
“The playful nip denotes the bite, but it does not denote what would be denoted by the bite.” - Gregory Bateson, Steps to an Ecology of Mind, 1972


Jack, playing with his newest friend Franny.



Jack, playing with his newest friend Franny.
The pink umbrella made its introductions earlier this winter. This Pink Saturday it's going on an adventure.
On the other side of the Canyon.
It was classic slapstick. I went up to the street to put the garbage cans out, and after I finished the job, I turned to go back in the house and tripped over my own feet. Down I went on the asphalt, face first. I rolled over on my back and thought, "This isn't good."
This is Pulmonaria longifolia - also known as the narrow-leaved lungwort. It's blooming today in my shady front yard, beneath the California coast live oaks. It's somewhat splashed with grit and sand from our last spate of rains, but its cheerful blue pops up at you from the woodsy floor.

Like this one.
And this one! They were everywhere! Wow!
This is NOT a chanterelle. The tell-tale difference is the gills - even aged like this one above, the gills are obvious - thin papery membranes.
Can you see the difference? These are not papery membranes, they are thicker, curved ridges. And they run down along the fleshy stem of the mushroom.
The color of the flesh is different, too. The chanterelles have a pretty, tender peachy color.
I put this mushroom on the scale. It was 10.5 ounces. Chanterlles go for around $20 a pound in high-end food markets like Whole Foods and Bristol Farms. Here's a website where you can buy them online for about $25 a pound.
[The Man I Love] and I went out to a Chinese restaurant on a recent afternoon, to one of Los Angeles' old venerable establishments, where they are famous for their "slippery shrimp" - shrimps fried crispy and then napped in a sweet-and-sour sauce that's pungent and sharp with chiles. Very old school Chinese restaurant style, but quite delicious. And they do it right.
What do you think?
The Santa Monica Mountains separate the basin of Los Angeles from the San Fernando Valley. And here in Topanga, west of Los Angeles basin, it separates the Pacific Ocean from the San Fernando Valley. Topanga Canyon is like a gouge through the mountains that connects the high valley to the sea.
This spring, on a recent morning I looked out to see the western mountains of Saddle Peak lit by the morning sun. Up at our house it was clear and bright, but down in the boulevard, it was socked in with thick fog that lay low and solid and thick, like a blanket of snow or cotton batting.
I went out to walk the dog, and within a half hour, the fog had dissipated - here it floats as thin and ethereal as a chiffon silk scarf, trailing through the eucalyptus trees across the canyon in the Fernwood neighborhood.
On another morning, the fog billowed and puffed, like the steam of a locomotive chugging up the canyon. As the train of vapor runs up-canyon, just below our neighborhood the creek forks, and the fog collides against the mesa that lies between the two creek branches, piling up, billowing and rising - sometimes to dissolve in the sun, or sometimes to engulf those of us in higher altitudes in its mist.
It's where we live. All fleeting - wait half an hour and it will change. What a great place to live.
I was visiting an antique show at a local exhibit hall. And I encountered this inviting and elegant chaise longue. Upholstered in pink velour, its frame is wood carved with floral elements, and painted in pretty colors.

It's the Santa Monica Pier on a beautiful day.
Jack is a young dog, and he loves to play with other dogs. He has a couple of neighborhood friends, but when he goes out for a walk, we keep him on the leash, so his playing is pretty controlled and constrained.
When they exhaust themselves, they lie down together, like Jack and this sweet brindle Akita-cross girlie we met the other day. She licked his face!





Here they are, spooned onto the chicken breast meat. The chicken was juicy and slightly smoky from being cooked in the Weber, and the mushrooms were perfect with them - a rich flavor and a nice meaty texture.

This vendor fans the coals beneath roasting ears of corn.
There were lots of vendors selling Los Angeles' favorite bacon dogs.
This woman was making homemade tortillas using a traditional tortilla press. She's also heating cecina, or salted aged beef, on her comal, or griddle as a filling for her quesadillas.
While just a few storefronts away, this woman was also making quesadillas, only with blue corn masa harina. Note her cart - it's fashioned from a folding stroller, with condiments and utensils in the trays and hanging in plastic bags tied to the push handle.
The old warehouse buildings with their boarded up windows are painted in bright colors - pink, blue, red - and the vendors who set up their ad-hoc shops in the alley have striped umbrellas to shade them from the hot sun of an uncharacteristically warm February Saturday. Valentines gift baskets wrapped in ribboned cellophane crackled in the breeze that fluttered the pink and pastel baby clothes hung out on display, and the tissue streamers of pinatas from the party store.
Lots of people lined up for the taco trailer that looks like its been here forever. There are CD vendors, socks and underwear vendors. People set up a box in the middle of the pavement and begin selling from it. There was a guy selling toasted nuts and seeds from small trays tied to a fancy wheeled walker.
This vendor is selling fried plantains, dressed with sauce and crema. They smelled amazing!
Paleteros, or ice cream bar salesmen, roll their carts up and down the street, their brass bells jingling. On the corner of Los Angeles Street and Fourth this little boy is fascinated with the many pictures of flavored ice cream bars.
The official L.A. Street Food Fest was too much of a success for us to deal with, but in a happy coincidence, our afternoon was spent at a Los Angeles street food festival that was a bit more authentic.
The downtown street food scene is a tier below taco trucks as far as mobility and earning potential is concerned. You can't stock much food in a shopping cart or portable cooler, and the Health Department will never countenance a propane burner mounted on a stroller. These food vendors are designed to be swiftly dismantled and hidden from the authorities if raided.
The other day I was wondering what I would chose to do, if I ever had to start a business. What product would I sell? What skill do I have that I could bring to such an effort? How much would I be willing to risk to make it a success - or just break even?