Update about blogCa

Who knew all this would happen afterwards! The winter garden in my living room.

Saturday, August 31, 2024

The sun and the moon and the stars

 My recently retired friend was game for a early morning trek.

Not on foot fortunately.

We planned on going early Thursday up on the Blue Ridge Parkway to see the sunrise. Well, I'd never seen a sunrise on the mountains here, so I thought I'd better check that off possible events of note.

She retired in January, and goes to a South Carolina beach for long weekends and sees an ocean sunrise there. I've done that too.

Then there was an announcement on Facebook that 5 planets would be in alignment with the crescent moon on Wed. Aug. 28. We agreed we'd try to see that too by going on Wed.

As it happened...



We could see the crescent moon and several stars right above my trees, though the silly iPhone messed up the setting and washed out the moonlight. I may have not held the phone still for the whole 3 seconds it took either. 

Once we got to our seats at the overlook, we could still see the moon, but the stars were harder to see as it was getting lighter out.




First light gave us plenty of light, but where was the sun?




Our cameras picked up some orange in the sky which wasn't very evident to the naked eye.



The mist in the valleys seemed to grow as it got lighter.


There were others there also to view the sunrise. Two vehicles (one a camper) had children in pajamas walking around barefoot, while they also had some food to keep them busy. A car with an old guy who was observed smoking a cigarette which fortunately didn't blow smoke our direction also stopped. He had two dogs, one on a leash. The other was tiny and the kids enjoyed him.




Yes, it takes a village even to watch a sunrise apparently.

The weather people said sunrise was at 7:00 am. We sat there as this perfectly nice dawn light was all around us, waiting for Old Sol to make his appearance.



At 7:18 it looked like it was on the verge of  appearing.

And at 7:22 it really shot into our eyes.




So I took a selfie with the sunrise, and went to breakfast.
After two coffees, a scone, and hours of being out and about, I went home and slept for 2 hours!

Today's quote:

It isn’t more light we need, it’s putting into practice what light we already have. When we do that, wonderful things will happen within our lives and within our world.

PEACE PILGRIM









Friday, August 30, 2024

Catching up from the month


Not my photo of the Aurora (nor do I know which bridge this is.)
Sharing with Skywatch Friday





A wood puzzle of a dragon book-reader with iridescent tiles.


This is the most important message I can share to individuals who can at least grow a few flowers to provide pollen to our bees. Without the bees many of our crops would not be fertilized, and then no more almonds, oranges, peaches, etc.


Sharing with Saturday's Critters



 A shame at the DNC convention last Wed. night a man used a Biden sign to hit a woman over the head who was demonstrating to stop the fighting in Gaza. Since it was caught by many cameras, it's likely he will be charged with assault.

It would really be great if Biden did something about this before handing things off to Harris.


I'm hoping these are real poppies, next to a real beach, rather than AI. But I admit they aren't known to grow on sandy beaches. I'll enjoy them, however they got there!




Today's Quote:

Like yin and yang, spirituality and physicality are two sides of creating genuine well-being.

Thursday, August 29, 2024

Love of organic architectural forms.

 Colossal just posted some photos from a house in Mexico. Casa de los Milagros, or House of Miracles.



"On the outskirts of Xalapa, Veracruz in Mexico, a striking terracotta-colored dwelling sits among patches of trees.

This "... architectural wonder’s construction process began in 1955 and took place in stages over the course of 47 years until its completion in 2002. In 2021, Mexico-based Kurdish photographer and architect Naser Nader Ibrahim captured photographs of the unique creation. Designed by the late Danilo Veras Godoy, the project’s jumping-off point was simply asking [owner, Rosalinda] Ulloa what her wildest dreams were."

I'll let you go to the site to see the wonderful interiors. It's incredible! Well, you can tell I like some of the out-of-the-box architecture in the world. I was so glad to see this home.

And then there is this charming house in France:

ICASSIETTE HOUSE, Chartres, Department of Eure-et-Loire, Region of Centre-Loire Valley, France 🇫🇷
The house was built by one man, Raymond Isidore (1900-1964) and is an example of naïve architecture made up of earthenware and glass mosaics cast in cement.




He was municipal employee of the city of Chartres for which he worked as a roadmender, then sweeper of the cemetery. In 1929 he purchased a plot of land and began construction on a one-story house for his family. Once his house was built, he had the idea of covering everything little by little. His life was totally devoted to the construction and decoration of his house and the garden. Over the next thirty years he covered the entirety of his house with mosaics. Isidore drew inspiration from Christian symbols and characters as well as his own dreams. He also built several smaller structures, including a chapel, throne, and a wall to enclose the site. Raymond Isidore's name is on the windowsill in the middle gallery.



The site was actually visited by Picasso in 1954. Isidore is seen as one of the pioneers of the trencadis style of mosaics, which is also referred to as pique-assiette.
Isidore's house has been declared an Official Monument of Historic Importance. It is now part of the Chartres Museum of Fine Arts.



(Photos credit: 1. Photo by Michael P Chang, MD, via Flickr; 2.3.4. by Author Zairon for wikimedia commons)

There are many many more homes that are either built in flowing shapes, or decorated with all kinds of things from bottle caps to glass beads!

Today's quote:

Every moment is unique, offering its own way to connect to what is deepest within us, to the wonder and mystery of being fully alive.

LLEWELLYN VAUGHAN-LEE



Wednesday, August 28, 2024

"They wanted to intimidate me, but this is important work"

So said  Lidia Martinez, an 87-year old retired educator who helps elders in San Antonio register to vote, after 9 officers of the law entered home, "seven of them men, some with guns in their holsters."

Here are two sources of information about Texas' attorney general Ken Paxton. 

Heather Cox Richardson posted this in her newsletter Letters from An American on Monday Aug 26 (same day as the article I quoted from The Status Quo below).

Voter intimidation is underway in Texas, too. On August 18, Fox News Channel personality Maria Bartiromo, who was a key figure in promoting the Big Lie, posted a rumor that migrants were illegally registering to vote at a government facility west of Fort Worth. The Republican chair and election administrator there said there was no evidence for her accusation and that it was false, but Texas attorney general Ken Paxton nonetheless launched an investigation.
In addition to feeding the narrative that there is voter fraud at work in Texas, the investigation led Paxton’s team to raid the homes of at least seven Latino Democrats. No one has been charged in the aftermath of the raids. Latino rights advocates call them a “disgraceful and outrageous” attempt to intimidate Latino voters and have filed a formal complaint with the Department of Justice.
Today, Texas governor Greg Abbott announced that since 2021, Texas has removed more than one million people from the state’s voter rolls, and said the process will be ongoing. Abbott’s office said those removed are ineligible to vote because they have moved, are dead, or are not citizens. But more than 463,000 of those on the list have been removed because their county of residence is unaware of their current address

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An interesting editorial in The Status Quo Newsletter from Jay Kuo, who incidentally is about to become a father!

Texas Is Terrorizing Voters

State Attorney General Ken Paxton’s office raided Latino Democratic candidates’ and activists’ homes under the false pretense of election security.


In November of 2020, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, an ally of then President Trump and a staunch election denier, sought to overturn the results of the national election. That effort failed spectacularly, but that didn’t stop him from putting his finger on the scale of Texas elections. 

Paxton’s “Election Integrity Unit” next went after alleged election violations, filing dozens of bogus criminal claims of election fraud, including false claims of ballot harvesting. The state’s highest criminal court threw most of those out.

Now Paxton has shifted his mode of attack, enlisting the help of a Republican DA who “referred” a case to his office. I’m curious to know on what grounds, and whether there was any coordination at work. Paxton has now used that referral as a pretext to conduct raids on the homes and offices of Latino voting activists claiming “voter fraud.” Among the targets are Democratic leaders and election volunteers. They’ve had their cell phones, computers and documents seized, and ordinary citizens are now embroiled in costly criminal cases.

Make no mistake: The charges are political and are intended to intimidate and to suppress votes under the guise of “secure elections.” Latino civil rights groups have asked the Justice Department to intervene.




Ken Paxton: Enemy of Democracy

Paxton’s long history of criminal chargesethical complaints and impeachable offenses (he narrowly escaped conviction after impeachment by his own party earlier this year) could fill an entire government ethics course. For purposes of this discussion, I’m going to focus on his election-related abuses of power.

For some important context, Paxton is a hard-core election denier. He spoke at the January 6 Ellipse rally and has spread false election conspiracies. As Texas Attorney General, he filed a wildly inappropriate and baseless lawsuit in December of 2020, enlisting a group of red state AGs to challenge the election results in four blue ones, claiming they had failed to follow the law. That meritless suit got tossed by the Supreme Court in short order, and the Texas State Bar sought disciplinary action against Paxton for even filing it.

Paxton is also a superspreader of election lies. His office even screened a showing of 2000 Mules, the widely debunked, depublished and discredited film about supposed election fraud by convicted felon Dinesh D’Souza. 

To keep the myth of election fraud going, he targeted the Latino community with scores of criminal cases using the false claim, ginned up by Trump and Fox, that persons who are here illegally are voting in high numbers. This has no basis in fact and also defies common sense. After all, why would someone who is here illegally commit a crime that could have them deported? And why would they do so while leaving a paper trail for the government, complete with their identification and address where they could be found?

Of the some 100 cases charged by his office, only four wound up even being prosecuted at a cost of $2.3 million. The rest were tossed on grounds it was unconstitutional for Paxton to unilaterally pursue the charges. His efforts are part of a larger push by Republican DAs and AGs to aggressively prosecute alleged voter fraud, with simple harmless error being charged at the maximum felony levels to try and intimidate and make examples of voters.

Paxton’s latest deplorable move

With the courts telling him he couldn’t pursue election fraud charges on his own, Paxton shifted gears. He enlisted the help of Republican District Attorney Audrey Gossett Louis in the 81st Judicial District in Texas. That includes Atascosa and Frio Counties, where some of the recent raids were conducted.

The New York Times published an account of some of the raids. Some raids were conducted on actual candidates running for office:

On Tuesday…officers raided the home of Cecilia Castellano, a Democrat running against Don McLaughlin, the former mayor of Uvalde, for a state House seat, taking her cellphone.

Ms. Castellano described her experience as “very frightening” and said she still did not know why she was targeted. “This is all political,” she said.

Police also broke down a door and raided the home of Manuel Medina, a consultant for Castellano’s campaign. Medina is also chair of the Tejano Democrats, a group advocating for greater Hispanic representation in the Democratic Party.

Elderly residents were also targeted, including Lidia Martinez, an 87-year old retired educator in San Antonio:

Nine officers, seven of them men, some with guns in their holsters, then pushed open the door and marched past a living room wall decorated with crucifixes, she said.

“I got scared,” she recalled in an interview on Sunday, speaking in both English and Spanish. “They told me, ‘We have a warrant to search your house.’ I said, ‘Why?’ I felt harassed.”

Ms. Martinez said that the officers told her they came because she had filled out a report saying that older residents were not getting mail ballots. “Yes, I did,” she told them. For 35 years, Ms. Martinez has been a member of LULAC, the civil rights group, helping Latino residents stay engaged in politics. Much of her work has included instructing older residents and veterans on how to fill out voter registration cards.

“I go to a lot of senior events; I explain to them what they have to do,” she said. “I’ve been involved in politics all of my life.”

Reactions from Latino elected leaders have been swift and, understandably, full of outrage. State Senator Roland Gutierrez could barely contain his anger, claiming “Crooked Ken Paxton” had targeted and terrorized seniors in his district. He called for an immediate investigation in the following clip posted to Twitter:

Leaders of LULAC and elected officials will hold a news conference on Monday to demand answers. LULAC has also asked the Department of Justice to open an investigation into Paxton’s misuse of his office to conduct a sprawling set of raids on Democratic activists and leaders in the Latino community.

Fascism, Texas style

It’s important to recognize this for what it is. A party like the Texas GOP using the power of government to intimidate the opposition and suppress its democratic efforts is what we see in places like Russia, Hungary and Venezuela. It is fundamentally anti-democratic, particularly when it is conducted so close to an actual election. 

Paxton can tie down the other side using state charges, forcing them to spend money and time on legal defense against entirely bogus charges, while handicapping their get out the vote efforts by seizing their electronic devices and computers.

Someone like Paxton who has a long history of abusing his office shouldn’t be given any benefit of the doubt here. And conducting these raids in the name of “election security” is an Orwellian level of government speak that not only furthers a false narrative with no evidentiary basis but also undermines faith in our democratic systems generally.

When people ask me whether Texas will flip blue, either in the Senate or the Presidential race, I often say it might, but it is a voter suppressed state. The deck is stacked against Democrats there in many ways, including now open intimidation tactics and rampant abuse of government authority by Paxton.

While it’s important for the Justice Department to take an immediate and aggressive stand against such abuses, it’s even more important for Latino activists, politicians and voters not to be cowed by Paxton and his goons. In this there is a glimmer of hope. As the New York Times reported,

Days after the raid, Ms. Martinez said she still felt shaken. But she said she remained committed to the cause.

“They wanted to intimidate me,” she said. “But this is important work.”


Editing is a mess, sorry about that. 

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Tickle your funny bone

 






Somebody played with AI and the Peanuts characters



Working on the Statue of Liberty, by Norman Rockwell 


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I've been trying to say this all along...


Apartment House Of The Future, by Grant E.Hamilton - from 02.16.1895 edition of Judge magazine



by Mandy Gallimore, Courthouse valley overlook from Blue Ridge Parkway, June 24



Chair Yoga class with Deb Vingle at the Lakeview Center



Today's quote:

The heart of a mother is a deep abyss, at the bottom of which you will always find forgiveness.
 -Honore de Balzac, novelist (1799-1850)



Monday, August 26, 2024

Going to market again

Ho hum, you say...there she is doing her due diligence and taking her table of pottery to let everyone paw upon it at their leisure. And there she went to buy fresh corn on the cob, and bread, and a brownie, and for breakfast, a scone! Not just any scone, but a chocolate chip pecan scone! But she didn't bother to have it warmed up for her. No, she'd already had her cup of coffee on the way to market, and now wanted just to nibble on her scone for a while.



Thus my 8:15 arrival at the Tailgate Market in Black Mountain moved toward the next 4 hours of wonderful weather, meeting with old friends, and selling not a thing! Zip, nada, no sales!




But did I complain? Not really. Well only that the music was bad. The weather was fantastic though. And though I coughed a bit (well quite a bit there at the end of the day) my friends were great about loading and unloading my car for me, so the worst effort I expended was arranging the pots, then packing them back into tubs again.





And I did spend some early time wandering and taking photos. It wasn't a very crowded market this week. We figured parents are going with children to get the last minute school supplies since school starts here today, Monday.

Amazing how I caught our Market manager, Jaqueline Smith, as she walked by.





I even added a sunflower to the vase, but nobody seemed interested in it. The bears and these little dishes by Cathy Babula usually get a comment...but that's all they garnered.



Amelia had some new work on display, which caught people's attention, but I don't think she had sales either.  Her daughter had made some earrings, a couple of which sold. But nobody seemed too distressed by the day's take.

So here's an old favorite to entertain you...if you like. 





Today's quote:

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe wrote, "A man can stand anything except a succession of ordinary days." And, "Divide and rule, a sound motto. Unite and lead, a better one."

 


Sunday, August 25, 2024

Summer winding down

The pool officially closes on Labor Day. But since most kids start school this week, it has limited hours.
 

What a difference from the crowds in June and July!  This last week has also been quite cool, with mid-70s F in the day and into the 50s at night. I keep the living room windows open, but the bedroom window is just cracked a bit so I don't have to get the winter blanket out yet. I'm already under a sheet , a blanket and a bedspread (a light-weight quilt).


This is the nebulizer, which lets me breath saline solution, and I pretend I'm on a beach breathing the salty air there. It helps my cough be productive.  Then I also inhale Albuterol, which helps my lungs somehow.  And if I'm a very good girl, I'll sit and vibrate with the vest for 15 min. All in all, I have to set aside about 20 min. for each procedure, with the set-up and then washing the nebulizing equipment.

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From last week's DNC...a bit on climate change, thank you very much, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland!




Today's quote:

John Locke said, "Reading furnishes the mind only with materials of knowledge; it is thinking that makes what we read ours."






Saturday, August 24, 2024

Shopping for a specific item

 I'd received a request, for the next time I went to the Folk Art Center, on the Blue Ridge Parkway, not very far from where I live.

My son liked a certain item which he must have purchased the last time he was here, mmm, 2012? Maybe later than that.

Anyway he sent a photo of it, and asked for another one, please. He now lives in southwest Colorado near Mesa Verde National Park. But I just didn't have an opportunity to go there (the parkway, the Folk Art Center). And honestly with fighting to just breathe sometimes between coughs, I didn't have the energy.

But he sent another "gentle reminder." And I asked some friends to drive and join me. They looked at the recent exhibits. I just shopped for a slanted wood spatula.













Browsing in the store, between glass, pottery, jewelry...all kinds of beautifully crafted things!

I easily found the wood utensils rack!

Walked around it...

Until I found flat spatulas! On the right are slants for right-handed people, on the left for left handed!






I snuck around the corner and took photos of some of the spatulas. They each have a woorburned name in the handle telling what kind of wood it is.


The one on the left is shorter handled, and obviously cherry. But the one next to it also says it's cherry, while far right says Maple.

Sent these pics to my son. I bought all three, thinking I'd keep the short handled one. They are definitely getting two! I don't really need one, but it will go with my wood spoon from the same craftsmen.

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After a lovely birthday luncheon at my favorite Mexican restaurant with 5 friends, and an afternoon talking to various people I love, I had a light dinner. Peanut butter and jelly on toast. And Saturday means I'm planning to be at the Tailgate Market again!

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Today's quote:

The world is changed by your example, not your opinion.
 -Paulo Coelho, novelist (b. 24 Aug 1947)