My niece is moving to Austin to attend grad school at UT. She and her brother drove down from Seattle, and arrived on Friday. We’ve enjoyed visiting with them for the last few days. Tonight we drove down to South Congress to meet them for dinner, and afterwards watched the bats fly out from under the Congress Avenue Bridge.
Today a solar eclipse occurred right as the sun was setting. Farther west in the US, the entire eclipse would be visible. But, in Austin it started about 45 minutes before sunset, and by the time the sun was to set, it would only be about 50% eclipsed.
A few weeks ago, monte ordered #14 welder’s glass so that we could view it safely. We scoped out a high enough perch that would allow us to see the sun for the longest time before it slipped below the horizon.
We decided on the Iguana Grill above Lake Travis. The view was pretty great. A bunch of friends joined us to watch it occur. This is a shot right before the it slipped away.
Butterfly out back on the lantana. Maybe one of these days I’ll have (make) the time to take some proper shots out in the garden, with a tripod and patience. But for now, I’ll try to be quick on the shutter for these chance encounters.
We headed to the lake yesterday to raft-up overnight in Arkansas Bend cove with Marty & Sue, and Joe. It was really pleasant out. Overcast yesterday, but nice breezes. This is a shot from yesterday of the windsocks on Joe’s backstay on Prelude. It got into the 60’s last night. Refreshingly chilly. It will be hot again soon enough.
We made quite the fleet. 2 sloops, 1 catboat, 2 kayaks, a rubber dinghy and a stand-up paddle board.
Today, we kayaked and sup-ed around the cove, and then headed back early in the afternoon to prepare for Monday. Today was much sunnier, blue skies with big clouds, and a nice breeze for the sail home.
When I got my Mac, I realized that it could only open the windows filesystem on my old USB backup drive in read-only mode. Not great for doing backups. I’ll need to reformat it to use it. But I’ve been procrastinating, because i’m going to have to sort through what’s on there to see what to keep and what to get rid of. So this week I took the first step – I copied most of what was on the backup drive to my mac to prepare to reformat the USB drive.
Consequently, the next time I opened Picasa, it found ALL the photos that I had just copied and loaded them into its library, which took a while. But, once it finished, it makes for very easy viewing of many years of pictures. So, I’ve been spending a lot of time this morning browsing through photos I’ve taken that I haven’t looked at for years.
When I got to this one I thought I’d share it with you. This is a photo that I took when my sister, Colleen, and her son, Jacob, were visiting about 4 years ago. We drove down to Port Aransas for the weekend, and stayed a place right on the Gulf-side of the beach. This is a picture of Colleen and Jacob jumping together in the surf. I used some piece of software, can’t remember what, to create a water-color effect — oh, and I edited out the oil rig on the horizon :(. I later printed this and framed it for her.
I guess it’s kind of appropriate, too, because this is Mother’s Day weekend, and she’s a great mom.
It rained yesterday and last night and has been drizzly today – a gray day, indeed. But I am not complaining…not til the lake is full.
I downloaded the Color Splash Studio app for my Mac a couple months ago, but have never taken the time to figure out how to use it. This is my first attempt. It allows you to manually remove colors from a color photo. I know I should just get Photoshop, but I’m playing around a bit with other tools first.
For some reason this song popped into my head as I was writing up this post…just try keeping it out of your head for the next day or two. 🙂
Jacques Pépin‘s biggest fan may very well live under our roof. Monte follows his show regularly. Every once in a while we’ll try one his recipes out.
This is a soda bread recipe that I’ve tried, two ways. Jacques says it can be made either with regular milk and baking powder, or with buttermilk and baking soda (the more traditional, I suppose).
Last week I made it with milk & baking powder. Yesterday, (pic above) I made it with buttermilk and baking soda. Both were good. I think this last loaf cooked a little too long, though. Either that or the fat in the buttermilk caused it to get more yellow than white inside.
You can watch the episode (link here), if you like. Or, here’s the recipe, below. If you want to try it w/ the milk and baking powder combo, just swap out the buttermilk and baking soda in equal quantities.
Soda Bread
1/2 tsp canola oil
3 c all-purpose flour
1 1/2 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp baking soda
1 1/2 c buttermilk (room-temperature if possible)
Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Cut sheet of parchment paper to cover baking sheet. Coat parchment paper with canola oil.
Hold 1 Tbsp flour aside to dust loaf before placing in oven. Sift the rest of the flour together with salt and baking soda in a large bowl.
Add buttermilk to dry mixture and stir til combined. You want to make sure to add the buttermilk right before you’re ready to put it in the oven. Don’t let it sit. Turn dough out onto parchment paper. It will be a bit sticky. Cover with saran wrap and form into a round dough, about 7″ in diameter. Remove saran wrap. Dust with previously set aside flour, and cut a shallow x in the top of the loaf.
Cover with an upside down stainless steel bowl. Cook in oven for 30 mins covered. Then remove bowl and cook for another 30 mins.
We had planned to raft up last night, but as it turned out, we didn’t make it to the lake. It ended up raining overnight, so it’s just as well that we weren’t out there. Today we went to the marina to bring home the kayak and close up the boat. It was nice to back on the lake. It’s been a while, for me. The temps were in the 90’s. The water temps are in the high 70’s. Tis the season for B-dockers to hang out on the lake every weekend.
We saw Joe, Mike, Marty, Sue, Jerry and Wally. Sue has her stand-up paddle board in their slip. So, she and I paddled up and down the dock for quite a while. Along the way we saw lots of the neighborhood ducks. The mom and babies in the shot above were not too leary of the kayak – we were able to get pretty close. Though, I’m told that last week, this momma duck had seven babies, not six.
The shot below shows some of the ducks that have become quite accustomed to handouts from B-dock. You can see one of the big carp under the surface of the water on the right side of the frame.
Our mimosa tree out back is blooming. It’s had a hard couple of years with freezes and droughts. At one point we thought it was a goner. It appeared to have a split in its trunk. But, there’s still life in it. The canopy is not covered with blooms this year, just a couple dozen. I tried to capture one of the newer ones, here.
Doray & Tom gave Monte a lime tree for his birthday (aka his “margarita tree”). It’s blooming out back, now. And after the blooms are spent, little baby limes are left behind.
Can’t wait for them to grow up. Monte’s standing by with the juicer at the ready. 🙂
I do love driving up north of New York City. In about a span of 5-10 minutes the scenery quickly turns from city sprawl to forest, hills, rocks and streams. I can drive the route between La Guardia Aiport to Somers in my sleep. There’s one sight on the Hutchinson River Parkway at about exit 24 that always makes me chuckle – a curious looking pine tree.
I decided to take of picture of it as I was zooming by in traffic today, on my way back to the airport.
“And we must study through reading, listening, discussing, observing and thinking. We must not neglect any one of those ways of study. The trouble with most of us is that we fall down on the latter — thinking — because it’s hard work for people to think. And, as Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler said recently, ‘all of the problems of the world could be settled easily if men were only willing to think.'”
IBM founder Thomas J. Watson was an inspiring figure and entrepreneur. He introduced the “THINK” slogan in the early days of the company to motivate and inspire IBMers. It was the first US trademark registered by IBM. Over the century, this one-word slogan has adorned IBM buildings, publications, ads and presentations. Back in the day, IBMers carried around small, leatherbound THINK note pads to capture great thoughts and ideas.
The original ThinkPad.
Those little notebooks later inspired the name of the IBM ThinkPad line of laptops in the 1990s. I’ve always thought that was clever. I think TJ Watson would, too.