Monthly Archives: February 2024

Happy Leap Year! Feb 29, 2024

In honor of leap day. Click on photos to enlarge.

Every Which Way for Which Way!!! Feb 29, 2024

For Cee’s Which Way Challenge, Feb 29, 2024.

Bougainvillea, FOTD Feb 29, 2024

For Cee’s FOTD

W’s and X’s For CMMC

Click on photos to enlarge.

For Cee’s CMMC

A Morning Visit to the Garden: For FOTD Feb 28, 2024

Click on photos to enlarge.

My visit luckily coincided with that of a bee coming in for a landing.

For Cee’s FOTD

Waking up in Mexico

I awaken abruptly at 6:30 AM in spite of the fact that my alarm is set to 7:30, awakened by nature’s own alarm clock. Roosters in Mexico do not cock a doodle doo. Their LOUD, hoarse, shrill screams (Ah Ah Ay’ oooooh) split the air precisely at the first hint of light each morning and continue for a good hour or so—long enough to insure that no human sleep survives their onslaught.  It is as though nature, unaware of the invention of alarm clocks, has taken on the duty of awakening the world. And if this isn’t enough, it invented the fighting cock, which doesn’t limit its crowing to the hours around sunrise but instead crows off and on all day.

I once had a neighbor who, in desperation, offered to buy all of his neighbor’s fighting cocks and then to gift them back to him if he would just move them to another location. The neighbor took him up on the offer, but a few years later when  the friend and his wife moved back to the states, I’m unsure if his contract with his neighbor passed on to the people who bought his house or if any warning was even given in their rush  to exit Mexico. Perhaps the neighbor who owned the fighting cocks, realizing the old contract had ended, collected again from the new buyers.

I started this post at 6:30. It is now 7:30 and my phone alarm has started its 7:30 wake-up trill. I press the “Stop” button, but seconds later, I hear the stubborn succession of a cock’s crow and a dozen answers. After one hour, the chorus shows no signs of ending, but has instead been joined by a myriad of other bird calls with a dozen or more town dogs providing a descant .

Good Morning, Mexico.

Succulents in a Coconut Shell, For Cee’s FOTD

For Cee’s FOTD

Thunbergia Against a Painted Wall, For FOTD, Feb 26, 2024

 

 

For Cee’s FOTD

Wild Women Writers Retreat: Quinta San Carlos

Click on photos to enlarge.

 

Tomorrow is our last day of our retreat at the wonderful Quinta San Carlos across the lake.  Our brains are nearly emptied of words and our stomachs are certainly full of the delicious food they serve us from the time we wake up until we drag up the hill to our rooms.  Breakfast, lunch and dinner are supplemented with a round the clock buffet of cookies, chips, sliced veggies, sodas, coffee and tea of every variety.  I am now hiding out from dinner as if I put one more bite of food into my mouth I won’t make the bonfire tonight (Where by the way they roast corn over the open fire and serve it with the usual Mexican condiments of butter, mayonnaise, lime and chili powder.  We are going to ask them to skip this tradition this year.

As soon as I’m sure they are finished with dinner I’ll go down for the bonfire and to lead the storytelling. Our leader (another) Judy has had bad laryngitis for the past few days so we are assuming her task and even reading aloud for her what she has written. It’s been a great time.  Hopefully, same time next year.. I believe this is our seventh year with a few years skipped during covid.

Holy Moly…”The Reply” for MVB, Feb 26, 2024

 Holy Moly

My friend Michael and I love to issue poetry challenges to each other.  We once did one on parts of the body:  Knees, etc.  So, when I noticed his bandaged big toe and asked if it was broken and he replied that he’d had a mole removed from it, I decided it was time for another challenge.  Below is his poem and then my reply:

ODE TO A MOLE (recently removed from my toe)

 Old friend, we trod the bumpy road
of ups and downs together, you and me –
I send you home with this sad ode
to join your scabby family.

You were an ugly, lumpy one
but always benign in your own way –
you did no harm to anyone,
now you’re cut off and thrown away.

Although your features did not please,
I give you this, my final thought
for one who sometimes smelt like cheese
“They also serve who only stand and wart!”

                                                          Michael Warren

 

This poem was written in reply to Michael’s. May he forgive me for using his personae in writing it.

Holy Moly

Oh mole that graced my biggest toe,
you had a thankless row to hoe.
I did not know your purpose there–
devoid of title and of hair.
Had I but known why you were given,
had you only come and shriven,
I might have given absolution,
reacted with less resolution
to sever our relationship
–to halt the surgeon’s unkind snip.

We have so little knowledge of
digits that fill our socks or glove.
We do not know of strange attractions
that might have influenced your actions.
Oh mole that lived beneath my knee,
my leg, my ankle and most of me––
that chose to dwell far far below,
clinging to my aging toe.
What fierce attraction brought you there
to form this most unlikely pair?

Came you from Nile or from Ganges
to wed largest of my phalanges?
How did you choose from all that were
to settle there on him or her?
(I am embarrassed here to note,
I only know my toes by rote:
big toe, second toe, middle toe, stinky,
little toe, simply known as pinky.
I do not know their names or gender,
only that they’re long and slender.)

True, I clip their nails with care––
remove the occasional long-grown hair––
but I never address my bod
lest others label me as odd.
So you must know this apology
is no means a doxology.
I do no honor to thy name.
I do not wish to spread your fame.
In short, that act would be absurd.
I simply want to say a word

explaining to you that although
your habitation of my toe
was ended by easy decision,
I felt no scorn and no derision.
I hope this ode might serve to leaven
your anger as you speed towards heaven.
I really would not like to think
that once arrived, you’d raise a stink
to blacklist my immortal soul
by making a mountain out of a mole.

                               –Judy Dykstra-Brown

For MVB the prompt is reply.