Saturday 28 May 2011

Eyeball to eyeball

Two days ago, camera in hand, I sat flat on the grass, a mere 3 ft from a male Grey Heron.  Wondrously quiet 30 minutes in Regents Park  - 1 mile from the very centre of London City.  What a profound, companionable,  priceless half an hour – I can’t tell you!  
(Double-click any of my images to enhance your viewing experience)
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Every few minutes I  moved closer and closer to him.  His neck sunk between shoulders, relaxed.  A memory flashed back of years ago, working in a veg garden and having to deal with a persistently aggressive male turkey.  Not today, not the Grey Heron – all is  safe and restful.
In deep thought?
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And so it was, that on this magical afternoon, we both stared across the water with a fixed gaze. 
The black elongated crown feathers  form a wispy crest and rest on the birds back.
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Today a heron – one day a wolf, a leopard and a lion!
Isaiah 11:6 (New American Standard Bible)
And the wolf will dwell with the lamb,
And the leopard will lie down with the young goat,
And the calf and the young lion and the fatling together;
And a little boy will lead them.
Motionless except for the occasional drink of Regents Park water – no plans to take off.  The wonder of just sitting there together on the grassy bank.
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I start to throw small pebbles in the water near him which evoked slight interest.

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And I would never have guessed that a Grey Heron had a tongue like that!
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The first thing that struck Gordon and I as we walked into Regents Park (from the South East entrance anyway) is how tame the herons are and how many of them there are! 
While Gordon read a book, I spent a goooood 90 minutes with a flock of  12 Herons.  Siesta?   Now and again one would take off or return with  slow wing beats, wings strongly arched and trailing legs.
Six of the twelve.
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Heron-charades.  I think this mean “Let me show you who’s in charge here”
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RANGE:
Grey Heron is relatively common resident and widespread in most part of Europe. It is also found in Asia and some parts of Africa. We can observe northern bird’s migration southwards during hard winters.
Grey Heron
Ardea cinerea
BIOMETRICS:
Length : 90-98 cm
Wingspan : 175-195 cm
Weight : 1020-2070 g
LONGEVITY : from 15 to 24 years
  Genesis 1:21 So God created the great creatures of the sea and every living thing with which the water teems and that moves about in it, according to their kinds, and every winged bird according to its kind. And God saw that it was good.
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(It was easy to get these last beautiful images off the net, please let’s all respect the owners and not use any of these for commercial purposes).  The rest of the images are mine and the same respect is due - thank you).

Sunday 22 May 2011

Gordon, the druggy!

Friday getting comfy at home not long after surgery for his Dupuytren's_contracture.
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Saturday: a brave smile and a make-shift improvised sling
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Today………far more pain, and thankful for strong pain-killers. 
(Gordon didn’t get too far with his Tim Keller’s “Counterfeit gods” - :-).  Sleeping with the arm elevated as he should!
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Look away now, if you can’t stomach the sight of open surgery –even though this is not Chris Barnard working on a heart.  Or just scroll faster past the first small picture of an operation for Dupuytren contracture.

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We guess Gordon’s hand looking something like this:
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Reasons why our hearts sing to our Father God:
  1. For the poppy/opiates:  God’s provision for extreme physical pain.  
  2. Our humble thankful hearts also sing to Jesus who were wounded, shamed and killed to pay for our sins and bring us not only healing, or a revamp, but a brand new life in Him.
  3. Also that right now our Creator is causing the tissue in Gordon's hand to knit together – and whatever else is necessary for healing.
  4. And for the lovely efficient medical staff at St Albans hospital.
300px-Illustration_Papaver_somniferum0Which brings me, to a last few thoughts on  the neutral poppy: 
 a drug with two faces.…….very lovely & effective pain reliever, but also terribly misused in international politics, economics, crime, war and terrorism and by drug abusers and addicts. Its dangers to destroy lives are well-known.

(With the invention of the hypodermic syringe during the American Civil War, opiates really came into their own as both powerful pain killers on the battlefield and as drugs of abuse and addiction.)

Afghanistan....
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Do you have an answer or part-answer?

Here is the question regarding the former IMF chief, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, as posed by a Time Magazine journalist:
"How can it be, in this ostensibly enlightened age, when men and women live and work as peers and are schooled regularly in what conduct is acceptable and what is actionable, that anyone with so little judgment, so little honour, could rise to such heights?"
It's way past my bed-time right now and unwise to forfeit further sleep.  I'm hoping that the sun is up when you read this question and that you may venture at least part of an answer?

Tuesday 17 May 2011

Chicken Cacciatore - Buon appetito!

Do you also read recipes and wonder about the meaning and pronunciation of  - to you – outlandish words?  I often do, & often, just as often throw the recipe out with the mystery ingredient.  Not today. 
It’s 19 days till our children and grandchildren are visiting – excited!

Soooo, before this homely, quick and easy recipe gets the delete-treatment,  I let the internet throw light:

Mystery words (to me)
1) cac·cia·to·re/ˌkäCHəˈtôrē/ (my friends, Sylvia and Shirley should be able to help with the pronunciations.
2) mas•car•po•ne/ˌmäskärˈpōn(e)

Mas•car•po•ne is a soft, mild Italian cream cheese.
Cac·cia·to·re: Adjective: Prepared in a spicy tomato sauce with mushrooms and herbs: "chicken cacciatore". Cacciatore means "hunter" in Italian. In cuisine, "alla cacciatora" refers to a meal prepared "hunter-style" with tomatoes, onions, mushrooms, herbs, often bell pepper, and sometimes wine. Cacciatore is popularly made with braised chicken  or rabbit.  Cacciatore - Prepared in an Italian style with wine, mushrooms, spices and tomato. Cacciatore - An Italian combination meat and vegetable dish (ie: Chicken Cacciatore) in which vegetables are cooked in a hearty sauce with meat.

Some reasons why I fancy this quick & simple  recipe:
  • You can’t go too far wrong with a recipe from Good Food BBC and the editor’s choice.
  • Hospitality,hearty food and family go together like 2 horses and a carriage.
  • Far more time with Josie & Evie & the parents than in the kitchen.
  • It’s fun to use the newly acquired word and offer (with love, not to impress) – “Hey guys, how about Chicken Cacciatore for Thursday evening?”
chickenChicken Cacciatore
Ingredients1 onion , finely chopped
2 garlic cloves , crushed
olive oil
2 x 400g tins cherry tomatoes
4 tbsp mascarpone mas•car•po•ne
a handful basil
6 chicken breasts , skin on
Heat the oven to 190C/fan 170C/gas 5. Fry the onion and garlic in 3 tbsp oil until softened but not coloured. Add the tomatoes, season, then simmer for 10-15 minutes or until thick and glossy. Take off the heat and stir in the mascarpone and half the basil, roughly torn.
Heat a little oil in a pan and fry the chicken on both sides until golden. Transfer to a baking dish and pour over the sauce. Cook for 25-30 minutes or until the chicken is cooked through. Scatter over the rest of the basil.
Know-how :Serve with a short pasta, like fusilli, or a big bowl of potatoes roasted with olive oil and rosemary.

A week later: to save oven-electricity, I'm crock-pot cooking the Cacciatore and it really looks yummy.  I've also learned of extra ingredients that can be added and I love a recipe with a NAME!     http://busycooks.about.com/od/chickenthighrecipes/r/cpcacciatore.htm 

Here are 5000 more recipes to try out!

Monday 16 May 2011

|Our latest favourite bridge: The Bastei

 

15 April 2011 – our 6th day in Dresden.
The Bastei Foot Bridge in Swiss Saxony, Germany is built from surrounding sand-stone.
Please feel free to enlarge the image by double-clicking.  Please DO double-click!
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What a thrill! 
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We took the hiking-route – every huff and puff have been worth the destiny and vistas.
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double-click for readable map.


The Bastei is a spectacular rock formation towering 194 metres above the Elbe River in the Elbe Sandstone of Swiss Saxony of Germany.  The jagged rocks of the Bastei reach a height of 305 metres above sea level. 

My Gordon
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Me
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How did we get to the Bastei bridge?
 
We arrived by train at Rathen station on the right of the Elbe River and then..
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crossed over by ferry
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From here we found the path up to the Bastei bridge and to the very top.
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The first glimpse of the Bastei Bridge! 
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Double-click any of the images to enlarge/enhance the view.
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Panoramic views from the Bastei bridge over the Elbe River
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Peering down from the Bastei Bridge
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so natural.
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From here we climbed to the top and enjoyed a great plate of soup and fresh homp of bread, feasting our eyes on wunderbar views.
In the afternoon we got ourselves first by bus then by train to Konigstein Festung/Fortress – but that is for another time.

This link will lead you to lots of further interesting information.