The second part was spent in the Museum.
Sunday, October 29, 2017
Mount Vernon School Outing
Chaperoned a trip of 5th of graders to Mount Vernon this past week. I filled in for a teacher who unable to go. The first part of the trip was spent on the grounds of the Mansion and Farm.
My Little Garden Menagerie in Autumn
As autumn tries to take hold, you never know who will show up in my Little Garden Zoo from day to day. One day it's the Chimpanzees...
...and the next it could be the Pandas!
Monday, October 23, 2017
Audrey Come Inside
I have this Tree Philodendron that has been in my life for about 32 years now. Her name is Audrey. She came into my world in 1985 and had lived with me for 9 years in central Kentucky before moving with me to Washington, DC. Every year she goes outside to our deck for the summer months and returns inside for the winter months. I think she gets me. That she realizes on some level that she is cared for.
Bread Pudding
Made one of the best Bread Puddings ever!
The basic
ingredients are the same:
2 cups milk
1/4 stick butter
1 tsp vanilla
1/4 tsp salt
Combine and warm to melt butter, then let cool before adding
2 eggs
1/4 stick butter
1 tsp vanilla
1/4 tsp salt
Combine and warm to melt butter, then let cool before adding
2 eggs
Everything else is up to you!
For this one I added 1/4 tsp cinnamon, 3/4 cup peaches, and
1/4 cup golden raisins. The bread I used was a sourdough.
Bake it at 350 for about 45 minutes or until a toothpick
somes back clean.
Finally I drizzled Smuckers Caramel topping on it. Let it
cool and then---YUM!
"Antony and Cleopatra" at the Folger Shakespeare Theatre in DC
It was Shakespeare at the Folger Shakespeare Theater/Library
this past Sunday afternoon and a play of the Bard's that I had never read or seen performed
before. "Antony & Cleopatra" was one of Shakespeare's later
tragedies, and it is based on a translation of a history by Plutarch. The thing
about experiencing a Shakespeare play for the very first time--even if you have
a basic understanding of the plot (thank you, Richard Burton and Elizabeth
Taylor!) is that you're still spending a lot of energy grasping the nuances of
the dialogue in order to just come away with a sound understanding of what this
version is all about. The advantage that this provides is a generalized
understanding of the sense of the production as a whole. There isn't mental
room for too much nitpicking and the things that either bother or impress are
generally obviously bothersome or impressive. By comparison, if I were to go
see Romeo & Juliet AGAIN, I am looking for lots of very specific things
from the way particular recitations go to the finer points of movement and
chemistry between characters.
Let me; therefore, start with some general observations. I
don't really like the play that much--it covers too much ground in too short a
time span and the transitions between major shifts in historical events are not
always discernible at first--leaving me feeling like I'm playing catch-up in
order to understand shifts in the emotional relationships between the
characters. At least in this
performance, the first half was slow and had a lot of lack luster plodding. The
shining example of the opposite was the character of Octavius Caesar played by
Dylan Paul. He landed in every scene with an intensity that was captivating and
seemed to energize those around him. Then came the second half; which was like
a different play. Nearly everyone
stepped up their game, and things became much more compelling. Granted there
were also major soliloquies to be performed and lots of people die--it's a
Shakespearean Tragedy, after all. Yet, both the principles Cody Nickell as Mark
Antony and, especially, Shirine Babb at Cleopatra just become more real in
their emotional portrayal of the famous lovers. I found myself ceasing to think
of them as actors portraying characters, and instead I saw them as Antony and
Cleopatra. On the negative, and I rarely get personal when it comes to criticisms
of actors, there are just some people who can't do Shakespeare. They fucking
can't! When they try, they simply become a distraction. That would be Simoné
Elizabeth Bart. And while she had the relatively minor role of Charmian (thank
the muses!), she was never in the zone. I came to dread the moment I realized
she going to speak again. Her resumé is impressive, she just isn't my cup of
tea for this genre of acting. And
unless she's just bull-headed arrogant, I fault the director for not correcting
her interpretation of the role.
In a bold change for the theatre, the set was constructed in
the round and the audience was placed on the sides and where the stage usually
resides. I sat in the middle of
the front row in the balcony that would have otherwise been the second level of
the stage. It was an interesting
perspective not only of the play, but also of the theatre. For friends who may be interested in
seeing this production I would say, invest in something else. Having experienced both "Timon or
Athens" and "Sense and Sensibility" last season at the Folger, I
know what an exceptional production looks like.
The stage in the round. |
Cleopatra (Shirine Babb) and two of her attendants, Charmian (Simoné Elizabeth Bart) and Mardian the Eunich (John Floyd) |
Mark Antony (Cody Nickell) and Cleopatra (Shirine Babb) |
Octavius Caesar (Dylan Paul) |
The wedding of Mark Antony and Octavia (Nicole King) |
Eleven Views of the Smithsonian National Zoo #1
SO, I devised a plan to visit the Naitonal Zoo that involved
trying some new things. First, PARKING: SInce the grounds open at 8 AM (and the
buildings at 9 AM) I would arrive around 8:30 in the hopes of finding easy
parking. I did, BUT there's more! The lot was open. Normally you pay to enter
it, and so while everyone who arrived after say 8:50 AM when the attendant
arrived on duty paid like $23.50--I parked for FREE!
Next, I chose the lot at the BOTTOM of the zoo at the south
entrance. And entrance that I had never entered before. This meant that I
would spend the beginning of my visit climbing up the "mountain," and
the end of my visit walking back down. This proved much more satisfactory to my
feet. While the zoo's amazing initial design comes from the father of landscape
architecture, Frederick Law Olmsted, it is built on a very steep hill! In fact,
when you look at the map of the zoo, it has a section warning you to expect a
steep climb.
Finally, I planned to scope out about half a dozen animals
that the zoo "claims" to have, but which I have never seen! As a
result, after my visit today, my list is smaller, but not eliminated. And this
is an aspect of the National Zoo--and all good zoos--that I do support. The
animals are not forced to be "on" display. They have access to off
sight areas that allow them to just chill if there not feeling up to it. This
leads to one of the exciting things about going to a zoo--you never what you're
going to experience. In fact, no two visits are ever the same. And I have to
say that I had some really great experiences at the Smithsonian National Zoo
today. I took just shy of 350 pics, too!
Eleven Views of the Smithsonian National Zoo #2
When you enter the zoo before it's officially open, it's a
pretty deserted place. Some people who live in the neighborhood jog or walk
through as part of their exercise routine. A lot of the animals are still in
their enclosures, too. Fortunately for me a quartet of Ring-tailed Lemurs
(Lemur catta) and a lone Black & White Ruffed Lemur (Varecia variegata)
were out and about on Lemur Island. The quartet were perched high up in the
tallest climbing tree checking the new day out and particularly captivated
by the distant sound of persisant howling that I believe was coming for a
Howler Monkey quite a ways away in another part of the zoo. The Black &
White Ruffed Lemur was eating his breakfast on one of two raised platforms and
making his own low lamenting vocalizations. I think my favorite picture is
actually the one where all the ring-tails are looking away!
Eleven Views of the Smithsonian National Zoo #3
Leaving the Lemurs I decided to make my trek to the top of
the zoo via the American Trails pathway. This is the concentration of animals
from North America--not all of them, but the majority of them arranged along a
ravine with a little run flowing down the middle that the trail criss-crosses
on it's way up. The entire area has only been fully populated this summer after
a multi-year renovation that began at the bottom of the hill with one of the
nicest and largest seal complexes I've ever encountered at a zoo. This one is
home to a little colony of California Sea Lions (Zalophus californianus) in a
humongous main habitat, and then in an adjacent habitat just a little higher up
the hill you will discover a Gray Seal (Halichoerus grypus) and a pair of speckled
Harbor Seals (Phoca vitulina). The
Sea Lions share their space with four Brown Pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis),
as well.
As it would happen, on my way down I met one of the volunteer species at the Smithsonian National Zoo--and in a most fitting section, too. A White-tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) was casually browsing along the top of a retaining wall against a presently vacant habitat. She didn't seem overly concerned by my presence, and when I got down to the little plaza at the Sea Lion exhibit, I could see that she was still grazing above the wall.
Other animals that I saw and didn't in this section included a pair of Gray Wolves (Canis lupus), (no photo), a pair of Bald Eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus), and a pair of North American River Otters (Lontra canadensis); however, the glare from the angle of the early morning sun was such that you could see a thing of them through the large glass viewing area, and I barely got on in the photo I took from up above. Still, better than the North American Beavers (Castor canadensis) who were no in casa and instead their expansive habitat was flush with Wood Ducks (Aix sponsa)! A parting shot back down the trail gives you some idea of just what sort of grade we're talking about in climbing up the hill.