Monthly Archives: March 2009
Spooky - a Happy Ending!
Last August, we were adopted by a beautiful stray puppy that we were unable to keep. Fortunately, a lady from a local Golden Retriever Rescue Group was able to place him in a foster home. Well, today, Mom got this e-mail on the computer…
You might remember me from last August when I rescued Spooky from your house. The Golden Retriever rescue group that I volunteer for could not take him so I came and got him from you. I just wanted you to see how well he is doing and thank you again for taking such good care of him until he could find his forever home. The very first couple that agreed to foster him ended up keeping him and they just love him. He gets along great with their dog Nikki. They had recently lost a dog so it was perfect timing for them. They even kept the name that your daughter gave him, Spooky!!
Here is Spooky in his new home. I wish we could’ve kept him, but I am very happy that he has a great place to live. But I think we need to get another Spooky puppy for Kimmy some day in the future. Or a Spooky puppy for me.

Here is the link to the origional Spooky post.
Very Early Spring
For months now, I’ve been staring at the stark forms of leaveless trees.

But that’s about to change. This month has been temperamental, with one day in the 50s, the next in the 80s. And lots and lots of rain. This field is behind my house looking south into Lucas. Just below the water tower is where my sister and I once found a box turtle crossing the road. Since then, that place has been referred to as “Turtle Crossing.”
More fields directly behind my house. This particular field is part of the Wilson Creek flood plain, and it’s not unusual to have it flooded all the way up to the fence. Of course, if it were that flooded, I wouldn’t have stood there and taken the picture. Wilson Creek can be very dangerous when it floods.
Here is our new waterfall. Kimmy was utterly fascinated, and I think having a waterfall makes up for not having any more tadpoles.
All this water is good for at least one thing - it causes a rush of green on the prairie and all the redbuds come into bloom. This redbud is the most beautiful tree on our property.
We’re the only house in hundreds that I’ve seen (and since I’ve been all over the North Dallas Metroplex, I’ve seen quite a few) that actually has redbuds lining their drivway. It’s a sight more creative than the old Bradford pear most people use. And better suited to the environment. Redbuds are native to North Texas. Bradford pears aren’t.
This is an apple blossom blooming on the last apple tree we have in our yard. We’ve never had much success growing fruit trees in Texas.
The view from the top of Mom’s Bald Cypress. Across the yard, our Shumard Red Oak is coming into leaf.

The Shumard is Mr. Cardinal’s favorite perch, and I’ve caught him more than once swaying on the tender top branches singing his heart away.

And this is the lovely creature he’s usually singing to!
I spotted this dove not long ago. We have many different types of doves and the only one I can positively identify is the mourning dove, and then only by its habitual call.

Most of the cows have calved in the nearby farms. Its not unusual to spot calves hours old following their mothers on shaky legs.

The horses have shed their winter coats, and are growing sleek and shiny again. Except after a rainstorm, when they roll in the mud.

Here is a splendid view of the country east of Lake Ray Roberts looking towards the west. The sun was very bright the day I took this picture and cast a kind of haze over the prairie.
Behind the pond, you can see where the grass is beginning to turn green again.
Often old barns, relics of the past, will be sighted on hills or lightly wooded glens.
The most obvious feature in a spring sky still untouched as yet by the summer storms is the very bright, very strong sun.
And it’s the sun that produces these amazing sunsets, never alike from one day to the next.

Late Winter Skies
Click this link: late-winter-skies
Baby Pictures
Recently, I unearthed some “baby” pictures.
This is Cloud when he was 3 weeks old. Isn’t he cute!?!
This is Joy at six weeks on the day we brought her home. Now that’s cute!
Cloud at 8 weeks with a two-month old Abigail. Notice the bat ears.
Another shot of Cloud the Cool Cat at 8 weeks. Hard to believe he was ever that thin!
A Bit of Correspondence…
A few days ago, Dad took Kathy, Matthew, Emily, Annie, and me down to the Dallas Museum of Art to view King Tutankamun and the Golden Age of Pharaohs. It was a splendid exhibit and I really enjoyed seeing all those things I had only read about. I’ve never been a big fan of Egyptian history like some of my sisters, but whem Mom discovered that the treasures from King Tut’s tomb were making a tour of America…well… what history lover could pass up an opportunity like that? It was a long wait of months, but it was so, so worth it. However, there was just one problem. Photography wasn’t allowed. Talk about a crushing disappointment! The only thing I could do was carry back mental images and bits of trivia to write down later. And not write down in the form of a blog entry. Whenever I go to something like this, there’s only one thing I want to do afterwards: write down the whole thing for my best friend, Elisha Wahlquist.
For a long time now, she and I have been sharing what we find beautiful in our lives. My family takes a vacation in Arkasas, and my next letter is full of descriptions of the pristine rivers, beautiful mountains and wildlife. Elisha travels to California to visit her grandmother, and her next letter is filled with word pictures of the seaside, the scent of the ocean, the crashing of waves, and the crying of seagulls. I take a walk in early morning, and then stay up late at night describing the colors and shapes of the clouds I observed. Elisha goes with her family to the land they’re developing, and her next letter tells me about the expansive beauty of the prairie, the amazing depth of the sky, the beautiful greens of the trees and the yellow of the grasses. Favorite passages from books,poems, funny stories about our siblings, and Bible verses that mean something to us… these are things we write about to each other. Over the years, she and I have developed a rappot with each other’s minds, and we often write to each other exactly as though we were sitting face to face having a real conversation. That’s really what it is. Coversations on paper. And it’s the most wonderful thing in the world to me.
So, here below, is an except from the e-mail I sent to Elisha that night. I didn’t origionally write it with the intent of posting it; that thought occured to me only this morning because I didn’t think I could rewrite it any better than it was. So, with her permission, I’m posting it.
…I know you haven’t written back to me yet, but I must tell you everything while it is still fresh in my mind. I wish you could’ve been at the exhibit with me, but you weren’t, so the best I could do was imagine myself relating every detail to you in person as I observed it.
The exhibit actually spanned at least four generations going all the way back to Thutmosis IV and his parents (whose names I can remember but not the Roman numerals after them). We had to walk several rooms before we reached the treasures from King Tut’s tomb. These other things were included, I think, to give a sense of context to the viewers. Of course, I already had a great deal of context, but not everyone is a history buff. Sometimes, I really wish the Egyptians hadn’t falsified so much of their history, because then I could have solidly known what was going on in the world during the times I was viewing. It really bothers me. I like knowing the big picture. I like knowing that while Europe was plunging into the dark ages, the Mayans were plotting the course of Venus, or that while the Incas were building their civilization, the Vikings had discovered America, or that while the Greeks were coming out of their dark age, Solomon was building his temple. You know what I mean.
The first glass case held a beautiful granite statue of King Tut himself. It was about 4 feet high. I was amazed by how unique the face of the statue was. It really looked like a 10-year-old boy. Smooth round cheeks, full mouth, bright, sparkling eyes. I guess after reading so many books I had the impression that faces in Egyptian artwork were all alike, but standing face to face with a real statue made me realize just how wrong such an assumption was. Sure, there are stylistic techniques that identify the culture of the art, but I could, through the eyes of my imagination, see quite well what the boy might’ve looked like had we met face to face.
One statue in the second room really intrigued me. It had been made during the reign of the great Thutmosis III, and showed a picture of that pharaoh with two deities. During the reign of Ahkenaten, this statue had been destroyed. During Tutankhamen’s reign, he rebuilt the statue, substituting himself for Thutmosis. Interesting. Did you know that the color blue is considered sacred to the ancient Egyptians? This color blue. Or a little darker, anyway. Much of the little statuettes of various deities found in the tombs had faces and hands this color. Some statuettes were supposed to be guardians, and they were supposed to intercede or plead for the Pharaoh before the gods, or something like that. I felt sad that they didn’t know who the real Interceder is. That poor boy king is dead, and I’ve a pretty good idea where he is. Looking at history through a Christian lens gives one an incredible over-arcing perspective, doesn’t it?
In the last room before King Tut, they had treasures found in his grandparents’ tomb, which prior to Howard Carter’s amazing discover, was the archaeological find of the century. I can’t recall the name of his grandfather, but the grandmother was Tjuya. They had her coffin and mummy mask on display. I was surprised by how small the mummy mask was. Either the Egyptians were small as a race, or she was an unusually small person, or mummifying the body really shrank it. The mask looked like a feminine version of King Tut’s. The coffin was splendid with a full mask and ornate carvings on the side.
Some of the objects on display were those I’ve previously seen in books. Like the chair Tutankhamen used as a child. Or the crook and flail he held as symbols of power. One interesting concept I had never considered before was the the Pharaoh was considered the shepherd of his people, and in royal functions apparently held a special shepherd’s crook for this purpose. I’m not sure what the flail symbolized. One fascinating item that Emily really liked was a beautiful necklace in the shape of a falcon with wide wings made of gold. You’ve probably seen this in books, like I have. What you don’t get from the pictures is how amazingly delicate this necklace is. It looked as thin and fragile as tin foil.
Now, here’s something really fascinating. The picture below wasn’t taken by me - I found it on the internet. See the green-gold scarab in the middle of this necklace? It was originally thought to be a semi precious gemstone, but recently scientists discovered that the scarab is actually made of glass, glass that was never fashioned by human hands. Instead, it occurs naturally in rare deposits in the Sahara desert. There seems to be a lot of debate as to how this glass was formed. Glass, you know, is formed by melting sand and it takes a lot of heat to melt sand. Since there is no crater impact evident anywhere in the Sahara, scientists think that maybe a comet or hot meteor burned up/exploded right before impact…30 million years ago. Well, except for the 30 million years part, that sounds plausible, but I think more likely that the flood or post flood events would’ve caused it. And I’ve read that creation scientists believe the Sahara was a lush, tropical paradise during the early ice age, so that needs to be factored in as well. I’d love to know what a creation scientist would think about the origins of this mysterious scarab.

This picture I also pulled from the web. Its a coffinette. Sounds cute? Not really. This thing held King Tut’s pickled liver. The coffinette was less that 24 inches high, and it was perfect down to the last detail. It gleamed. It glittered. It glowed. There were more people around this little beauty than anything else in that particular room.
Kathy has long had an interest in what is termed “Pharaohs of the Sun.” This would include Tutankhamen and Ahkenaten. You shoud’ve seen her face when we walked into one room and came face to face with a bust of Ahkenaton himself. Art from the Armana period is pretty distinctive, even to me, who sees Egyptian art as being irritatingly monochrome. The chin, nose and mouth were elongated, almost grotesquely so. There was a sort of half smile on the face, and those blank eyes…ooh! I wouldn’t want to be walking around that thing in the middle of the night! The tiny bust of Nefertiti, on the other hand, was exquisite and probably made before the major shift in Egyptian artwork had begun. It was so real and lifelike - even the stone looked smooth and soft as skin. Her cheek bones were appropriately high, her eyebrows perfectly arched, the lips beautifully formed… if she really looked like that in real life, she must’ve been something else. Why Ahkenaten felt compelled to marry other women after seeing her is beyond me!
So, was it worth going to? Absolutely. The artwork is beautiful and I’m happy I was able to view it. I suppose, had I been a character in a book, I would be one of those liberal minded people that is always going on about improving culture and one’s mind by exposure to art and good music and stuff like that. At least, that’s what I would like to be. I really enjoyed going and I wish you could’ve been there with me.
We also went through the Dallas Muesem of Art while we were waiting to go through the King Tut exhibit. Nothing noteworthy because I’m not fond of art by the Greeks or Romans nor do I enjoy staring at conglomerations by Picasso and, even though there are things about the Impressionist period that I like, I’m really picky about it. There were only two things I liked. First was all the Eastern art from China, Japan and India. Second was a huge painting done in the Renaissance titled “Storm.” Picture this. Rocky, wind-swept mountains with a few trees tenaciously clinging to life on the edge. Narrow, fertile valleys. A raging cold river, teaming with trout. A beautiful town bathed in the golden light of the afternoon sun just glimpsed through the boulders on the riverbed and the tall trees. Fishermen pulling their nets in from the swirling waters. A mother with an infant walking along the water’s edge. Blue light in the sky above on one side, and a raging storm blowing down from the mountains on the other, touched here and there by pinks and golds from the sun, grading down to dark, ominous clouds. That’s what the picture looked like with all the sense of depth and light and color as though I was really standing there. I could almost taste the rain on the wind, almost hear the distant boom of thunder. Poetic ramble, anyone…?
Thank you, Elisha, for the many years of correspondence! I am eagerly awaiting your next letter!

An Afternoon with Mr. Darcy
Today’s post…………..the definitely dashing, dazzling and smashing Mr. Darcy, who has graciously posed for the following photographs (captioned by his beloved nanny, Kathy)…
Does this position make me look…stout?

A true gentleman takes pride in his personal appearance, achieved by meticulous grooming
………………….and more grooming,
Don’t you agree?
Unfortunately, one is at times obliged to mingle with the lower classes.

What’s under there?
Ahhhhhh………..a tail!
Permit me to assist you, my clumsy friend; a bird’s tail is a gentleman’s cravat.
I was only trying to help!
You certainly don’t take criticism kindly, do you?














































