Gorgeous Day

The Brides invited us to the Bayou City Art Festival today. I was doing some editing that was interrupted by the migraine last week, and I wanted to get back to it, so Tom went without me. But the day was so beautiful that I didn’t want to be stuck inside. First, I spent some time outside with Margot, Guinness, Rex, and Sugar. I got a photo of Margot sunbathing that I really like:

Then I took my work to one of my favorite restaurants, Baba Yega, where I haven’t been in a long time. This was the view from my table:

After eating and working, I did a tiny bit of Christmas shopping, then got a call from the art-gazers, who invited me to meet them for ice cream at the Marble Slab Creamery. It was a lovely way to spend an afternoon.

Dylan, Etc.

Sunday I had my MTM Barbie post to prepare, and it was great going into downtown Houston. There was little evidence of the damage done by Hurricane Ike; that may be because I couldn’t really look around since I was driving. I did see downed trees piled under overpasses, cut and waiting to be picked up, like this:

Houston lost thousands of trees (including more than 3500 in city parks and golf courses), but Tim made me aware of a program the city has already planned called Million Trees . Trees are a vital part of keeping an urban area healthy, because as Mayor Bill White said, “[T]hey absorb carbon dioxide, aid in flood prevention, provide shade and serve as buffers against violent winds.” Such planting efforts have made positive changes in other cities including Chicago, LA, and NYC.

In addition to the trees the city intends to plant, the mayor is encouraging Houstonians to plant trees privately. Another suggestion is for people and businesses to honor friends, family members, and employees by giving trees as “gifts.” How lovely to know that someone is planting a tree in your honor that will be around to provide shelter, shade, and beauty even after you’re gone!

As a treat after my outing yesterday, I stopped at Starbucks so I could read while enjoying my usual mocha frappuccino. In one of those happy coincidences, I met a couple who has fostered dogs through Scout’s Honor Rescue, Inc., the organization who brought EZ into our lives. The couple (whose names I never asked for!) talked about some of the dogs they’ve fostered (and adopted), and it gave me hope that one day, EZ will find the perfect forever home. She’s such a delightful dog that it’ll be hard to let her go, but I know she needs to be an only dog with someone who can lavish her with time and love.

Although I failed to get my fellow Starbucks patrons’ names, I DO know the name of their three-and-a-half-month-old puppy:


Dylan, a Rhodesian ridgeback. Look at those paws!
He’ll be about a hundred pounds when he reaches adulthood.


A photo Lindsey took of EZ pretending to be languishing in jail.
Don’t let her fool you. She’s a happy girl.
You can check out her information here.

LJ Runway Monday, Final Collection, Part 1

On the most recent episode of Bravo’s Project Runway, contestants were sent home from New York to work on their final collections. Among their assignments: Include a wedding dress as part of the collection. Style guru Tim Gunn visited the designers in their homes, then they were brought back to Manhattan to face one new elimination challenge before Fashion Week: Design a bridesmaid’s dress to go with their wedding dress.

LJ Runway Monday producer Heidi Gunn decided there was no need for the Runway Monday designers to spend our time on a bridesmaid’s dress, since all of us are showing final collections. Although she was unable to personally visit each of us as we worked on our final designs, she did send her Fashion Ambassador to check on us. Who could possibly know more about fashion than our producer and judges?

Click here to find out.

Button Sunday

Last night I uploaded my Hurricane Ike photos to share with you, and I realized that almost all of them are of broken and felled trees. It’s not that I don’t care about the damage to structures; I do. I feel compassion for people who’ve lost their homes or are dealing with roofs, leaks, flooding, and broken masonry, fences, and hearts. But I think the truly dramatic photos that capture human suffering are taken by far better photographers and are available to anyone online and on television.

Also, I just love trees. I love their grandeur. I love thinking of how they’ve been around longer than us and will be standing when we’re gone. I love the music they make when the wind blows through them. The shade they provide us–and often their bounty of nuts and fruits. The home and playground they provide to wild things. Some of the best memories of my life are of playing under trees, climbing them, and walking through them in forests.

The day before Ike came, I took some photos outside. I stared up into my elm at all the nests, unsure if they were birds’ or squirrels’ nests. I watched the doves and jays and cardinals–the pigeons and grackles that other people dislike, but I rather admire–and all the little birds whose names I don’t know, and wondered how they would fare.

After Ike, with the elm split in two and many of its branches gone, the nests are gone, too. I haven’t awakened to the sound of the mourning doves for over a week now. Today a power company crew took our tree down. I know it had to go. It was broken, and sooner or later it would fall. We’ll plant again, of course, but I will miss my pretty elm, and I know the birds and squirrels will miss it, too.

As I told Tim a few days ago, he and James have taught me to make peace with pruning because it’s necessary for new growth, so I will think of Ike as Nature pruning herself. Still, I think the loss of old friends always deserves to be noticed.

the Ike photos

Your designers at work

As if giving our visiting fellow Runway Monday designer Mark G. Harris a hurricane wasn’t enough, Timothy and I also offered to take him to the fabric mecca of Houston: High Fashion downtown. After determining on Thursday that they were open for the first time since Ike blew through, your hardworking designers immediately siphoned gas from a neighbor’s vehicle jumped into the car for the adventure of shopping in a store that sustained hurricane damage. Water-saturated bolts of fabric were stacked throughout the sales floor waiting for the insurance adjuster, and men on ladders tore out pieces of the wet ceiling overhead, but we just shopped around the mess, doing our bit for the local economy. Although, um, when it comes to High Fashion, “economy” is not exactly the word of the day.


Why yes, that price does indicate that the fabric is $179 a yard.
Nothing’s too good for the Runway Monday viewers, right?

Want to see more? Then click here!

Belated Button Sunday

ETA 2022: Whatever the code was for this button has been tampered with and the link no longer works. So I replaced it with this one.

We have power and Internet access at The Compound. Millions in Houston and the surrounding area do not. I hear Ike has caused power outages in many places on his path north. We are so grateful that everyone here is well–that includes Tom, Tim, me, the Compound Dogs, visiting Mark G. Harris, and Rhonda, Lindsey, and Sugar, who are hunkered down* with us as their power is still out.

Will post later with details and photos, as I’m sure Tim and The Brides will, as well. I know some of our LJ friends are not as fortunate as us right now, and I’m sending all good thoughts your way–which I know from my messages and e-mail everyone is doing for our part of the Gulf Coast.

*Favorite newscast before the power went out on us: Reporters encouraged their viewers to e-mail their web site with variations/synonyms on the phrase “hunker down,” most overused words in the news over the past week.