Pink Saturday - Beverly at the blog "How Sweet the Sound" hosts Pink Saturday. Let the color pink inspire you!
I admit it, I'm a weather wimp. Although I grew up in the steamy Midwest, I've been spoiled, living more than 18 years in Seattle, where it's temperate and pleasantly moist, and in Los Angeles, where it's temperate and dry - and when it's hot, it's a dry heat.
Here in Northern Illinois, we're re-encountering that feeling when you walk outside an airconditioned space and hit a wall of hot pea-soup heat.
July has brough 100+ degree temperatures and thunderstorms to this part of the country. The moisture in the air, though, keeps the plants hydrated and keeps the landscape green. Heat-loving flowers are thriving - like these bright pink zinnia, growing in flower beds at Geneva's Island Park.
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Thursday, July 28, 2011
A rainy morning
I went out this morning hoping to beat the heat for my daily walk. It had been raining most of the night, with thunderstorms, but by morning the rain let up enough for me to go out. I crossed the Fox River on State Street, and then took a flight of stairs down to Island Park, on the East side of the river.
Labels:
Fox River Valley,
Travels
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Still unsure, at my age
We're staying at a wonderful boutique hotel in the small town of Geneva, Illinois. The furnishings are elegant, and there is a view of the Fox River from our room's balcony.
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| A good place to walk in the morning |
We had a wonderful meal in the hotel restaurant, and came up to our room for a nice soak in the lavish bath. Such enjoyment and luxury!
Labels:
Travels
Thematic Photographic - Big
Carmi at Written, Inc., posts a photographic challenge each week called Thematic Photographic - this week's theme is "BIG."
This gleaming glass tower rising up over the Southwark in London is called The Shard London Bridge. When it's finished in 2012, it will be the tallest building in the European Union.
It's called "The Shard" because its architect, Renzo Piano, likened it to a shard of glass. Rising up in the sky like a splinter, its glass facade and panels will reflect back the sky so that the massive tower changes as the weather changes.
Sometimes you can only get an idea of "Big" by pulling back. Here The Shard is seen from the Tower Bridge, where it rises up over London's egg-shaped City Hall.
Or back even more. From the Limehouse section of East London, The Shard is the most prominent landmark on the skyline.
Distance lends perspective. Seen here from a high building in New Cross in Southeast London, the London skyline shows The Shard and other prominent skyscrapers like The Gherkin. The still unfinished Shard tops them all - and it's still rising.
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| The Shard seen from the Thames River |
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| The ancient and the modern - the medieval Southwark Cathedral and its neighbor, the Shard |
Sometimes you can only get an idea of "Big" by pulling back. Here The Shard is seen from the Tower Bridge, where it rises up over London's egg-shaped City Hall.
Or back even more. From the Limehouse section of East London, The Shard is the most prominent landmark on the skyline.
Distance lends perspective. Seen here from a high building in New Cross in Southeast London, the London skyline shows The Shard and other prominent skyscrapers like The Gherkin. The still unfinished Shard tops them all - and it's still rising.
Labels:
Thematic photographic,
Travels
Monday, July 25, 2011
The view from the Pagoda
If you take a right turn at Sycamore Street, off Franklin Boulevard in the heart of touristy Hollywood, you'll find yourself on a narrow road that winds up into the hills. Pass through the gate and follow the directions of the attendant, and you'll find yourself pulling up at a valet stand in front of an amazing Japanese palace, with one of the best views in town.
Labels:
architecture,
L.A. Excursions
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Drinking in the Library
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| Cocktail made with ripe tomatoes and marjoram |
I'm sure that Cicero was thinking about books, not cocktails. But even Cicero would have loved the Library Bar at the historic Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood.
Labels:
cocktails,
food,
L.A. Excursions
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Pink Saturday - Here's Jack!
Pink Saturday - Beverly at the blog "How Sweet the Sound" hosts Pink Saturday. Let the color pink inspire you!
I ran out of time to finish my Pink Saturday post, so all I've got are some pink angel-wing begonias....and Jack. Happy Pink Saturday, everyone!
I ran out of time to finish my Pink Saturday post, so all I've got are some pink angel-wing begonias....and Jack. Happy Pink Saturday, everyone!
Labels:
Pink Saturday,
Weekly Jack
Friday, July 22, 2011
Staying cool
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| 6:57 pm |
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| 7:00pm |
But here in coastal Los Angeles County, we're having a cooler than usual time. In a way, it's an extension of our usual June Gloom. Mornings are cool enough to need a sweater to walk the dog. When I drive to work down the canyon, I descend into fog and sometimes even have to use the wipers to clear the mist from my windshield.
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| 7:03pm |
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| 7:05pm |
You can watch it in real time.
Labels:
Topanga
Thursday, July 21, 2011
A real treat
Last night I had an unexpected treat. My department at work had been offered free tickets to the final dress rehearsal of the new Cirque du Soleil production, "Iris."
I carpooled with a co-worker, and it took us 2 hours to get from Santa Monica to the Kodak Theatre at Hollywood and Highland. It was five minutes till curtain by the time we parked. We dashed up the escalators from the huge parking garage, hoping to get to the Will Call for our tickets before the show started - and then we rushed inside through the first set of doors.
How lucky we were! We found seats in the lower orchestra section, only six rows from the front! As we watched, the aerialists soared directly over our heads!
"Iris" is subtitled "A Journey Through the World of Cinema" - and it evokes the history of movies. It dazzles with a fast-paced blend of live action, video projection, and amazing feats of circus skill. What better place to see it than on Hollywood Boulevard?
The show started off strongly, with an aerial duet that took my breath away.
Photos were not allowed, so I only snuck a few before the show started. But here is the Cirque's own highlight video to give you an idea.
"Iris" is supposed to play a long run at the Kodak. If you visit Los Angeles, check it out. There's nothing more fun than having trapeze flyers bungee cord above your head!
I carpooled with a co-worker, and it took us 2 hours to get from Santa Monica to the Kodak Theatre at Hollywood and Highland. It was five minutes till curtain by the time we parked. We dashed up the escalators from the huge parking garage, hoping to get to the Will Call for our tickets before the show started - and then we rushed inside through the first set of doors.
How lucky we were! We found seats in the lower orchestra section, only six rows from the front! As we watched, the aerialists soared directly over our heads!
"Iris" is subtitled "A Journey Through the World of Cinema" - and it evokes the history of movies. It dazzles with a fast-paced blend of live action, video projection, and amazing feats of circus skill. What better place to see it than on Hollywood Boulevard?
The show started off strongly, with an aerial duet that took my breath away.
Photos were not allowed, so I only snuck a few before the show started. But here is the Cirque's own highlight video to give you an idea.
"Iris" is supposed to play a long run at the Kodak. If you visit Los Angeles, check it out. There's nothing more fun than having trapeze flyers bungee cord above your head!
Labels:
circus,
The theatre
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Take Courage
Seen in the Southwark neighborhood of London. I should enlarge this photo and frame it and put it up on my cubicle wall.
(Courage is a brewery, This is an old advertisement for ale!)
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| Pub in New Cross |
Labels:
Travels
Monday, July 18, 2011
Thanks for Sharing!!
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| Cast bronze cell phone by Rick Oginz |
The man in front of me has a knit cap pulled down over his greying hair. His casual clothes, his full beard and a tan mark him as one of the early morning surfers I see in the water during my morning commute - or at least I assume that. He's got a package of blueberries and a tall plastic water bottle in front of him on the moving belt. He's holding his cell phone up to his ear and talking, loud.
"Well, babe, see the thing is you want to live in West Hollywood, but I don't...No, babe, it's just that you're into one thing and I'm not. You're not into what I'm into, so that's the way it goes.....well, I don't want to live in Florida, either...."
The cashier scans his items, and he swipes his card and inputs his numbers into the pad while he keeps talking. He never looks at her, not once.
"I'm not going to live my life doing something I'm not into....Well, if it's like that, you should just go ahead and file the divorce proceedings. No, I don't want to go into counseling - we did that last year and look what good it did....well, babe, I don't know what to tell you."
He grabs the handles of the plastic bag, and walks out of the store, still talking. "You do what you need to do...."
The cashier glances at his back, shrugs and then says hello to me and scans my groceries.
It's a peculiar thing. Someone just aired his intimate domestic quarrel with a half a dozen fellow human beings, all the while failing to acknowledge the existence of the person right in front of him.
"Thanks for sharing, huh?" I murmur to the cashier, and she smiles. "Thank you," she says. "Have a good day."
"You too," I say.
When I get out in the parking lot, I see him drive off in a Lexus SUV, phone still held to his ear, still talking.
Labels:
funny
Sunday, July 17, 2011
The Wapping Project
Saturday, July 16, 2011
Pink Saturday - watermelon salad
Pink Saturday - Beverly at the blog "How Sweet the Sound" hosts Pink Saturday. Let the color pink inspire you!
What's pink, cool and refreshing for summer, yet sophisticated enough to serve company? Watermelon salad.
This one is watermelon, basil, feta cheese and pistachios, served at Gordon Ramsay's gastropub The Narrow, on the banks of the Thames River in the Limehouse area of London.
We enjoyed it at a windowside table, looking at the river. The clouds threatened, but the storm never came.
This Pink Saturday, we're staying home, due to Carmageddon! Have a great weekend, all!
What's pink, cool and refreshing for summer, yet sophisticated enough to serve company? Watermelon salad.
This one is watermelon, basil, feta cheese and pistachios, served at Gordon Ramsay's gastropub The Narrow, on the banks of the Thames River in the Limehouse area of London.
We enjoyed it at a windowside table, looking at the river. The clouds threatened, but the storm never came.
This Pink Saturday, we're staying home, due to Carmageddon! Have a great weekend, all!
Labels:
food,
Pink Saturday
Thursday, July 14, 2011
Super potatoes
We saw these beautiful purple and gold potatoes at the stall of Weiser Family Farms at the Wednesday Santa Monica Farmers Market. Their pretty coloring is only skin deep - the flesh inside is pale and starchy like a russet potato. The farmstand recommends them as a great baking potato.
What do you call purple and gold potatoes in Los Angeles?
Laker Bakers, of course!
What do you call purple and gold potatoes in Los Angeles?
Laker Bakers, of course!
Labels:
food
The end of life as we know it.
"Carmageddon" - that's what they're officially calling it.
This weekend, starting around 7 pm on Friday, July 15, the California Department of Transportation is going to close the 405 freeway through the Sepulveda Pass, until Monday morning, July 18.
The 405 will be closed between the 10 and the 101 freeways so the DOT can take down a bridge in the process of widening the freeway.
With the 405 closed, the entire west side of LA, including Santa Monica, Brentwood and UCLA will be forced to travel on surface streets - or not at all.
Not at all is more like it. We're staying home. Because - believe it or not - our winding, two-lane mountain road is the next road through the mountains west of the 405. Which means it will be the first thoroughfare chosen by anyone who needs to go from the Valley to the beach.
People are coming up with some ingenious ideas, though. My favorite? JetBlue is selling tickets for flights from Burbank airport to Long Beach airport - for only $4! The flight takes about 35 minutes - pretty darn good, I'd say!
Here in Topanga, we've laid in supplies and we're having a "stay-cation." We've invited our neighbors for a potluck barbecue on Sunday.
Labels:
Topanga
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
American ignorance?
I always wonder who those people were. But yesterday I was talking to someone I've known for at least a year, and she surprised me.
We were catching up after a month of being out of touch. I explained that I'd been traveling, and that we went to London, England. My friend had been at a family gathering in Lake Tahoe. We both told little stories about our stay.
I told about the weather. During our London stay, the weather had been very unusual - lots of rain, one really hot day, some surprisingly cold days, and one day of really fierce thunderstorms. After a bit of back and forth, my friend asked, "So, in London, it's their winter now, right?"
My friend wasn't sure which hemisphere Britain was in.
My friend is in her mid thirties; she's smart, talented and has a good job. She hasn't been to college, but she certainly graduated from high school without trouble. Yet her grasp on basic geography - where is Britain located? - came as a shock to me.
What do you think? Is this common? Have you encountered similar examples of ignorance? And - playing the devil's advocate for a moment - does it really matter, if she has a good life in society?
*Update - misspelling fixed. Thanks Gary!
Labels:
funny
Monday, July 11, 2011
Summer pleasures
These pretty flowers are Helenium, and since they were photographed in England, they are probably the well-known garden hybrid called "Moerheim Beauty."
This genus is native to Texas, Northern Mexico, and the Southwest of the U.S. They are members of the Aster family. Somewhat drought tolerant, they like full sun and look great with other hot, dry summer flowers like dahlias, yarrows, black-eyed Susans, and crocosmias.
I love their cheerful bright color and the prominent round central cone - it feels like a chenille-covered button under your finger.
What says "summer" to you, in your personal landscape?
This genus is native to Texas, Northern Mexico, and the Southwest of the U.S. They are members of the Aster family. Somewhat drought tolerant, they like full sun and look great with other hot, dry summer flowers like dahlias, yarrows, black-eyed Susans, and crocosmias.
I love their cheerful bright color and the prominent round central cone - it feels like a chenille-covered button under your finger.
What says "summer" to you, in your personal landscape?
Labels:
flowers
Sunday, July 10, 2011
Warm beer
The grey-haired man in black accepted the glass of beer from the bartender, but then he tasted it and placed it back on the table.
"This beer is too warm," he said.
It was a Sunday, just after noon, and the Dog and Duck pub in Soho had just opened. The landlady was cleaning up the place after a raucous Saturday night. "It's not supposed to be cold," she said, taking him for a tourist unaccustomed to British pubs.
"I know that," said the man, irritated. "But this one is too warm."
"It's the same as all the others. We keep them at 14 C." She was having none of it.
"it's too warm," he said again. He set the glass on the table, turned and walked out of the pub, down the narrow street and away.
The landlady smirked and muttered at his back.
The other customers shrugged, watched the black-clad figure diminish down the street, and sipped at their own glasses of ale or cider. "Pushy bastard," said someone.
After a moment of silence - "D'you know who that was?" asked the man sweeping up in the corner. Everyone looked at him. "That was Terry Jones."
We all looked down the street again, but the former Monty Python comic was no longer in sight. But the glass of beer remained.
"This beer is too warm," he said.
It was a Sunday, just after noon, and the Dog and Duck pub in Soho had just opened. The landlady was cleaning up the place after a raucous Saturday night. "It's not supposed to be cold," she said, taking him for a tourist unaccustomed to British pubs.
"I know that," said the man, irritated. "But this one is too warm."
"It's the same as all the others. We keep them at 14 C." She was having none of it.
"it's too warm," he said again. He set the glass on the table, turned and walked out of the pub, down the narrow street and away.
The landlady smirked and muttered at his back.
The other customers shrugged, watched the black-clad figure diminish down the street, and sipped at their own glasses of ale or cider. "Pushy bastard," said someone.
After a moment of silence - "D'you know who that was?" asked the man sweeping up in the corner. Everyone looked at him. "That was Terry Jones."
We all looked down the street again, but the former Monty Python comic was no longer in sight. But the glass of beer remained.
Labels:
Travels
Saturday, July 9, 2011
Pink Saturday - Columbia Road
Pink Saturday - Beverly at the blog "How Sweet the Sound" hosts Pink Saturday. Let the color pink inspire you!
The Columbia Road Flower Market fills the street, with racks and stands full of cut flowers and potted plants. Everything from exotic orchids to mundane annuals is here for sale, and loudly hawked by Cockney-voiced vendors competing with one another for your business.
"Doy-ann-thuss! Two fer a fiver!" shouts one man, cradling an entire flat of garden pinks in his beefy embrace. "You've got lob-eee-lee-ah loike that, dah-lin', shood be four pots a fiver!"
At the stall next door, another vendor shouts, "Any two for three pounds!"
Further down the row, another vendor holds up a standard-pruned fuchsia in full bloom. "They's stolen that's woy they's so cheap! A fiver!"
I marveled at these blue Eryngium alpinum - I've never been able to grow this plant, and here were bunches of them.
Further down, a display of dahlias.
Or hydrangeas catch the eye.
As you squeeze through the crush, you might decide to take a break, buy a coffee or a pastry, and explore the little shops.
This one entices you with a phrase of poetry chalked on the door.
Inside, you find rustic pots, packets of seed, garden furniture, hats and tools.
You can even buy compost by the scoop here.
Other shops sell clothes, jewelry, or artwork.
We relaxed a bit before wading back through the tightly packed scrum. Such a sea of color and scent! It was irresistible! Though I knew it would be foolish to buy potted plants, unable to take them back to the US, there's no reason not to have cut flowers. I bought two bunches of peonies to bring back to our flat.
They lasted for days, filling our rooms with scent.
If you visit London, don't miss the Columbia Road Flower Market.
Labels:
flowers,
Pink Saturday,
Travels
Friday, July 8, 2011
Thursday, July 7, 2011
Xanadu by the sea
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| The Royal Pavilion seen from the park and gardens |
He bought a modest farmhouse a short walk from the pebbled beach, and as the years passed he improved upon the property. In 1815 he engaged the architect and designer John Nash, who turned the modest Sussex farmhouse into an extravagant, almost hallucinogenic, sprawling fantasy palace known today as the Royal Pavilion at Brighton.
In the midst of the town of modest attached houses and pubs, pale stucco turrets, minarets and bulging onion domes rise over a green lawn and winding, flower-filled gardens. The exterior style is an amalgam of Saraceno-Indo-Islamic Arabian Nights on acid. The interior is one of the finest and most overblown example of Nineteenth Century Chinoiserie ever created.
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| Entry |
And then you enter the Banqueting Hall. It's a huge domed room encrusted with decor - the walls are painted with Chinese scenes, the windows crested with pelmets fashioned to resemble writhing dragons; great banana leaves of bronze and gilt top the dome and from them a huge silver-gilt dragon bearing a crystal chandelier is suspended.
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| Click to "embiggen" |
Tourists are not allowed to take photos of the interior, so you'll have to be content with this contemporary print of the Banqueting Hall.
Nash's designs were state of the art. The building was built with the latest technological advances - a frame of iron clad in stucco was innovative and allowed for the fanciful domes and shapes of the building. Even the kitchens were designed with the latest - a specially engineered contraption used the power of the wind to turn dozens of trussed birds roasting on spits. Nash allowed the kitchen slaveys a bit of fancy, too - the cast-iron columns in the room are topped with palm leaves, as though trees are holding up the high ceilings.
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| Kitchen at the Brighton Pavilion (sorry, no larger resolution) |
| The Prince Regent, painted by Thomas Lawrence, circa 1816 |
The upper floors include the suite Queen Victoria used the few times she came to Brighton. You can even see her maid's bedroom and the royal commode. There are also suites that housed George IV's brothers, the Dukes of York and Clarence, decorated in a searingly vivid chrome yellow, with dragon-patterned panels.
Victoria disliked Prinny's elaborate fantasy, finding it vulgar and not a good place to raise children. In 1850 she sold the building to the City of Brighton at a cut-rate price - after stripping it of most of its furnishings and fixtures.
The town used it as assembly rooms - no doubt the tourism trade provided a good market for meetings, ballrooms and the like. King George IV's fantasy became the first modern example of a municipally owned event facility.
As we toured the upper rooms we also learned of an odd, paradoxical yet fascinating episode in the history of the Pavilion. Between 1914 and 1916, at the height of the First World War, the City of Brighton provided housing for military hospitals in municipal buildings like schools and exhibit halls, and also the Royal Pavilion. The Royal Pavilion became a ward serving wounded troops from the Indian Corps - soldiers from Britain's colonies in India. Over 4000 men were treated there during this time.
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| Another view from the garden |
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| Painting by C C H Burleigh showing the Music Room used as a ward |
You can see a Flickr set of images of the Brighton Indian Military Hospital at this website HERE. A nice article about those days is HERE.
After the Second World War, the City began an effort to restore the Pavilion. Queen Elizabeth II returned on loan much of the furnishings that Victoria had removed. Today, the house is beautifully preserved and conservators are trying to recreate its original furnishings and decor.
If you're interested in interior design; a fan of chinoiserie, or interested in seeing what might have been the first true fantasy-land environment, you'll love a visit to the Royal Pavilion at Brighton.
Labels:
architecture,
history,
Travels
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