12-25-16 VERMONT: Two days ago we had bight sun and a warm, 30°F., day and the Solstice party at night with a bonfire. Yesterday we had a dark, overcast, gray sky with snow, also 30°F. Today there’s bright sun again, it’s still 30°F., but wind speed in the 20’s makes it feels like the teens.
Everybody here last night stuffed themselves at Judy’s table. There were no presents under the tree this morning, as neither of us needs anything else, but also because we decided to support National Resources Defense Council and Planned Parenthood.
Another party tonight.
Judy leading the dogs around the pasture.
Low winter sun through the trees.
Long shadows at the solstice.
Solstice party bonfire at the neighbors. There were high school seniors, college seniors and us, seniors also.
Next day, Xmas Eve, more snow.
Bally after a satisfying roll in the snow.
Sunday, December 25, 2016
Thursday, December 22, 2016
Vermont Solstice.
12-22-16 VERMONT: We drove up yesterday on a sunny, winter solstice day. There were about six inches of crusty snow here, not quite enough to require snowshoes. Today we got new snow, about three inches more.
Just before evening yesterday, I walked out in the pasture with the dogs and cut down a good-sized white pine. I had to cut about three feet off the bottom to make it light enough to drag back up to the house. Once I stood it upright on the deck, with Judy’s help, we decided it needed about five feet off the top to fit inside the house. When we got it inside, I had to shorten the lower branches to get the door opened and closed and to give us room to walk around it. The upper parts were untrimmed and extend out further into the room than the bottom branches. I also tied the upper trunk to a hook on the corner post of the room to stabilize the tree. It’s decorated now, and I think it looks great, even if some disparaging remarks have been made about the tree by another person.
Tomorrow we have a Solstice party across the road at Steve and Diana’s, Xmas eve we are feeding some neighbors here, and the next day we are at Dave and Shari’s for dinner. After all that, it’s probably left-overs for the foreseeable future.
I put some pix on FB of the Family Winter Birthday Bash held at the Red Rooster. It was brunch with the Gospel Choir of Harlem performing. Chef Marcus Samuelsson knows what he is doing in the kitchen, and we can’t wait until he opens his planned restaurant in Newark.
Last Monday Judy took Gus the therapy dog to Lincoln Elementary School in Newark for the Xmas Party. I came along to carry the bags of stuffies that Judy collected over the summer in the Upper Valley of VT and NH and to take pix. A couple of those pix are on my FB page also.
Dark, overcast morning with lots of snow, but we ended up with only three inches.
It was snowing in Hanover as well.
Our garage has started to shed snow from the roof.
Late, partial clearing gave us a sunset through thin clouds.
It's not a giant squid threatening us from the corner of the living room. but a large Holiday tree. I cut down this white pine in the pasture, dragged it up to the house and cut pieces off of it until it fit inside. I needed to cut more off to get the door open and closed. Where is it written that all trees need to have a conical shape?
Just before evening yesterday, I walked out in the pasture with the dogs and cut down a good-sized white pine. I had to cut about three feet off the bottom to make it light enough to drag back up to the house. Once I stood it upright on the deck, with Judy’s help, we decided it needed about five feet off the top to fit inside the house. When we got it inside, I had to shorten the lower branches to get the door opened and closed and to give us room to walk around it. The upper parts were untrimmed and extend out further into the room than the bottom branches. I also tied the upper trunk to a hook on the corner post of the room to stabilize the tree. It’s decorated now, and I think it looks great, even if some disparaging remarks have been made about the tree by another person.
Tomorrow we have a Solstice party across the road at Steve and Diana’s, Xmas eve we are feeding some neighbors here, and the next day we are at Dave and Shari’s for dinner. After all that, it’s probably left-overs for the foreseeable future.
I put some pix on FB of the Family Winter Birthday Bash held at the Red Rooster. It was brunch with the Gospel Choir of Harlem performing. Chef Marcus Samuelsson knows what he is doing in the kitchen, and we can’t wait until he opens his planned restaurant in Newark.
Last Monday Judy took Gus the therapy dog to Lincoln Elementary School in Newark for the Xmas Party. I came along to carry the bags of stuffies that Judy collected over the summer in the Upper Valley of VT and NH and to take pix. A couple of those pix are on my FB page also.
Dark, overcast morning with lots of snow, but we ended up with only three inches.
It was snowing in Hanover as well.
Our garage has started to shed snow from the roof.
Late, partial clearing gave us a sunset through thin clouds.
It's not a giant squid threatening us from the corner of the living room. but a large Holiday tree. I cut down this white pine in the pasture, dragged it up to the house and cut pieces off of it until it fit inside. I needed to cut more off to get the door open and closed. Where is it written that all trees need to have a conical shape?
Saturday, December 17, 2016
Snow Jersey.
12-17-16 SHORT HILLS: We had an arctic invasion over the last two days with frigidity and temps transiently down into the teens. Last night it began to warm up and snow. There was about four inches this morning when it warmed up more after sunrise and turned to freezing rain—a recipe for disaster, typical of New Jersey. Add enough cold to let the rain freeze on all the trees and shrubs, stir with some wind, lower the temps the next night and you have broken branches all over the yard.
The birds besiege the feeders on snowy and cold days. I have been filling feeders daily. They are all looking puffy as they arrange their feathers to fight the cold. They look like they are in little down coats, which I guess they are.
I shoveled a path in the driveway for walkers, which was probably unnecessary because it’s supposed to be in the fifties tomorrow.
Friend Alan is coming for dinner tonight. Judy made her famous ribs and cornbread. Tomorrow is our annual family winter birthday bash for the four of us with Jan/Feb BD’s. We are going to the Red Rooster in Harlem for brunch and the gospel choir.
Slate-colored Junco in his down outfit.
Dawn a few days ago.
Holly tree looking seasonal.
Frosted apples.
Cardinal and leaf under the feeder.
The birds besiege the feeders on snowy and cold days. I have been filling feeders daily. They are all looking puffy as they arrange their feathers to fight the cold. They look like they are in little down coats, which I guess they are.
I shoveled a path in the driveway for walkers, which was probably unnecessary because it’s supposed to be in the fifties tomorrow.
Friend Alan is coming for dinner tonight. Judy made her famous ribs and cornbread. Tomorrow is our annual family winter birthday bash for the four of us with Jan/Feb BD’s. We are going to the Red Rooster in Harlem for brunch and the gospel choir.
Slate-colored Junco in his down outfit.
Dawn a few days ago.
Holly tree looking seasonal.
Frosted apples.
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
At Last, another December Post.
12-14-16 SHORT HILLS: Wow, nine days without a post, that’s probably a record. Obviously, not much has been happening. We had a Saturday night dinner with Bette, Lonnie, Ellen and Bruce at a quietish place so we could hear each other talk. If we need quieter next time, maybe a mausoleum would work.
Judy and I have been binging on TV. We did almost four season of Rectify in about a week, the new season of Mozart in the Jungle in a couple of days and a season of The Man in the High Castle in a couple more. All those shows are worth seeing if anyone hasn’t tried them.
The weather is getting colder, as it should be, there has been a bit of ice on the roads. We had a quarter inch of snow before it turned to rain and melted. We have managed to walk the dogs most days and got a couple duck pix at one of the ponds in town.
One brag—I have finished 18 straight NYT xword puzzles.
Mallards cruising an open spot on the south pond.
More mallards.
The other pond is frozen, for the moment.
Judy and I have been binging on TV. We did almost four season of Rectify in about a week, the new season of Mozart in the Jungle in a couple of days and a season of The Man in the High Castle in a couple more. All those shows are worth seeing if anyone hasn’t tried them.
The weather is getting colder, as it should be, there has been a bit of ice on the roads. We had a quarter inch of snow before it turned to rain and melted. We have managed to walk the dogs most days and got a couple duck pix at one of the ponds in town.
One brag—I have finished 18 straight NYT xword puzzles.
Mallards cruising an open spot on the south pond.
More mallards.
The other pond is frozen, for the moment.
Monday, December 05, 2016
PHC and Othello.
12-5-16 SHORT HILLS: Our weekend adventures began Friday night when we went to a Dartmouth sponsored performance of New York Theatre Workshop’s ‘Othello’ with Daniel Craig as Iago and David Oyelowo as Othello.
Before the show, we met with Val and two of her old friends, Ted and James, who we hadn’t seen in years. It was nice to see them as successful grown-ups. When last we saw them, they were new college graduates.
When you walk into the theatre, the smell of fresh carpentry is unmistakable. The whole room is newly covered in raw plywood and the seating newly constructed of unfinished lumber.
The star-studded cast, there were a number of other actors we recognized from TV or the movies, had huge presence. James said that when Daniel Craig stood next to his seat, he, Craig, exuded ‘animal musk’.
Less is more in terms of minimal staging, the modern setting neither added nor detracted from the play, but the lack of elaborate sets allows the words to be the focus of your attention.
The play resonates today, echoing down 500 or so years, on racial, religious and gender interactions. I was always bothered by how easily Othello, a supposedly brilliant commander, was duped and betrayed by the duplicitous Iago.
Saturday night we went to the new incarnation of Prairie Home Companion. Garrison Keillor has retired and the new guy, Chris Thile, is a remarkable musician, mandolin, and does the show with more music and less skits. Lake Wobegon and Garrison’s cast of characters are gone, presumably forever—RIP, Guy Noir. Some of the old cast members and musicians are still there, but the PHC name should probably be retired also. Trevor Noah was on in the second hour. He and Chris discussed how to try to follow a retiring icon.
Before PHC, Judy and I walked up to Rock Center to see the tree and all. Other people had the same idea as it turned out. There are Xmas lights and imagery everywhere, but the crowds were overwhelming. We couldn’t get to 5th Ave. at all.
Sometimes you could see a gap in the crowd, but when you got there, it turned out to be a stroller. The passenger in that stroller saw nothing but parts of people.
Rock Center xmas tree with lights, silver flags, wooden soldiers and CROWDS.
Before the show at New York Theatre Workshop's 'Othello'. Raw wood seating and set of military barracks. Ang Lee was in the audience.
Crowds rushing by at rock Center.
Rock Center looking toward 5th Ave. and invading hordes.
Prairie Home Companion during warm up.
Before the show, we met with Val and two of her old friends, Ted and James, who we hadn’t seen in years. It was nice to see them as successful grown-ups. When last we saw them, they were new college graduates.
When you walk into the theatre, the smell of fresh carpentry is unmistakable. The whole room is newly covered in raw plywood and the seating newly constructed of unfinished lumber.
The star-studded cast, there were a number of other actors we recognized from TV or the movies, had huge presence. James said that when Daniel Craig stood next to his seat, he, Craig, exuded ‘animal musk’.
Less is more in terms of minimal staging, the modern setting neither added nor detracted from the play, but the lack of elaborate sets allows the words to be the focus of your attention.
The play resonates today, echoing down 500 or so years, on racial, religious and gender interactions. I was always bothered by how easily Othello, a supposedly brilliant commander, was duped and betrayed by the duplicitous Iago.
Saturday night we went to the new incarnation of Prairie Home Companion. Garrison Keillor has retired and the new guy, Chris Thile, is a remarkable musician, mandolin, and does the show with more music and less skits. Lake Wobegon and Garrison’s cast of characters are gone, presumably forever—RIP, Guy Noir. Some of the old cast members and musicians are still there, but the PHC name should probably be retired also. Trevor Noah was on in the second hour. He and Chris discussed how to try to follow a retiring icon.
Before PHC, Judy and I walked up to Rock Center to see the tree and all. Other people had the same idea as it turned out. There are Xmas lights and imagery everywhere, but the crowds were overwhelming. We couldn’t get to 5th Ave. at all.
Sometimes you could see a gap in the crowd, but when you got there, it turned out to be a stroller. The passenger in that stroller saw nothing but parts of people.
Rock Center xmas tree with lights, silver flags, wooden soldiers and CROWDS.
Before the show at New York Theatre Workshop's 'Othello'. Raw wood seating and set of military barracks. Ang Lee was in the audience.
Crowds rushing by at rock Center.
Rock Center looking toward 5th Ave. and invading hordes.
Prairie Home Companion during warm up.
Sunday, December 04, 2016
Loantaka Pond and Forsythia.
12-4-16 SHORT HILLS: We were in NYC both Friday and Saturday nights for shows, but I’ll talk abut those later. Today we dog walked with Bill at Loantaka Brook Reservation. The weather was great and we did two loops separately because a connecting bridge is blocked for repairs. Judy was recognized by young boy whose school she visits with the dogs. Actually it was the dogs who were recognized. He and Maizie were both glad to see each other.
There is a large pond, perhaps two acres, at the reservation occupied by a lot of water birds. There is a mute swan and a lot of ducks including many mallards and two other species, ID’s pending consultation with Garden Daily consultants.
On a somber note—friend Bill was tripped by dogs on the last leg of the walk and took a tumble. He seemed OK at the time but will probably be sore tomorrow. The actual event happened so quickly that we couldn’t get live shots, so it was necessary to stage a re-creation of the accident.
Before Thanksgiving there was a brief cold snap that gave us a frost. I don’t think we have had another one, and it has been pretty warm since then. Forsythia foolishly decided it might be a short winter and an early spring and popped a few flowers. They do the same thing every fall, I wonder if somebody is still buzzing around to do the pollination?
New blooms: forsythia.
Mute swan and mallards.
Forsythia thought it might be an early spring.
Ducks on the pond - I'm guessing these are Gadwalls, expert testimony requested.
Gadwalls again, perhaps.
More mallards.
I think these are female lesser scaups, anyone??
Dog walker down. Full disclosure: the actual event took so fast that this picture is a re-creation of the accident.
There is a large pond, perhaps two acres, at the reservation occupied by a lot of water birds. There is a mute swan and a lot of ducks including many mallards and two other species, ID’s pending consultation with Garden Daily consultants.
On a somber note—friend Bill was tripped by dogs on the last leg of the walk and took a tumble. He seemed OK at the time but will probably be sore tomorrow. The actual event happened so quickly that we couldn’t get live shots, so it was necessary to stage a re-creation of the accident.
Before Thanksgiving there was a brief cold snap that gave us a frost. I don’t think we have had another one, and it has been pretty warm since then. Forsythia foolishly decided it might be a short winter and an early spring and popped a few flowers. They do the same thing every fall, I wonder if somebody is still buzzing around to do the pollination?
New blooms: forsythia.
Mute swan and mallards.
Forsythia thought it might be an early spring.
Ducks on the pond - I'm guessing these are Gadwalls, expert testimony requested.
Gadwalls again, perhaps.
More mallards.
I think these are female lesser scaups, anyone??
Dog walker down. Full disclosure: the actual event took so fast that this picture is a re-creation of the accident.
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