I don't get too many beautiful pictures from our area of Texas, but I always enjoy driving by a few small rice fields near our house. And I love to run out the door to see what kind of cropduster is turning around over our house. And sometimes I see pinkish or white birds along the ditches in the rice fields. Some clever photographer needs to get a picture of them (cropduster, birds).
August 31, 2011
Rice Fields
I don't get too many beautiful pictures from our area of Texas, but I always enjoy driving by a few small rice fields near our house. And I love to run out the door to see what kind of cropduster is turning around over our house. And sometimes I see pinkish or white birds along the ditches in the rice fields. Some clever photographer needs to get a picture of them (cropduster, birds).
August 30, 2011
Michigan
A few pictures from our trip to Michigan in August. We visited some old friends there that we'd seen twice in 17 years. They have a lovely home and we had a lovely time. We relaxed on their back patio and saw wild turkeys. Al and Mr. Timmer had long conversations while Mrs. Timmer and I went to the beach and watched wind-surfers and a boat that takes passengers for a short jaunt (and also had long conversations).











August 25, 2011
Old Friend
I can't imagine a better dog than Juneau. Sometimes I see dogs here that look approximately like he did, but they have perkier ears, which makes them look too sassy. It's the partly-droopy ears that gave Juneau his appeal. And his ears would disappear instantly every time he saw my face, even at a distance. Putting ears down is a sign of submission and respect, and also says "I'm sweet, aren't I?"
When Juneau first showed up on our property in Indiana, we didn't want another dog. Jeshurun especially insisted we didn't need another dog, and I agreed, and assured him I wasn't feeding him. "But you're smiling at him!" Jeshurun replied. Then Jesh took Juneau down the road in his pick-up truck and dropped him off somewhere. Juneau got back before Jesh did. So we didn't adopt him, he adopted us. And we said no, no, no, yes.
Once he got hit by a car and broke all his ribs on one side. For several days after that he looked very very sad and walked very very slowly. After that he was fine, except maybe he didn't have quite as much wind as he used to.
On one pleasant Indiana night, I went outside about midnight and watched Juneau running fast in large circles in the moonlight. I think he achieved what Beethoven never did -- at least one moment of pure joy.
Juneau had one sad incident when he stepped on a bees' nest and they all started attacking him. He jumped up and down yelping and finally ran through the screen in our sliding door. I have to confess that I laughed seeing him jumping up and down. We never did replace that screen.
Juneau was a moderately smart dog, and could have learned a lot if he had had more training, especially when he was younger. When I called him, he would stop and sit in front of me. Then when I said, "Heel," he would bounce into position beside me. Since it was hard to walk with him beside me and keep him from taking off, I would walk a few paces, stop, expecting him to sit immediately, and then repeat the process. Soon he would look at me with a laughing face as if to say, "I know this game!"
He was always so good-natured, but he had a few naughty spells, such as when a kitten or a small dog got too near his food dish. He beat up and chased away a neighbor's dog, and afterwards walked around with his head high, so proud of himself, but not looking at me--he knew I was mad at him.
When he got older Ben took care of him and took him on long walks around the block (3 miles?). I had a feeling he wouldn't be around much longer when I went to Israel. He's buried without a marker, but I'll never forget him.
An old song:
Old dog Tray's ever faithful
Grief cannot drive him away.
He's gentle, he is kind;
You'll never, never find
A better friend than old dog Tray.
August 24, 2011
Back to Normal
Blogspot seems to have gotten over its bugs, although that last post didn't post till sometime later, and who knows what this one will do.
Life is starting to return to normal. It took me a long time to get over jet lag, partly because I didn't try to, but stayed up till unreasonable hours every night.
Then I decided to work on a quilt project, which involved working out a pattern for some pieces that I brought from home. More pieces will have to be cut sometime; and sometime in the unforeseeable future, maybe I will start sewing them together. But that's a back-burner project now, since I have to put my composer-linguist hat back on. My hat says composer on the front and linguist on the back. Unless I turn it inside-out (which might be right-side out, I forget which is which), and then it says linguist on the front and composer on the back.
After reading a book on getting things done, I got into a getting-organized frame of mind, which may have been partly successful. If I am going to get an electric piano, I am going to have to make space for it. And if I am going to be pianolating or pianifying or pianolyzing, in addition to what I do now, I'll have to regulate my time better. I hope to get something accomplished day by day, without always getting burnt out to keep from being bored or burnt out to keep from feeling guilty.
I hope to finish reading through the book of Psalms in Hebrew (with English alongside) by the end of October. In evening worship we've been reading Genesis in Hebrew. The problem with that is that in the evening I am getting so sleepy that I can't make my eyes focus on Hebrew letters. About bedtime I get a second wind, and then I like to stay up late because it's nice and quiet. Not a good idea really. I need to get up with the sun.
I discovered a website with many children's books, originally written in English, all converted to pdf's and translated into Hebrew. I was surprised to find how few good books there are, or have been, for the last 50 years. The artwork is often terrible, and some of the stories are too much into weird fantasy and magic. And the artwork is terrible. Seems like that I need to say that twice. I can tolerate a lot of fantasy and a lot of different styles of art, but even so I find many children's books ugly and intolerable. But reading children's books is a very good way to learn Hebrew. You learn language relating to everyday situations. I'm not interested in politics or current events (however there are planes flying overhead and I wonder what's happening in Gaza about now). I just need to know about home life, plants, animals, and people doing ordinary things, speaking ordinary language, and having ordinary thoughts. A book helps you catch up on what you didn't run into in real life because you just happened to be on a different continent.
Life is starting to return to normal. It took me a long time to get over jet lag, partly because I didn't try to, but stayed up till unreasonable hours every night.
Then I decided to work on a quilt project, which involved working out a pattern for some pieces that I brought from home. More pieces will have to be cut sometime; and sometime in the unforeseeable future, maybe I will start sewing them together. But that's a back-burner project now, since I have to put my composer-linguist hat back on. My hat says composer on the front and linguist on the back. Unless I turn it inside-out (which might be right-side out, I forget which is which), and then it says linguist on the front and composer on the back.
After reading a book on getting things done, I got into a getting-organized frame of mind, which may have been partly successful. If I am going to get an electric piano, I am going to have to make space for it. And if I am going to be pianolating or pianifying or pianolyzing, in addition to what I do now, I'll have to regulate my time better. I hope to get something accomplished day by day, without always getting burnt out to keep from being bored or burnt out to keep from feeling guilty.
I hope to finish reading through the book of Psalms in Hebrew (with English alongside) by the end of October. In evening worship we've been reading Genesis in Hebrew. The problem with that is that in the evening I am getting so sleepy that I can't make my eyes focus on Hebrew letters. About bedtime I get a second wind, and then I like to stay up late because it's nice and quiet. Not a good idea really. I need to get up with the sun.
I discovered a website with many children's books, originally written in English, all converted to pdf's and translated into Hebrew. I was surprised to find how few good books there are, or have been, for the last 50 years. The artwork is often terrible, and some of the stories are too much into weird fantasy and magic. And the artwork is terrible. Seems like that I need to say that twice. I can tolerate a lot of fantasy and a lot of different styles of art, but even so I find many children's books ugly and intolerable. But reading children's books is a very good way to learn Hebrew. You learn language relating to everyday situations. I'm not interested in politics or current events (however there are planes flying overhead and I wonder what's happening in Gaza about now). I just need to know about home life, plants, animals, and people doing ordinary things, speaking ordinary language, and having ordinary thoughts. A book helps you catch up on what you didn't run into in real life because you just happened to be on a different continent.
It Did!
I don't get it.
But this one won't post either.
And it won't save.
So what if I set it to post in two minutes?
It didn't.
Would Pooh Bear have a wise comment at a time like this? Or maybe Snooopy?
blogger wogging
what's the trick here
I can't get it to edit
it won't post either
it won't save
it says it posted and nothing posted
I check options
I sign out
I do this and that
and this time it's going to work, right
wrong
it did auto-save for some reason so maybe it's ok now
nope
I'll set it to post in two minutes
it won't, of course
I can't get it to edit
it won't post either
it won't save
it says it posted and nothing posted
I check options
I sign out
I do this and that
and this time it's going to work, right
wrong
it did auto-save for some reason so maybe it's ok now
nope
I'll set it to post in two minutes
it won't, of course
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