happiness is a day at home with my wife and a new rainbow umbrella
13 Wednesday Mar 2013
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13 Wednesday Mar 2013
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16 Saturday Feb 2013
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14 Thursday Feb 2013
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A couple of weeks ago, we finally decided the only way to get the (apparently tasty!) plants out of Teazle’s acrobatic reach was to buy a basket for them. So now the three most vulnerable plants are hanging from the ceiling. We fully expect to come home from work one day to find Teazle swinging from the wire mesh by her claws!
She’s similarly fascinated by the daffodils we picked up from Trader Joe’s (note the paw stage left), so we’ve had to drop them in the tall glass vase that at Christmas we used for candles.
Necessity led to quite a lovely display, I think.
For some reason, the ivy loves the winter and often sports more new leaves this time of year than in the summer!
I actually had the camera out to take photographs of the afghan Hanna just finished, so she could post them to her blog as part of a giveaway. Teazle wanted to help!
While I was taking pictures of Hanna’s project, I decided to capture a few of the (nearly-finished) afghan I made for my friend Anne and her daughter Lilly. Both Teazle and Geraldine wanted in on the action for this one!
Thanks to Mama Linda for the hand-dyed yarn that makes up the majority of this rainbow!
10 Sunday Feb 2013
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It’s sunny this morning in Boston, a brief respite before tomorrow’s predicted rain. Teazle is excitedly (and vocally) watching birds fluffed along the branches of the trees outside, and Hanna and I are sitting on the couch reading and writing and listening to the BBC classical music stream while watching cars get stuck in the snowdrifts on our corner.
Yesterday, the hill outside our living room window was turned into a sledding hill until the travel ban was lifted at 4pm.
09 Saturday Feb 2013
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I promised photos to several people yesterday from the “snow emergency” here in Boston, so this morning while Hanna did yoga in the living room I tumbled into my boots and winter gear and re-learned how to hike through knee-high drifts in order to bring you some pictures from our snowy neighborhood.
As a baseline, here’s what the view from our window was like around two o’clock yesterday afternoon:
Shortly after I took this picture, the poor red car had it’s rear bumper sheared off by a neighbor’s car that skidded through the intersection.
Thankfully, no one was hurt!
By the time we went to bed around 9pm, this was the view out that same window (note the red car, sans bumper, now half buried in snow).
Waking up this morning, it was difficult to see outside, so I decided to venture out.
You can see I was perhaps the second person to leave the building on foot this morning; with the snow still falling and blowing, and a travel ban in effect state-wide, few people are bothering to dig out.
We have no sidewalk currently!
And these cars aren’t going anywhere soon…
Above, wind whips snow across a nearly-deserted Commonwealth Avenue (this was taken about 7:30 this morning).
Snowplows were out in full force on the main roads, trying to stay on top of clearing the fallen snow.
But most apartment buildings showed little signs of activity.
I saw a few people out on foot who weren’t municipal workers, but the lack of traffic was eerie, particularly at usually-busy intersections (below is Harvard Avenue looking south from Commonwealth).
Side streets had higher drifts, and as I made my way back home through Brookline’s residential neighborhoods, I saw a few people out trying to clear snow from their sidewalks and cars.
These cars aren’t going anywhere soon!
The playground was deserted.
I was the first pair of feet to walk up our cul-de-sac on my return journey.
… and then I had to climb over this to get to the back door!
Now we’re enjoying breakfast and planning to nap the day away inside. Stay warm and safe everyone!
31 Monday Dec 2012
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… which goes delightfully in this Doctor Who tea mug — though Hanna was concerned that the mixing of two such potent fandoms might cause the universe to end!
We’ve had a lot of breakfasts that look like this in the past week; there was something pleasing about the way everything was laid out in sets on this particular board, so I snapped a photo.
The cats have definitely been pleased to have us around as Big Soft Warm Things upon which to sleep; sometimes it can be difficult to get a book in edgewise so that we may make headway on the year’s reading!
Or blogging …
And of course, no matter how much reading and writing and tidying we do, there are always piles of books and periodicals left to consult when time and inclination allows.
It’s a good thing we have lots of tea, coffee, and sweets to consume while we’re being all intellectually (or at least texually!) inclined.
Welcome to the final day of 2012. It was rather a momentous year for us; I know for some of you as well, in varying mixes of positive-to-stressful (and at times positively stressful!). Let us hope for a creative and renewing 2013!
30 Sunday Dec 2012
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We had a proper snowfall in Boston last night for the first time in a couple of years (!), and with temperatures predicted to remain in the twenties this coming week hopefully winter is here to stay … at least into the New Year.
While Hanna was doing yoga this afternoon, I walked out (and up) Corey Hill. Corey Hill in Brookline is one of the neighborhoods the abuts our section of Allston, and one about which I have serious real estate envy.
I mean, the downside about Corey Hill is that, well, it’s a hill. So living on it would be akin to living anywhere in San Francisco: you’d get your cardio walking to and from work every day, no problem — whether you wanted to or not. But the upside is that they have lots of brilliant little turn-of-the-twentieth-century houses, most of which are still in pretty decent repair, and many of which have been converted into multi-unit dwellings.
I’ve always had a thing for photographing flights of stairs, and the Corey Hill neighborhood definitely provides ample opportunity.
Even before I moved to Boston, I liked wandering around neighborhoods that weren’t my own to engage in “what if…” imaginings about the life one would have living there, or the home-making possibilities of the houses therein.
(For example, what’s with the pink door below the stair?)
At the summit of Corey Hill is a public park which lends itself to sledding (the man in the black coat was a supervising adult waiting for his sprongs to return from the latest run). In July, this is a favored spot for watching Boston’s city fireworks.
In addition to adorable brick cottages, there’s this imposing art deco structure near the summit park, and also a few truly outstanding Victorians (I assume vestiges of the original settlements).
One of the cool things about snow is the way it makes you see color in a whole new way. Like the greens and yellows behind the row of icicles on this recessed garage…
…and the turquoise on this second-floor balcony.
While I suppose the “house” below might be a little too tiny for us, I’d like to imagine that some day — if we stay in Boston — our little household of two humans and two cats might be able to afford a home of our own in a neighborhood not entirely unlike this one.
26 Wednesday Dec 2012
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We put out the runner from Grandma Cook, made by master weavers in Sweden who serve the Swedish royal family!
I particularly enjoy the leaping pig!
We had to keep these little guys up high away from Teazle’s explorations…
And I’ll leave it there as we head out on this cloudy Boxing Day to the thinking cup for a few hours of reading and lattes. I hope everyone had a lovely Christmas Day and is looking forward to a relaxing as we head into the final days of 2012 and the dawn of 2013.
24 Monday Dec 2012
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One of the really nice things about an extended at-home vacation is that Hanna and I can eat on our own schedule, which for both of us is more along the brunch-at-ten-late-lunch-at-four-cocoa-before-bed than breakfast at seven, lunch at noon, and dinner at six.
Hanna’s parents gave us Rose Elliot’s New Complete Vegetarian for Christmas and we’ve made some lovely and simple recipes from it, like the oatcakes and most recently vegetarian toad-in-a-hole. Toad-in-a-Hole is basically a baked pancake with sausage in, and very simple to make! Elliot’s version is as follows:
1. Heat oven to 450 Fahrenheit.
2. Brown vegetarian sausages (we used the Field Roast apple & sage, but any kind would work!) in 1/4 cup of oil (we used olive, but any nut or vegetable oil would work) in a cast iron skillet, remove from the pan and set aside. Leave the remaining oil in the pan for later use.
3. In a mixing bowl or blender, combine:
1 cup white flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 eggs
150ml milk
150ml water
Beat until smooth and put in a pitcher (I used a Pyrex measure) or leave in blender for easy pouring.
4. Put skillet with oil into heated oven and let warm until the oil is very hot and just starting to smoke.
5. Pull out the oven rack and pour the batter directly into the pre-heated skillet. Drop the sausages into the pan, distributed as evenly as possible, and close the oven door as quick as you can.
6. Bake for approximately 25 minutes (don’t open the door to peek!). Check after 25 minutes and once the top of the pancake is golden brown remove from the oven and serve immediately.
It was just the sort of meal we needed prior to going out on a brisk walk yesterday afternoon to the Chestnut Hill Reservoir and back.
This morning, Christmas Eve, we’re having coffee and cinnamon buns while listening to the MPBN broadcast of the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols from King’s College, Cambridge. The buns are inspired by our favorite recipe of Joy the Baker’s, her sugar and spice yeast rolls. But this time I did make a few changes that Hanna and I agreed were
Cross-posted at Lyn’s Friends Feast.
23 Sunday Dec 2012
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My family often complains I don’t share enough pictures on this blog, the better for them to get a sense of how we live here in Boston. So I thought over the holidays I’d try to make up for lost time (with a little help from the cats).
This week, Christmas parcels arrived from Michigan, Kentucky, Texas, Oregon, and California with presents for the humans; Teazle and Gerry enjoyed the boxes.
We had to clear a top shelf of the bookcase off for presents, out of reach of curious kittens. We had so many gifts that some have spilled onto the lower shelves (and a few more have arrived since!).
On Friday, I left work early to pick up our December CSA farm share in the pouring rain. When I got home, we had to lay all the veggies out to dry before storage.
Teazle was, as usual, super helpful in the task of vegetable organization. She kept insisting turnips should be kept on the floor.
I seem to have taken a lot of pictures of Teazle in the last couple of days. Possibly because she is ever-present investigating our activities. Here she is watching Hanna prepare lunch from the vantage point of an empty box in our kitchen.
I thought the light coming in the kitchen window made this a rather lovely still life. We just re-potted the plant after Teazle had dug it up multiple times on the windowsill in the living room. It’s been relocated to the kitcen for safe-keeping.
While we were crocheting this afternoon, we decided to let Teazle play with our stuffed mouse from IKEA, which she is convinced is a real threat to life and limb. She kills the zombie mouse repeatedly, and carries it around in her mouth growling, particularly when you try to pry it from her jaws.
Above, she’s guarding it between her front paws …
… carrying it off by it’s (broken) neck …
… killing it again …
… and finally getting bored by the whole endeavor (although only momentarily; the mouse came back to life and had to be killed again moments after I snapped this one).
All this ruckus sometimes exhausts Gerry, even if all she’s doing is watch!