Art Cars

This past weekend was Houston’s Art Car Parade, an annual event since 1987. I wasn’t able to go to the parade, but as I was running errands Saturday afternoon, I was able to shoot (with my cell phone) some of the entries in various parking lots.


This made me want a bus so I could convert it to a Partridge Family bus.


Recognize the Griswolds’ car from 1983’s Vacation?


They’ve even got Aunt Edna tied on top.

And look, Chaaaarlie, it’s a Unicorn Car:

Button Sunday

Can’t resist sharing the arrival of The Canadians to The Compound:


‘Nathan and Dan don’t seem too traumatized by the blindfolds.
Maybe because their escorts let them wear their glasses on top of the blindfolds.
Maybe because Dan doesn’t realize his blindfold has SKULLS on it.
Maybe because they don’t take penguins seriously.
Always a mistake.

Jet

One of the best purchases I ever made was my CR-V, Jet, in April of 1998. I learned from past car mistakes and have taken good care of Jet with regular maintenance, oil changes, and cleanings. At twelve, he’s weathered some dramas and isn’t the fresh young thing he used to be, but he’s still my favorite car I’ve ever had and I’m not even remotely interested in trading him for some whippersnapper with a shiny finish. We’ve driven to Mendocino, California and back. To Portland, Maine and back. To Ohio, New York, Tennessee, Alabama, Utah, Minnesota, Georgia, Louisiana, and all over Texas–a lot of highway miles.

Last week, I realized Jet was about to reach an important milestone, and I hoped I’d be with him, but I knew it was just as likely that Tom or Tim would be and probably wouldn’t even notice. This morning when I woke up, I felt compelled to go check him out before Tom used him for an errand. Because it MIGHT still be possible…

Here’s what I saw.


So, like any White Trash Princess, still wearing my nightgown, I grabbed my keys and my license, invited the dogs for a ride, put on my seatbelt, and away we went. About three-tenths of a mile later, we all pulled over and celebrated together:

Happy birthday, Jet, and I look forward to as many more miles with you as you’ll give me. Here’s a photo Tom took of us on our first day together:

Photo Friday, No. 196

Current Photo Friday theme: The Coast

It’s hard to contemplate the impact of the recent oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico without remembering how, in 2005, Hurricane Katrina caused such terrible loss of life along with damage to property and the economy of the beautiful Mississippi Gulf Coast. Even in 2008, my first visit back to the area broke my heart.

The story in this photo gives me hope. This smooth road along the coast, with equipment still on it, had been turned into a twisted mass of puzzle pieces by the winds and floods. Many of the gorgeous live oaks–some of them hundreds of years old–and pines that were destroyed in the hurricane have since been turned into sculptures like this dolphin, becoming the number one tourist attraction in the area. Then there’s the whimsy of the Santa hat on the dolphin’s head.

A little science, a little art, a little humor: We deal with catastrophe.

On birthdays and other things


I always make Rhonda feel REALLY great when I tell her that her birthday–May 4–is the day Jeff died in 1995. Because that’s the kind of friend I am! In actuality, though that time was a dark one, only two years afterward, I met Rhonda online, and here we are thirteen years later, “in real life” friends, as they say, and part of a group of people who enjoy and cherish one another, most of whom I didn’t know existed in 1995. Celebrating Rhonda’s birthday while remembering Jeff reminds me what brilliant experiences and people may await me after bad times. No matter what happens, there’s always hope that eventually, someone could make a Pixie Bear on craft night.

I’m assuming–and I hope I’m right, because I have no cake baked!–that Rhonda will be blowing out candles at The Compound while the Canadians are here. And that’s SO SOON. I hope the jasmine is still blooming for y’all, because I was outside earlier inhaling the aroma. Awesome.


To show that hope really does spring eternal, I also planted some seeds in little pots and in one of the flower beds this morning. If something I planted from a seed actually grows, it’ll be a miracle. Tim has much better luck at that than I ever have–his morning glories I thought were gone forever because of our freezes have come back to stick out their purple tongues at me.

One of the daisies Tim got for The Compound looked especially lovely today. I’m presenting it here as a gift to ‘Nathan, because it’s orange and for another reason I think he’ll understand.

Today is also Star Wars day, which I only discovered last year, I think: May the fourth be with you. Once again, in regard to balance, this reminds me to laugh in spite of the other event that this date signifies: the Kent State shootings in 1970. In February of this year, the site where four students died and nine were wounded was added to the National Register of Historic Places. Usually this doesn’t happen for more than fifty years after an event, but the application offered a compelling case for registering the site. One of the applicants, Kent State Professor Emeritus Jerry Lewis, was acting as a faculty marshall on that spring day in 1970. Today, Amanda provided a link to a radio interview with Dr. Lewis that was really good. Thank you for that, Amanda.

Among the things Dr. Lewis shared was an excerpt from an article written this year by Elaine Holstein. You probably don’t recognize her name, but if you’ve ever read an article about Kent State, you’ve seen her son Jeff Miller in the Pulitzer Prize-winning photo taken of him that day; at age twenty, he lay dead on the ground with an anguished fourteen-year-old girl kneeling next to him, her arms outstretched.

I’d like to repeat the quote from Mrs. Holstein that Dr. Lewis shared:

…once in a while, I wonder about my son Jeff’s future that had so needlessly been cut short.

What would he have been like now, at age 60? What sort of career would he have had? Would he have married? And what about those other grandchildren that my husband and I might have enjoyed?

Now, as I watch the news on TV each night, I deplore the increasing ugliness of politics, and I’m afraid. I know too well what can happen when hatred takes over.

Please, let us lower the volume and be civil toward one another.

For Jeff’s sake. And for all of ours.

Every life has its celebrations and losses, its joys and heartbreaks. I believe each time we’re willing to see that truth in the lives of others, even those from whom we feel different, we make civility more possible–and we nourish our own souls.

Rhonda, your date is a profound one–and this crazy world is better because you’re in it. Happy birthday.

Another of those random “Did you notice I haven’t posted much?” photo posts

I was called for jury duty the other day. I didn’t get picked. I didn’t even get called to a panel for the voire dire process. Several cases were settled and I was among prospective jurors sent home. Doesn’t matter to me whether I serve or not; I’m not a jury duty hater. I was amused when the bailiff made an announcement that someone’s car was in a judge’s space on the third floor of the parking garage and it would behoove that person to move the car ASAP. I guess it’s not good to piss off a judge. It’s also apparently a bad idea to piss off a veterinarian.

I shot that photo when Tim and I played fashion photographer to some Scout’s Honor dogs last week. They were saved from death row and OMG, CUTEST DOGS EVER. If you want to see some of their happy faces, check out the Scout’s Honor Flickr group where we share their photos. I’m assuming at least some of them, along with other great dogs, will be available at this weekend’s Scout’s Honor Adoption Day in the Heights, Saturday, May 1, from 10am to 3pm, at 1128 Heights Boulevard (between 11th and 12th Streets), Houston.

Just to entice you, a favorite of my photos:


Brew, totally posing for Tim.

April 28 is the birthday of my late friend Steve R, and as I have every year since he died, I enjoyed chocolate cake with friends. That’s what he did on his last birthday in the hospital in 1992, and I love honoring his life each year with the laughter and good feelings that exist among friends. The group around the table may change from year to year, but he’s always remembered.

However, I think you should know that anticipation can lead to jazz hands:


Kathy S, Tim, and Lindsey

Among our Christmas gifts from my sister Debby was a beautiful fantasy puzzle that Tom finished last week with very little help from the rest of us (although Lindsey, puzzle hater, did place three pieces, and I swooped in when all the hard work was done and found some key pieces to make myself look clever):

I shot this photo before I took it apart. I’m sending it and the Lord of the Rings puzzle we got last year from Rob E to Debby for her to do while recovering from back surgery. Because back surgery is not torturous enough. =) Get well soon to my favorite sister!