"Ah summer, what power you have to make us suffer, and like it!" - Russell Baker
ONE VERY HOT DAY by David Halberstam
It was like that
afore
you
got here.
It's like that
now.
And it's going
to be like that
when you and me
are gone.
Departed and left......
and so
there is only one rule
swing with it
and smile..........
Photographs 2021
Thursday, July 29, 2021
Sunday, July 25, 2021
WILD BLUE YONDER
".....and everything burned in blue, everything a star..."
"I need the shade of blue that rips your heart out..." - Cathy Crowley
"Wouldn't it be strange to have a blue sky....." -Jeanne DuPrau
"Let my toes teach the shore, how to feel a tranquil life, through the wetness of sand.." -Munia Khan
"I want to go to the ocean....." -Laura Chouette
"Cloud disappeared, Moon appeared, to make my sky less blue..."
"Wispy blue clouds blue quickly across the sky,blue sky topped the Antwerpen blue of the ocean..." -Sharon Brubaker
"The ocean is weird here. It's the wrong kind of blue.."
Photographs 2021
- Pablo Neruda ( 100 love sonnets)
"I need the shade of blue that rips your heart out..." - Cathy Crowley
"Wouldn't it be strange to have a blue sky....." -Jeanne DuPrau
"Let my toes teach the shore, how to feel a tranquil life, through the wetness of sand.." -Munia Khan
"I want to go to the ocean....." -Laura Chouette
"Cloud disappeared, Moon appeared, to make my sky less blue..."
-Sw. Chidananda Tirtha
"Wispy blue clouds blue quickly across the sky,blue sky topped the Antwerpen blue of the ocean..." -Sharon Brubaker
"The ocean is weird here. It's the wrong kind of blue.."
-Nicola Yoon (The Sun is Also a Star)
Photographs 2021
Labels:
Blue Sky,
Discovery Passage,
nature,
Ocean,
Quadra Island,
Tyee Spit
Tuesday, July 20, 2021
BLACKBIRD PIE
"Blackbird singing in the dead of night.You were only waiting for this moment to arise..." -the Beatles
My father called it Blackbird pie, way back when. Blackberries were something my mother loved to pick in late August. She would be amazed that we can now get farm blackberries earlier. Without the picking. But back then we used to have to pick them way out at a church graveyard. I hated going out there. It was so far. The canes were so scratchy. wasps buzzed. Snakes slithered. We loaded up the old Dodge with basins galore and a large metal ladder. The old car had holes in its floorboards. You could see the road swish by. I could stick my toes down into the holes. Feel the wind on them. Shudder.
My mother wore her engineer overalls. Stained with blackberries, bleach, paint, etc. She drove in them. Stopped for gas on the way. Got out of the car to open the gas cap. Someone else pumped gas....those were the last years of THAT before we had to do it ourselves. The other car behind us thought she was an employee. They asked for gas. I slumped down in my seat. Stuck my toes into the holes in the floorboard. Then we'd be off for the blackberry patch. My mother sang as we went. Her out of pitch songs wafted out of the open car windows.
The Blackberries were located in a cemetery on the outskirts of town. The church it was connected to is now long gone. Years later, they put up a parking lot and aerobics studio around the old gravestones. But back then, I imagined zombies and vampires coming to get us. My mother grabbed her long metal ladder and laid it up the massive bramble wall. Cars whizzed by overhead. People trundled by on the sidewalk above. She climbed that ladder like a pro and her hands flew. Berries plopped into basins . They sounded like bullets.
I think I ate more then I picked. My mother's face was streaked with purple juice , on her hands, on her overalls. Basins were full. But my mother couldn't get down from the ladder. One of her suspenders got caught on the ladder rung, and she swung from it like a pinata, shrieking for me to cut her down. She managed to rip off the offending suspender and plopped into the brambles; just scratched up a little but fine. She laughed and retied the scarf on her head. She was pleased with our haul.The ladder, the basins of blackberries all piled back into the car. On the way back I stuck my toes into the holes on the floorboard. It was starting to rain, and my toes got wet. My mother made Black bird pies, Blackberry cream pies, tarts, crumbles, Blackberries and cream, Blackberry muffins, jams, jellies, even juice. She mended the overalls. Much to my chagrin. She wore those overalls to the store later that week to get varnish to do the downstairs floors and when she took a pie to the couple across the lane, and the neighbours on the other side as well.
The next August we returned to our blackberry haunt, like we did every year. It was all torn out. The graves were still there. But the church was gone, the little forest was gone. A construction sign had gone up. My mother got out of the car. She just stood there for a while. She finally told me how she used to come to this place with my dad. They'd pick blackberries almost every year. Only then he was the one wearing the overalls. That's why she wore them. They were his. And this was their place. Where they would pick enough blackberries to make him Blackbird pies.......
BLACKBIRD PIE: 6-8 cups fresh blackberries ( Better than frozen which can make for a gooey pastry), 2 pie shells ready to roll out, 1 cup sugar, 4-6 tablesp flour, sprinkle cinnamon, sprinkle almond flavouring,
Pile into pie crust. If you want to blind bake the bottom you can first. But I didn't. Worked well.
Top with pie shell and slash with a knife.....
Melt a little bit of butter and spread over top of pastry.
Sprinkle with raw sugar
Bake at 400F for about 30 minutes. Really does a nice job on the pastry. Cover with foil and then lower temp to 350F and back a further 40 minutes till the juices bubble out. Serve plain or with vanilla ice cream.......
Photographs 2021
My father called it Blackbird pie, way back when. Blackberries were something my mother loved to pick in late August. She would be amazed that we can now get farm blackberries earlier. Without the picking. But back then we used to have to pick them way out at a church graveyard. I hated going out there. It was so far. The canes were so scratchy. wasps buzzed. Snakes slithered. We loaded up the old Dodge with basins galore and a large metal ladder. The old car had holes in its floorboards. You could see the road swish by. I could stick my toes down into the holes. Feel the wind on them. Shudder.
My mother wore her engineer overalls. Stained with blackberries, bleach, paint, etc. She drove in them. Stopped for gas on the way. Got out of the car to open the gas cap. Someone else pumped gas....those were the last years of THAT before we had to do it ourselves. The other car behind us thought she was an employee. They asked for gas. I slumped down in my seat. Stuck my toes into the holes in the floorboard. Then we'd be off for the blackberry patch. My mother sang as we went. Her out of pitch songs wafted out of the open car windows.
The Blackberries were located in a cemetery on the outskirts of town. The church it was connected to is now long gone. Years later, they put up a parking lot and aerobics studio around the old gravestones. But back then, I imagined zombies and vampires coming to get us. My mother grabbed her long metal ladder and laid it up the massive bramble wall. Cars whizzed by overhead. People trundled by on the sidewalk above. She climbed that ladder like a pro and her hands flew. Berries plopped into basins . They sounded like bullets.
I think I ate more then I picked. My mother's face was streaked with purple juice , on her hands, on her overalls. Basins were full. But my mother couldn't get down from the ladder. One of her suspenders got caught on the ladder rung, and she swung from it like a pinata, shrieking for me to cut her down. She managed to rip off the offending suspender and plopped into the brambles; just scratched up a little but fine. She laughed and retied the scarf on her head. She was pleased with our haul.The ladder, the basins of blackberries all piled back into the car. On the way back I stuck my toes into the holes on the floorboard. It was starting to rain, and my toes got wet. My mother made Black bird pies, Blackberry cream pies, tarts, crumbles, Blackberries and cream, Blackberry muffins, jams, jellies, even juice. She mended the overalls. Much to my chagrin. She wore those overalls to the store later that week to get varnish to do the downstairs floors and when she took a pie to the couple across the lane, and the neighbours on the other side as well.
The next August we returned to our blackberry haunt, like we did every year. It was all torn out. The graves were still there. But the church was gone, the little forest was gone. A construction sign had gone up. My mother got out of the car. She just stood there for a while. She finally told me how she used to come to this place with my dad. They'd pick blackberries almost every year. Only then he was the one wearing the overalls. That's why she wore them. They were his. And this was their place. Where they would pick enough blackberries to make him Blackbird pies.......
BLACKBIRD PIE: 6-8 cups fresh blackberries ( Better than frozen which can make for a gooey pastry), 2 pie shells ready to roll out, 1 cup sugar, 4-6 tablesp flour, sprinkle cinnamon, sprinkle almond flavouring,
Combine washed berries with sugar and cinnamon and almond flavouring. Preheat oven to 400F Add the flour .............
"If reasons were as plentiful as blackberries..." -Shakespeare
Pile into pie crust. If you want to blind bake the bottom you can first. But I didn't. Worked well.
Top with pie shell and slash with a knife.....
Melt a little bit of butter and spread over top of pastry.
Sprinkle with raw sugar
Bake at 400F for about 30 minutes. Really does a nice job on the pastry. Cover with foil and then lower temp to 350F and back a further 40 minutes till the juices bubble out. Serve plain or with vanilla ice cream.......
Photographs 2021
Labels:
Blackberries,
Blackberry recipe,
cats,
nature,
Short Story
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