Canned Goods

 

An asian woman checking out before us at Sprouts this evening had something like 30 cans of coconut milk (probably the store’s current stock). After the lady left the checker said “That was a little strange!” I just smiled and told the checker it was a run on coconut milk — the scene reminded me of Spain. During the three and a half years we lived in Madrid, the food staple we missed the most was hot New Mexico green chiles. There were green pimientos readily available in Spain that looked just like green chiles, but I think a bell pepper from New Mexico is hotter than those pimientos, so we were in a sad state of chile withdrawal for the first several months in Spain. One day, while looking at the ethnic food section at El Corte Inglés (I had never thought of the food we eat daily as ethnic, before living in Spain), we found cans of  Old El Paso roasted jalapeños. The gods were smiling on us! While not quite to the level of the local green chile we ate back home, roasted jalapeños were a great substitute. So we happily bought Old El Paso roasted jalapeños from our local El Corte Inglés for several months, until one day we bought the last can. We innocently asked a store clerk if he knew when they were getting more. He checked with the manager and told us they were no longer available. Upon seeing the panicked look on our faces, he told us the other stores might still have some. I spent the next day running from one end of Madrid to the other, and by the end of the day I had bought out the remaining stock of Old El Paso roasted jalapeños from every El Corte Inglés in Madrid proper and the surrounding afueras (suburbs). Thus I didn’t think it at all strange to see an asian woman buying up Sprout’s stock of canned coconut milk.

Father Justin

We went to a lecture by Father Justin of St. Catherine’s Monastery, Mount Sinai last night as part of the Medieval Studies lecture series. Father Justin is the Librarian at St. Catherine’s Monastery, which was built by Justinian in the sixth century, and is the oldest continuously inhabited Christian monastery in the world. His talk was on “Continuity and Change at Sinai from the Seventh to the Ninth Century: Insights from a Sinai Palimpsest.”  The palimpsest is a page from a set of manuscripts of the Epistles of St. Paul written in Greek with accompanying, parallel Arabic text from the 9th century. The manuscripts were left or forgotten in a room in the monastery where the roof collapsed and buried them. They were discovered in 1975 during renovations to the room. The manuscripts provide a great deal of information about the time when the Christian church in the Middle East was having to deal with the Islamic presence. Using modern photographic and digital technology, Father Justin has been able to not only study the writing that is currently on the manuscripts, but also enhance and make earlier text that had been erased legible so the previous writings can now be analyzed and studied, as well.

As we walked back to the car, I took a few photos of the buildings and features on campus. The architecture and lighting on UNM’s campus provide so many photo opts that I can’t recall setting foot on campus at night within the past four years without taking at least a half a dozen pictures.

Love & Manx

 

Between nights in the low 20’s and day time temps reaching into the 70’s, the rose bushes have a variety of fresh to freeze dried blooms. Mama Manx was looking in the window hoping one of us would let her in. Laurie made note of how cute she looked, while I photographed her. The kitty was very patient staring through the glass and screen until we finally let her in.

We headed out early this morning, in sub-freezing temperatures, all bundled up,  with coffee and Kindles in hand, prepared to brave the line and elements to exercise out right to vote — but there was no line. The poll workers outnumbered the voters, so we ended up spending about as much time saying hi to an old friend attending the vote scanner as we did voting.

 

 

 

 

Roadrunner Art

I hadn’t seen a roadrunner in our yard in several years. About 20 years ago we were infested with roadrunners. There would be a half dozen or more hanging around in the yard just about any time we went outside. When we were out working in the garden, the roadrunners would surround us, staying about 15 feet away, and walk circles around us, one direction then the other, cocking their heads as the eyed us up one side and down the other. I figured they were sizing us up to determine if they had sufficient numbers to take us down. One year they simply disappeared and I haven’t really seen roadrunners in the yard again until yesterday. I got the photo of the dogs in the back of the truck on our way home tonight.

El Dia de los Muertos

We went to a live performance of “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead” last night (wonderful performance), then went to the Frontier Restaurant to eat and visit afterward, so we didn’t get home until almost midnight. Laurie reminded me that we set the clocks back an hour, so I set all our analog clocks to 11:20 thinking we were almost ready for bed. However, by the time I remember I needed to go outside and turn off the water to the drip system, did a kitty count, messed around on the computer some more, and finally herded the cats to the bedroom it was 12:20 again — I ended up staying up past midnight twice last night.

We went to the Marigold Parade and Festival as part of El Dia de los Muertos after choir practice this afternoon. The Marigold Parade was great fun and people from the various cultures in the Albuquerque area participated and showed off their creativity.

Classic Beauties

 

The smoke from the latest controlled burn has just about put me down for the count — I really have cold symptoms from it.  The lovely sisters work at Lindy’s Diner downtown. They were gracious enough to pose with the coke pump in the diner. The turquoise GMC pickup is a really well restored 60’s model and the Boulevard C50 T is a modern classic in turquoise as well.

 

 

Inspirations

We went to “Inspirations” by Nicole Larsen tonight at UNM’s Keller Hall. It was a mix of singing, dancing, and drama that was very well done and entertaining. The show offered great music, beautiful singing, stylish dancing and emotionally charged theatrics delivered with a lot of energy and enthusiasm.  The only problem was a pesky photographer who sat in the back of the theater taking photos during the first act; the clicking of the shutter and whirring of the lens stabilization system bothered his wife, who made him stop taking photos during most of the second act. Oh well! I need to figure when the dress rehearsals for show like this are and see if I could photograph the dress rehearsals, then people could go to the shows if they liked the photos and the review.

Halloween

 

Liz, who works at Patrician Designs, was a paper boy for Halloween. Getting a good photo of her clicking her heels was not an easy task, but we finally got a great jump and click — although she jumped so high, she about jumped out the frame — I was impressed. I managed to get a photo of an angel playing the piano, which is a pleasant addition to the ghostly images a got walking around downtown this evening. The three celebrants in the last photo had wonderful costumes, very well done, and appropriate for Halloween.