Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Water

Got up this morning listening to the sound of rain against the windows. Being the first one up at about 5:30, I came down to the kitchen, emptied the dish washer, cleaned up the remnants of last night's late evening snacks, made coffee (french press for the family, expresso for me), cooked up some oatmeal, read a New York Times article on restaurants in Hudson County where I grew up, remembered one of my first jobs as a bus boy in Tedesco's, an Italian restaurant on Bergenline Ave that had great bread and mussels.




I continue to hear the soft hits of raindrops on the window. Coming from Colorado with our seemingly perennial drought, I think of how they have all this water on the East Coast and they just let so much of it run into the sea. Filling estuaries like those of Pawtuxet a few blocks away and, then, making its way into the long Narragansett Bay and finally into the Long Island Sound. ("Sound" coming from the Dutch, "sund" meaning, I think, strait...at least that is the translation in Norwegian).





So the waters, now brackish in the estuary, move out into the great salt waters...providing recreation, scenery, and food for tourists and day trippers.









But also providing the ballast for the earth, a home for the sealife from which our species, this bright mammal Homo sapiens, creating the climate which blankets us all. And, even, yes, providing the winter snows that thousands of miles from any coast, provide the waters for the Colorado deserts in which we live.

posted for using BlogPress from my iPad

Location:Mather Ave,Cranston,United States

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Adelaide and her folks

Well, at least, some of her folks. Because, after all, it is not about the baby per se. It is about the baby as part of a family...as far out as the definition of family may go.




In this case, Adelaide with her mormor and the cat Hobs.




-
Or with her Dad who is now off to work after spending the first few weeks with Addie. I do believe he would rather be home but then there is that question of income. It is, after all, not Norway where fathers are obligated to take paternity leave of several months. With pay.
But then that is why there is a family that can be extended. Our son, Jose, had taken the overnight train up from Maryland to Rhode Island to welcome Adelaide...just found it hard to stay awake the following afternoon. Above his supine form are, from the left,




Ingrid, Adelaide, Geoff, Charlotte (the mormor), Halie, Freya, and Tom. Not shown are Nelcy, Alejandro, and Dylan...still in the Dominican Republic. And Jose Jr, the first grandchild, now 14 years old, in Missouri.

All of us at one point have been babies. And even if we are not babies, we still need our sleep.

Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Houses

Out walking in Cranston, along Narragansett Bay, the houses...so distinctive, so beginning to bloom in the spring















Some well maintained, some needing repair, some totally redone, all making a space for a family, some friends, some families, pets...all weathering the damp sea air, the constantly changing sea winds this time of year, the rain...all making a compromise between the world and our need to be warm and to surround ourselves with beauty.

Location:Newport, RI

Adelaide Charlotte

So ok here we are...the real reason for your being this month in Rhode Island...for hanging around with Freya, now almost two...making sure that she did not feel slighted by the sudden appearance of a smaller sister...
doing dishes...emptying out garbage...doing laundry...you know...




-








And what could be more important than this passing of DNA along to another generation...so much fun. was in a restaurant tonight and a young woman had a small baby with her and I looked and I asked "Two months?" And she looked really surprised as if people like myself would not know the age of a small newborn. "Two and a half months."




But it is not of just one generation at a point in time but all that train of generations, millions of years in their making, their evolution,...all that continuity and innovation.




So we celebrate this birth...and this sharing of our species' lineage...moving down some unknown paths...so much adventure to be had.
Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Pawtuxet Village

Late afternoon in the village. The Pawtuxet River still flows past the village to its juncture with the Narragansett Bay...past the colonial homes that were built when this site was an active ship-building port, past homes that were built for the textile magnates who harassed the river's power to run the mills that once lined its banks, past the homes of managers of the Rhodes casino and dance hall that brought throngs out from Providence on the trolley on weekends, and now past the homes of those with wealth enough to "live on the water" and past the shops (restaurants, wine bars, tea shops) that crowd around the small bridge that crosses the water.


Charlotte and I came down to the village for a glass of wine, taking a break from waiting with Ingrid for the imminent birth of her second child. We've been out for a week so far, helping with housework, childcare for first daughter Freya, and moving at a pace much slower from that at home. So we've been a bit house-bound (well that is the meaning of "husband") but the new baby will come when she, yes a she, comes.

In the meantime, it's daily trips to the village (for the New York Times and the morning's first capuchino) and for a walk around a part of the country, so different from the colorado town we call home.

Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

At home

Only so many backsides of trucks in one day to make you wish you were somewhere else. But the mood brightened considerably when we crossed from the west bank of the Ohio River into the hills and mountains of Pennsylvania.




The road developed curves, and if more narrow than the Ohio Turnpike, it was much more interesting to drive...and we had listened to the 44 Scotland series of Alexander McCall Smith, the adventures of Bertie and Bruce and Dominica, and Ulysses and so many others. It is like signing up for a course in community awareness.





So we left behind those massive factories of high fructose corn syrup and climbed and descended into lush green forests and fields. Narrow valleys. Former mining towns. Now quiet. 16 percent of the houses in the town where we stayed for the night were "abandoned." Not foreclosed, not for rent, not vacation second homes. Just abandoned.




But then there is always something amazing. Like the sunset as seen over this valley of so many abandoned dwellings. The way the ski lights turned on, then red, then yellow, then just dark shades of themselves.





So yesterday we arrived, three blocks from Narragassett Bay, at the home of Ingrid, Geoff, Freya, two cats, and about to be joined by a new child, still clinging to the inside of Ingrid's womb. The living room is grey and populated with bright red sofas, a large cadenza holds a tv, now thankfully off, paintings line the walls, an easy chair waits for me. Home, this home away from home. BlogPress from my iPad

Location:Cranston, Rhode Island

Sunday, May 5, 2013

On the sides of I-80

So sometimes you pull off the highway at a rest stop and something is happening. For example, a music celebration at a Western Trails stop on the bluffs overlooking the Missouri River. Council Bluffs to be exact.


Besides a Saturday afternoon live concert, old photos displayed how the trails west (which we follow on I-80, parallel to the Union Pacific Railroad, parallel to the Platte River) went across the rivers....





But it is also the way that a stop causes a little burst in the car bubble, the cocoon created by being in an automobile for hours on end, even with an amusing audio book on CDs, the tight constraints of seat, car door, dashboard dictating movement. So you step out of the cocoon into a world....college students arriving at a motel with huge bundles on their backs going to a tuba and euphonium workshop at the local university. Or, as in Iowa City, hitting prom night at the restaurant down the hill. Girls looking beautiful; guys looking awkward. Or, sometimes, at a quick stop, a place with really good ice cream. Or trying to figure out why the family at the next table looks so sad.



It's there...life on the sidestreams of the interstate. But, then, we are just passing through...another 1200 miles to go before we hit the shores of the Rhode Island bay where we are headed.

Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Location:iowa city