Sunday, September 27, 2009

EMPS: How to Tell It's Autumn in Tucson

For the Ellipsis Monday Photo Shoot, literally at the last minute (again):

How do you know it's autumn in Tucson?



Daytime temperatures plummet into the 90s.



Or not.



The Palo Verde trees are still in bloom (ah-choo!).




And so are the flowers.




"Pumpkin Anything" starts to return to stores and restaurants. (Yum!)



Sunset comes earlier.


Really, though, one sure way to tell, at least for me, is the arrival of Michaelmas, the annual feast of St. Michael the Archangel. My church, St. Michael and All Angels, always celebrates the "patronal feast" of Michaelmas at the end of September. And next week? It will be the Feast of St. Francis, or, as I like to call it, "Take your dog to church day!" A sure sign of fall in Tucson!

Karen

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Weekend Assignment #286: Far Away

This Weekend Assignment is even later than usual, but I was so tired last night that I couldn't face it. What the heck, nobody does these until the weekend's over anyway. Here we go:

Weekend Assignment: #286: What is the #1 place you'd like to visit that you haven't been to yet? Do you think it's likely that you'll ever get there?

Extra Credit: What is the farthest place from home that you've ever been?


Despite the photo above, I've never been to Africa. If you look closely, you can jut about make out that the truck is labeled "Lion Country Safari." I took this picture in Florida in 1986, during our "big trip," three and a half months of roaming the U.S. and Canada. It was fantastic. We got as far west as Los Angeles, as far north as Montreal, as far south as the Florida Keys. Later that year, in November, we went to England: London, Liverpool on our Beatles pilgrimage, and a day trip to Stonehenge. I may have done that last one by myself.

But growing up, oh, how I longed to go much farther than that! I read Born Free and its sequels, and a rather more disturbing book to my fifth grade sensibilities called The Lion. I repeatedly borrowed a large illustrated compendium called Mammals from the school library, and learned all sorts of interesting things about lemurs and okapi and the platypus. The only really successful project I attempted in junior high art class was an Australia travel poster with a koala on it. Someday, somehow, I was going to visit Kenya and Australia. Other places too, but those were the main ones that I'd never seen outside of books and television.


I have no idea why Lion Country Safari had this Australian native.

All these years later, Australia is still interesting to me, largely because of all those marsupials. But when I was a travel agent, I won a book about New Zealand, and also arranged a big trip for a client to both countries. That's what I'd like to do: see the kangaroos and such, Ayers Rock and the Great Barrier Reef, and then go on to see beautiful New Zealand with its sheep ranches and Middle Earth shooting locations.



Apparently I rose an elephant in 1986. I think it was an Indian Elephant.

As for Africa, I'm still interested in going there, too, but no longer consider Kenya the sole country of interest. I gather that Tanzania is at least as important to the survival of all those magnificent mammals I used to ogle in books. Much of the continent suffers from poverty, disease and political instability, but tourism seems to bolster the economies of the countries lucky enough to still have cool animals in their parks and preserves. I think such tourism disqualifies you from giving blood, but that probably wouldn't stop me.

Other places I'd like to go include Maui and the Big Island in Hawaii, Greece, and maybe some Biblical places if the people of that part of the world ever learn to get along with each other. My current boss is in Ireland right now, and that's another place I'd love to see, along with pretty much every other place in the British Isles, whether I've already been there or not. But I think if I had to pick just one country I've never been to and go there, I'd must likely go to, um, well, maybe Tanzania. But it's a close call.

Will I ever make it to any of these fabulous places? I'm beginning to have my doubts. But if we ever manage to miraculously get out of debt with lots of money in the bank, I'll visit them all.

And where is the farthest I've been? I would have guessed Oahu, on our two-day drive-through visit, but Honolulu is only 2968 miles from Tucson. If I remember correctly, the three week package tour of Europe my mom took the family on in 1972 got as far east as Salzburg, Austria, which is 4087 miles from Manlius, NY where I lived at the time. If we only got as far as Innsbruck, that's still 4041 miles. So there's your answer.

How about you? What is your greatest travel ambition? Start thinking about that while I present the recap of last week's two responses. For Weekend Assignment #285: Lost and Found, I asked about things you've lost.

Florinda went with something most people are glad to lose, not so glad to find:

Just about six years ago, my sister and I joined Weight Watchers together. She'd recently had her second baby. I had no similar excuse for the gradual packing on of pounds that had sent my weight to the highest it had ever been (well in excess of my peak weight during my own pregnancy nearly twenty years earlier). I embraced the Weight Watchers Points Plan, and within six months - not long before my 40th birthday - I had successfully shed 25 pounds.


Mike made a terrible discovery one night after walking the dog:

Anyway, it was a cold and snowy January (maybe February) night. Jenn and I had just gotten home from a dinner at Chevy's and I just come in from taking our puppy, Cosmo, out. I noticed something was different as soon as I took my gloves off. May hand, more specifically my left hand, felt weird. The usual rubbing of the wedding ring on my pinky wasn't there.
So, have you thought about where you'd like to travel? Here are the guidelines if you'd like to participate in the Weekend Assignment:
  1. Please post your entry no later than Friday, October 2nd at 6 PM. (You can also post your response in the comments thread, but a blog entry is better. )
  2. Please mention the Weekend Assignment in your blog post, and include a link back to this entry.
  3. Please come back here after you've posted, and leave a link to your entry in the comments below.
  4. Visiting other participants' entries is strongly encouraged!
  5. I'm always looking for topic ideas. Please email me at mavarin2 on gmail.com if there's a Weekend Assignment theme you'd like to see. If I use your idea, you will be credited as that week's "guest professor."
Coming up before the weekend is out: my EMPS entry, and I still haven't told you about of Bat Night!

Karen

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Weekend Assignment Result: Florinda's First

For Weekend Assignment #284: First Day, I asked to hear about your first day of, well, anything. Aside from a few general comments, our sole response was from Florinda, with a great story about a very successful first date. An excerpt follows:

...I arrived first, and settled on a bench near the mall entrance (with a book, of course) to watch for my date's arrival. I'd only seen a couple of pictures of him, but they were enough for me to recognize him in Target the day before our lunch, so I was quite sure I'd know him when I saw him. (I e-mailed him about the sighting at Target after I got home, to confirm that it was him; he said later that he thought it was a good sign that I didn't want to call off the date after that.)
Okay, folks, next week I'd like to see more participants, okay? Here's the current topic again:


Weekend Assignment: #285: Tell us about something important that you lost.
Extra Credit: Tell us about something you found.

You can handle that, right? So let's hear your Legends of the Lost and Found!*

I know I'm being really skimpy on the blogging, but I'm working all day now and having computer problems at night. I should be able to post more often soon, once I get used to working again!

Karen


*A Harry Chapin album title

Sunday, September 20, 2009

EMPS: Some Kind of Cricket

It's taken me all week (again) to respond to Carly's Ellipsis Monday Photo Shoot, this time asking for pictures of bugs. This was not just because of my two jobs and computer problems, but also because I wasn't encountering any bugs bigger than an underdeveloped grape seed. But then this guy (girl?) turned up in my bathroom:



Obviously this it a cricket - not the plain black kind I used to see Back East, but some kind of Arizona cricket with brownish stripeyness. Here's another shot:



I've looked up "Arizona Cricket" on Google, but the results are dominated by two groups that play the British sport, the wireless company and an arena named for the wireless company. There are pages about species of crickets, but mostly they're about a newly-discovered genus of cave cricket, which this isn't. But it is a cricket of some kind. Trust me.



I have a policy about bugs in the house, which for most species is that they give up their right to live if they enter the house. I have been known to rescue the occasional beetle, and I used to tolerate a tiny black variant of the ladybug until we came to suspect they were a different stage of the species of bugs that ate their way through a bunch of irreplaceable coats, hats, wizard costume and Toros baseball jerseys. But the main exception to the policy is crickets. I have never killed a cricket, and hardly ever even removed one from the house. This isn't just because of Chinese tradition and the superstition that they bring good luck. The main thing is that they eat other bugs - well, I think they do. And I find them kinda cute!

Karen

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Weekend Assignment #285: Lost and Found

I'm extending the deadline on Weekend Assignment #284: First Day, because our regulars are either stumped on the topic or running late. But that won't stop me from introducing the next topic:

Weekend Assignment: #285: Tell us about something important that you lost.
Extra Credit: Tell us about something you found.

I've been working all week, more or less, for a small high-tech manufacturer of medical equipment. I've also been struggling to get my computer functioning better, compensating for the fact that the techs at Staples think I have a dying motherboard. Today they installed my 2 GB of RAM (I only had 1 before) and reset the computer to its factory settings. The idea was to try to "trick" my failing motherboard into lasting a bit longer, and maybe coax it to recognize my CD drive better. Tonight I picked up the computer, brought it home, and set about reloading software and restoring files from backup. I immediately ran into two problems:

  1. The CD/DVD drive still isn't working, although the techs had hoped otherwise. That means I can't load MS Office from a disc, or PhotoStudio, my beloved cheap but surprisingly versatile photo editor. I downloaded a demo of PhotoStudio, but it won't save files in a decent resolution. So tonight's photos were all edited on Adobe's extremely basic online PhotoShop editor.
  2. I backed up my docs to a Seagate FreeAgent external hard drive a few days ago using Seagate software. On Thursday evening, to be safe, I used Windows Backup and Restore to back it all up again to the same drive. It took five hours. Neither Windows nor Seagate even gave me the option tonight of trying to restore from either backup. Fortunately, after several hours of downloading Firefox, Norton and other stuff, I discovered that the second backup was sitting uncompressed on the G: drive, and could just be dragged over. It only took about 3 hours. Hooray!
What has this to do with the topic? Well, obviously, I've lost access to two important programs that I used all the time; and for a few uncomfortable hours, I was a little worried that all recent drafts of my novels were lost as well. But eventually I found a usable version of my docs, which unlike the software are irreplaceable. What a relief!

On a more literal level, the most important thing I ever lost was my wedding ring. It was a gold and white gold filigree in a Celtic design. A Cuban gave it to John's mother many years ago as an engagement ring, intending to come back and marry her. He never did. It was too big for my finger, and not adjustable. The only thing we could do to try to keep it on my finger was have a couple thin bands made to wear under the ring. But those were uncomfortable, and I couldn;t stop messing with them. Eventually I lost them both. The ring itself soon followed - and np, I never got it back. I had it for less than a year before it was gone forever.

And what have I found? I've had a few good yard sale / estate sale finds, in the days when we were doing the eBay thing. One was a foot tall(?) Snoopy Astronaut from 1969, in a rather battered box. It cost me $5, I think. I sold it for over $100 to someone in Japan. The other really good find was a Niagara Falls motion lamp. The cylindrical shade is painted with a scene of the falls, which moves, powered by the heat of the bulb. The light underneath moves relative to the scene, creating the illusion that the water is moving.

That's it for now! I'll be back Monday night with the reults on Weekend Assignment #224. Meanwhile, I hope you'll jump in with your own Weekend Assignment entry, either #284 or #285. Here are the guidelines if you'd like to participate:

  1. Please post your entry no later than Friday, September 25th at 6 PM. (You can also post your response in the comments thread, but a blog entry is better. )
  2. Please mention the Weekend Assignment in your blog post, and include a link back to this entry.
  3. Please come back here after you've posted, and leave a link to your entry in the comments below.
  4. Visiting other participants' entries is strongly encouraged!
  5. I'm always looking for topic ideas. Please email me at mavarin2 on gmail.com if there's a Weekend Assignment theme you'd like to see. If I use your idea, you will be credited as that week's "guest professor."
And still to come: my EMPS entry, and my untold story of Bat Night!

Karen

Round Robin: Chickens Are for Eating

I admit it. As busy as I've been with my new temp job, my job at St. Michael's and various one-off events, I've been too distracted to do much blogging. I even forgot what this week's Round Robin Photo Challenge is until after I ruined one photographic opportunity. This week's topic, as suggested by Sherrie of Sherrie's Stuff, is "Chicken." By the time I looked this up, here's what was left of tonight's dinner:



As it happens, the dogs also had chicken for dinner:



But that's boring. How about something a bit more fun? This is a vintage cookbook we picked up somewhere, sometime:



And here's our Better Homes and Gardens New Cook Book, with an extra chicken recipe torn from a magazine, at a very specific time in our cultural history:




Along with my new work situation, I've been struggling to get my computer in more usable condition than it's been lately. Today the techs at Staples installed my 2 GB of RAM (I only had 1 before) and reset the computer to its factory settings. Because if this, I no longer have access to my primary photo editing software (see the entry above this one for details). I had to resort to Adobe PhotoShop's bare bones online editor to produce the pics above. But what the heck; it worked!

I promise not to wait a week to post my next entry - in fact, I need to do my Weekend Assignment before going to bed. Meanwhile, let's visit everyone else's chickens!

Linking List (As of 5:30 AM Pacific, Saturday, September 19th 2009)

Sherrie
Sherrie's Stuff
http://sherrie-plummer.blogspot.com

Carly - Posted!
Ellipsis
http://ellipsissuddenlycarly.blogspot.com

Karen - Posted!
Outpost Mâvarin
http://outmavarin.blogspot.com

Linda
Mommy's Treasures
http://mommystreasures.blogspot.com

Jenn - Posted!
My Muskoka
http://mymuskoka.blogspot.com

Lana G - Posted!
Above The Clouds
http://airmiles.wordpress.com

Nancy**Welcome, New Member!**
Bondi Resort Blog
http://bondi-resort-algonquin.blogspot.com

Maria Berg - Posted 9/4/09
Everything is Green (English Translation)
http://alltkangronska.blogspot.com/2009/08/camera-critters-chickens.html


boliyou - Posted!
endomental
http://www.endomental.com

Molly Mavis
Visual Dialogues
http://visualdialogues.wordpress.com

Margaret
Facts From A Fact Woman
http://factwoman.blogspot.com

Suzanne R
SuzyQ421sphotoblog
http://suzyq421sphotoblog.blogspot.com

Ruth
Scrabble Queen
http://scrabblequeen.wordpress.com

Gattina - Posted!
Keyhole Pictures
http://gattina-keyholepictures.blogspot.com

Ellen b - Posted!
The Happy Wonderer
http://happywonderer.wordpress.com

Vicki - Posted!
SEA TURTLE 'MOM'
http://florida-shellseeker.blogspot.com/

And don't forget our other memes...

Karen - Weekend Assignment (A New Weekend Assignment Posted Each Friday)

Carly - Ellipsis Monday Photo Shoot (A New Photography Assignment Posted Each Monday)

Karen

Sunday, September 13, 2009

EMPS: From the Archives

I started working on this entry nearly a week ago, but never got around to posting. Carly wants to see previously unpublished archive photos. Easy, right? But I spend hours digging through files, searching, rejecting; and even when I decided on a few shots I later decided they don't count, because they were on Picasa in some form.

So. It's probably too late; I'm past the deadline. But here are a few shots anyway, because I have NEVER missed a Monday Photo Shoot. Even at this I'm only 99% sure I haven't posted these before.


Vintage photo reproduced on a west side underpass.


Carondelet St. Mary's Hospital, a major landmark on the west side of Tucson.
A friend of mine had a procedure there in June. I picked her up afterward.


A tent John erected over one of our fruit trees.

Next time: Bat Night! And not at the ballpark, either!

Karen