Today was a milestone in family maturity for us. We started soccer. Not for the year, but actually just started for the first time. Neither Abby nor Ben had ever played in any organized way and I wanted them to play and not get behind their peers.
Friday, September 28, 2007
A family first
Welcome to Hong Kong – want a donut?
This is one of the first things you see when you emerge from the luggage area in the
If this is what the wonder of globalization gets you, I feel short-changed. That said, I have to admit that I once bought one of these once in a moment of trans-fat nostalgia.
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Yellow fish mobile
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Baby raccoon
I asked her where you could buy, say, a chipmunk in
Well, at the cricket market, of course.
Why not just buy a cricket?
Way too boring, maybe even more boring than a fish.
The saga continues.
Monday, September 24, 2007
Saturday, September 22, 2007
Collect the Distillate of the Whole World
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Duck herding
Friday, September 7, 2007
Six Records of a Floating Life
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
Portulacas
Here's pictures of some portulacas planted on the edges of the beds in our front and back yards.
I first planted portulacas in a small patch of land next to a little studio apartment I lived in in LA about 10 years ago. The apartment was above a garage and next to it there was this little weedy patch about 10 x 20. I asked my landlady if I could dig up the weeds and plant a little garden and since it was sort of out of the way and people rarely object to anyone voluntarily pulling weeds, she consented. I ended up planning tomatoes, some red and yellow peppers and then a bunch of flowers -- mostly seasonal stuff with lots of zinnias, petunias and impatiens. In the dead of the summer I planted portulacas, which I'd never known before, but are really nicely flowering things once they get going. They're annuals, which are both fun and sad, since you get the satisfaction of seeing them bloom quickly, but then you have to seem them die off quickly as well. They are heliotropic (the flowers turn to face the sun as it moves during the day) as well as diurnal (the flowers open in the morning and close at night). I felt obliged to shoehorn those words in somewhere just because I spent a lot of time learning what they meant and you can't really throw them into a normal conversation. Anyway, I showed my kids some morning glories in our neighborhood recently told them that the flowers open and closed. They were a bit skeptical but we did a check before and after sunset and I was justified in the eyes of my 4 and 6 year olds. Abby came up to me the other day and said that portulacas were related to morning glories since they closed up at night. I thought it was pretty observant and I was pleased to see that my botanical indoctrination was beginning to bear fruit. It's always nice to close on a bad pun
Rock formations
A couple of weekends ago I went with a neighbor on what was going to be a long day trip to a Chinese national park that was about an hour flight from Shanghai. Amusingly, I got the idea to go to this place from an online article in the New York Times travel section. I read the Times on the web each day. As far as I can tell it appears to be almost entirely uncensored by the Chinese government. Most days there is at least one article on
But the real action started after we got to the airport. It turned out that there had been a big thunderstorm in
Fortunately, I traced my way back through security checks and metal detectors, which were all turned off, and found that the doors to the security were only closed by small sliding bolts. On a somewhat frightening side note, the airlines would check in whole groups of tourists by letting their tour guide just bring up a stack of ID cards and issuing the tickets for the stack. – no visual check of the passengers. Anyway, I undid one of the security gates, figuring that if I got in trouble I could always pull the confused foreigner card, and walked out into the main lobby where we found an open door to the outside. As we were headed out the door a bunch of people saw that we had escaped and began to follow our lead, pouring out of the airport. We managed to grab the last cab and found a hotel back in the town about midnight that had a couple of rooms with air conditioners. Our flight back to