Saturday, June 21, 2014

Cat-sitting...

 I try to follow directions when cat-sitting:

    a. Brush her, but not on the stomach.
    b. Hide a few treats under the scratcher thing...make her work for them.
    c. Open the door so she can go out on the porch and eat some grass...
    d. Check food and water levels.
    e. Don't be insulted if she "meows" at you in a manner that feels like you are being yelled at in cat talk.
    f. Play with the mouse or bird on a string to make her exercise a bit.


Birdie spoke to me, but I did not feel that I was in trouble. It was conversational cat talk, not "cat cussing."  And, since she refused to talk for the first three days of my last cat-sitting experience, I felt like I was finally accepted. Then I realized I had just finished lunch with friends where I had spilled a good bit of seafood broth down my shirt. I suspect Birdie was asking what I had done with the shrimp. "Sorry Birdie. I ate 'em!"

I had to call OC to find out if it was OK for there to be tissue paper on the floor. It looked as if Birdie had raided the "wrapping" supplies.* OC confirmed the paper was left for Birdie's amusement...little did I know. Wait for it.

We brushed and checked levels and talked. Birdie refused to go out onto the porch - even though I left the door WIDE opened for a good long time. I went out on the porch and watered the plants. She found the hidden treats. She chased and killed the "mouse-on-a-string."**


And then it was on.

Tissue paper at the door.
You gonna brush me or not?
Any birds out there?
I thought I heard a tweet.
Time to attack the paper.
Wrestle, wrestle, wrestle...
I won that round.


















You don't see me...
Bang! Boom! Rustle! Whoosh! ($*$*&(*#)@!!!
Did you see that? Did you?
There! I win.
Finished this one off too!
Where ARE those birds?
Go away! You bother me.

Having killed the dreaded tissue paper monster, Birdie settled in her window spot and watched for the birds***

Having done my cat entertainer/exerciser/companion duty, I went home.


NOTES

* She likes "bling." You cannot tell from the photos, but the tissue was sprinkled with multicolored glitter.

**She actually grabbed the mouse in her TEETH a couple of times and tried to walk away with it. I suspect she would be a great "mouser" (if such a creature was needed).

***When I visit, Birdie looks towards the porch doors most of the time. She is always looking over her shoulder, watching for the birds at the feeder outside. She spends much of her time in the corner, hidden by the curtain, waiting. And that is how you know you are "dismissed."

Saturday, June 14, 2014

June farmers' market visit

My arms are not as strong as my eyes think they should be.

This morning I went to the local farmers' market. It was my first visit of the season and everything was beautiful! I went for a few things, peaches and (as requested by OC) "whatever looks good."

It all looked good.

The benefit of our strange spring rains showed in the tables of beans and peppers, squash and corn...yes, and peaches.

I love the market. Many of my "old" farmers are gone now. But there were still a few who greeted me, "Where have you been?"

The plant lady was there. The gentleman farmer who retired from the diplomatic corps and then from teaching public school has introduced me to different veggies over the years as well as different farming techniques (He feeds his watermelon sugar!). He had berries and a few other things. I grabbed the blackberries.

There were some new farms represented and I was unable to pass the overalled, cowboy hatted fellow with the beautiful sweet corn. "No chemicals on this corn." he promised. I told him about farmers calling Daddy when the corn was ready - when I would walk through the fields and fill up the bib of my overalls with field corn. By that time I was so overloaded that I was afraid I couldn't carry all the bags back to the car.

At the second market (It is only a block away. I unloaded and drove around the corner for a better parking place.) I saw the goat cheese lady (her feta is fabulous). I could not find the milkman who usually has fresh butter. His truck was there, but he was not tending to business. I was seduced by the retiree selling ersatz jelly,* aloe vera and spinach vines.**

Now the work begins at home - washing and dividing and storing some things and roasting others. I will also divide and plant the spinach vines. I am intrigued by them and will probably see if I can grow them in a pot, in the small patch of sun by my back door.

Here are a couple of views. I only took a few photos because my hands were full.



This is one of my long time farmer friends.

A close-up of some of his veggies: pattypan squash, yellow squash, pickling cucumbers, some exotic cucumbers and tomatoes (I got yellow squash and cucumbers here)

Is this the most amazing assortment of squash ever? Aztec, Mexican squash, Yellow squash, lemon squash (an heirloom) Burpee's golden egg squash (!) and a cross between the lemon and Aztec (an accident, but pretty). I got the golden egg (supposed to be flavorful) and lemon squash. Charles said he didn't mind me posting photos here and FB.

Some of the bags. The bag message for the customers is mine for the farmers - Thank you!
The final tally?

3 kinds of squash
sweet corn
red potatoes
green beans
blackberries
peaches
beets (with greens)
chard
feta cheese
aloe vera plant (for a friend)
spinach vines (for OC and me)


What do I do with it all?

DH only eats corn, potatoes, and green beans. I will wash the "greens" and sneak them into his sandwiches. Shhhhh! Don't tell. 

OC will share the other veggies and fruit with me. I don't know what she will do with hers. I will roast most of the squash and make salads and stir fry for the week with greens and cucumbers and feta.


NOTES:

*Please, please, please don't make jelly with jello. This was zucchini squash with different flavors of jello. Don't do it. I sampled it to be nice. I did not buy any. I am not that nice.

**http://www.bbg.org/gardening/article/red-stemmed_malabar_spinach

My friend, Herbert of Stoney Acre Farm. He is gone, but not forgotten. He always had wonderful veggies and great stories and recipes. He planted a number of varieties of okra and would have a basket of tender small pods for me. RIP




Saturday, June 7, 2014

"The sun was shining on the sea" *

The family gathered this weekend to celebrate a graduation. My baby brother and his wife graduated their middle child from high school...MY high school.

My roots are in this town. And so much here - and in the surrounding area - feels home, feels right in a way I am not sure I can describe. But it also feels far away.

Graduation:

Flags at the high school

The graduates were a rowdy bunch. They called each other out in their speeches with humor and love. They recognized each student who would be the "last" from their family to graduate from the school. They stood and honored the family whose child, a member of their class, died last year. That family sat on the field with the graduates, but just apart.

After graduation all of the families took to the field with their children, talking, laughing and taking photos.

My class didn't graduate from the football field (the only place in town big enough for the crowd then and now). It rained and so we graduated from the auditorium. It seems we had to limit our guests, but we graduated and headed out into the world.

But there was no rain this year. Two Boy Scouts marched before the 130+ graduates who made a final procession around the field.

Scouts lead the graduates
Valedictorian, salutatorian and honor graduate thanked parents and sisters and uncles and mentors and classmates in more personal and casual addresses than I recall. A few students "acted up" taking the mike for a comment or doing a little dance or flashing a hand sign as their names were called. But this appeared to have been expected. This was one of those classes that challenged the teachers and schools. And as you almost heard the sighs of relief, you also recognized the pride and "felt the love."

We cheered and hooted when the nephew's name was called and as he walked the stage. Then we cheered and hooted again for his cousin in his turn.

Families crowd to reach the field with hugs and flowers and balloons  - all under the glare of those bright stadium lights.

We walked to the stadium and walked home again, along the same streets where, as children and teens, we walked,  rode our bikes,  ran for P.E., and practiced driving (and, according to one great writer - watched the crickets die under the street lights).

Home. Always home, but also not home anymore. We are guests. We are visitors here.

Indian Point Park:



The sun was shining on the sea,
Shining with all his might:
He did his very best to make
The billows smooth and bright--
And this was odd, because it was
The middle of the night.*



The Park - 

My next younger brother had suggested a hike at Indian Point Park** for early Saturday morning. Although it had been a late night at the graduation, we all rose, grabbed some coffee and headed to the park.

The park is just across the bay from Corpus Christi at the northeast side of the causeway leading to the harbor bridge.

Corpus Christi skyline as seen from the park - I once walked across that bridge...
We arrived just behind sunburned/weathered fishermen*** - some already staking out spots on the pier and others preparing to drop a line in the water.

The shore birds were out in variety, if not in numbers. We saw herons and stilts. One roseate spoonbill flashed its pink plumage at us and was joined by at least a half dozen to a dozen others before we left the park. Sandpipers danced across the beach. Gulls flew and called to us from overhead.

Black mangrove
Primrose
Primrose and petunia

My brother is a naturalist,**** an ecologist. Where I see "shore birds" he sees oystercatchers***** and herons (OK - I know a heron when I see it) and terns.  I see scrub and he sees black mangrove and sea oxeye and wolfberry.

I love to hike with him, but fear that I sometimes ask too many questions:

"What is that peat-like material on the shore?" I asked. "Sargasso seaweed decomposing, I think." he replied.

"Was that a coconut? Where do you think it came from?" I inquired.  "Yes. From far, far away." said he.

Heron enjoying the boardwalk (seagulls flying in the distance).

shore bird

Roseate spoonbill (bad photo, but I had to prove we saw them).

Oystercatcher (catching oysters, I presume)

I lagged behind mostly, taking pictures of rusted metal, abandoned rope and shells.

I am always surprised at the changing varieties of shells on the shore.****** Today there were angel wings (yes, I know shells) everywhere. And lightning whelk shell casings were strewn across the sand. So it was not really a huge surprise then to see lightning whelks, large and small, at the water's edge. Some were brightly colored while others were crusted with worm tubes and barnacles. All were occupied.

There, there's a cockle shell. And there, that's a slipper shell. All sorts of tiny shells crunched underfoot.

I picked up a few shells for my sister and another friend, but each time I lifted a whelk or a moon shell, a hermit crab peeked out before pulling itself as far into the interior as possible. Some showed their toes, while others disappeared entirely.

A hand-full of shells - The shy hermit crab hid in the recesses of the lightning whelk.
Whelk surrounded by tiny shells - mostly opened bivalves

Later, as we walked back to the car, we passed a father shelling with his small sons. I noticed that they had gathered a bucket of whelks. I had to stop. "You know. There's someone home in those shells." I told them. "Yes." one solemn boy spoke  -"Crabs." "Hermit crabs," I said, nodding agreement with him. Their father assured me they would release the crabs before they left. I showed the boys the angel wings and gave them its name and then handed them other a small, iridescent mussel.

"The time has come," the Walrus said,
"To talk of many things:
Of shoes--and ships--and sealing-wax--
Of cabbages--and kings--
And why the sea is boiling hot--
And whether pigs have wings."*


Family walking the beach
DH and FUM walk towards a spot where the bird (black spot in clouds at left) chattered and cried and flew towards us as if protecting a nest. We never saw the nest, but the bird never gave up its efforts.

Close-up of the bird...

The sun turns the murky water to silver

Whelk and other shells at the water's edge

Beautiful fish bones caught in seaweed
NYB noted how the plants changed with the slightest elevation on these islands/sandbars. Prickly pear cactus is bright green snuggling under the higher shrubs.
Rusty metal lines up with wooden posts further out in the water - remnants of an old pier?
Ruins - a work of art
Coconut from exotic shores
As far as we walked
Hermit crabs in their whelk homes crowd the top of a rotting wooden post
Close-up of post covered in hermits
Yucca growing just feet from the water - remains of a sea turtle at its feet
Gaillardia blooming mid-frame/Oxeye at the bottom of the photo.


DH and NYB walk ahead as we returned to the parking area near the fishing pier
Fisherman (with causeway in the background)
Sun, clearing the clouds, shining on the sea as we left the park

NOTES:

* The Walrus and The Carpenter, Lewis Carroll (from Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice   Found There, 1872) --Daddy gave me a copy of Through the Looking-Glass when I was little. I still   have the volume. I once memorized this poem. It returns in bits and pieces at the strangest times.
** http://onpadreisland.com/indian_point_pier.aspx
***I do so miss hanging out with some of Daddy's fishermen friends. They often smelled of salt and   cigars and had many stories to tell.
****He has given me a guided tour of my own yard, identifying plants and advising which should       stay - which should be removed.
*****http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/american_oystercatcher/id
****** In 1974 I went to Port Aransas for spring break with a friend, her parents and a group of her   college friends. I was still in school and only spent the weekend. I felt decidedly out-of-place and spent most of the weekend walking the beach, sometimes talking with my friend, and sometimes shelling alone. One day the tide left the most incredible selection of olive shells, sand dollars, whelks, and other shells. To this day I have never had a shelling experience like that. I gathered shells for hours and later made shell bordered mirrors and other craft projects. It was a magic time as was today.

[Photos will be cropped and added later in the week]

EXTRAS: Had to put these somewhere

Nothing says "feeling at home" like working a crossword puzzle before a nap
Palm trees and cotton fields and wind farms - The crops looked good. And in other fields we saw sunflowers and wine cups and gaillardia.
BBQ at one of Mom's favorite spots
That's a beautiful plate.