouTube?

  • Angelo is a recent art school graduate in Italy, young, talented, attractive, and a good content creator.  https://www.youtube.com/@angelomansour 
  •  Norm is from British Columbia, and has lived and worked in Japan for years, this is a second channel for him.      https://www.youtube.com/@TokyoLensExplore    

 

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Travel Tuesday: Glass Bottom Boat Tour in Bermuda

This shore excursion was easy to get to, walk along the pier to the end of the ship, turn right and the it was there waiting for us to board. It was about a 90 minute ride on a 75 foot boat, around the point, and to a nearby reef and sunken ship. The reefs in Bermuda are loosely formed, with somewhat healthy corals. The sunken ship, is not a shipwreck.  It was a British navy ship, a cast iron clad wooden ship. The ship was corroding badly, and it was determined that it was not feasible to return it to England for repairs. There was a deep chanel that allowed access to the port, that the Navy really wanted to close off. So they stripped the ship, packed it with explosives, towed it out and sunk it. They used too many explosives and split the ship in half, driving the bow up onto the shallows, where it still sticks out of the water.