Monday, December 30, 2013

Iceberg


Once upon a time, back in the nineteen-sixties and seventies, the most popular kind of  salad lettuce you would be served here in NZ was the Iceberg lettuce. Thousands of them were grown every year, particularly by home gardeners, because they were easy and bulked up well in hot weather. They were usually picked as whole plants, then kept in the 'fridge along with tomatoes, cucumber and salad cream. Then along came the Italian-type lettuces, with colours and shapes, picked as individual leaves, and salad as we knew it changed, but due to some spirit of nostalgia in the supermarket the other day I bought one. And I love it! It's all about the crunch; modern gourmet-type lettuces just don't have it, no matter how fresh they are. And Iceberg is bland, (which is probably why we got bored with it.) There's very little taste, which makes it a great accompaniment for stronger tastes - smoked salmon or grilled lamb, for example. (I did draw the line at dressing it with salad cream, though. I've never really liked salad cream, even when its called mayonnaise, except with potato salad.) Iceberg lettuce, rocking salads since the 'sixties.

Sunday, December 29, 2013

The antidote

The book I've just been reading is The Antidote: happiness for people who can't stand positive thinking by Oliver Burkeman.


The question posed is "Does the pursuit of happiness make us miserable?" and Burkeman's persuasive answer is Yes, it does. He delves into Stoic philosophy, Buddhist teaching, business psychology and the Mexican celebration of mortality that is the Day of the Dead, among a host of other things. He recommends an alternative "negative path" to happiness that involves embracing failure, pessimism, insecurity, uncertainty and our own mortality, a more realistic approach than the endless 'motivational' sessions and 'goal-setting' of one branch of pop-psychology. These upbeat brain-washings can do more harm than good. One example he uses is the 1996 disaster on Mt Everest, where obsessive goal-achievement overrode the climbers' commonsense. The goal becomes the person, and any denial or failure of that goal means self-negation.
  I enjoyed this book's location at the intersection of philosophy and psychology, and Burkeman makes his points without over-emphasising them. A 'just right book', not too clever nor too simplistic.

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Rain, rain


Boring day today. This is the fourth day of rain; it started on Christmas Day in the afternoon and has been going ever since. This seems to happen every year. Just as the apricots get ripe, (also just as everyone heads off on their camping holidays) we get this misty or pouring rain which sends brown rot onto the fruit. One year I remember picking them in the rain while not quite ripe, so that at least I could have the cooked fruit and not all the crop would be ruined. It looks like that may happen this year too. I also have a lot of blackcurrants that need picking, but they seem less prone to fungal diseases - maybe tomorrow will be better.
  The photo is of a past harvest of apricots, about four years ago. Sadly, both of the beautiful puss-cats (Eddie, left and Emma, right) are now deceased.
  Watched the BBC teaser for the new 'Sherlock' series - how I miss those guys! Weird to think that they are now also Bilbo and Smaug. Hope to go to The Hobbit soon, with a group of similarly-minded nerds from work. That's what I love about my fellow librarians; they really are my soul-tribe. We can talk about daleks and dragons, sing old advertising slogans (Bernina, Bernina!) and discuss Stoic philosophy, and we all know what we're talking about.

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Boxing Day bits and pieces


Been doing a bit of painting; this is Castle Rock, which I can see from my spare room window. Its Maori name is Te tihi o Kahurangi, the abode of the sky-god, which is much more poetic. The rain was clearing away from the south. Kahurangi is very dramatic, a good weather indicator. I look at him every morning and evening and several times during the day. 


I've also been baking. This is my very own recipe, Apricot, almond and sour cream ricotta cake. I had to make use of some cream that was turning, some leftover bottled apricots and almond meal that had been sitting around for a while (but not rancid), plus fresh ricotta that I bought from the market on Sunday. It's gluten-free and delicious. Next time I'll put baking paper in the bottom of the tin, though, as it stuck even to the non-stick, buttered pan.


And a lovely poppy photographed in first light. I hope to harvest the seed from these for baking. There's a great Jewish recipe called Hamantaschen (Haman's pockets) made to celebrate Purim that uses a poppy-seed filling for pastry pockets. My German teacher made them for us many years ago in high-school, and though I remember hardly any German, I do remember these - very delicious.


Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Merry Christmas from a grumpy cat


                     Tried to "festive up" Thomas - he wasn't happy. 

                   Merry Christmas to all our friends and readers.

Monday, December 23, 2013

Removal



I've removed the daily saying of the Dalai Lama from the bottom of my page, not because I disagree with him, but because his wise words came with an advert saying "Who doesn't want to make more money with smart apps?" - not quite what I want, and somewhat contradicting His Holiness' message, which was about selflessness. I've been uncomfortable with this add-on for a while, and wish I could get the Dalai Lama without the ads, but Google won't let me, posing an ethical dilemma that I have now resolved with the remove button. And posted a calming picture of Okuti Valley instead.

Italian-English


Just been reading Corriere della sera online, as a way of learning a little more Italian. I can get the Google translation as well, so it's quite fun to compare what I think I understand with what it really is. Google translates literally, though, word for word, so sometimes the words don't make sense: I'm not sure how 'barista' becomes 'tom-tom' for example. But it is a painless way of learning new vocabulary. If my addiction to news can be harnessed to learn a new language, so much the better. I also have a set from the library "Perfect your Italian" which has interviews and conversations at real speed, which is very useful and stretches my knowledge. It is marketed for 'intermediate' speakers of Italian, but I think I may be safely classed as 'sub-intermediate' at the moment. The weird thing is that when I switch back to reading English, it takes a second to make sense again! There is just a little brain lag, where the brain has to renegotiate its mother-tongue.
  And I got to hear Italian the other day at the local market. An Italian couple have started making and selling cheeses; while I was buying some an old guy came up and started talking to the proprietress in Italian. I don't quite know what he said, apart from the last word, 'sentiamo' which meant 'we listen'. Or perhaps 'we feel' or 'we think'. Not knowing the context, it's hard to say. But I could wish them 'Buon Natale'.




Saturday, December 21, 2013

Today

Today I got stuck in to my neglected front garden. The front bed is infested with twitch and is hell to get out, so the management plan is to weed it, then mulch it heavily. I've also put in some winter (!) vegetables, leeks, onions, celery in the vegetable garden. The yellow courgette has succumbed to virus and being eaten by something so that's gone. The weather changed this afternoon though, and now it is cold and windy. So I've gone to bed early. Les Nouveaux Riches (Mr Machinery) over the back fence have a loud party going, but I've got Christmas carols in my headphones so they can boomp, boomp all they like. I hate this time of year; every halfwit in the city thinks it's time to do silly things that normally they probably wouldn't. It's no coincidence that September is one of the most common months for babies to be born. I think of them, poor little things, being concieved left, right and centre, by parents who are too drunk, drugged or besotted to think about their actions. Still, twas ever thus, I suppose.

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Garden and shelfies


Poppies in the potager



Marina di Chioggia was probably the wrong choice of pumpkin for a small garden



Pears are coming along


The shade corner with the Edwardian urn



The conservatory; not really attractive but I've tried to soften it with plantings


Shelfie in my bedroom; this all fell off the wall in the earthquake and landed on my bed


Hallway shelfie


Spare room shelfie

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

In defence of real books

http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/opinion/columnists/rosemary-mcleod/9533538/Plastic-not-as-fantastic-as-real-books

In this morning's Press, a piece by Rosemary McLeod.


And The Guardian brings you "shelfies":

http://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2013/dec/17/forget-selfies-we-want-to-see-your-shelfies

Feeling more Christmassy


Feeling a little more Christmassy tonight. I've got King's College Chior on, singing away, and the candles are lit, and the house is full of the scent of Christmas lillies. (One of the great things about having Christmas in summer is the flowering of the Lillium regale, which we call Christmas lillies, sort of a little reminder of the Annunciation, which started everything off.)  We had our final team meeting at work yesterday, which doubled as our Christmas party, now that our employers are taking the road of austerity (or so they say). We had lots of lovely food, a quiz and a Secret Santa, so it was one of the best team meetings ever.
  And today I had a visit from a dear old friend. (Old as in have known her for a long time. And she's 91). She's just a little younger than my Mum, but now "has a hip" and walks with a stick, so I was able to pass on Mum's stick that I had kept, a proper ergonomic one, and Mum's record player, since hers doesn't work now. She bought me some preserved ginger in a lovely blue and white jar, some Ferrero Rocher and a bottle of wine. We had a lovely talk. She's such a cheerful person, always looking on the bright side, a joy to be around. She hopes to live to 100 to see her grandchildren graduate from Uni. I think she'll make it.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Change adaptive? Nah.

Oh dear. A bit depressed tonight. I don't usually talk about my work life, but... Both of my jobs are changing so fast they are becoming jobs that I no longer want to do. One is becoming increasingly technological, the other increasingly customer-driven and money-centred. Neither of these things have much interest for me. It seems as if a certain kind of person with a certain kind of mindset is taking over the world. And I had the very annoying experience this week of being treated like a total idiot by a new, much younger colleague, who thinks that just because she is much younger she is naturally much smarter. Oh, she's just so bloody professional! Terribly efficient and trying to impress, which she thinks she will achieve by dissing the sad middle-aged wreck that she sees is me. Of course, manners and general courtesy are such a waste of time, aren't they? Time that could be better spent getting ahead in one's career.  So tonight, I feel really old. I've seen the writing on the wall; soon the world will have no place for me or others of my kind. I am going the way of the dinosaurs, the sooner I shuffle off the better for the Bright Young Things who are taking over.
  But one day they too will be old and fat and past it. This is my consolation. Whenever some pouty young Miss pouts at me I think "Your day will come, too, sweetie". As I am now so will you be, prepare for old age and irrelevance, and follow me.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Search by voice!

Yes, my new browser gives me the option of searching by voice. Problem is, it will only search if you speak with an American accent, and that American accent as in New York/Midwestern/Californian, not Southern American or any other English accent.
It comes up with wonderful things when I speak in my own flat New Zild accent:
"The Press" became "Chris" or "The Priest"
"Christchurch Press" became "christmas tree"
"Rachmaninov" became "right money"
"Florence, Italy" became "Laura" unless spoken with an American accent. Thusly "Flawrrence, Iddaly" found what I wanted.
So, although this seems a wonderful innovation, for most of the world's Internet users it's worse than useless.
Hours of innocent fun, though.

Monday, December 9, 2013

Book review: The white forest by Adam McOmber


   Usually I try to review books that I've enjoyed. Well, here's one I didn't enjoy.
I was attracted by the cover and the hope that it would be another enjoyable  Victorian- era novel a la Sarah Waters. It starts out quite promisingly, with believable characters and something that might become an interesting plot, but about three-quarters of the way through all believable parameters are thrown away and I felt as if I was reading someone's drug trip, mental breakdown or a rewrite of the Book of Revelation. It's as if the author suddenly gave up and thought he'd just throw a lot of weird stuff in, which might (he hopes) be interpreted by the reader as significant and meaningful. Good fantasy has an internal logic of its own; its world is believable on its own terms, but this....? It's a lot like the last episode of Lost, which raised more questions than it answered and was really lame. ("Oh, so they all go into the Light, do they? How very original. Not.") With this book, you're left asking "Yes, but how did Ariston Day and the Fetches get into the Empyrean? And why did Nathan become a white ape? And what are the white apes anyway? And how did Madeleine and Pascal get back to London from the Empyrean, considering that the Empyrean is not on the same plane of existence? Did they walk? Did they get a cab? " Sorry, Sarah Waters it aint. Reading the readers' reviews on Goodreads I obviously missed something; everyone else seemed to think it was a work of genius, but I can't concur. If I was being really nasty I would say it was subjective claptrap, trying hard to be deep and profound.
   Best avoided.

Friday, December 6, 2013

Morning garden

 
Took these shots this morning while the light was gentle
 
 
Poppy from seed taken during a trip to the Cape Campbell walkway several years ago. On the last day we stayed in a beautiful old house called Freeth House, so these I've named (unofficially) "Freeth House".  

 
This beautiful aquilegia just popped up in the vegetable garden.

 
Digitalis mertonensis

 
The lilies are starting to bloom. This is always the first one.
 
True to the forecast, today is going to be very hot and probably windy. The plan of attack is to do some gardening out the back this morning while it's shady, then move to the front, with a diversion to tidy the composting area at some stage. And tie up the tomatoes and the beans. Knowing me, I'll probably lie around all day with my nose in a book. (Reading a weird one at the moment - The White forest by Adam McOmber - sort of a Victorian fantasy/steampunky thing, not sure yet if I like it).
 
The Heathcote River bridge is closed today, so all the heavy traffic is being bypassed down Opawa Road. It's so noisy, all banging and clanging as the trucks go over the earthquake bumps in the road. Thank the Goddess that we don't have to put up with it all the time. I can hear Mr Machinery over the back fence throwing things around, so no doubt he's got a DIY project on the go, off course they've all got to be finished by Christmas so... goodbye peace and quiet. And with his horrible noisy kids there too, the overweight teenager bellowing like a bull calf and thumping his massive body into the (really quite small) swimming pool. What a waste of fresh water.  Ghastly people, why don't they buy a block in the "lifestyle" suburbs, then they could really go all out.  
 
So poor Nelson Mandela has died, and now we have the hypocritical right-wing pollies saying how wonderful he was and how well they knew him, the same people who would have been quite happy if he'd stayed in prison forever. Terrible to think that of his ninety-something years, TWENTY-SEVEN were spent in some of the world's worst prisons. I don't know how he was able to survive, physically or mentally; this fact alone makes him a remarkable human being.


Sunset

 
Very beautiful sunset tonight. We get these particularly when the wind is in the North-west, a hot wind called a Foehn wind, which comes across the Tasman sea from Australia, picks up moisture as it travels, then dumps the rain on the west coast of the island as it lifts over the mountains. Once over the mountains it races over the Canterbury plains getting drier and hotter; it's our classic hot-weather summer scenario, the only time we get really hot weather here. And beautiful sunsets with calm warm evenings.

 
The orange-pink light makes orange-pink spectrum flowers almost fluorescent - lovely effect.
Tomorrow will be another hot day like today. I spent most of it in bed with a tummy bug though, so hopefully I'll see more of the golden weather tomorrow.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Cyber world

Had to change my browser - don't really understand the whole browser thing, but my Blogger template looks odd ("unsupported browser" apparently) and Blogger recommended I use another browser, so I've gone with Chrome. Weird thing was there was a Windows update yesterday, after which the Blogger site started doing weird things, displayed a cryptic error message, something about my run time not being compatible with my ghs.exec.html. Doh??? as Homer Simpson would say. I hate the way all these things happen behind the scenes; it's like your car suddenly decided to become a different make and model, all on its own, and now the gears are column change and manual.
  So if this displays funny at your end please let me know.
  Sadly, the blackbird's nest is gone. Himself got up there this morning and pulled the nest down, with the poor birds unable to stop him. I guess this is just nature taking its course; birds are programmed to nest, but cats are programmed to hunt. He's now sleeping the sweet sleep of the unguilty and untroubled on my bed. Pity I can't reprogramme his browser too.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Thomas with Graham Thomas


'Graham Thomas' has gone a bit mad the last few days, so I picked a big bunch for the house. Thomas happened to be sprawled out on the carpet so I got them both together. Thom's such a good cat, he sleeps quietly on my bed some nights, but sometimes makes me feel too hot then I put him in the living room to sleep; he doesn't seem to mind where he's put, so easy-going. He's being a great hunter at the moment. A blackbird has made her nest in the plum tree, so he goes up to see her; I hear the poor bird's alarm call and rush out with the twiddle-stick to distract him. (Twiddle-stick; an old piece of stick I use to run over the lawn imitating a mouse). So far, so good, but I don't hold out any hope for the blackbird chicks. Thom knows just where to find them when he wants them.
  Watching the second series of 'Sherlock' at the moment, I didn't see it when it was on TV. It's highly enjoyable, very escapist stuff. I've just watched the one with Irene Adler, tonight it's the Baskerville Hounds getting the treatment. And ooo, that evil Moriarty!

Friday, November 29, 2013

Resurrection

Resurrection by jwyg
Resurrection, a photo by jwyg on Flickr.
Piero della Francesca's Resurrection of Christ, named by Aldous Huxley as the world's greatest picture.

Serious planning for my trip to Italy next year (April-May). I've booked to stay in Sansepolcro, a small town that houses this painting in its Museo Civico, plus other Piero masterpieces. I've never been a big fan of Piero, so won't be doing the whole "Piero trail", but feel I must make an effort to see this. Christ resurrected and militant; the expression on his face is so uncompromising, so hard, no namby-pamby Christ this one. Magnificent.

P.S. I notice from my statistics that the horrible vampirestats has temporarily relinquished my blog. (This is a referrer that refers sites on to pornwatchers.) No doubt they will return; here's hoping they get an eyeful of this vengeful Jesus ready to whop them with his flag.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Reading binge

 
"Double delight" - with a perfect attar of rose perfume.


I've been having a real reading binge lately. I've just re-read "In this house of Brede" (Rumer Godden) that I talked about a few blogs back. Really enjoyed it, practically read it cover-to-cover at one sitting, only interrupted by the necessity of going to work. Also read another Ariana Franklin "Grave goods" and another Sarah Dunant "In the company of the courtesan". Now on  to a Georgette Heyer I've never read "The unknown Ajax" and half way through "Parade's End" (Ford Madox Ford), so the old reading muscles are getting a very good workout. We've had horrible wet weather this week and it's forecast to continue, so I'll just keep going with the books. Just reminded of my Mum, who used to say "What do people do, who don't read?", and thankful that she let me read as much as I liked. Her own mother was convinced that reading was a waste of time, and once threw one of Mum's books into the fire! Horrible.
    Having thoughts about the ideal public library I would create if I had the werewithal. It would have the atmosphere of a gentleman's club, leather seats and beautiful art-deco reading lights. Admission would be by subscription only ("keep the riff-raff out" as Basil Fawlty would say). There would be no computers or Skyping, and you would have to hand your cellphone over at the front desk. Any infringement of a very long set of rules would get you a demerit, and if enough demerits were accrued, out you would go, banned for a year. There would perhaps be a coffee-room, which would also serve tea and classic baking treats, where people could discuss the books they had read in quiet and learned tones, but there would be no eating in the reading areas. There would be no taking away of books, but you could have them bookmarked and shelved for your next visit. And the Librarian's word would be final. The bookstock would all be classics from before the nineteen-sixties (when the literary rot set in, IMHO - that annoying concentration on experimental form at the expense of plot). It would be interesting to see if anyone would turn up!
  Think I'd call it The Bookery.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Potager pics

 
Here is the pumpkin patch, Marina di Chioggia and a couple of strays that have germinated in the compost. I think I might put a couple of tomato plants here as well, as the pumpkin will grow out and down and the tomatoes up.

 
Giant red cabbage 'Red Rooster' goes well with the vivid magenta of Lychnis coronaria. I'm not that keen on cabbage and grow these mainly for the coloured leaves! Vigorous plants of 'Russian Red' tomatoes planted too close together in right foreground.

 
Looking the other way - potatoes under the apricot tree have done very well this year. Not many apricots though - I didn't summer prune last year and the tree is very leggy.
I ate the first of my broad beans last night with cavolo nero and roast pork. Today I had planned to get a lot of work done in the garden, but a nasty north-easterly wet fog has come in, so I'll have to scale Ironing Mountain instead. Blah!

Monday, November 18, 2013

More roses



 
 
The magenta rose is 'Big Purple', the pinks from an old rose that was planted before I bought the house. Now I'm going out to put 'Smelly' on my vegetables before I go to work. 'Smelly' is my name for a disgusting but fertile concoction of cow poo, seaweed, comfrey and fish bits that I brew up with water in an old paint pail (securely lidded). It stinks to high heaven but the plants seem to like it. My zucchini plant leaves are looking very yellow, so hopefully 'Smelly" will provide them with the will to live.

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Greengage summer

Haven't blogged for a few days because life is very humdrum at the moment. Worked, finished painting the toilet, washed the car, you know the sort of thing.
  I've been re-reading Rumer Godden's The Greengage summer and enjoying it. I read quite a lot of her books when I was a teenager, most of them seem to have a theme of loss of innocence and coming of age so perhaps they were appropriate. "In this house of Brede" started off my life-long fascination with nuns and the conventual life, and several of her other novels are set in India, another fascination of mine. I'd like to get hold of the film of Greengage summer, there is a short clip on youTube, featuring Susannah York and an absurdly young Jane Asher. "Black Narcissus" was made into a film, wretchedly, I think; I bought it once, but ditched it. Some of the Indian characters weren't Indian but obviously just cast because they were dark-skinned. The femme fatale was particularly bad. Same with 'A passage to India' which featured Alec Guiness in brownface as Prof. Godbole - awful. I felt embarrassed for him; what ever persuaded him to take such a part? Money, I suppose.
  Also re-re-re+ reading 'Persuasion' - think I know it by heart now. Just can't get enough of the wonderful Captain Wentworth!

Monday, November 11, 2013

Roses, roses

My idea of luxury - to have many, many roses.
 
 
'Peace'
 
 
'Crown Princess Margarethe'

 
'Gruss an Aachen'

 
'Buff beauty'
 

 
The stunning 'Crepuscule'

 
'Penelope'

 
'Sally Holmes'
 
 
 
And a pretty dress that I got from 'Time and time again' - fits perfectly and was only $27.50!

Friday, November 8, 2013

Sculpture on the Peninsula

 
"A young woman in blue" - Margriet Windhausen
 
Today I went out to Charteris Bay to see Sculpture on the Peninsula, a large annual sculpture exhibition held as a fundraiser for Cholmondely Children's Home, who offer residential care for children in temporarily difficult circumstances. Their home was condemned after the quakes, and this money will help to ensure that the new buildings will be largely debt-free. The works are all by professional sculptors and artists, some of our best among them. We could also vote for our favourite, to win the Viewer's Choice Award. "A young woman in blue" is mine. She evokes the kore of the Greek Archaic era, serene and unfussed, focussed on something way beyond the viewer.
 
 
 
The site for the exhibition is the farm estate of Loudon, and the works are dotted around, some hidden in farm buildings, this one on the skyline.

 
This is not a sculpture but should be - the old travelling PA system. Marcel Duchamp would have loved this. The line between sculpture and 'real' things has become increasingly blurred; people look at an object unsure of whether it's an exhibit or not. You could leave a wheelchair or a bicycle in the middle of a field and it would be a sculpture.



 
"Burden" - Sam Mahon. I think this is a comment on bringing up children; the parent goes through a huge balancing act to ensure that the child's life can be undisturbed.

 
Corrugated iron cow - don't know the artist.

 
"Rabbit on top" - Paul Dibble

 
These ceramic beehives were intriguing, covered with pictures and historic images and maps, with sayings in Slovenian and English, inspired by the artist's visit to the Bee Museum in Radovlijic.

 
"World apart" - Graham Bennett

 
"Top spot" - Hannah Kidd

 
My other favourite. "Harestand Edition No.4/6" - Julie Ross. Light, elegant and joyful.

 
"Teaching an old dog new tricks" - Hamish Southcott

 
"Laid" - Eggs et al. Sited outside the real hen-house, it looks like the hens' pile of rejects.

 
I don't know what this was called or who by, (apologies to the artist) but it was very attractive to the children present. Lots of photos were taken with this steel plated bear and his (her?) shopping trolley.
 
All of the works are for sale, alas, way out of my reach financially, but good to see them in such a spacious setting, and such a wealth of sculpture, almost 200 items.