(no subject)
Sep. 24th, 2025 10:28 amI'm up here at my sister's, not quite a hundred miles north of home, while the new floors are put in. It's all SoCal, and yet a completely different microclimate. I woke to the tut-tut-tut of some bird we don't ever hear at home, and other chirps and twitters equally unfamiliar. Over that, though, the very familiar caw of crows.
As I did the morning walk with the little dog, and listened to the local crows up in the eucalyptus and pines, I wondered if the crows that follow me at home were watching for me to come. Now that the sun is lowering a bit, we're back to increasing numbers, so I might have thirty or so swirling around me when I throw unsalted peanuts out. so exhilarating to watch them!
Here they don't know me, of course, so the calls can't be to let me know they are there. I'm sure the lives of humans are ignorable, except as annoyances that send them into the trees. I wondered about that sky civilization as I trod the path to the dog park. So much going on at the tops of the trees, that we barely notice!
It's such a relief not to be toiling with packing, though of course unpacking lies in wait to pounce when I get back. Then I'll only have three or four days before I take off for my October east trip, so most of my share of the unloading will await me on my return. The big job (and the fun one) is the library.
Speaking of, since it's Wednesday, let's see, what have I been reading? The Military Philosophers by Anthony Powell, which is part of a book discussion that I've been following since the start of the year. One book a month in Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time series. The discussion happens at the start of each month over Zoom, and what interests me is how folks from either side of the Atlantic read the work. Also, non-genre reading. This time I'll be on the train when the discussion rolls around, so I hope I have connectivity, but if not I'll listen to the recording. At least that way I can skip ahead if the fellow who leads it gets prolix over an obvious point as he has a tendency to do. The academic curse; students above a certain age level are too polite to say 'Zip it! We got the idea already." (High schoolers had no such restraint, and middle schoolers invariably signalled boredom by more physical means.)
Anyway I had the leisure, for the first time in a couple of months, to make chocolate chip cookies. So I can have those and tea and do some reading. Heigh ho, I will go do that now.
As I did the morning walk with the little dog, and listened to the local crows up in the eucalyptus and pines, I wondered if the crows that follow me at home were watching for me to come. Now that the sun is lowering a bit, we're back to increasing numbers, so I might have thirty or so swirling around me when I throw unsalted peanuts out. so exhilarating to watch them!
Here they don't know me, of course, so the calls can't be to let me know they are there. I'm sure the lives of humans are ignorable, except as annoyances that send them into the trees. I wondered about that sky civilization as I trod the path to the dog park. So much going on at the tops of the trees, that we barely notice!
It's such a relief not to be toiling with packing, though of course unpacking lies in wait to pounce when I get back. Then I'll only have three or four days before I take off for my October east trip, so most of my share of the unloading will await me on my return. The big job (and the fun one) is the library.
Speaking of, since it's Wednesday, let's see, what have I been reading? The Military Philosophers by Anthony Powell, which is part of a book discussion that I've been following since the start of the year. One book a month in Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time series. The discussion happens at the start of each month over Zoom, and what interests me is how folks from either side of the Atlantic read the work. Also, non-genre reading. This time I'll be on the train when the discussion rolls around, so I hope I have connectivity, but if not I'll listen to the recording. At least that way I can skip ahead if the fellow who leads it gets prolix over an obvious point as he has a tendency to do. The academic curse; students above a certain age level are too polite to say 'Zip it! We got the idea already." (High schoolers had no such restraint, and middle schoolers invariably signalled boredom by more physical means.)
Anyway I had the leisure, for the first time in a couple of months, to make chocolate chip cookies. So I can have those and tea and do some reading. Heigh ho, I will go do that now.
no subject
Date: 2025-09-24 05:45 pm (UTC)What an entrancing path that statement leads the imagination down!
Maybe the crows do share about people the like. Maybe your sister's crows are corroborating with the crows that come to you in cooler weather. "Ah yes, that one, with the dog. She's a good one!"
Enjoy the chocolate chip cookies :-)
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Date: 2025-09-24 06:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-24 07:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-24 09:17 pm (UTC)You remind me of climbing the fire tower at Lake Itasca State Park. I couldn't get all the way up; I have issues with heights, and at the time I was there with Eric, a horde of children were racing up and down the stairs and making the entire structure shake. Someone down on the ground was expostulating with their parents, but I don't think anything came of it.
In any case, I got to the treetops and stopped, clutching the railing for dear life. I was hoping for birds, but what I saw -- and I knew this happened, but somehow had not expected it -- was the dragonflies and the tiny insects that they were preying on. They were all everywhere, evanescent half-invisible fluttering things, some seemingly laying eggs and some obviously eating the nectar or pollen of the tree flowers, which were themselves invisible from the ground. And among them the dragonflies swooped and darted, glittering, touching delicately over and over again on leaf edges and undersides to glean their food.
I'd have loved to see birds -- we once saw a kestrel hovering right at eye level from a hilltop in California, and we've seen ravens riding a strong breeze to the ground right in front of us on Twin Peaks in San Francisco -- but the dragonflies were really enough.
P.
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Date: 2025-09-24 09:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-25 01:06 am (UTC)I haven't seen any in years.
Nine
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Date: 2025-10-07 09:10 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-24 09:50 pm (UTC)K. [does not know why]
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Date: 2025-09-24 11:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-25 01:41 am (UTC)The robin in Scotland, perched on the handle of a spade stuck in the ground, just like Ben Weatherstaff's robin in the The Secret Garden
That flash of a kingfisher, blue enough to write in fire on the retina.
A flock of red kites in Buckinghamshire, shimmering and soaring. They're magnificent fliers. For over a hundred years, they were all but extinct in the British Isles, but they've come back triumphantly.
And over here, the cloud of hummingbirds that I walked into, feeding on loosestrife on a patch of swampy ground.
Nine
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Date: 2025-09-25 04:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-25 01:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-25 04:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-25 10:23 am (UTC)Mmmm, chocolate chip cookies. :)
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Date: 2025-09-25 01:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-25 10:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-25 01:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-26 01:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-09-26 02:36 am (UTC)