Tuesday, April 27, 2021

A SPRINGTME TRADITION

 A few years ago I discovered a really great way to have my kitchen windowsill filled with cheerful little green plants that didn't suffer the ravages a lack of water can cause because of my multi-day trips away from home with United Airlines. Prior to this discovery, each trip would result in some kind of casualty.  Just before leaving the house, I would glance backwards before I slipped into the garage.  It was always a pleasure to see everything in order, the house clean, and the whole place inviting to the glance, partly because of a plethora of houseplants which made everything look welcoming and alive.

Now imagine walking into the house a few days later and finding that my happy little pots of miniature plants were no longer standing at attention.  They were drooping....big time.  Sometimes when that happened, I could immerse them into a sinkful of water and wait a few hours for the stems to straighten themselves and look lively again.  If that happened too many times, though, the plant was ruined and would certainly die sooner or later.

Then during one winter layover in Bozeman, Montana, I ventured out to find something to eat.  It was toward the end of a multi-day trip, and I was either sick to death of the limited food stores left in my bag, or I might have been in the mood for something fresh.  At any rate there just happened to be a very big WalMart store right across the highway from our hotel in Bozeman.  I had gone there a few times on other layovers to achieve my 10,000 steps quota for the day by marching up and down the aisles in relative warmth and convenience.

This particular day as I was walking through the store, I found myself in the garden department.  An attractive end cap caught my eye.  That was the first time I had seen those tiny two-dollar treasures I wrote about a few years ago.  Mini little cactus plants in a HUGE variety of  species lined about three shelves!  I loved those miniature little potted cacti!  Here I was hundreds of miles from home...with some more flights scheduled before I actually got home.  But I WANTED some of those little two-dollar treats!  Is all I could think about was how lucky I was to be on a layover there that day--and motivated to venture out of my hotel room  into Montana's cold winter weather.  And I WAS going to purchase some because I had sadly learned over the years that not all WalMart stores have the same merchandise.  There were a few times I saw something in Virginia or Florida or Texas thinking that instead of lugging that something around on the plane with me, I would just go to my local WalMart and get the same thing.  Wrong!

So, after delighting in my find and determining that I would purchase some of the little plants, I narrowed my selection to only three pots.  I figued I could safely tuck them into my bag if I did some rearranging.  Maybe I could even put some soft articles into the emergency backpack I kept in my bag to accomodate unplanned purchases while I was on a trip.  Then for sure I would have room in my suitcase where they would be much safer.

When I got home, I could hardly wait to display them on the windowsill.  They looked so cheerful--three little plants in a clay pot dish big enough for all three.

Sure enough, those miniature cactus plants could survive  multi-day trips that were just too long for the regular small plants on the windowsill to be without water.  And thus began my quest for MORE little succulent plants.  My determination coincided with the rest of the country, too.  Because all of a sudden lots of stores like Home Depot and the grocery stores were selling small cacti, as well.  But it was the mini two dollar treats that were show-cased only at WalMart.

But this year there were none.  I have checked several different WalMarts in the surrounding towns, as well as other areas of Denver and the suburbs when Louis and I have gone places on little day trips.  Nothing.  Oh, now all the stores are getting classy and offering succulent dish gardens or larger singular cacti in fancy planters.  Yet not one tiny treasure.  

Is this another casualty of COVID?  The plethora of house plants that usually arrive in the stores in January didn't show up either.  I began wondering if the greenhouse in California which distributed the miniature cactus plants had to close or cut their work force or something.



Tiny Treasures from Montana

Whatever the reason, I have sorely missed those happy little plants that used to line up on the kitchen window sill in the sun--and still remain lush and green no matter how long I have to be gone somewhere.  

Guess it's "Goodbye" to yet another aspect of our lives that will probably only remain a memory from now on.

Bottom line....I'm going to miss my Springtime tradition!


Friday, April 16, 2021

OH HAPPY DAY !


antarctica

My friend and walking buddy Natasha gave me a lovely gift for my 75th birthday last year.  It is a guided journal to celebrate all the joy in my world, titled "Oh Happy Day!"

As she gave it to me she said, "When I saw this at the bookstore I mused, I can't think of anyone who could make better use of this little journal than you.  I know you kept a journal for years, so I hope you enjoy this different take on recording some of your thoughts." 

The premise in the forward of the book suggests that we focus so much on working towards happiness, that we don't realize it's within us all the time.  It then suggested the journaler could discover lots of ways to savor the simple things, appreciate others, and smile every day.  In short--enjoy the world around us!

And I have. Thanks to this little book, I have taken better notice of all my multitudinous blessings, even if I don't write every single one of them down in that great little journal.

One of the topics is "What are some small pleasures that came to you this week?"  Yesterday I sat  down and wrote this:

Several years ago, my nephew's wife Karen sent me the link to a You Tube video entitled Ultima Frontera which was posted on December 27, 2007.  This breathtaking slideshow of Antarctica is set to background music of an aria from the opera TOSCA.  It shows a stunning continent of majestic mountains, unbelievable ocean scenes, and the penguins and polar bears who live there.  I was enthralled and played it often just to hear it, even, while I was doing my work around the house,

A few weeks later Louis did one of his famous purges to get rid of "unnecessary stuff that clogs the computer".  There went my bookmarked video!  I searched and searched for it over a period of several weeks and could never find the right one.  (Believe me there are a LOT of videos with this same beautiful aria for background music!)

Then yesterday I was looking through some loose papers on my side of  the computer desk and found the card on which  I had originally written the pertinent information about this outstanding video. I tried again to search for it on the computer, writing the name of the aria--"Aria de Amor de Tosca" in the search line.  Bingo!  That same gorgeous video of the Antarctic  popped up first.  I couldn't believe my good luck after all these years to find it once again!  I savored it over and over the rest of the afternoon while I was doing some work at the computer.  The aria is played by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and  conducted by a man named Luis Cabos, a Spanish composer, conductor, and musician born in 1948.  (A contemporary of mine!)

Here is the link on You Tube.  I hope you will take the time to look for the video and enjoy it as much as I have.  Search for this   www.bing.com/videos/search?q=aria+de+amor+de+tosca&docid    Then click on the video ULTIMA FRONTERA.  It is a delight for the senses.....

OH HAPPY DAY !