shadowkat: (Default)
([personal profile] shadowkat May. 17th, 2025 06:25 pm)
I'll try to stay away from politics. ;-)

1. Krysten Ritter aka Jessica Jones joins Daredevil Born Again S2

During Disney’s 2025 upfront presentation on Tuesday, Krysten Ritter took the stage to announce that she is joining the cast of Daredevil: Born Again Season 2. Joined by Daredevil actor Charlie Cox, Ritter revealed that she’ll be reprising her role as Jessica, the beloved Super Hero/private investigator.
Read more... )

[I'm happy. I loved the Daredevil/Jessica Jones platonic pairing. And she's my fav next to Daredevil.]

2. The Diplomat has been Renewed for S4 on Netflix

The Night Agent also got renewed for S3, even though it has choppy plotting to say the least. S2 isn't as good as S1.

And Etoile on Amazon - was automatically renewed for S2.

3. In more Streaming News? "Netflix has acquired the rights to The Chronicles of Narnia and is developing new films and series based on the books. Greta Gerwig is writing and directing at least two Narnia movies for Netflix. The first film, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, will have a limited theatrical release in IMAX on November 26, 2026, before premiering on Netflix on December 25, 2026. The Narnia films will be "bigger and bolder than they thought," potentially including all seven books in the series."

GO HERE

4. CNN has an exclusive deal to air the live theater showing of George Clooney's Good Night and Good Luck direct from Broadway.

CNN to televise George Clooney in the Broadway Play Good Night and Good Luck Live from Broadway on June 7

This is a first in Broadway History.

" The limited-run play’s penultimate performance from the Winter Garden Theatre in New York will air live on CNN and CNN International and stream on CNN.com at 7 p.m. ET.

“This announcement marks a historic Broadway first: never before has a live play ever been televised,” the network said in a news release.

The show is an adaptation of the 2005 movie Clooney directed of the same name and is based on veteran journalist Edward R. Murrow’s work and tension with Republican Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the Red Scare of the 1950s.

The play, which debuted in March, swiftly shattered weekly records, becoming the highest-grossing play in Broadway history. It has also earned five Tony Award nominations, including Clooney for best leading actor in a play.
Read more... )

5. On PBS (PBS Passport via streaming and PBS at various local stations) - Great Performances - has shown to date the UK West End Production of Next To Normal and Yellowface (starring Daniel Dae Kim and Ryan Eggold) and coming up, Bob Dylan's Girl from the North Country, these are all filmed presentations of Broadway shows (not live, taped or filmed).

Note - other Broadway shows that have been filmed are: Merrily We Roll Along (bought by Sony) starring Danial Radcliff and Jonathan Goff, Frozen, Hadestown, and Aladdin.

If you get the chance to see either or both Next to Normal and/or Yellowface, do so. I highly recommend both. One is a beautifully rendered musical about mental illness and grief, and how the two intersect and are often difficult to separate, also their destructive influences on relationships and family dynamics. It has songs that will haunt you long after you hear them. The other, Yellowface, deals with race dynamics in the US, from multiple sides, and is a clever satire on all of it, from a Chinese-American perspective.

6. Netflix - unveils ... Wednesday starts August 6, with part 2 of the Season is in September

The Addams Family world gets bigger (and eerier) with Wednesday, returning for Season 2 Part 1 on Aug. 6, with Part 2 following on Sept. 3. Gen Z horror standout Jenna Ortega leads the altogether ooky drama’s cast as the titular supernatural detective, Wednesday Addams. The upcoming season will explore a new bone-chilling mystery at Nevermore Academy, as well as characters both familiar and strange to Wednesday fans.

“Wednesday Season 1 was a table setter, but there’s still so much of the world left to see. It’s been exciting to expand the scope and the vision of the show this season,” executive producer Alfred Gough said. Fellow co-creator and co-showrunner Miles Millar agreed, saying, “We have a broader canvas and more toys to play with. The world of Nevermore is much expanded — and we had a great time doing it.”

7. Bridgerton S4 airing in 2026 on Netflix

The cast is revealed, along with the plot thread, and some preview shots.
Also it's renewed for five and six.

***

I'm off to make dinner. So here's a picture from my walk today to the grocery store. We've moved from tulips to irises in NYC, specifically Brooklyn...odd flower irises, I kind of prefer tulips.






susandennis: (Default)
([personal profile] susandennis May. 17th, 2025 09:07 am)
I prefer the pool water to be not hot. I'd rather have it cool than warm but this morning's pool water was borderline gethefuckouttahere. We had a good game anyway. But damn it was cold. I think I'm no longer sad about missing aqua yoga on Monday. I'm guessing no one will get to it this weekend.

My New Zealand friends did a bunch of Amazon shopping on my account last night. Funny to watch your own cart fill up with goodies. They mainly got stuff like EOS lip balm and laundry soap sheets and drug store-y things. I'm pretty sure they ordered this early in case they slam up against tariff shortages. I get it. The little hearts I use for my knitted dolls are gone. Back ordered with no ETA at all. I found some on Etsy that are close - at least they are the same size. I ordered too many. Just in case.

I used to make Japanese pickles all the time - cukes, sugar, salt, soy, rice wine vinegar. Then I stopped. Don't know why. But yesterday I picked up some Persian cukes and made me a batch and OMG delicious. Now I will need more cukes. I might try some slivered onions in with them as long as I have to go to the store anyway. Probably not today but maybe tomorrow.

Baseball games all day today which is fine by me. I need to turn out some new monster/robots.

But, first, elbow coffee.

20250516_193809-COLLAGE
maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
([personal profile] maju May. 17th, 2025 12:29 pm)
To follow on from yesterday's post:

There are a couple of factors (at least) causing my lack of motivation to do much with the yard. One is that I am planning to sell the house when I move to Connecticut, and I'm about 99% sure that whoever buys the house will demolish it and build a McMansion - because that's what almost always happens in this area with the original houses (from the 1950s and 60s like this one) which aren't in the officially designated historic part of town. Therefore I don't see much point in expending time and energy (or money) on more than just keeping the yard looking more or less tidy. Another is that I've tried planting things in the past, only to have deer and other critters eat them. I've managed to get a few trees and shrubs growing so the yard is pleasant enough, but that took a lot of effort. I know how to garden in Australia but I haven't really mastered it here, where the conditions and the wildlife are so different.

Another factor affecting other parts of my life is that I still (even after 15 years) feel sort of like a foreigner who doesn't completely understand the local culture. S was my interpreter and my bridge between cultures and without her I feel less at home. (Of course car servicing is the same anywhere.)

Today started out cool and wet, but now the sun has come out and it's dramatically warmer. Because it was wet this morning and I knew the trail would have some big puddles, I skipped parkrun yet again, and instead ran by myself a bit later away from possible puddles.

There’s no excuse for ugly people’: controversial dentist Mike Mew on how ‘mewing’ can make you more attractive:

The orthodontist’s strange mouth exercises are beloved by incels seeking a manlier shape – and a fast-growing TikTok trend in classrooms around the world. So why has he been struck off the dentists’ register?

I don't know if the General Dental Council is like the General Medical Council and strikes off for ADVERTISING (quite aside from the horrendous things this awful guy is doing) but it strikes me that the way he is promoting himself would have been way, way beyond a lot of the things the GMC was taking exception to. But maybe times change.

But honestly. This is probably because I have an perhaps unusual knowledge of medical (including dental) quackery and its promotion, and common themes are:

There Is One Big Reason For All Your Problems

And

One Simple Trick (which I have) To Fix Them.

(Cites here, so that you know that I am not making this up all out of my own head, to Alex Comfort, The Anxiety Makers, Ann Dally, Fantasy Surgery, and a tip of the hat to Rob Darby, A Surgical Temptation.)

Okay, this is at the other end of the alimentary canal to Sir Arbuthnot Lane's Cure For All Evils (caused by Chronic Intestinal Stasis), but I think we can see the pattern repeating here.

Not saying that maybe, somewhere in this, there is something that may be helpful in some, specific cases, but let us consider e.g. radium in the 1920s. Yes, it was really, really useful in treating certain forms of cancer: it was not a cure-all and downing massive amounts of radium tonic just left a person, well, radioactive, if the tonic actually contained any active principle at all.

I am also boggled at the assumptions about beauty, and trying not to comment on this guy's own appearance, but to remark that the Hapsburgs ruled swathes of Europe for centuries without manly square jaws, hmmm, plus, has this chap ever been into an art gallery in his life??? Is there one pattern of beauty or are there many?

Just reading what he thinks the epitome makes me want to assert the true loveliness of consumptive pallor, heightened by just a touch of hectic feverish flush, wilting picturesquely on a fainting couch.

oracne: turtle (Default)
([personal profile] oracne May. 16th, 2025 10:21 pm)
After a glitch with my Apple account, their very helpful (!) customer service got me fixed up and I managed to sneak in the first episode of Murderbot before dress rehearsal, and the second one when I got home. I just finished it and am ready for more. It's a good adaptation. I never feel like adaptations replace books because there's no way to capture narrative voice in the same way in a visual medium, but there are other advantages books don't have. I love seeing actors interpret characters; it's a sort of fanfiction. The actors are all great.

Maybe I will also finally watch Ted Lasso. Severance sounds too depressing for me right now.
moonhare: (Default)
([personal profile] moonhare May. 16th, 2025 09:32 pm)
…that a car could fail emissions testing because it wasn’t driven enough? Specifically, my truck’s OBD2 monitors weren’t ‘ready.’
—-

Last December I took the truck in for an oil change, and the tech called us to say the battery was going bad. They put in a new battery and that was that. Personally, I felt the battery was underperforming because of how little I had been driving since retiring, but it was old enough to be considered a risk.

Last week I took the truck in for its biennial State Safety and Emissions Inspection. Safety was no problem but the machine needed to read that the onboard diagnostic monitors were running: they weren’t.

It came down to how the truck’s computers reset after a battery has been disconnected. I needed to have driven highway speeds for a certain number of miles, and apparently had not. I remembered that when GM replaced a recalled Takata airbag that the system needed resetting, but I was driving everyday then. In the case of my failed inspection, I had only driven about 270 miles, occasionally but not usually over 45 mph, since New Years…

Anyway, the tech recognized the problem, they took the truck out and triggered the monitors, and it’s good for two more years :o)

Aside- I’ve had the truck for twelve years now, and, including my retirement, it has averaged less than 4000 miles annually.

PXL_20250501_194906512_Original.jpeg

Such fun!
shadowkat: (Looking Outwards - Tessa)
([personal profile] shadowkat May. 16th, 2025 11:44 pm)
[Not only was I out on a much needed vacation last week, but I also couldn't find any good news on FB or my other sources while I was out. It didn't pop up on my news feed until yesterday and today. (I'm thinking my sources took a break for Mother's Day?)

It was quite distressing, not helped by Mother - who likes to watch CNN, ABC News, and occasionally FOX to see what a lot of her friends and neighbors are digesting news wise and to try and understand them better. Mother is 82, and an information junkie. She and my father spent most of their dates debating politics in bars to the wee hours of the night while they were in college. Every time I'd try to be optimistic or bring up good news, Mother would discount it and play devil's advocate, mainly because she watches CNN, Fox, NPR, ABC News, and all their discussions of it. I read it - in the Atlantic, New York, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker. Although now, I'm overwhelmed with magazines. So not reading as many articles as I'd like. I'm trying to support a free press. Not everybody has one - after all. And I'm not taking mine for granted.]

That's clearly not necessarily good news? Or it is depending on one's perspective? Good news much like beauty and humor is more often than not in the eye of the beholder.

Good News from the American Resistance and It's Global Allies

[As always this is in the eyes of the beholder.]

1. Supreme Court extends block on some Alien Enemies Act deportation flights. Go Here.

The gist:

Supreme Court rules 7-2 AGAINST Trump on Deportations.
No, they cannot deny due process
No, they cannot remove these people under Alien Enemies Act.
And of course Alioto and Thomas were the dissenting votes. [Sigh.]

Read more... )

2. The GOP suffered a stunning election loss in Omaha, Nebraska, where Democratic candidate John Ewing Jr. will go on to win defeat the longest serving incumbent Republican mayor in the United States former Mayor Jean Stothert. The election swung 20 points over to the Democrats.

3. New York’s Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul signs a law that will require fossil fuel companies to pay for climate damage repair. The new state law requires the companies responsible for the bulk of emissions produced between 2000 and 2018 to pay out roughly $3 billion a year for the next 25 years. Read more... ) GO HERE.

4. A federal court denies the Trump administration’s request to stay an injunction blocking its ban on transgender military service members. [Source: Lambda Legal & Human Rights Campaign.]

5. US District Court mandates that ICE restore 133 international student visas and halts deportation proceedings. Go HERE

6.ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero is named to the TIME100 list for his commitment to America’s civil-­liberties tradition. Go HERE

7. ProPublica wins 2025 Pulitzer for Public Service for reports on deaths of pregnant women in abortion-restricted states. Ann Telnaes, who quit The Washington Post in protest, wins the 2025 Pulitzer for Illustrated Reporting and Commentary. The Pulitzer Prize board soundly rebuked Jeff Bezos by awarding the former Washington Post cartoonist who quit after her cartoon was scrapped. Book on Soviet dissidents wins Pulitzer Prize. "To the Success of Our Hopeless Cause: The Many Lives of the Soviet Dissident Movement" by Benjamin Nathans won a Pulitzer Prize on May 5. Percival Everett won the award for fiction for his novel James, a powerful re-imagination of Huckleberry Finn. [Oh lovely, Wales gave me that book for my birthday (at my request), looking forward to reading it after Parable of the Sower.]

8.The Associated Press wins reinstatement to White House events after a judge rules that the government cannot bar its journalists. Go HERE

9.In a win for voters, North Carolina settled with voting rights groups and the DNC to permanently block part of a law that required officials to reject some voters' ballots due to address verification issues and offered no remedy to fix the problem. Go HERE.

10. Harvard refuses to comply with a list of extraordinary demands from the Trump administration, asserting its academic independence and constitutional rights.

the rest )

As always, good news is in the eye of the beholder.

Hope you found something to smile about or to relieve anxiety. I know I did.

It's late, off to bed. Have a good night. Or Good Night and Good Luck - Edward R. Murrow (historic newsman during the McCarthy Hearings in the 1960s, who reported against the Blacklist and the McCarthy Hearings.)

Also, here's another pretty picture...


maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
([personal profile] maju May. 16th, 2025 02:25 pm)
I'm still learning how to live alone, or actually, how to take care of things while living alone. My latest challenge is knowing how often to have the car serviced, since I rarely drive it. I think I've done under 200 miles since I came back from Connecticut in January. Last time I had it serviced was about October last year, so I decided I should have it done again in spite of the low mileage (and I know you're supposed to have it done even if you don't drive much) and it's booked in for the week after next. Last time I was looking after my own car was more than 20 years ago, and I was doing a lot more driving as I was still chauffeuring my daughters around sometimes.

Another small challenge is keeping the yard looking reasonably tidy. I could pay for someone to do it, but so far it's not too much for me, it's just that I'm not very motivated. Yesterday I cut some of the grass (weeds) in the front yard, and today I trimmed the edges of the front path. For a long time S and I shared the grass cutting, but in later years she did it all herself (because she enjoyed it and I didn't - she got a sense of satisfaction from being able to do it and see the results), so now I'm continuing for her.

Two years ago S and I were about to leave for our short trip to New York City; it was to be our last trip together. It feels unreal that it was already two years ago.
pegkerr: (The beauty of it smote his heart)
([personal profile] pegkerr May. 16th, 2025 01:16 pm)
Just as I did last week, I stuffed this week's collage with color, as this is about the garden I put in this week. Each year I tell myself, "I'm going to scale it back!" and usually I don't.

Well, it is a little smaller. I did not plant my big City Picker planters. I will still put kale and Swiss chard in one. I limited myself on tomatoes to just two plants in smaller pots. I have about given up because the squirrels get so many of the tomatoes and the ones left are usually afflicted with blossom rot. But as I do every year, I have put geraniums by the front door, herb pots on the back porch, a hanging pot of lobelia by the back door, and petunias in the four planters on the back patio.

The lilacs are blooming (Rob planted that bush over thirty years ago), as well as the bleeding hearts, and bunnies sit in the yard every day.

It is a lot of work, and I always grumble about the work and the cost. But I am always so happy when I get it done.

Description: Background: a riot of colors from flowers. Lower left: a crouching bunny. Lower right: a terra cotta pot planted with basil and a tomato plant. Center: a row of herb pots. Upper third: a white planter planted with multicolored petunias

Garden

19 Garden

Click on the links to see the 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022 and 2021 52 Card Project galleries.
susandennis: (Default)
([personal profile] susandennis May. 16th, 2025 10:39 am)
Vet said (via email) that the prescriptions would be ready yesterday. This morning, I go in and they have one but not the other. WTF?? I handed back the one and asked her to let me know when they had both ready.

Then I went to the grocery with 2 things on my list. Got one and a bunch of other stuff and forgot the second item. Of course.

BUT all is well. I am home. Cukes have been sliced and Japanese pickles are marinating in the fridge. They had chicken liver pate greatly reduced and a good deal on a couple of pieces of excellent cheese. And my favorite cookies.

I also picked up a pizza to try in my air fryer.

So all is good. I'm set. The laundry area is already cleared out for the repair guy so I don't even need to do that.
susandennis: (Default)
([personal profile] susandennis May. 15th, 2025 04:55 pm)
8:30 Bodewell calls to tell me their technician is unexpectedly 'off road' and won't be back today. Best she can do is Monday 1-5. Fine. But, then I immediately get an email with a proper tracking link and full info.

Could be way worse. But, still. It means I will probably miss what will probably be the last aqua yoga class.

But, otherwise, it's just annoying and not cataclysmic or even a big deal. Assuming he will have to order parts, they would probably arrive at the same time whether ordered Friday or Monday. And it's not like I have a family's worth of stinky clothes and no options.

I do feel badly for the woman who had to call me and all of Jeff's other appointments. And I feel guilty that I didn't acknowledge her very bad day with some sympathy.

Oh well. Off now to very leisurely, do my errands.
oursin: Books stacked on shelves, piled up on floor, rocking chair in foreground (books)
([personal profile] oursin May. 16th, 2025 04:05 pm)

Is it ethical to buy used books and music instead of new copies that will financially reward the author or artist?

Okay, perhaps the writer of the query means, books that are currently available new but you are able to score a used copy in the local Oxfam shop or whatever - maybe.

(Which of course raises another effikle q that in that case it is For A Good Cause....)

And as someone who has spent years hunting down works which were not in print, or were only reprinted by Virago or the British Library or whatever after I had acquired my collection after arduous searches and considerable expense, or, finally, can be downloaded from Project Gutenberg or the Faded Page -

Hollo larfter.

True, I have also bought copies of works which I probably could have acquired shiny new, but was not entirely sure whether they were for me, taking a punt on something I had heard of, etc etc. And sometimes this led to me buying up everything the author ever wrote, their backlist, preordering their forthcoming, and so on. In hardback.

Plus, while I was appalled at those people who were buying books on Amazon and then returning them and getting their money back, and also at book piracy, on the whole I don't think it is the end-user, the actual reader, who is the greatest villain facing authors, rather than the publishing industry.

***

In other book-related news, yesterday I was still feeling the effects of a couple of bad nights with lower-back flare-up and did that thing of doing some small tedious task which has been lingering about for, lo, a very long time.

Transferring my FREE PDFs of Open Access academic books to my tablet (and also sorting out the file titles to be something a bit more helpful than a truncated ISBN) so I can, should I be moved to do so, actually read them. Some of them are things that yes, I should read, and others are more, er, aspirational.

I also, whilst faffing around with my tablet, finally got the issue with Princeton UP's annoying walled-garden app sorted. So maybe I can finally get to the books I bought in their sale nearly a year ago.

susandennis: (Default)
([personal profile] susandennis May. 16th, 2025 07:08 am)
Yesterday I was starting to think about what I was going to do for lunch, when Bonny popped in. I had asked her about Myrna's card key and told her I was thinking I'd use her dryer, if needed. She said she tried the key once last week and it no longer worked. She's been trying to renew her drivers license and discovered she could not but also could not get an appointment. So she was going to the grocery store instead.

I told her I'd go with her whenever she wanted to North Bend (up the road 20 minutes) - the nearest drivers license place. And after chatting, we decided to just go right then.

Besides they whole enhanced kerfuffle, Washington state recently added some new rules. If you are over 70, you can no longer renew online. (I was actually over 70 last time I renewed... online - so lucky.) BUT they also extended the 4 year renewal to 6 or 8 - you get to pick, 8 years costs more.

So we drove to North Bend and found the joint and were delighted to see that the line was not out the door. But, then, of course, learned that that was because they were basically giving you a number and telling you to come back in an hour. So we went across the way to a teriyaki place for lunch that was absolutely perfect and delicious. Then she sat in the license place for another hour and people watched. It was actually not at all unpleasant. And, considering all the elements, they were pretty efficient. She got the 8 year deal figuring at 85, she won't have to do that again. She was very grateful for my company but also she gets really stressed at driving on the interstate and finding places she's never been so I got her there and home stress free.

Over lunch we discussed many things. Mostly Timber Ridge gossip. Jim, who lives across the hall, has a mostly bald head but has fringe which he routinely forgets to get cut. It gets really long and looks ridiculous. It used to drive Myrna crazy and now it's driving us crazy.

Yesterday afternoon, I ran into him coming back from the main area and he had had it cut!! Just today, he said. Probably while we were talking about him.

The woman who teaches aqua yoga is leaving. She's really a fun, nice lady and while not a certified yoga teacher, she's very well schooled. And nobody else here is so I'm guessing aqua yoga is going to be canceled. Although, I just looked and it's still on the calendar in June, after she's gone. hmmmmm

And, in other news, I have a new house cleaner. I hate to have lost the most recent one. She was fabulous. And fast. And delightful. Oh well.

Oh also Bonny told me yesterday - actually worked it into a sentence about something else, that Joan got her nose out of joint about Myrna's spending so much time with me. I had never heard this. So, see, mean girls are a life long thing. She's now adopted Bonny. Bonny's not thrilled. But I am. Joan is whiny and complains about everything and never ever stops talking. As long as she peeved at me, I'm ok with that.

The Bodewell service people gave me a 8-12 window today. No texts or emails about tracking but I figured out their dashboard. I had an ETA of 10 until about 30 minutes ago and now it's an ETA of 11:30. Which actually suits me better. This gives me plenty of time to get out and pick up Biggie's drugs and pop into the grocery without hurry. The tracker also tells me my technician is Jeff. I think that's the name of the guy who was here last time which would be fine. He knows how to park close to my actual apartment and come up the back way. Saves lots of steps for both of us.

My friends, Julie and Scott from New Zealand, are soon hoping a plane for North America. They will be here about two months. They come every couple of years. Julie has a shopping list a mile long and she's already started. There are lots of things they cannot even order without a U.S. address so they are using mine. Last night she sent me the first order - candles and soaps from a shop she found last time in Colorado. I should order up some of that hand cream that I cannot get because I don't have an NZ or AUS address, and get them to bring it with them. Their stop here is about mid way through their trip. I'm excited to see them.

It's new menu day so I think I'll get dressed and stroll down to the mail room to pick up a copy before I head out on my errands.

20250516_074448-COLLAGE
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
([personal profile] oursin May. 16th, 2025 09:55 am)
Happy birthday, [personal profile] kaberett!
shadowkat: (Default)
([personal profile] shadowkat May. 15th, 2025 09:12 pm)
Miss me? Most likely not - it's not like there isn't a ton of content on the internet to weed through.

While I enjoyed my visit and being with my mother, I'm happy to be home.

For the most part, the trip went without a hitch. I got onto the island without any issues. It was pouring. But not until after we landed. And by Tuesday, the sun was out, blue sky, and temperatures reaching the lower 80s. Sunday and Monday had bits of sunshine. Actually it rained more in New York this past week than it did on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina.

The trip back was delayed by about an hour - we sat on the tarmac waiting for inclement weather ahead of us to clear. Or so we were told by the pilot over a horrible intercom system. I could barely hear him, and spent the hour wondering if I'd heard him correctly. (I had.) When I got into Laguardia Airport, it was clearing for the most part, and I even saw spots of blue sky. However, the airport was packed - just about every flight was delayed. Apparently they were having tornado warnings in Chicago and Milwaukee, and inclement weather throughout the Northeast and Midwest.

I didn't fly out until 4 pm. So had a nice lunch with one of mother's friends, an 86 year old, tiny woman, who came up to my thigh, and had traveled extensively in her lifetime, and at one time had worked as an EMT in volunteer rescue. She regaled us with stories from that time in the car on the way to the restaurant, and she insisted on paying for our meal (since mother had paid for hers the last go time). The restaurant, Dockside at Skull Creek - had a gluten free menu, and I was able to get fried shrimp, french fries, and cole slaw, with shrimp cocktail sauce - all gluten-free. (This is a rarity.) They actually have quite a few places on the island that have gluten free menus now. (But our go-to spot, Ruan Thai, is no longer an option. They no longer have gluten free available. Sad to say.) It was a lovely day - so I got to look at the boats, and watch the egrets and pelicans.

***

Backing up a bit to Monday. Saturday - Mother's street and front yard briefly flooded, but it also quickly cleared. We drove through it on the way to lunch (which we had to wait a bit to drive to - since it was coming down in buckets).
Read more... )
After nothing but rain on Monday, or so it seemed (we watched television most of the day, chatted, read, and relaxed), however,Tuesday was a lovely day. So after lunch, we went to a private residential beach - at Dolphin Head, which is also a bit of a wildlife refuge and recreational area.



There's no development permitted, and they've increased the sand to build up the beach and protect the marsh land behind it.



People don't tend to swim in the water, and for the most part just enjoy the beach. It's never crowded and you don't see many folks lying on the beach or playing on it.

lots of beach pictures )

Mother and I aren't huge beach goers - I don't particularly like sand or lying on beaches. Walking yes, lying no. And while I did go down to the water, I didn't dip my toes in it. I decided it had wild life in there, and I didn't want to get my feet caked with sand or the sandals. It did - there was a lot of seaweed washed up on a section of the beach. I did watch a flock of sand-pipers fly in and out of the waves, jumping about on the beach hunting sand crabs (these are crabs that burrow under the sand, with a little air hole, some find shells - they are kind of like hermit crabs).
They are tiny little birds, and I do not have the right camera to effectively capture them.

While Mother sat on a bench and talked to her younger sister (who lives in Michigan), I wandered about on the beach.

***

The next day, Wednesday was equally lovely. Blue skies, and in the low 80s.
So after going on a brief, but productive (if somewhat pricey) shopping spree (I bought six items, three shirts, three pants, and at least two of the shirts were heavily marked down - so not too bad), we went to Jarvis Park. We did lunch first at the Sante Fe Grill. Where I had a corn Enchilda, refried beans, and salad (I couldn't have the rice - since it was coated in a wheat flour sauce - and I'm ceiliac - yes, I know, it's rice, but I didn't mind - I have issues with rice.) Also a huge chocolate mousse for desert. Chocolate Mousse is basically my favorite desert next to flourless chocolate cake.

Jarvis Park is another environmentally sustainable recreational area designed to protect the marshland and environment, and provide an area for people to walk and exercise.

Originally it was just a small pond. Then it became a small park, with some plantings, and a small pound. Now it is a huge lake, with streams, and creeks, and a water reclamation center. Also a home to alligators, egrets, birds of all kinds, fish, etc. Although I only saw a few egrets this time. Mainly because people were out, the water was high, and it was warm.

Two pictures or views of the lake )

An ancient tree covered with Spanish Moss )

walking through the woods )

The lake is just over about a mile or two around, and it took me about twenty - thirty minutes to walk it. I didn't do a brisk pace, mainly because my leg had been bothering me a bit. Mother sat on a swing chatting with her younger sister, while I walked the circumference of the park. Mother calls her sister each day. Mother is doing rather well health wise, her sister, not so much.

Anyhow, it's late, and while for the most part I slept rather well during my trip, I did not sleep well last night. I never sleep well prior to a trip. And I'd eaten things the night before that undoubtedly kept me awake.
So, I must beg you all adieu and go off to bed.

I'll leave you with another photo...this one of Mother's backyard, or rather the golf course that comprises her backyard. (I'm NOT a fan of golf, but this is pretty for the most part.) This is actually about five houses down from Mother. You have to walk about five minutes to see it.


mrissa: (Default)
([personal profile] mrissa May. 15th, 2025 08:12 pm)
 

Sonja Arntzen and Ito Moriyuki, trans., The Sarashina Diary: A Woman's Life in Eleventh-Century Japan (by Sugawara no Takasue no Musume). This is brief but delightful. Its author is one of the most relatable historical figures I have ever encountered, book-obsessed and delighted by the written word.

Franny Choi, The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On. The modern world, the Korean-American experience, a dozen other things in a score of emotional ranges. Sometimes I find it interesting to contemplate which volumes of poetry resonate me and which with similar descriptions leave me cold. This one resonated.

Christopher Hale, A Brief History of Singapore and Malaysia: Multiculturalism and Prosperity: The Shared History of Two Southeast Asian Tigers. A bit too much Singapore in the balance for my taste--I have no objection to Singapore, but if you're putting both Singapore and Malaysia on the cover, I want both. This is more a starting point than an ending point in the history of this region, but that's valuable too.

Reginald Hill, An Advancement of Learning, An April Shroud, Bones and Silence, Child's Play, A Clubbable Woman, Deadheads, Exit Lines, A Killing Kindness, A Pinch of Snuff, Recalled to Life, Ruling Passion, Underworld, and The Wood Beyond. Rereads. And here we come to the reason this is one of the easiest book posts I've written in ages: I'm 2/3ish of the way through rereading the Dalziel and Pascoe series, and I find them more or less where I left them--the early ones are fine, and now I'm into the part of the series that's quite good, with the best yet to come. Gosh I'm glad I read them out of order originally. The exception to finding them where I left them is that three times through is enough for me on A Pinch of Snuff, I do not expect to find it worth my time for a fourth go-round.

Natalie Shapero, Popular Longing. This is also poetry engaging with the current moment. Like the Franny Choi collection, it is frequently angry. For some reason it doesn't resonate for me nearly so well--I find it more grating in places but most often it's just that Shapero's gears and mine don't mesh. Ah well.

Tom Stoppard, Plays: 5 (Arcadia, The Real Thing, Night and Day, Indian Ink, Hapgood). Rereads. I'm passing this on to a young theater-lover in my life and read it on the way out. One masterwork, one mid-century adultery play (YAWN), two attempts at reckoning with colonialism very much from a colonizer viewpoint, and a spy thing that is less clever than he thinks about quantum mechanics. I have another copy of Arcadia, I'm not sorry I read the others, but I'm also not sorry to hand them on.

Merc Fenn Wolfmoor writing as A. Merc Rustad, So You Want to Be a Robot. Reread. Remains varied, wrenching, and brilliant, one of the best debut collections of our generation, yay.

maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
([personal profile] maju May. 15th, 2025 04:16 pm)
12. What are you sure of in your life? That I'm not getting any younger. Almost nothing else is set in stone.

13. When you think of ‘home,’ what, specifically, do you think of? The place where I spend most of my time and where I sleep at night.

14. What’s the difference between settling for things and accepting the way things are? I'm not sure that there is any meaningful difference, except in the mental/emotional state of the person either setting or accepting. In both cases you make a decision to continue with things as they are without struggling to change anything.

15. How many of your friends would you trust with your life? All of them.
.

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