I caught sight of the female Hummingbird this morning too. She's so small and delicate it seems like she can't be a real bird. She looks more like a big bug. I got a text from DD this afternoon that she saw a Hummingbird at her feeder in KY for the first time. A banner bird day for her!
This little House Finch watched me do yoga this morning. It sat on the step and gazed in the window. I'm guessing that it was watching its own reflection but I thought it was pretty funny for it to stay there for as long as it did and not be chased away by my flailing around. House Finches have a taste for grape jelly too but I don't begrudge them their share.
I need to keep an eye on the
lantana pots because the Hummingbirds visit it too. My grandma used to grow lantana. I remember liking the colors and shapes of the flowers when I was a kid.
I sat on the patio this morning and finished the May Preemie Hat #1. It was lovely to sit out in the sun listening to the birds and knitting.
Then I cast on a slip stitch hat in some leftover bulky yarn. In one more round of the ribbing (maybe two) it'll be time to add in the second color and start the pattern part. I'm using red as the second color (what a surprise), I think the gray and red will look nice together.
20 May--Barbara Malcolm, Tropical Obsession.
On her way out of town
Mona decided to stop at a gallery to kill time until four o’clock. Maybe I will take up painting, she thought,
standing in the mildew-y smelling blast from the Cinnamon Gallery's overworked
air conditioner. I could not be any worse than this guy. She bent forward and
squinted at the artist's signature smeared in the lower right corner of the
framed canvas. Winfred Danie it read, written in what looked like a child's
handwriting. Was Winfred Danie someone influential's nephew, acclaimed as the
family prodigy, and given a show in return for a juicy donation? Mona shook her
head and glanced around looking for a sheet describing the art. There it was a
haphazard pile of poorly Xeroxed pages flung in a cut-down corrugated carton.
Very chic, she thought as she stooped to pick one up. She frowned at the grainy black and white
photo of the artist placed at a slight angle atop the sheet of text describing
him and his works. She had met this man at one of Jack's influence-currying
cocktail parties. The man in the picture had been quite convinced that Mona
herself was on the appetizer menu. It had taken the better part of a Mai Tai
poured down the front of his slacks to convince him otherwise.
Susan stopped in at a gallery on
her way home too. She had need of a gift
for her daughter-in-law Elke’s birthday next month. Instead of the Cinnamon Gallery on a side
street in Playa she went to the Windward Gallery in Antriol across the
island. Susan stood in the gallery
staring at the framed and matted photos. She did not go to the galleries on the
island often. Most of the art for sale was patently made for sale to tourists.
Tourists who most often left their good sense--and good taste too she thought--at
home. What seemed to sell best were naive paintings of colorful flowers, palm
trees, and romantic depictions of island life. Too many of them to count made
their way onto cruise ships and airplanes to hang in middle-class living rooms
as a reminder of a few days' holiday in the tropics. But these photos were
different.
Jorge Provenza, whoever he was, had
used light like a paintbrush and his camera lens as his canvas. What might have
been a trite picture of a lone flamingo at sunset in less imaginative hands had
become through Jorge's eye an abstract shape emerging from flame-colored water.
No sky, no trees, just barely ruffled water and that distinctive
silhouette. This would be a perfect gift
for Elke. Susan leaned closer. Damn. Not for sale. She would
have to keep looking.
Susan’s drive back home
across the island gave her time to think about the young woman she had just
left. Mona seemed mature and confident,
yet she had let herself be coerced by Jack Spencer to be his ornament, his
property for years. What could be
lacking in her that kept her from running away from the little martinet? She would have to see about getting Mona
involved in the Art League while they were here on the island. A few nights in the company of the Tsarina
and her cronies and even the most timid of women would change.
(I don't know what's up with the line formatting of the novel part tonight.) It felt weird this morning to realize when I was writing down the day's to-dos in my bullet journal that I really didn't have anything I needed to do today. I was kind of stuck for a minute, then I picked up my knitting and started filling the time. I got the hose timer set so that I don't even have to remember to water the garden although now that I think of it, I want to get out the balanced fertilizer and sprinkle some on the bales, just to give my plants a little welcome-to-the-bales boost. I can do that tomorrow and have something to check off my to-do list.
--Barbara
1 comment:
Ah yes -- the "To Do" list. I love any kind of list and that one is especially gratifying because you can check off the accomplishments and feel so satisfied. All the pictures today are first on my gratitude list. Love the birds -- who all love jelly! And the cute little "birdie with a yellow bill" so intent on you (or his reflection). Everything very, very nice.
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