Thursday 28 November 2013

Back Home with Great Memories

I started doodling a map of my summer travels and visualize the circles I went around, up and down  Oregon and California. Guess I didn't have a plan, just enjoyed people, places as it worked out. It was fun having wheels and getting off to places I've always wanted to see. And revisiting favorites. A 20 year old ford got me around, and it handled beautifully on winding back roads. I managed to keep up with traffic on the interstates too. But in cities I got the feeling I was a rat in a maze. And the reward was a parking space. So I am again appreciative of public transit.  I'm happily back in my apartment in Honolulu. Please come visit!

Sunday 10 November 2013

Autumnal Equinox

Autumn has arrived and I've past the one year anniversary of my leaving Newport RI. One week later I left NYC and was in Morocco when superstorm Sandy hit the east coast. My luck continues as I left Oregon in the first major rain and returned to sunny, warm (80 degrees plus) California. Mt. Hood is even more spectacular with a full, fresh cover of snow, but I'll appreciate it only in photos.  Temperatures fall in California too, especially in the wine country, and fog covers the bay area so no stopping there. Meant to post this weeks ago, but have been rolling around California looking for a spot to winter over. It didn't appear so I'm on my way back to Honolulu with certainty of sunshine and warm water to swim.

Wednesday 3 July 2013

Washington State Adventure

Yesterday my sister, brother-in-law and I went on a loop up into Washington to Trout Lake and Klickitat. It was a hot day 97-100 degrees. There was no lake at Trout Lake, but there was a huge canyon that the river cut through the mountains and beautiful valleys, Mount Adams has a large snow pack for July, and this is the south side. The run-off from the mountain on this hot day is milkey colored. The platforms over the river are where the Native Americans net salmon as they go upstream. No dams on the Klickitat River. We dined at Huntington's, totally authentic, and they serve huckleberry pie - yummmmm.

100 shades of grey

Back in Oregon,  back to clouds and rain. Such a change, I never take my sweatshirt off. I saw a bit of Mt Hood from the plane into Portland, but its been hidden ever since. Incredible luck today: I lost two rings off my right pinky yesterday, after looking everywhere found one in the car trunk. That was clue that they slipped off while loading groceries so went back to market and amazingly someone had turned it in!  Got both rings back when I thought for sure they were gone forever.
Then the clouds started to clear and the mountain reappeared - it is majestic at over 11,000 feet.

Tuesday 4 June 2013

California Dreamin'

What a great place to be a tourist. Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Cochella Valley, Santa Barbara and now Sonoma County - wine country. Healdsburg is a nice balance of traditional small town and upscale tourist resort stired together with wonderful plaza anchoring it all. There is a large old orange tree in my sister's front yard that just keeps dropping its tasty gold orbs for me to juice. Then there's the oriental poppy that is so dramatic, over six feet tall and covering a large plot by the sidewalk. The backyard has lemon, grapefruit, fig trees as well as more flowers and a garden space. Things grow so well here, with lots of water as it is hot. I'm only active outside in morning and evening hours. And the hay fever has hit me. I hate it when I can't breathe. No, that picture isn't my sister's house, it's the Getty Villa in Pacific Palesades. The palm and the redwood stand together in the Healdsburg plaza.

Sunday 19 May 2013

Completed circle

Landed at Los Angeles Monday, May 13, 2013, and officially completed circling the globe as I was in California last August. The trip was just just six days short of seven months. Of course I'm still traveling, we'll see how long before I settle. It was easy to move, but difficult to leave paradise. I felt at home there and had settled in effortlessly making some really nice connections. I expect I will return. Santa Monica was a good stopping point. There I am at the Santa Monica Pier end of Route 66, a nostalgic spot not only because of the many cross country trips my family made driving Rt66, but because of the carousel on the pier. There were apartments (now only offices) around the second level of the building housing the carousel, and I had put my name on the list for living there. At that time I was told it could be a ten-year wait. Of couse I left for New York City - experience has always trumped home. I forgot that carousel dream until getting to Rhode Island and finding five wonderful carousels in that tiny state - you can visit all of them in one afternoon, which I did and made an artist book to reflect on my connection to that whole experience. Continuing my tourist ways I visited The Getty Museum, well worth a trip. Wandered the old Hancock Park with the LaBrea Tar Pits still bubbling away. Also walked around the UCLA campus curious about all the changes of the last 50 years. And past my old rooming house where I met my good friend Judy whose home I am enjoying right now while she and her husband are out of town for the weekend attending a wedding. This is the start of my house-sitting phase. I have two more "sits" lined up. Does anyone else need a house/pet sitter? Let  me know before I settle down again. This lovely home is in the desert near Indio and Route 66. It's about 80 degrees this morning as I sit out on the terrace watching the golfers go by in their carts. I thought the idea was to walk the links for exercise. Guess not, and it seems they all have their own carts too. Judy and I did some fun tourist attractions here in her neighborhood. First we saw the Sunnylands Center and Gardens. Sunnylands was the home of the Annenbergs and known as the Camp David of the West. It can be viewed on certain days and only with advanced tickets. But the center and gardens are fabulous, laid out like an impressionist painting with wonderful strokes of green and touches of bright color using all native plants, or plants compatible with this hot, dry climate. There are lots of palms here in the desert, this is the heart of the date industry, but I just might have to start drawing cacti. Again the surreal shapes and outragous textures are wonderful. There is a huge saguaro cactus down the street I plan to start with. Anyway, our second stop was the Desert Pueblo Museum. We got  there just in time for the last tour and it was such a delight. This place is the Watts Towers of the desert built of salvaged materials over a twenty year period by Cabot Yerxas whose family emigrated from Denmark in late 1800's. He was born on a Sioux reservation, a start of what was a fantastic life - he traveled everywhere.

Tuesday 14 May 2013

Tourist, Travel Notes

As you can see from photo I'm taking it easy in fantastic location. The Pacific Northwest is surley the summer ideal and I am enjoying it while I contemplate my travels. Here are a few random memories.

The light in various places: filtered through the cloth roofs over the shops in the marketplace in Marrakech, a mile high sky at the equator with the clouds enveloping Mount Kenya, then at sea level sky near the equator in Hawaii, the long twilight sky on the south island in New Zealand, the smog of Delhi,  and at all the stops along the way I marveled at the daylight, and the night skys. In Sorrento, Australia the power for the entire town went out on a clear warm night. Ah, marvelous view of milky way and the southern cross. Then of course the eire light during the solar eclipse seen from the Great Barrier Reef.

When foreign visitors tour the Taj Mahal we pay quite a bit more admission and enter through a separate gate, which is fine. But when you actually enter the masoleum they stand in a long line while I was ushered in skipping ahead of all the Indian visitors. That was very awkward feeling. But my most ackward experience was in the Albert Hall Museum in Jaipur, India which was full of school groups, around 8-9 years old. I was viewed as a freak there, an old white woman on her own. There were lots of stares and giggles. I apparently was even scarier when I tried to talk to them.

The drivers on Australian Greyhound buses carry their own tool boxes. There are vast territories without service and they must be able to do repairs on the run. Each time there is a change of drivers they gather up their paper work and personal toolbox, some very large/heavy.

The trolley stops in front of the Honolulu Museum of Art, the driver rings the bell, the guide talks into little microphone, a row of tourists turn and lean to right as if correographed as they take their pictures. The bell rings and as quickly as you read this the trolley moves on.

Man on public bus speaking loudly on cell, complaining about how crowded and slow it is. Meanwhile driver is trying to tell him he's blocking the back door from closing so we can't move.

Lessons in patience. Waiting here, waiting there. Travel is a lot of waiting. Waiting in airports and on planes, waiting in bus stations, bus stops and on buses, waiting in restaurants. I think I'm learning this lesson. One needs to be patient to enjoy travel; slow down and see all the wonders of this immense world. Just looking at the sky helps me be patient.

Not having an actual home is complicated. I'm using both my sisters for mailing addresses,  but when I meet someone and am asked where I'm from I don't have an easy answer. Honolulu is last residence, but only four months doesn't really count. I guess I feel more like saying "the United States" as I would when traveling.

Wednesday 1 May 2013

Happy May Day

Today is also Lei Day in Honolulu, with a big celebration at Kapiolani Park. Music, food, crafts, art and fantastic lei competition. Here are a few of my recent flower photos as well as a few shots from the lei festival. Wish I could send along the wonderful scent, sometimes it just stops me in my tracks and I have to stop and smell the flowers. Those big trumpet flowers that did have a lovely scent are incredibly poisonous I am told, even just a deep inhale can make a person violently sick. Oh, but they are lovely.

Saturday 13 April 2013

April Fools

I've let more than two months pass without writing, guess I'm the fool as now I'm at a loss of where to start. Most important first: my art that I've been showing / selling on the Zoo Fence each weekend. I've been making 11 x 14" pen and ink drawings, enhanced with color pencil and some with hand dyed paper, a new technique I've developed that gives a flat area of color that works well with the fine lines. Some examples of my current work is attached, including a diptych and a triptych made by stacking images - an effect I really like. When I'm not doing art or just out enjoying the warm weather I have found lots of good visual art, and wonderful experimental theater - just saw 'Thread Hell' a fasinating, kind of surreal, Japanese contemporary play. This was the premier production in English. Have seen three other plays, all very good. And then all the films! The Hawaii International Film Festival just ended: saw Midnight's Children; a North Korean film called Comrade Kim Goes Flying; but my favorite was Cutie and the Boxer about wife and husband artists in NYC.