June 12, 2019
office supplies
posted by soe 1:13 am
When I’m working at the park, this is often what my kit looks like.
Obviously the laptop, which is hooked up to my cell phone hotspot to provide internet, is the most crucial item.
I bring a thermos of tea and a bottle of chilled water and a snack/lunch for sustenance. Today, it was peanut butter and graham crackers. Sometimes it’s yogurt. Other times it’s a bagel.
For protection and comfort, I have sunglasses, sunscreen, and bug spray (although I try to sit at a picnic table under the trees and they spray for mosquitoes at the park, but that doesn’t stop the no-see-ums from chewing on me).
And there’s reading material (and, inside the wicker tote, headphones and a knitting project), although none of that is guaranteed to be used. But it makes me feel better about things.
When you work outside (in your backyard, maybe, if you have one), what do you always have with you?
June 11, 2019
purple heart reflections
posted by soe 1:07 am
The coffee house with the best late evening exposure (and the nicest baristas) near us has created some beautiful planter boxes to demarcate their outdoor seating area. They’re filled with cheerful and colorful plants like petra croton and purple heart and flowering plants. Today it rained off and on, but eventually the skies cleared and Rudi and I headed over to the cafe to read away the final 90 minutes of daylight.
While there, I noticed the purple hearts were filled with water and that the water was filled with rooftops. (You’ll need to click through to Flickr and zoom in if you want to see the latter.)
I love seeing the world contained in a single drop of water.
June 10, 2019
rainy june weekending
posted by soe 1:34 am
While yesterday was a bit of a letdown, with the job search getting in the way of having fun, today was far better.
It started with a trip to the farmers market. No raspberries to be seen, but we bought both cherries and strawberries.
We watched Nadal win the French Open and the English women beat the Scots.
We tried a new ice cream shop.
We headed up to the bookstore and, thanks to a gift certificate from my brother, came home with a new cookbook and new music and a new Peter Mayle collection.
I harvested my first (tiny) tomato from the garden in the mist and sorted out my greens and brought home herbs for supper (eggs, roasted new potatoes with rosemary, and the first green beans of the market season, cooked with herbes de Provence we bought on our trip to the region a decade ago).
The day concluded with The Tonys and strawberries and cream and some late night reading.
It was a good weekend.
How was yours?
June 9, 2019
peonies
posted by soe 1:10 am
When I was out on Thursday, I stopped at Trader Joe’s and they had just gotten in an enormous and gorgeous shipment of pink peonies. A bouquet was slightly more than I would have paid under normal circumstances, but it was clear they were fresh and they looked likely to last for several days. And, honestly, they were just so colorful and I knew they’d be beautiful when they opened, which they are.
June 8, 2019
pride weekend planning
posted by soe 1:02 am
This week has been Pride Week in D.C., which will culminate tomorrow with our annual parade, which starts just down the street from the Burrow, and in which Rudi will be participating with his colleagues.
Here’s what I’m hoping the weekend includes:
- Watching some of the parade. This is the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, which helped coalesce the movement, so it seems appropriate to acknowledge it. (Did you know that in Germany (or maybe just Berlin, which is where my new friend is from), they call their Pride parade the Christopher Street parade, in honor of the street where the Stonewall Inn is located?)
- Swimming. Tomorrow is the last we’ll see of the sun for a few days, so it seems like a good idea to take advantage of it. But this is also the last week the pool will only be open on weekends, so at least I’ll soon be able to take more advantage of it.
- Sending out some resumes.
- Cleaning the apartment. Vacuuming, clearing out the fridge, emptying the cat boxes, and dealing with the bathroom are all on the list.
- Doing laundry.
- Buying limeade so we can make daiquiris, although to be fair, it looks like Sunday might be more of a make a pot of tea kind of day instead.
- Shopping at one of our local bookstore’s quarterly member sales — we plan to buy a cookbook we loved from the library and will peruse our favorite sections.
- Heading to the farmers market on the early side. I’ve missed out on milk the past two weeks. Plus, it sounds like cherries and raspberries might be available to the early risers.
- Reading. At least 20 minutes a day. But preferably many more.
- Watching sports — either baseball or women’s World Cup soccer — and the Tonys (the only award show I particularly care for).
- Tending to the garden. I need to get beans and some onions in the ground and need to stay on top of my greens so they don’t completely bolt.
- Visiting the library. I should probably finish a book or two so I can trade them for the holds waiting for me.
How about you? What’s on tap for your weekend?
June 7, 2019
yes, re-maker, and gorgeous
posted by soe 12:19 am
Three beautiful things from my past week:
1. Rudi and I were at the ballpark on Tuesday for a glorious evening of baseball. As with most sporting events these days, the Nationals employ staff to do routine schtick with attendees between innings, such as opening a box while wearing baseball gloves or identifying songs. Between the 6th and 7th innings, the host running the trivia game asked a guy for the nickname of our third-baseman, which he answered correctly. The host congratulated him and then asked if he’d be willing to answer a bonus question, at which point the man’s boyfriend got down on one knee and proposed. While I know public proposals are risky and put a lot of pressure on the person being asked, it seemed like this proposal had been well-thought out, especially since it included a custom engagement ring engraved to resemble the stitching of a baseball. Oh, and Teddy said yes.
2. Our library’s Fab Lab maker space held a free jewelry repair class today, and although I couldn’t find what I’d bought to fix the necklace that Rudi had commissioned for me by a friend, the librarian running the session had supplies (including some new spacer beads, since one of the original beads had a piece of the waxed cord stuck in it that I couldn’t get out) that worked well enough to make it wearable once again.
3. The afternoons have been very comfortable this week, which has enabled me to spend a lot of time outdoors.
How about you? What’s been beautiful in your world lately?