Monday, June 25, 2012

The Fraser River



With snow melt and bountiful rain, the Fraser River is overflowing its banks, and once again, my husband and I risk being labeled as scofflaws.

Given our shared fascination with water in all its forms, we took ourselves up to Derby Reach this weekend, one of our favourite Langley spots to visit.


 Over the years, we've seen this river at times fiercely frozen, and even seen it dwindled markedly in the heat of summer...but never have we seen it overflowing. Mindful that flooding puts people at risk, we simply could not resist a chance to see the river cresting.






 We found the parking lot full, though the camp ground host had sensibly pulled out his trailer, and large signs made clear the inadvisability of entering the camp sites.


In our defense, there were a good number of us squeezing by the warning signs for a peek.




 Still, it must be said that of the dozens of adults and children lining the riverbank, we were the only two who ploughed along the flooded road to see how deep the water got...well above my knees, as we went further along!


 Somewhere in the heavens, I'm sure my mother looked down, tsk-tsking about her flighty daughter, (who never had an ounce of sense), and bemoaning the muddy ruin of a perfectly good summer frock!


Sorry, Mum...but we enjoyed our whimsy. Of course, when the weather took a turn with wind and rain battering against my bare arms and sodden dress, I might have questioned the veracity of our decision, had I any sense indeed.



 We saw one adventuresome couple who'd carried in wood and built a fire...several fishermen who threw in their lines with optimistic enthusiasm, and when the sun put in a very brief appearance, it became just another Sunday in the park. It seems we're all so desperate for summer on the Lower Mainland that we'll celebrate the season, no matter what the weather throws at us!







With any luck, the river has done all it means to, and further damage can be averted.  Our prayers go out to those in peril and our heartfelt wish that they stay safe.




Wednesday, June 6, 2012

An Afternoon at Bear Creek Park




 After a cool,  wet spring, the sun graced us with a blazing, though short-lived, appearance a few weeks ago.








In celebration, my son and I spent the day at Bear Creek Park, one of the many green sites that earn Surrey its title,  'City of Parks'.



 While I dislike having my photo taken, Jules was only too happy to pause and offer a smile as we wound our way to the Chapel In The Woods, a quietly reverent spot. 
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I'm told weddings are actually held here,  though I've not managed to be there at  the right time.


            Flowers and foliage were vibrant in their new growth, the warm sun urging them to preen and proudly  show off their fresh beauty.






In the Japanese Garden, I took into my soul this wonderful poem penned by Korean-Canadian writer/theologian, Rev.  Byung Sub Van, and carved onto stone. It is both simple and                        profound.




 As usual, I was captivated by water and the ever-changing ripples caused by a light wind.



             
           
                 
                 







             



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Of all the gardens, I most enjoyed the West Coast Native Walk, as the varied hosta and lacy fern are more beautiful to me than the most exotic of orchids.
 
 It was fitting to sit a while at this serene                      pavilion with its crystal-clear pond 
    and letter-inscribed glass roof.

 A few final shots, a miniature train ride and a visit to the Art Gallery completed the afternoon beautifully. My one regret was that the only wildlife we encountered were these metal fellows in the
playground.



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Of such simple pleasures are memorable afternoons made.....


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Thursday, April 5, 2012

The Mona Lisa Smile


Because Leonardo's "Mona Lisa " was in the news recently, I thought to dig out a story I wrote some years ago. I was in an art history course at Kwantlen University, (where I also work), and to my great delight, the instructor offered that we might write a story about a Renaissance masterpiece in place of a carefully documented essay.
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 I happily rattled off this tale...

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As she was wont to do in times of stillness, Lisa surrendered her thoughts to childhood. It was easy, here in her parent’s house, to look back on the past. The warm air around her, heavily sweet with the scent of wisteria, was the same air she had delighted in as a child. The verdant slopes that rolled lazily away from the villa’s doors were the same lush hills she had roamed so frequently as to know them by heart.

          She pictured herself, once more, in the middle of her father’s vineyard, tracing with her eyes the orderly rows that stretched away from her on the south-facing slope. They seemed to her nearly endless, snaking lithely down the hillside, only to merge at last with the silver strands of olive trees in the valley below. She knew if she turned left, she would find herself in a meadow flush with wild poppies and sun-baked grass; if she went right, she would come to the kitchen garden where multi-hued clumps of lavender and thyme eagerly released their pungent odors as one brushed against them.

          Watching over all was Villa Vignamaggio, whose gold-tinged glow spoke both of the sun going down and of the warm haven that waited within. It had been the center of the earth for her, this land her father owned and the home he had built on it for his family.

          Dimly, she became aware of outside music nudging its way into her reverie, but Lisa brushed it aside. She heard only the sound of ivy-clad cypress trees tugged about by the wind and the ever-present rustling of grape vines heavy with the need to shed their bounty. This was the music of the earth; this was her concert and she needed no other. It was surely this sense of belonging to the land she felt nowhere else, that had made her request the portrait sittings be done at the family villa. She had come home to a place that some part of her had never left.
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          Abruptly, a startled squeal rent the air, forcing her back to the present. A small striped kitten leaped nimbly onto her knee, to then nestle deeply into the velvet folds of her gown. It was not hard to deduce that her youngest pet had worn out his welcome with the massive wolfhound sprawled tiredly across the feet of his mistress.

          Lisa stifled a smile and resisted an urge to fondle the purring bundle in her lap. Signore Da Vinci was most stringent and would not wish her to ruin the pose he had so carefully crafted. She had found herself inordinately pleased when he’d told her she was the only woman he knew capable of sitting still for any length of time: he was not one inclined to bestow his compliments lightly.

          She tried to catch the master’s eyes, hoping to find approval there, but he remained hunched behind his easel, lost to everything but the process of putting paint to panel.

          The afternoon sun slowly slanted its way out of sight. Servants lit candles that gently filled the room with light and warmth, and still Lisa remained on the balcony where she had been seated, her arms resting on the balustrade, her back to the sky. She felt a chill run across her shoulder as the evening air took on dampness. Nights in the hills were as cold as the afternoons were warm: it was this balance that made the grapes grow succulent and fat.

          From the corner of her eye she could see a bright fire built by the workmen at the edge of the fields. Stoked with trimmings from the olive trees, it carved out a fragrant sanctuary in the gathering darkness. Frequently as a child, she had sat beside such fires, comforted by the easy laughter of the labourers, content at the end of their long work hours. Inevitably, the day came when her mother took her to task for doing so.

          “It is unseemly for one of your station to frolic with the peasants as you do, young lady.  I will not have it...do you understand? Why, I’ve been told you even go to the cellars to see how the wine is made.”

          Lisa opened her mouth to speak of the pleasure she took from the damp brick floors and the smell of fermenting grapes; but her mother cut her off before she could get out a sound.
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          “Such nonsense! That is men’s work and none of your affair. You need only concern yourself with learning to run a household so that your servants do not cheat you, and your husband may be assured of returning each day to a home that is well-ordered and inviting.”

          Lisa tried to respond, but was again forestalled.

          “Enough!” came the admonishment. “You will fetch your embroidery and we will speak no more of this matter.”

          Lisa turned away in tight-lipped dejection. As she started across the terracotta floor, her mother’s voice carried after her clearly.

“You are not beautiful, daughter,” came the oft-heard reminder. “It is true that where beauty is missing, a humble and dutiful nature may nicely take its place - yet, as you are neither humble nor dutiful, I despair of making a suitable match for you. Is your father to support you all his days?”

          Lisa’s fine eyebrows rose sharply and she turned back in indignation.
         
“Why, I shall support myself, of course,” she responded adamantly. “I do not need a husband for that. Indeed, I do not see what need I have of a husband at all.”

A short gasp escaped her mother’s lips, and in the charged silence that followed, Lisa watched the colour drain from the rouged cheeks; saw the lips take on a paleness that was never allowed. That gasp was followed by one of equal surprise from Lisa as her mother’s hands shot out to grab her by the shoulders and give her a hard shake.

“Insolent girl! Do not get above yourself, or no one will have you.”

In spite of this dire prediction, Lisa made a good match when her time came to marry. Though Francesco del Giocondo came with no title, it pleased Lisa’s mother well that he was wealthy and much respected for his role in civic politics. He had become the city’s leading silk merchant: Signora Gherardini never passed up a chance to tell anyone who might listen that her son-in-law supplied the finest bolts of silk to the leading citizens of Florence, foremost among them, the Medici family. Moreover, with fabric as Francesco’s stock-in-trade, she was, herself, able to wear gowns of stunning opulence. Why her daughter continued to dress so plainly, when hers might have been the finest wardrobe in the province was beyond all understanding.

          For her part, Lisa surprised herself by coming to love the older Francesco. She believed him to be a better husband than most. He solicited her opinions, and listened thoughtfully when she spoke of things that ventured beyond the domestic. Never had he treated her as anything but an equal. She had borne him three handsome children, though her heart ached always for the daughter she would not see grown, and would never forget.

A cloud seemed to pass over her soul and left its reflection in her eyes. She simply could not accept that her late child would remain lost to her forever,

Once, when Signore da Vinci stopped work to jot a note in his well-thumbed journal, Lisa had been unable to stop herself from asking what he was writing. Without looking up, he’d replied absently, “I am observing that to plunge things into light is to plunge them into the infinite.”

It had taken her breath away, that sentence. She’d understood instinctively that the breadth of life was more than she could see, more than she could even imagine. She’d felt the wholeness of it, the knowledge that all was one; that nothing was ever truly lost. If hope had a voice, it lay in the words she had just heard.
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A sudden stillness brought her back to the present, where Signore Da Vinci had put aside her brush and was watching her with studied intensity. As she met his look with her own frank and open one, his hands rhythmically stroked his long beard and the air between them cracked with life.

“Ah, Mia Dona,” the old painter at last crooned. “You are not entirely of this world, I think.”

Lisa felt the shadow lift from her eyes. Once more, a scolding voice seemed to fill her head. Lisa had come home on the summer afternoon of her twelfth birthday to find herself in trouble yet again.

“Lisa – where is your cap?” her mother had demanded harshly. “Are your guests to arrive and find you with damp, flushed cheeks and stains on your bodice?”

Lisa had sighed impatiently at the familiar tone, which made Signore Gherardini angrier.

“Do not scowl in that unladylike manner,” she’d continued, pulling twigs from Lisa’s loose hair. “What I tell you is for your own good. You will earn no one’s admiration if you do not learn to temper your bold ways.”

Lisa’s face twitched at the remembrance of her mischievous ways, knowing that the feisty girl was not as far removed as some might imagine from the respectable matron she’d become. Now, as then, she tilted her chin resolutely forward, slid her eyes slowly aside to focus on a point only she could see, and allowed the corners of her mouth to pull up in the smallest of smiles.

Signore da Vinci said nothing more but with a twist of his own lips, took up a brush to capture the light and the life that lay in that elusive smile. 
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Monday, April 2, 2012

Watching Boats




When my sons were small, we spent many hours on the edge of construction sites, watching the work in progress. 
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They never seemed to tire of dusty 
dump trucks and lean, lofty cranes that dwarfed all alongside them.
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While I think they have mostly gotten over their fascination with heavy machinery, I'm not sure my husband has. For yesterday's outing, he suggested a trip to North Vancouver's  Lonsdale Quay, a bit of a distance from our Surrey home. As drives are what we do, I happily agreed.
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He had been intrigued by a photo in the weekend paper of a massive ship-transporting vessel heading out to a scrap yard in China. This ship is, incredibly, loaded with a full-size log barge, an equally huge log ship and eight old tugs perched on top of those.
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The Development Way will take 25 days getting to China, where it will then lower a floating deck under the water and lift the ships up to release them in place. Wouldn't that be a process to watch?

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We were thoroughly intrigued when the tide eventually pulled the ship around to let us see the full scale of how wide this load really is.
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Of course, I took many  pictures of the waterfront, having a
personal fondness  for shiny red tugs and orange container cranes.
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 I was pleased to be able to include cormorants in some photos, since I see them infrequently, as well as our well-known Convention Centre  and ever-present ferries and freighters.



Since my eye is drawn more to details than the big picture, the fountains, murals and mosaic floors of the market competed for my camera time. 










Even the clean lines of the inner building seemed lovely to me.


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Alas...my eternal quest for the perfect seagull picture
 came no closer as I got this fellow on our way out
...one day I'll be satisfied with a shot!
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Friday, March 16, 2012

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 Since my children were small, I've made a great fuss over St. Patrick's Day. It was not something we did growing up in Ireland, but as a treat to amuse my wee ones years ago, I began to colour their milk and potatoes green for this special day.
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The notion exploded, and really...how was I to know they would never get over it? Now a table of full-grown adults, and whomever else we can con into it graciously invite, gather at table each year to partake of green wine and a motley assortment of viridian-tinged victuals.





 It is great sport to check out the reactions. We've had guests who were quite unable to eat at the sight of dark, mushy peas crowding up against lividly-tinted spuds...and skinless chicken that glows fluorescent green on the outside and is fish-belly white when cut seems to repel everyone.


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 It must be said, however,
 that others have fit
 right in, stuffing
 food into their mouths 
in the knowledge that 
it all tastes just 
the same 
anyway.
These people we embrace  
into the family!
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This year, scheduling conflicts force us to postpone celebrations
 until next week...cancelling was not an option, apparently!
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 I leave you
 with a few photos of previous dinners, and a collage of my girl
 Meeghan in her
 St. Paddy's Day pullover.

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But should you hear the raucous sound of the Pogues somewhere in tomorrow's celebrations, you'll know I'm having a grand oul' time singing along with them!
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Have yourself a wonderful day!

Thursday, March 1, 2012

I'll Show You Mine If You Show Me Yours!

On this morning of World Book Day, I made a list of the books I’ve read recently. It amused me that the mix I came up was so eclectic – everything from children’s books to novels to true-life accounts of heart-breaking reality. This has piqued my curiosity… does everyone bounce from genre to genre as I do, and indeed, how many people are as passionate about reading as I am?

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Books are the world to me. They took me through a troubled childhood by being my friends when I had no other and my refuge when the world asked more of me than a child should have to give. As an adult, they have been my joy and my inspiration…a continual celebration and exploration of life in all its diversity. In the thrall of bookish delights, an idea began to form in my head.
While I have never hosted an event or a challenge, I realized I would love to know what my blogging friends are reading, and what part books play in their lives. If I shared my favourite reads might others be enticed to do the same?
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To that end, I offer, “I’ll Show You Mine If You Show Me Yours.” I’m talking about book lists, of course! The following is a random list is of what I’ve read over the last six or eight months. These are the first fifty titles that came to my head, though I’ve gone through many more, clearly the reason I’m accused of always having my nose stuck in a book!


Non-Fiction:
1:  The Faith of A Writer by Joyce Carol Oates (2003)
2:  The Writing Life by Annie Dillard (1989)
3:  Mystery Of The White Lion by Linda Tucker (2001)
4: An Unconsidered People:The Irish in London by Catherine Dunne (2003)
5:  Allah, Liberty & Love by Irshad Manji (2011)
6:  Sky Burial (Love and loss) by Xinran (2004)
7:  Little Princes (Helping children in Tibet) by Conor Grennan (2010)
8:  Wildlife Wars (African wildlife) by Richard Leakey (2001)
9: The Stoning of Soraya M. by Freidoune Sahebjam (1994)

Autobiography/Memoir

10: Between A Rock And A Hard Place by Aron Ralston (2004)
              (Grim but stunning)
11: Are You Somebody: The Accidental Memoir of A Dublin Woman  by Nuala O'Faolin (1996 )
12: A Long Way Gone:Memoirs of a Boy Soldier by Ishmael Beah (2007)
13: The Wilderness Family (More African wildlife) by Kobie Krüger (2001)
14: Swing Low: A Life (A father's death) by Miriam Toews (2003)
15: The Bone Woman (Forensic anthropology) by Clea Koff (2004)
16: One Hundred Days of Solitude (Buddhism) by Jane Dobisz (2008)
17: Lambsquarters: A Handmade Life by Barbara McLean (2002)
18: My Reading Life by Pat Conroy (2010)


                          Fiction:   (These are a few of my favourite authors.)


19: Tracks (Brilliantly written)  by Louise Erdrich (1988)
20: Fall of Giants  by Ken Follett (2010)
21: Port Mortuary by Patricia Cornwell (2010)
22: Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger (2009)
23: Another Kind of Life by Catherine Dunne (2002)
24: The Help by Kathryn Stockett (2009)
25: Water For Elephants by Sara Gruen ( 2006)
26: Minding Frankie by Maeve Binchy (2010)
27: A Blade of Grass by Lewis DeSoto (2003)
28: Afrika by Colleen Craig (2008)
29: The Camel Bookmobile (Based on a true story) by Masha Hamilton (2007)
30: Afterlight by Alex Scarrow (2010)

 Children's Literature: (Because good writing is good writing, no matter who 
it's intended for, and  because I harbour a secret wish to be a children's author.)

31: The Boy In The Striped Pajamas
by John Boyne (2006)
32: Because of Winn Dixie (A gem of a book) by Kate DiCamillo (2000)
33: The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane by Kate DiCamillo (2006)
34: The Tale of Despereaux by Kate DiCamillo (2006)
35: The Tiger Rising by Kate DiCamillo (2001)
36: The Magician's Elephant by kate DiCamillo (2011)
37: The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau (2003)
38: The City of Sparks by Jeanne DuPrau (2004)
39: The Prophet of Yonwood by Jeanne DuPrau (2006)
40: The Diamond Of Darkwood by Jeanne DuPrau (2008)








Classics: (Because my husband bought me a Kobo eReader pre-loaded 
with classics, I reread some favourites.)

41: Pride and Prejudice
by Jane Austen (1813)
42: Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë  (1847)
43: Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe (1852)
44: Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy (1877)
45: The Mayor of Casterbridge by Thomas Hardy ((1886)
46: The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde (1895)
47: The Romance of Tristan and Iseult by M. Joseph Bedier (1900)
48: Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham (1915)
49: Moby Dick by Herman Melville (1922)
50: A Tree Grows In Brooklyn by Betty Smith (1943)







I'm really hoping you will share your reading list with me, whether it contains forty titles or four. And if you have only one book that's touched you lately, let me know about that one...it  may be just what I need at this moment in time.
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If you choose to post on your own blog, do leave the link in my comments so I can visit, or simply leave a message if you'd prefer. On this World Book Day, lets celebrate in grand style!