It's not my photo...but I'm pretty sure I've been there!
Update about blogCa
Wednesday, June 30, 2021
Tuesday, June 29, 2021
Monday, June 28, 2021
Sunday, June 27, 2021
Sunday with rest
Sleeping Ute Mountain, Cortez, CO 2019
Saturday, June 26, 2021
A short Saturday day-trip.
THis Saturday arts market left quite a bit to be desired. However, the people who offered their wares were sincerely smiling at us.
Actually these interesting patterns were the table where we had our vegetarian lunches.
The problem with that title for this old Apple monitor is, the book of that name didn't come out untirl 2012...and we have to believe this monitor is quite a bit older than that~!
I'm afraid I got hit by a bug yesterday, and haven't got much energy, except to read books. I may miss a few days while I'm recuperating!
Friday, June 25, 2021
Hodge podge old and newer
Myself (lowest) and my granddaughter (l.) and her mother. Granddaughter just graduated from college! She is my oldest son's daughter. We visited with masks, except to eat...it was so nice to see their smiles!A hug between my middle son and his mother-in-law. I have long wished there were a good term for a couple of mothers of married couples...rather than mothers-in-law in common! I feel very lucky that my son's mothers-in-laws are such wonderful women.
There used to be a train that went up to Mt. Michell...the highest peak east of the Mississippi. Now you can drive almost to the top, park your car and then walk an incline the last couple hundred feet.
Sharing with Sepia Saturday, of course. Can't let these old photos go by without sharing them there!
Today's quote:
Think for yourself and question authority. -Timothy Leary, psychologist and writer (22 Oct 1920-1996)
Thursday, June 24, 2021
Yucca flower
Some yucca blooms by the parking lot caught my eye,
And if I were a professional photographer, I'd enlarge just the blooms!
At least the flower is still in focus. But it's pretty dull. However, it's in an industrial area, so should be commended for just making it this far.Today's quote:
Within living structures defined by profit, by linear power, by institutional dehumanization, our feelings were not meant to survive… We have hidden that fact in the same place where we have hidden our power. They surface in our dreams, and it is our dreams that point the way to freedom. Those dreams are made realizable through our poems that give us the strength and courage to see, to feel, to speak, and to dare. If what we need to dream, to move our spirits most deeply and directly toward and through promise, is discounted as a luxury, then we give up the core — the fountain — of our power… the future of our worlds.
Wednesday, June 23, 2021
Tuesday, June 22, 2021
Night blooming Evening Primrose...and ducks
Mr. Mallard woke up when I came down the hill to get closer photos of the flowers, which were still a-bloom at 10 am!
I was going to get down really close, but then I realized I was disturbing duck naps.
Today's quote:
of humble sunset-glaze.
Let the time to leave
be quiet, still. Let no pompous memorials
build the hypnosis of grieving.
Let the lines of trees by the departure door
bestow the tranquil chanting of earth
on quiet heaps of leaves.
Let night’s soundless blessing slowly descend,
iridescent offerings of the seven stars.
Monday, June 21, 2021
Early walk around my favorite lake
We counted 7 very small baby ducks with their mother on the hill.
We wondered what these plants were...very close looking to oak leaf hydrangias...just leaves look more like maples.
Today's quote:
We can celebrate the change of season and shift our own energy by setting some time aside to make the same changes we see in nature.
Sunday, June 20, 2021
Summer Solstice
also known as Changes in Habits!
And Happy Father's Day to all the Dads!
It happens tonight here at 11;32 pm EDT. That's practically June 21.
So for the shortest night of the year...in the northern hemisphere at least, on our pretty blue ball, the earth somehow shuffles its tilt to begin going the other direction.
Midsummer Night's Eve exactly!
Seen through the screen this morning, I'm afraid there wasn't much to nibble on for this squirrel.And part of it was that with the heat of day, I tried doing my walk at around 6:30 pm, also after the summer-like showers were over. I had to step carefully over a few puddles, but it was at least in the mid 70s rather than 80s. But then I was really hungry afterward! So I had another light sandwich dinner. Oops.
Here's a pretty enjoyable community of talented singers/musicians/dancers, all celebrating in a language I don't understand, but sharing such joy I want to share it with you. (And the tune does seem to stay in my brain!) My cousin identified the language as Lativian, and in honor of the mighty oaks.
Today's quote:
Saturday, June 19, 2021
Happy Juneteenth!
Many of my family members still live in Texas, and it was maybe sometime in my adulthood that I first heard of Juneteenth!
I was really interested (beginning about 10 years ago) in learning about the Texas Reconstruction. They had troubles with acknowledging Black people as free men and women. There were many politicians coming up with ways to keep those who had been enslaved from receiving recognition or education or opportunities...known as Jim Crow laws.
There were also some other people who helped by donating land for schools, as well as land for communities to build on and farms that were available for "truck farming" - where usually the Black farmers would get a portion of the crop that they raised.
But the actual announcement that the Civil War was over was the cause for Juneteenth...not the actual Emancipation Proclamation as is being given out in publicity for the new national holiday.
The Emancipation Proclamation, issued by President Abraham Lincoln on Sep. 22, 1862, announced, “That on the 1st day of January. A.D. 1863, all person held as slaves within any state…in rebellion against the U.S. shall be then, thenceforward and forever free."
Lincoln freed the slaves on New Years Day of 1863. Of course the Confederate leadership didn't share that information with their slaves, or maybe even to the soldiers who were giving their lives for the cause of slavery. My Texas ancestors weren't at all happy with Lincoln becoming President...and I've got a copy of their hand written letters that said as much.
Lee surrendered his Confederate Army on April 9, 1865 at Appomattox Court House. But there wasn't a way that all the various battlefields received that information right away. It wasn't until May 23 near Brownsville, TX that the last battle occurred...known as the Battle of Palmito Ranch. The news about the Appomattox surrender had finally arrived and many of the soldiers just went home by May 26 when Lt. Gen. E. Kirby Smith's Army of the Trans-Mississippi surrendered at Galveston TX.
"After the Civil War ended in April 1865 most slaves in Texas were still unaware of their freedom. This began to change when Union troops arrived in Galveston. Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger, (Union) commanding officer, District of Texas, from his headquarters in the Osterman building (Strand and 22nd St.), read ‘General Order No. 3’ on June 19, 1865. The order stated “The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves.” With this notice, reconstruction era Texas began."
In Texas, Juneteenth was celebrated as the Texas Black's first knowledge of Emancipation Day. Until that announcement, the slave owners probably were keeping it secret from the slaves.
It was first celebrated publicly, then more privately until the mid twentieth century. In 1979 June 19th became a Texas Sate Holiday.
This marker stands in Galveston TX to commemorate Gen. Granger's proclamation as quoted above. The marker was erected in 2014.
Incidentally, my great great great grandparents were Grangers from New England, I wonder if we were related to Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger.
Today's quote was the sign above in Galveston TX.
Friday, June 18, 2021
A sky to love
What a sky! Foreground has US 70 and the train track...looking south toward Big Windy Mountain, I think.
Thursday, June 17, 2021
Eating on a patio
We got take out at Cousin's Cafe', which is Cuban food! Actually we could have eaten inside, but there really wasn't room at the 6-7 tables! So behind the next door shop is a little patio where we were invited to eat. It was hot in the sun, but we found a shady spot.
Cute fake sunflowers cheer up the fence!
This is the doorway that we came through to the patio.
You must cherish one another. You must work — we all must work — to make this world worthy of its children.
PABLO CASALS
Wednesday, June 16, 2021
Peonies have it
These huge blossoms hung over the sidewalk precariously. I tried to prop them up...but the adult daughter of the woman who lives next to where these flowers grow (not planted by her) decided to "clip them and bring them inside." So everyone else didn't get to see them.
Incidentally the management later sent out a memo which included "don't pick the flowers." I wonder if the daughter read it.
These beauties below, were near another neighbor's apartment, and they are another kind of rhododendron.