Monthly Archives: March 2016

Palm Tree Blossoms: Flower of the Day Mar 22, 2016

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This little woodpecker wakes me up most mornings, pecking away 80 feet or more up one of my palm trees.  This morning it brought a gift by bringing my attention to these beautiful palm blossoms that I usually only notice floating in my pool.

http://ceenphotography.com/2016/03/21/flower-of-the-day-march-22-2016-daffodil/

Priceless

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                                                                     Priceless

How much is the purse––how much the papaya per kilo or the platanos? It seems as though in Mexico, we are always asking or being told the price of something. It is strange how rarely we had to ask this in the U.S., for everything there carries a price tag. Try some time to purchase a dress when there is only one like it on the rack and the price tag has fallen off. It is impossible. There is an established price that no one knows except some elusive price person perhaps filed away in a closet between pricing sessions. When the price tag falls off, the garment goes in a pile, perhaps to be reduced or sent to some limbo especially established for tagless garments, but not on your back, where you would prefer it to be.

In the U.S., the only comparison to Mexico is perhaps the garage sale, where pricing is often a matter of bargaining. Both seller and buyer establish a worth in their own mind and they each move toward that goal from a different direction.  “Five dollars,” “Two dollars,” “Four Dollars,”Three,” “Sold!”

On the beach in La Manzanilla, where I just spent two months, I bought 32 bobbleheads over the time I was there.  I didn’t really need even one bobblehead animal, but the children I bought them from a few at a time were so cute and funny in a natural uncalculated way.  The little boy was so kind and protective toward his little sister, and she was so nonassuming and innocent.  If this was all sales technique, it certainly worked, but I am a pretty close observer of minutiae and everything about these children seemed unplanned and fun.  To them, “selling” was involving you in their play as they lined up cowboys on the backs of cows to face off with a rotund moose or bobblehead monkeys.

“Cuánto cuesta?” I had inquired when they first held out his large box, her smaller one full of bobbleheads to me. “Veinte,” they replied in unison, and then “Twenty pesos.”  Although I’d always paid ten pesos for these little treasures in the past, I didn’t question the price, knowing that the U.S. dollar had soared to be worth nineteen pesos.  These silly little toys––intricate and well-crafted, were certainly worth a dollar, which is what I’d been paying for them when the exchange rate was closer to ten to one. Like the price of everything else, it had probably been raised to reflect inflation.  And so I paid the price without bargaining, and encouraged friends to buy from my favorite beach duo as well, even after I found them in both the weekly market and  souvenir stores  for ten pesos each.

As my time to leave approached, I spent less time on the beach or on my porch and since I’d already purchased at least one of every species that appealed to me, as well as duplicates as gifts, Edgar and Flo, sensing the inevitable, reduced their visits to my porch.

During their last visit to me,  “This is a family,” Edgar explained as he lined up three zebras–one fatter and taller than the two others that stood either side.  “A mama and two babies,” he said and then, quickly, “No, a papa and two babies.”

“No mama?”

“No.”

“Will they get a new mama?”

“No.”

I know Edgar and Flo have a mother and two older brothers, so this little story is purely imaginary and, like his flute playing and their little songs and arrangements of animals on the steps of my house for the many afternoons they’ve visited––priceless.

To read and see more about Edgar and Flo, go to
https://judydykstrabrown.com/2016/02/26/tower-of-bobble/

(The daily prompt word was “Price.”)

Lilies–A Flower a Day March 21, 2016

Since it is almost Easter and since lilies always remind me of Easter and my mother, this post is for her.  Both my mom and dad loved flowers and trees and every house in the somewhat arid little town where I grew up always sported trees, petunias, pansies, trumpet vines, tulips, peonies, sweetpeas and roses––but never lilies.  They were for Easter, as a potted plant to be thrown away after the blooms faded.  I don’t think it ever occurred to us that they could be planted.

(Click on first picture and arrows to view enlarged gallery.)

http://ceenphotography.com/2016/03/20/flower-of-the-day-march-21-2016-tulip/

Friends

Friends

(When I walked the Ajijic malecon with three good friends yesterday, I came across these friends frolicking in the lake slightly below us.  They were having such a glorious time and I identified completely, since all the swimming I did prior to my twenties was in stock dams (and occasionally the river) back in South Dakota. I have no better memories of childhood and I’m sure these children will feel the same way.  A little water to splash in, something to investigate along the way, sun and your friends––what more is needed for a perfect day?

(Click on first photo and then on arrows to see full-sized photos.)


I’ve done so many posts on the subject of friendship–at least five in the past year, but please go HERE to see a post I made two years ago that most of you probably haven’t seen before.

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/prompts/friend/

The Dance

Life goes better with the dance,
so do it when you have the chance!

(Click on first photo and then on arrows to enlarge photos and view.)

 

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/photo-challenges/dance/

Up a Tree

(CLICK ON FIRST PICTURE AND THEN ARROWS TO VIEW ALL PHOTOS FULL SIZE.)

 

https://beccagivens.wordpress.com/2016/03/20/sunday-trees-227/

 

 

Looking Out, Looking In

Version 2(Click on first photo and arrows to view enlarged gallery.)

Looking Out, Looking In

Folks look in my window every hour every day
when they view my photographs or what I have to say.
It isn’t that I have a need to publicize or flout.
They are just a way to let a part of myself out.

When I’m outside the room of me, looking here and there,
it’s like I am a voyeur. I pry and prod and stare.
The window might steam over, obscuring what I see.
Then I wipe it clear again to see what I might be.

I really just write what I see as I’m peering in.
Each failure and each triumph, each kindness and each sin.
Each interior arrangement has some ugliness, some beauties.
I hold inside life’s pleasures, her sadness and her duties.

Each poem that I’ve written—be it whisper, be it shout––
is a way for me to let a part of myself out.
And if you choose to view them and see where I have been,
You’re standing at my window with permission to look in.

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/prompts/window/

Primavera in Bloom: A Flower a Day 3-20-16

Today, the park along the Ajijic malecon  was  full of activity, people, birds, Micheladas and these beautiful Primavera trees in bloom. More about the people later. It is 4:15 a.m. and the LOUD Music half a block away above me has finally stopped.  Yes, it kept me awake but it sounded like a huge family party.  Everyone was singing along with the music and having a wonderful time.  During Semana Santa, the week leading up to Easter, we can expect more and more people to flood into town and more and more loud celebrations.

Happy Spring!!!

(Click on first photo and then arrows to enlarge and display all photos.)

 

http://ceenphotography.com/2016/03/19/flower-of-the-day-march-20-2016-color-your-world-challenge-purple-pizzazz/

Carrot Attack

It is 1:15 in the morning and somewhere down the block there is a very loud party going on––lots of singing along with loud sound systems and girls screaming. Dan’s watching Bill Maher on his notebook in the sala, Maggie’s gone to bed upstairs, Rhonda’s gone to bed downstairs and I’m cracking the crop over these photos I took earlier tonight that you will soon see below.

For months, I’ve been wanting to try out one of Leland’s scratch recipes that he posts weekly on his blog. Unfortunately, I always lack at least two of the ingredients; but the fact that I have an excellent baker visiting just now caused me to get organized enough to have butter, eggs, baking powder, flour, oranges, carrots and powdered sugar all in my house at the same time. The result is that Rhonda baked Leland’s carrot cookies and then taste-tested them with the help of Dan, Maggie and me. Here are the results:

(Click on first picture to enlarge all photos, then on arrows to view gallery.)

The Neighborhood–A Flower a Day, Mar 19, 2016

The most wonderful thing about bougainvilleas is often their surroundings.  They can obscure faults, serve as security and also as home to many creatures: possums, lizards, iguanas and my own cat.  Here are some beautiful places that bougainvilleas exist in La Manzanilla:

(Click on first photo, then on arrows to enlarge and view photos.)

http://ceenphotography.com/2016/03/18/flower-of-the-day-march-19-2016-magnolia-tree/