Pages

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Songdog of the West

 

This week's prompt over at Rain's Thursday Art and Dinner Date is "favorite animal". Have you guessed that my favorite animal is the cat?

While I love cats, they are not my favorite animals. I love all animals, but there are a few that are closer to my heart. It was a hard decision between these four:

Wolf - this is a Mexican Gray Wolf in the Arizona-Sonoran Desert Museum

Coyote, in Yellowstone

Moose, in Alaska

Cougar, in the Arizona-Sonoran Desert Museum.

These four are my favorites, but in the end one of them is a bit more of a favorite - the coyote, the trickster in Native American legends, the Songdog of the West. My spirit animal.

 

We saw and heard a lot of them in Yellowstone. Among them has been this female:

Look closely - can you see the coyote in the middle of Highway 50 near Lake Tahoe?

And s/he is off into the woods!


We also saw them often in Yosemite. While we were camping there in the High Country we heard them every night. 


We even sometimes hear them here in our neighborhood. That usually gets me very excited - and even more when I heard two mountain lions one night. It is something very extraordinary when you lie in your bed and you can hear these wild animals. I for one deeply love this.


Coyotes are very smart animals and have outstanding survival skills. You can find them in the wilderness, rural areas and even big cities. There is an area in San Francisco where coyotes roam and you probably have heard about the coyote in New York City's Central Park. But unfortunately not everybody loves them; every year there are competitive trophy hunts on coyotes in some states (the more coyotes are killed, the better), an abhorrent practice.

They're also master sleepers.

In the Arizona-Sonoran Desert Museum

And I almost forgot - there's even a coyote in my garden! He comes from Mexico.


So, what's for dinner? I often like to use the wok when cooking - just last week we had ramen noodles with baked tofu, broccoli, red bell pepper and romaine lettuce. It's a quick, easy and healthy dinner.


I'm linking to Rain's Thursday Art and Dinner Date and since there are so many sweet animal faces, also to Nicole's Friday Face Off.



Monday, February 17, 2025

My World of Books

 


Sometime in the first two or three months I usually write about the books I read the year before. These are not book reviews - I leave that to people who are much better equipped and eloquent for that than I am - but just a look back at what I read and what I liked (or not). 

Since 2008 I have been writing down the titles of the books that I read. While I was recently looking through the lists I noticed that since 2017 I've read much more books each year (almost double the amount) than in the years before that. First I was a bit stunned, then I realized that the Geek gave me a Kindle Paperwhite for Christmas in 2016. This was not for altruistic reasons alone - I love to read in bed, he doesn't, and he couldn't sleep that well with my nightlight on while I was reading. The Paperwhite is backlit, so I don't need the lamp on my nightstand anymore AND I can read as long into the night as I want without disturbing his sleep. Naturally I've read a lot more since then. However, I still love "real" books and I always will.

Here are two pages of the list for 2024.


I love to read fiction which for me includes mysteries (I'm aware that some people make a difference in that regard) and I read both English and German books. Fiction for me is a kind of escape (and I needed a lot of that last year, still do even more this year), immerse myself in a different world and just get lost a little bit in other places. But I also love to read non-fiction to learn, understand and achieve a deeper knowledge. Fiction I read on my Kindle (or "read" it as an audiobook), non-fiction as a book in my hand.

In 2024 I read 58 books which is less than in the years before. A few books got a star or even two in my "award" system and even one with three stars (one star is for books I really liked, two stars for those I loved and three stars for "exceptional"). The first four books of the year received each one star and I thought I was off to a good reading year. Of course it didn't turn out that way, there were a lot of mediocre books and even some that I didn't finish. If I had to recommend just one of the 1-star books, it would be "Remarkable Creatures" by Tracy Chevalier, a historical novel about the fossil hunters Mary Anning and Elizabeth Philpot. I was inspired to read it after David wrote about Mary Anning on his blog.

Another 1-star book was this one.


Hilary Melton-Butcher recommended it to me while we were exchanging a couple emails. Fran Sandham, a young man from England, describes his walking journey traversing the African continent from the West coast of Namibia to the East Coast of Tanzania. It's a fascinating, often funny read. I took it with me to Germany and gave it to my daughter, because a part of his journey passed through Malawi. Kaefer spent a couple weeks in Mzuzu last year as one of the instructors for a public health project at the university and fell in love with this small country.

The other books I liked and received one star were "Sea Defences" by Hilary Taylor (very good mystery), "Murder in Chianti" by Camilla Trinchieri (a lovely series of mystery and delicious food), "The Extraordinary Life of Sam Hell" by Robert Dugoni (wonderful), "Where'd You Go, Bernadette" by Maria Semple (weird and hilarious), "The Chinese Groove" by Kathryn Ma (Chinese immigrants in San Francisco), "Klara and the Sun" by Kazuo Ishiguro (interesting, a bit weird) and "We Never Asked for Wings" by Vanessa Diffenbaugh (excellent).

There were three 2-star books - "Ins Nordlicht blicken" by Cornelia Franz, a novel mainly set in Greenland which was both interesting and taught me a lot about this territory which I hope will remain with Denmark; and two novels I listened to, "Lessons in Chemistry" by Bonnie Garmus and "October in the Earth" by Olivia Hawker, a writer I like very much. Both stories were narrated extremely well and it was enjoyable listening to them while I was knitting.


This worn edition of Barbara Kingsolver's "Animal Dreams" is the 3-star book. I've already read this beautiful novel twice before and always lost myself in it. This time I listened to it when I could get it as an audiobook, narrated by the author herself. It was like a completely new story, exquisitely read and thus putting the beautiful language it is written in on display. It is one of my most beloved books.


"Finding the Mother Tree" was recommended to me by David (I tell you, I get a lot of inspiration from David's blogposts). It was a fascinating read, but it was also full of scientific terms that I didn't know and had to look up. As a non-native speaker of the English language this was sometimes difficult to read and it took me a long time to finish. Much of what Suzanne Simard writes was not completely unknown to me, but it was interesting to see how she got to her insights. The complicated, interdependent cirlce of life of trees is amazing and very fascinating. It's a book I would happily recommend to anyone who is interested in our forests.


This book really made me go out, observe, listen and write in my journal. Sometimes I go to "my" lake, look for a beautiful spot and sit and write. I guess I will do this more often this year since nature always calms and grounds me - something I exceedingly need.

Of course there were garden books... This one as well as "The Humane Gardener" by Nancy Lawson were right down my alley - nothing really new, but a lot of inspiration for my garden and the confirmation that I'm going in the right direction with it.


You might have noticed in my top photo that my bookshelf is pretty messy. Unfortunately this applies to all of my bookshelves. The books are completely unorganised. Since 2012, when we moved into this house, I have wanted to organise our books, but have I done it? No. See for yourself.



And the bigger picture...


Chaos. Which reflects the state our country is in.

The gaps in the shelves are the result of me purging books. Those books that I've read and am sure I won't read again are being moved to my neighbor's little library across the street. German books are being donated to the German School for the annual book sale. A lot of books I will keep and hopefully, one day the shelves will get more organised. The bookshelf in my studio doesn't look any better...


Now I need a drink for Bleubeard and Elizabeth's T Tuesday. Sorry, I don't have any. These bags of Hawai'ian peaberry coffee that our friends brought from Maui have to do this week.


I'm writing this post on Monday - President's Day in the US. The Geek and I discussed flying the flag today. While it's a day to remember the great presidents George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, we couldn't have it fly on its own. I don't know how you feel about our country right now, but I know that I am angry, mad and deeply embarrassed of the administration (I actually would use stronger choice words, but let's stay civil here), but also grateful for living in California (which, of course, means that we are on the revenge radar of same administration). Therefore we decided to fly three flags today - the Stars and Stripes in the middle in honor of before-mentioned former presidents, the California bear for our beautiful state and the inclusion flag for believing in the rights of ALL people.


And if you look hard, you can spot little Otis (my neighbor's sweet cat) in the lower right hand corner. He just had a sip of water.





Thursday, February 13, 2025

The Pink Granite Coast

 

After having visited Dinan and the Château de Guildo we stayed for three days in a small B&B near Lannion in the North of Bretagne. From here we took several day trips. The first one took us to the côte de granit rose, or the pink granite coast. If ever a place got a perfectly fitting name, this was the one.

This is a photo heavy post.

Most of the rocks are indeed pink, but there are also gray and ochre ones. If you have a lot of imagination you can see figures and shapes in this sculpted shoreline. Here, we are almost at the mouth of the English Channel, and out in the sea we could see many small and smaller isles.

We hiked a good stretch of the coast and enjoyed constantly changing views.



The lighthouse - Phare de Men Ruz - was often hiding behind the gigantic rocks and then peeked out from behind them. It blended perfectly into the landscape.

As you can guess I was particularly interested in the plants, almost all of them way past their prime.




Isn't this fascinating?

But there was also lichen and little plants growing right out of the rocks.

Kaefer preferred to climb to the top of the rocks, looking out to the sea.

Or she would climb down and explore all the tiny tidepools.

The gulls, however, were not amused.

I was very happy to see European Robins (Erithacus rubecula). They are such endearing little birds and very different from the American Robin (Turdus migratorius).

The lighthouse was still hiding...

... but finally we could see it in its full size.

Of course we had to go up there.


Kaefer and the Geek for Nicole's Friday Face Off.

I wonder what it feels like to live in this beautiful house. 

We went into Ploumanac'h where we had lunch in a crêperie. This was dessert:


After this delicious meal we hiked back along the coast to the parking lot. It was a beautiful outing.