Sunday, November 30, 2014

Honoring Miriam — A Trip to the National Gallery



It's been eleven years today since my mom, Miriam, passed away. This time of year is always hard. But this year was just a little harder because the date and day matched from eleven years ago. It seems like a long time and in other ways it seems like a very short time.

Each year I go down to the National Gallery of Art. It was her favorite museum in Washington. She loved the impressionists. We would always spend extra time in them. She particular liked two works by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. They were the Girl with a Hoop and Girl With a Watering Can. But she loved all of the impressionists.




Each year I go down and see them.




The other thing I do is go to the Gallery cafeteria and get some chocolate pudding. I then sit as close to the waterfall and eat my pudding and think of my mom.

The pudding story I've told before but here it is again. Back in the day my mom would make chocolate pudding for dessert. Now this was not instant pudding but the kind you had to really make and cook on the stove. Once mom was done making it she would put it in the refrigerator to cool down. Now it was important to cover the pudding sot it would not get that hard gross layer on top of it. To prevent this from happening, she would cover the pudding with wax paper (yes wax paper which tells you how long ago it was). The big thing in our house was who would get to lick the pudding off the wax paper once the paper was pulled off the pudding. That's the reason for the chocolate pudding.

It's just my way of remembering her.



Cute Teddy Bears — Actually Teddy Penguins

I saw these guys in the gift shop at the Natural History Museum. I thought they would be really expensive but was surprised that they weren't. The gray one in the first picture was $25. The penguins with hats, they looked so cute in them, were $38. The big guy went for $150. Not bad at all. Most of all all of them were really really soft.




Skating Anyone?

The National Gallery Sculpture Garden skating rink is open for business.

A little more on the rink:
The 2014–2015 ice-skating season at the National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden Ice Rink on the National Mall will begin November 14, 2014 and continue through March 16, 2015, weather permitting.

This season, Guest Services offers an exciting new program and broad range of skating lessons for all ages, taught by Emme Porter, Bruce Porter, and their team of instructors, who together have more than 25 years of teaching experience, in addition to their backgrounds spanning figure skating, ice dancing, choreography, hockey, and more, on local, national, and international levels.




Monday, November 24, 2014

Canstruction, Part I






From Canstruction web site:

Canstruction® is a unique charity which hosts competitions, exhibitions and events showcasing colossal structures made entirely out of full cans of food. After the structures are built, the cansculptures® go on display to the public as a giant art exhibition. At the end of the event, all food is donated to local hunger relief organizations.

Recognized for our commitment to innovation, hunger relief and collaboration, our work has helped raise over 25 million pounds of food since 1992. Canstruction® events are held annually in over 150 cities around the world including North America, Australia, South America, Europe and Asia.

This was at baggage claim area at National Airport. I went on Saturday and saw it. Very cool.

This is about the Jayson Werth gnome:
Over the weekend, a group of 10 people created a nine-foot replica of a Jayson Werth gnome at Reagan National Airport using $3,800 worth of canned seafood.

That’s a fun sentence.

Why did they do this? Well, it’s part of Arlington’s annual Canstruction competition, running this year from Nov. 14 through Nov. 22 at the main terminal’s baggage claim. Canstruction competitions, held in about 150 cities, feature large sculptures made out of full cans of food; after the events are over, the food is donated to local hunger relief groups.

Here are some pictures. What was interesting was the farther back you got the more in focus the image became. If you go up close to the Werth gnome you didn't get any of the detail.






Canstruction, Part II

More from Canstruction.








Sunday, November 23, 2014

Looking for a Forever Furry Feline Friend — This Adoption Event is for You!



My friend, Yolanda, is a volunteer with the Washington Humane Society. She's sponsoring a cat adoption fair this Sunday.

The fair will be at Annie’s Ace Hardware, 1240 Upshur St NW, Sunday, November 23, 12pm – 3pm.

So if you are looking for a furry friend and companion, stop by the fair this Sunday and see all the wonderful cats ready to be adopted.

More about the Humane Society:


The WHS Mission
The Washington Humane Society inspires and creates a community where all animals have secure homes and where people and animals live together with joy and compassion.

About WHS
The Washington Humane Society (WHS), the only Congressionally-chartered animal welfare agency in the United States, has been the area’s leading voice for animals since 1870. As the open-access shelter in the Nation’s Capital, the Washington Humane Society provides comfort and care to over 43,000 animals each year through its broad range of programs and services including sheltering for homeless animals, a comprehensive adoption program and off-site adoption events to find new families for the animals in our care, low-cost spay and neuter for pet owners and other local organizations, an aggressive TNR (trap-neuter-return) program for feral cats (CatNiPP), investigations of each allegation of animal cruelty or neglect through the Humane Law Enforcement, lost and found services to help reunite lost pets with their families, pet behavioral advice to help resolve issues that lead to animals being relinquished to shelters, working with breed rescue groups to find more homes for more animals, volunteer and foster programs to allow other members of the community to help us help more animals and an award winning Humane Education program that teaches kindness to animals to the next generation of animal lovers.

I just love the picture she found for this month's event!

You can also follow Petworth Monthly Cat Adoption Event on Facebook.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Gansevoort Market

At the end of the High Line is Gansevoort Market. Another great find on our walk down the High Line. More on the market:
Today’s Gansevoort Market is a unique food market aimed at providing the highest quality of foods from local and international vendors. Our specialized vendors purvey fresh produce and meat, artisan confections, savory snacks, imported coffee, fresh organic juices and prepared raw vegan foods. Gansevoort Market is also a meeting place for a quick cup of fine coffee and the best quality prepared foods.
 It had a wide range of things to eat. Pizza, sandwiches, crepes and some really great snacks. 

I'm putting this first because Denis went nuts over these.

The area around the market.


The market entrance


This is an old VW bus converted into a food truck.

The Twinkies again

More from this wonderful bakery.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

High Line — Part I

High Line Park in New York City

What a really cool park. One of the most unique that I’ve seen. The High Line is:

The High Line is an elevated freight rail line transformed into a public park on Manhattan’s West Side. It is owned by the City of New York, and maintained and operated by Friends of the High Line. Founded in 1999 by community residents, Friends of the High Line fought for the High Line’s preservation and transformation at a time when the historic structure was under the threat of demolition. It is now the non-profit conservancy working with the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation to make sure the High Line is maintained as an extraordinary public space for all visitors to enjoy. In addition to overseeing maintenance, operations, and public programming for the park, Friends of the High Line works to raise the essential private funds to support more than 90 percent of the park’s annual operating budget, and to advocate for the transformation of the High Line at the rail yards, the third and final section of the historic structure, which runs between West 30th and West 34th Streets.

A little more on the High Line:
The High Line Park uses the disused southern portion of the West Side Line running to the Lower West Side of Manhattan. It runs from Gansevoort Street – three blocks below 14th Street – in the Meatpacking District, through Chelsea, to the northern edge of the West Side Yard on 34th Street near the Javits Convention Center.

Here are some pictures of the walk Denis and I took on the High Line.

A map of High Line


They actually kept some of the tracks

Denis

A view of the High Line

And now I know where I'll buy my next home!

High Line — Part II

More from the wonderful High Line.

The change in color on this plant is  just amazing.

A place to stop and rest and get some sun if it was a sunny day. Notice the train tracks and wheels well you could move it down the track

Some silly person bothering Denis

Silly person is less silly mood

Some of the great art work



One of the sculptures along the trail.

Midweek Laugh

Wow it feels like the middle of January not the middle of November. Only a few days left of these really cold weather.

To get us through to next Monday when it's supposed to be almost 70 in DC, here are a few Peanuts cartoons.

Everybody keep warm with a smile.