Copyright © Louise Bostock 2007-2013. Please give credit where credit is due.

Monday, 31 August 2009

A grandfather's love


Caspar, one of the Three Kings, offers his gift to the Christ Child,
Fresco detail, exterior south wall
Chiesa di San Gottardo, Carmine Superiore

I'm always struck by the kindness in this character's face. He's giving his gift with true affection - the affection of a doting grandfather, rather than a potentate come to offer tribute. A very human moment.

Saturday, 29 August 2009

The snakes in the long grass

Thank-you to the ragazzo who spent all of yesterday morning's meteorological perfection cutting back the vegetation on the sentiero that leads us up from the lakeside.

The first time this year.

We feared we had been forgotten by the Comune's maintenance department, and slowly, slowly like Sleeping Beauty in her castle we would be lost in a tangle of rambling roses and 24 varieties of long grass, habitat for three varieties of child-chomping snake.

Worse, that we would be spending our winter forcing our way, falcetto in hand, through rain- and snow-laden vegetation, emerging at kindergarten wet and shivering. With all the 'flu-related worries we have to look forward to when the autumn term begins, I'd like to keep pneumonia off the list.

Ha fatto bene. Grazie.

Friday, 28 August 2009

The view through the trees

A golden, shining morning with a breeze to please the windsurfers and the promise of a perfect day.



Campanile, Cannobio

Thursday, 27 August 2009

Garden update

The end of August brings a sea-change, not only in the weather, but also in the garden - one variety taking over from another even as the first labours on. The tomatoes are beginning to wane, and this afternoon I plan to take out the earlies I planted what seems like a lifetime ago. The beef tomatoes are still going strong, and we'll be bottling tomato sauce for pasta ere long. We're still reeling under the annual glut of white zucchine and cucumbers - AJ's cucumbers have been particularly good. The chilli pepper plants are still laden with ripening fruit, and I have been drying heaps on the window sills for the last three weeks or so. They'll go into chilli oil to help make our winter evenings warmer.

Slowly, though, we see the fruits of summer giving way to the fruits of autumn and winter. The apple tree seems to be producing a few, and the pears are laden. The leeks for our winter soups are marching along in their drill-sergeant rows, and the broccoli I put in last week have stopped flopping and are standing to attention. All the herbs I planted this spring are doing famously - this really was made to be a herb garden and next year we plan to move more in that direction.

Golly, almost forgot! The vines are coming into fruit, and a couple of days ago we tasted the first bunches of our delicious, almost sour, Americana grapes. No good for wine, but as a table grape, beats the overstuffed, oversprayed varieties in the shops hands down.

The garden is a-bloom with the second, or perhaps even the third, flush of roses - the ground cover varieties are particularly prolific right now. The oleander I planted as a screen along the public footway side of the garden are starting to fill in, and they are still abundantly in flower - yellow, white, pink and apricot. The hibiscus are also in flower in shades of mauve, pink and white, and the jasmine are sending out new tendrils in all directions across the wire.

The males from this year's chicken cohort are already in the freezer. There were fewer than expected. Some of the big grays that were sold to us as males turned out to be females (read about their arrival in Carmine here). We also had a spot uh bovver with a fox or two along the way. The girl-chicks, a few more than expected, have started laying, just in time for the older ones in the Carmine population to start their autumn moult, and go on laying strike for the duration. With a bit of luck, the young ones will keep us and our neighbours in eggs while the old ladies are sulking.

That covers all but one of the chicks. The children have named the house hen Clothilde, which means she automatically gets a pension. She'll be allowed beyond the end of her natural laying life, and when the time comes she'll be given a decent Christian burial. That's because when you name an animal it becomes a pet, and we don't eat our pets! Clothilde's leg is improving, you'll be pleased to hear, but it'll be a while yet before she returns to the pond of barracudas that is Pallazzo Pollo. In the meantime, she is growing and growing and growing and growing, from all the tidbits the children give her (she particularly likes M.'s own version of risotto Milanese), and I'm starting to wonder whether we'll actually get her through the pollaio door when the time comes.

More on Clothilde the House Hen in another post.


Wednesday, 26 August 2009

Don't think you'd get away with this in Carmine...

Last night's 4am thunderstorm has left us overcast with a fair breeze and light showers. Farewell to blazing summer.




Interesting paint job, Ascona.
Each to his own.

Tuesday, 25 August 2009

Toes in the water

Close, overcast. Threatening rain.

Today we paddled a bit in the ebb and flow of Cannobio life, for the first time in what seems like aeons (if you've no reason to descend from the heights, why do it?).

We find Cannobiese society very much as usual. A new baby to be cooed over here, a professional nanny regretting the imminent loss of her charge to the kindergarten with the new term, a mama hoping the end of the holidays will come very soon, all the children grown at least an inch.

Holiday stories at the pasticceria, village gossip at the ferramenta, fresh ideas at the municipio and news at the door of the chiesa. But not too much at once. Nice to re-acclimatise sloooooowly!

Monday, 24 August 2009

Must be a(nother) milestone

Yesterday, after a restoration project that has so far lasted eight years, I finally sealed the last of the eight new larch floors.

Gimme five!

Sunday, 23 August 2009

Bitte nicht rauchen

Intermittent strong wind since the change in the moon has brought thankfully much cooler weather and light evening rain showers. Summer is waning, and we're working hard to enjoy every last moment of it.



By the old fire station, Tiefencastel, Grigiona/Graubunden

Thursday, 20 August 2009

Adventures with a Panda : Alpe Devero

How do you count black grouse? A question I've asked myself a dozen times a day - at least I have since I heard the word censimento...and now I know.

You will need :

a wife (patient)
two under-5s (rambunctious)
walking boots (strong)
fatigues (green)
a couple of English setters (trained)
a world expert
and a morning like this...


Instructions as follows :

Find out as much as you can about the black grouse before you start.

Salient points : a.) the males are black; and b.) they are about the size of a grouse.

Other notes : a.) they live on moorland near trees; b.) they don't taste good; c.) they have distinctive forked tail plumage, hence the Italian common name gallo forcello; d.) they perform elaborate courtship rituals in spring; e.) they are endangered to the point of being on the Red List, despite not tasting good; and f.) it is still legal to hunt them, despite being on the Red List and despite not tasting good. Go figure.


Next, climb in your Panda, taking wife, children and associated clobber with you. Head towards Cannobio, and hang a left, then keep driving up. Drop in at Crodo for a crodino, the region's very own fizzy drink (a bit like Lucozade), and keep driving up.


Keep driving up. Second gear. All the way.


Up, up, up.

When you pass through a tunnel very similar to the one at Milford Sound, NZ, (similar in that it has no interior cladding and no road to speak of - something off the set of Doctor Who, without, we hope, the wobbles) -- when you pass through this tunnel, you know you're nearly there.

Reaching, finally, a point about 5km below Alpe Devero, abandon Panda by the side of the road because the car parks are full, take out walking boots, under-5s, patient wife and other clobber. Start walking.


Up. Up, up, up (starting to seem like a busman's holiday...)


Reaching, even more finally, the alpe, marvel at the beauty of the fertile basin ringed by austere, bare peaks, and feel at home due to the frequent occurrence of stone houses with tetti in piode :



Make yourself known at the Refugio Club Alpino Italiano Castiglioni (recommended for hearty food, good company and cleanliness), which looks a bit like this, and is, reassuringly, a centre for the Alpine Rescue services :




Have a picnic. Walk around a bit. Count fish in the river (just to get your eye in). Wonder at the lack of ice-cream, and the lack of cows (it's an alp in summer, isn't it?).

Go to bed late (on account of the good company). Wake up early. Fortify yourself with a cappuccino and a slice or two of the refugio's delicious torta, made with pears, chestnut flour and honey. Forget to ask for the recipe.


Leaving wife and kids behind to clear up, trot across in your strong walking boots and green fatigues to the far side of the alp, where a bunch of guys wearing strong walking boots and green fatigues are standing in a manly circle, being eyed by a group of English setters.

Join a squadra, and after a second cappuccino, head upwards along the river bank and through the larches :


Reaching fairly open moorland (very up - more than 2000m up, in fact), walk around a bit, and then a bit more, and wonder at the lack of black grouse. But when the setters gather into a canine circle being eyed by a group of green-fatigued hunters, you know you've found one.


Don't miss the highlight : a mother with a brood of no less than seven juveniles. According to the world expert, A Good Sign.


In the meantime, make sure your wife (patient), walks around a bit, puts the kids on ponies and walks around a bit, takes some photos and walks around a bit, marvels at the overnight reappearance of large quantities of ice-cream (and its equally sudden disappearance into the mouths of two under-5s), 'discovers' the fact that the woodlands are full of wild blueberries and sets the kids onto picking some for lunch. She must also arrange a picnic lunch including a delicious local goat cheese and equally delicious rye bread impregnated with raisins and walnuts. Make sure she forgets to ask for the recipe.

As time goes on, wife should resort to playing Eye-Spy with the following on her list :

A church :



A mule with an interesting saddle :


A chimney with some mountains in the background :


Some pretty blue flowers :
And a pretty yellow flower :



She must be very sorry not to have had an opportunity to see a black grouse, which looks a bit like this (credit, RSPB) :



Get back to base two hours later than estimated, where patient wife is endeavouring to keep the two under-5s from killing each other (having run out of Eye-Spy subjects). Finish off the cheese and the bread, and inhale a can of Nastro Azzurro. Then head on down, down, down.

Down, down, down, second gear all the way.

Back home.

On arrival, the designated driver is fatigued, the boots smell strong, the under-5s are green from the curves, the cats are eyeing the lame chicken-in-the-pantry, and after taking more than two hours to get the rambunctious under-5s (no ironic reversal there, I fear) up, up, up to bed, the wife is a world expert on patience.








Wednesday, 19 August 2009

Motherhood means...No.16


Motherhood means...

...wondering why it is that on the day you want to go shopping, your 40-item list, lovingly and systematically compiled over a period of days, always goes missing.



Monday, 17 August 2009

New work by Danielle Eubank

Today's skies are blue, the sun is shining and there's a heavenly breeze.

I don't know. Since my first child was born I've barely turned a hand in my profession. Since Dani's first child was born, she's done nothing but create ever more beautiful work.

Check it out here.



Masts, Oil on linen canvas, 40 x 28

Sunday, 16 August 2009

The temperature of water

Hot and sunny today.

The lake is a delicious temperature - 25°C or thereabouts - and today even I was persuaded to take off my sunglasses and dive off the boat at a quiet spot close to the hanging monastery of Santa Caterina del Sasso. The water that flows into Carmine's old stone washtub, which usually comprises something of the temperature of icemelt, was clocked at 19°C last week.

Unusually warm this year.


Saturday, 15 August 2009

Oleander

After heavy rain in the early hours, this year's mid-August bank holiday has started damp and misty but still warm.



Pink oleander, a colourful counterpoint to the stark stone campanile of Carmine Superiore's Chiesa di San Gottardo.
Happy Ferragosto!

Friday, 14 August 2009

Yet another hot and sunny day. But for a couple of houses (G&G we miss you terribly), Carmine Superiore is full to bursting and looking forward to tomorrow's midsummer festivities.

Thursday, 13 August 2009

Le stelle di San Lorenzo

Hot and sunny once again. On the terrace there's a very large speckled hen eyeing a very large tabby cat. Don't ask.

One August night, back in oh my God, 1980, I was sweet sixteen. It was late. I was going home after the most dramatic evening of my young life. I was massively in love as only a 16-year-old can be, walking six feet above the ground, life vibrating through every nerve of my body. And other clichés.

Van Morrison's 'Moon Dance' spooled again and again through my mind. And above me, stars were falling, and I was wishing.

Fast forward to August 1988. A concert at Kenwood, where they played 'Scheherazade' hauntingly under the stars. The same stars that later rained down upon me as I lay in the arms of someone, swinging gently in a hammock strung across a Hampstead roof-garden. I remember clearly my wish that night. I'm still waiting.

And last night, lying on Carmine Superiore's ancient, darkened churchyard, experiencing a different kind of love. My three-year-old daughter asleep on my belly, and my 4-year-old son supine beside me, gazing upwards and asking impossible questions about the nature of stars, of space, of heaven, of eternity. Between sundown and moonrise, we saw San Lorenzo's stars whoosh across the sky, and on each and every one of them I wished the same secret wish.

And Carmine is a place where wishes come true.




Wednesday, 12 August 2009

Thirty-five degrees at 1:30pm. The kind of heat that burns, as my septuagenarian neighbour said. An afternoon for the garden.

Tuesday, 11 August 2009

Jazmin at the RA

Hot and sunny, blue skies, white clouds, a gentle breeze. A good day to clean the chimneys...

I know I'm late with the news.

But I've been on holiday.

That's my excuse.

And I'm sticking to it.




The news : printmaker, illustrator and martial artist Jazmin Velasco, is featured in this year's RA Summer Show (on at Piccadilly until the 16th, I understand). Congratulations, Jazmin. You must be just bursting with pride!

This is the piece - The Floating World II...





I have to say I love Jazmin's work. It's graphic, sexy, humorous and pointed. Seems the art establishment in England agrees with me! If you do too, check out the rest of her portfolio here.


But Jazmin, one question...exactly whose foot is that sticking out of the top of the 'ensemble'...?



Monday, 10 August 2009

Quote of the week No. 26 : On vacations

Hot, cloudy and pretty close back at Lago Maggiore.

Holidays abroad over. Holidays at home continue...and I feel very much that "No man [read in this case, mother] needs a vacation so much as the person who has just had one".

The quotation was from Elbert Hubbard.

Who he? as John Clarke, the man who taught me to edit non-fiction, would have scribbled in the margin next to a name left unexplained...

Well, it seems, quite an interesting person. Life dates 1856-1915. An American writer, philosopher, artist and publisher, and an influential name in the Arts and Crafts Movement. He set up a press inspired by William Morriss's Kelmscott Press, calling it the Roycroft Press, and founded a community in New York that produced Mission-style products. He also wrote lots of stuff I have just now added to my reading list.

For me, the most romantic thing about Hubbard was that he and his second wife died eight miles off the Old Head of Kinsale. Ring any bells? They were travelling on the Lusitania. When they understood that U-Boat 20 had done for the great ship, instead of slipping into a lifeboat or diving desperately into the unforgiving seas, they simply wandered into one of the ship's cabins arm in arm, determined not to be parted in death as they were not parted in life. They went down with the ship.

Through the flippant or the commonplace we sometimes come to espy something of the sublime.

Sunday, 9 August 2009

More meditations


An experience beyond words : Gregorian Laudes sung at dawn at Peterskirche Mistail, nr. Tiefencastel, Grigiona.



Picture : Benjamin Hofer, with thanks.

Friday, 7 August 2009

Motherhood means...No.15


Motherhood means...

...that performing a "walking meditation" now involves dragging a child in a brightly-coloured blow-up dinghy back and forth in the shallows of a lake - back and forth, back and forth, back and forth, light glinting on the water, back and forth, back and forth, breeze in my hair, back and forth, back and forth...

Concentration, mindfulness, tranquility and insight may all be achieved in this fashion - until you hit a rock and the child swaps floating for flying, that is.

Ah well, maybe the concentration-mindfulness-tranquility-and-insight will have to keep until they're a little older.



Thursday, 6 August 2009

No dumping!



"No dumping anywhere along this watercourse
(infractions will be reported to the judicial authorities)."
Carmine's summer flowers soften even the most stern of ordinances.

Tuesday, 4 August 2009

Castelli di Cannero - the work so far


A spot of pointing and a fabulous new tetto in piode
- a traditional stone roof -
at the medieval castle ruins on islands near Cannero.

Nice work!

Sunday, 2 August 2009

Immortality

After last night's two-hour thunderstorm (can I have a job as a weather-girl, please?), we are greeted this morning with raging torrents and blessed, cool air.



A crowd of people stand in adoration of St Ambrogio (Ambrosius).
Chiesa di San Gottardo, external wall, south side.

The father of an old schoolfriend of mine recently completed an illustrious career in the Church by modelling for a new stained glass window at the cathedral where he was latterly Dean. The old window lasted hundreds of years, and it's exciting to imagine his much-loved image could still be impressed on the fabric of the cathedral well into the 22nd century, as his work has doubtless left an impression on all who met him (including HM).

I sometimes wonder who the models were for the fresco above. Carmenites rich enough to pay for a spot of immortality, perhaps? The minor nobles of Cannobio? Those who paid for the frescoes? Maybe petty bureaucrats from St Ambrogio's entourage in need of a little stroking on the part of the Holy See.

I'm particularly taken by the woman at the top, nearest the angel. Could her proximity to the heavenly host be a comment on her status in the community? Or her outstanding piety? But why is she not modestly wearing a wimple? Floozie! Could her long, blonde braided hair have had some special significance for the artist...?

As ever, in the absence of fact, a multitude of possibilities come tumbling in...


Saturday, 1 August 2009

Pesante

Thirty-one degrees at high noon. Cloudy and oppressive. I predict thunderstorms within 24 hours...

Monday, 31 August 2009

A grandfather's love


Caspar, one of the Three Kings, offers his gift to the Christ Child,
Fresco detail, exterior south wall
Chiesa di San Gottardo, Carmine Superiore

I'm always struck by the kindness in this character's face. He's giving his gift with true affection - the affection of a doting grandfather, rather than a potentate come to offer tribute. A very human moment.

Saturday, 29 August 2009

The snakes in the long grass

Thank-you to the ragazzo who spent all of yesterday morning's meteorological perfection cutting back the vegetation on the sentiero that leads us up from the lakeside.

The first time this year.

We feared we had been forgotten by the Comune's maintenance department, and slowly, slowly like Sleeping Beauty in her castle we would be lost in a tangle of rambling roses and 24 varieties of long grass, habitat for three varieties of child-chomping snake.

Worse, that we would be spending our winter forcing our way, falcetto in hand, through rain- and snow-laden vegetation, emerging at kindergarten wet and shivering. With all the 'flu-related worries we have to look forward to when the autumn term begins, I'd like to keep pneumonia off the list.

Ha fatto bene. Grazie.

Friday, 28 August 2009

The view through the trees

A golden, shining morning with a breeze to please the windsurfers and the promise of a perfect day.



Campanile, Cannobio

Thursday, 27 August 2009

Garden update

The end of August brings a sea-change, not only in the weather, but also in the garden - one variety taking over from another even as the first labours on. The tomatoes are beginning to wane, and this afternoon I plan to take out the earlies I planted what seems like a lifetime ago. The beef tomatoes are still going strong, and we'll be bottling tomato sauce for pasta ere long. We're still reeling under the annual glut of white zucchine and cucumbers - AJ's cucumbers have been particularly good. The chilli pepper plants are still laden with ripening fruit, and I have been drying heaps on the window sills for the last three weeks or so. They'll go into chilli oil to help make our winter evenings warmer.

Slowly, though, we see the fruits of summer giving way to the fruits of autumn and winter. The apple tree seems to be producing a few, and the pears are laden. The leeks for our winter soups are marching along in their drill-sergeant rows, and the broccoli I put in last week have stopped flopping and are standing to attention. All the herbs I planted this spring are doing famously - this really was made to be a herb garden and next year we plan to move more in that direction.

Golly, almost forgot! The vines are coming into fruit, and a couple of days ago we tasted the first bunches of our delicious, almost sour, Americana grapes. No good for wine, but as a table grape, beats the overstuffed, oversprayed varieties in the shops hands down.

The garden is a-bloom with the second, or perhaps even the third, flush of roses - the ground cover varieties are particularly prolific right now. The oleander I planted as a screen along the public footway side of the garden are starting to fill in, and they are still abundantly in flower - yellow, white, pink and apricot. The hibiscus are also in flower in shades of mauve, pink and white, and the jasmine are sending out new tendrils in all directions across the wire.

The males from this year's chicken cohort are already in the freezer. There were fewer than expected. Some of the big grays that were sold to us as males turned out to be females (read about their arrival in Carmine here). We also had a spot uh bovver with a fox or two along the way. The girl-chicks, a few more than expected, have started laying, just in time for the older ones in the Carmine population to start their autumn moult, and go on laying strike for the duration. With a bit of luck, the young ones will keep us and our neighbours in eggs while the old ladies are sulking.

That covers all but one of the chicks. The children have named the house hen Clothilde, which means she automatically gets a pension. She'll be allowed beyond the end of her natural laying life, and when the time comes she'll be given a decent Christian burial. That's because when you name an animal it becomes a pet, and we don't eat our pets! Clothilde's leg is improving, you'll be pleased to hear, but it'll be a while yet before she returns to the pond of barracudas that is Pallazzo Pollo. In the meantime, she is growing and growing and growing and growing, from all the tidbits the children give her (she particularly likes M.'s own version of risotto Milanese), and I'm starting to wonder whether we'll actually get her through the pollaio door when the time comes.

More on Clothilde the House Hen in another post.


Wednesday, 26 August 2009

Don't think you'd get away with this in Carmine...

Last night's 4am thunderstorm has left us overcast with a fair breeze and light showers. Farewell to blazing summer.




Interesting paint job, Ascona.
Each to his own.

Tuesday, 25 August 2009

Toes in the water

Close, overcast. Threatening rain.

Today we paddled a bit in the ebb and flow of Cannobio life, for the first time in what seems like aeons (if you've no reason to descend from the heights, why do it?).

We find Cannobiese society very much as usual. A new baby to be cooed over here, a professional nanny regretting the imminent loss of her charge to the kindergarten with the new term, a mama hoping the end of the holidays will come very soon, all the children grown at least an inch.

Holiday stories at the pasticceria, village gossip at the ferramenta, fresh ideas at the municipio and news at the door of the chiesa. But not too much at once. Nice to re-acclimatise sloooooowly!

Monday, 24 August 2009

Must be a(nother) milestone

Yesterday, after a restoration project that has so far lasted eight years, I finally sealed the last of the eight new larch floors.

Gimme five!

Sunday, 23 August 2009

Bitte nicht rauchen

Intermittent strong wind since the change in the moon has brought thankfully much cooler weather and light evening rain showers. Summer is waning, and we're working hard to enjoy every last moment of it.



By the old fire station, Tiefencastel, Grigiona/Graubunden

Thursday, 20 August 2009

Adventures with a Panda : Alpe Devero

How do you count black grouse? A question I've asked myself a dozen times a day - at least I have since I heard the word censimento...and now I know.

You will need :

a wife (patient)
two under-5s (rambunctious)
walking boots (strong)
fatigues (green)
a couple of English setters (trained)
a world expert
and a morning like this...


Instructions as follows :

Find out as much as you can about the black grouse before you start.

Salient points : a.) the males are black; and b.) they are about the size of a grouse.

Other notes : a.) they live on moorland near trees; b.) they don't taste good; c.) they have distinctive forked tail plumage, hence the Italian common name gallo forcello; d.) they perform elaborate courtship rituals in spring; e.) they are endangered to the point of being on the Red List, despite not tasting good; and f.) it is still legal to hunt them, despite being on the Red List and despite not tasting good. Go figure.


Next, climb in your Panda, taking wife, children and associated clobber with you. Head towards Cannobio, and hang a left, then keep driving up. Drop in at Crodo for a crodino, the region's very own fizzy drink (a bit like Lucozade), and keep driving up.


Keep driving up. Second gear. All the way.


Up, up, up.

When you pass through a tunnel very similar to the one at Milford Sound, NZ, (similar in that it has no interior cladding and no road to speak of - something off the set of Doctor Who, without, we hope, the wobbles) -- when you pass through this tunnel, you know you're nearly there.

Reaching, finally, a point about 5km below Alpe Devero, abandon Panda by the side of the road because the car parks are full, take out walking boots, under-5s, patient wife and other clobber. Start walking.


Up. Up, up, up (starting to seem like a busman's holiday...)


Reaching, even more finally, the alpe, marvel at the beauty of the fertile basin ringed by austere, bare peaks, and feel at home due to the frequent occurrence of stone houses with tetti in piode :



Make yourself known at the Refugio Club Alpino Italiano Castiglioni (recommended for hearty food, good company and cleanliness), which looks a bit like this, and is, reassuringly, a centre for the Alpine Rescue services :




Have a picnic. Walk around a bit. Count fish in the river (just to get your eye in). Wonder at the lack of ice-cream, and the lack of cows (it's an alp in summer, isn't it?).

Go to bed late (on account of the good company). Wake up early. Fortify yourself with a cappuccino and a slice or two of the refugio's delicious torta, made with pears, chestnut flour and honey. Forget to ask for the recipe.


Leaving wife and kids behind to clear up, trot across in your strong walking boots and green fatigues to the far side of the alp, where a bunch of guys wearing strong walking boots and green fatigues are standing in a manly circle, being eyed by a group of English setters.

Join a squadra, and after a second cappuccino, head upwards along the river bank and through the larches :


Reaching fairly open moorland (very up - more than 2000m up, in fact), walk around a bit, and then a bit more, and wonder at the lack of black grouse. But when the setters gather into a canine circle being eyed by a group of green-fatigued hunters, you know you've found one.


Don't miss the highlight : a mother with a brood of no less than seven juveniles. According to the world expert, A Good Sign.


In the meantime, make sure your wife (patient), walks around a bit, puts the kids on ponies and walks around a bit, takes some photos and walks around a bit, marvels at the overnight reappearance of large quantities of ice-cream (and its equally sudden disappearance into the mouths of two under-5s), 'discovers' the fact that the woodlands are full of wild blueberries and sets the kids onto picking some for lunch. She must also arrange a picnic lunch including a delicious local goat cheese and equally delicious rye bread impregnated with raisins and walnuts. Make sure she forgets to ask for the recipe.

As time goes on, wife should resort to playing Eye-Spy with the following on her list :

A church :



A mule with an interesting saddle :


A chimney with some mountains in the background :


Some pretty blue flowers :
And a pretty yellow flower :



She must be very sorry not to have had an opportunity to see a black grouse, which looks a bit like this (credit, RSPB) :



Get back to base two hours later than estimated, where patient wife is endeavouring to keep the two under-5s from killing each other (having run out of Eye-Spy subjects). Finish off the cheese and the bread, and inhale a can of Nastro Azzurro. Then head on down, down, down.

Down, down, down, second gear all the way.

Back home.

On arrival, the designated driver is fatigued, the boots smell strong, the under-5s are green from the curves, the cats are eyeing the lame chicken-in-the-pantry, and after taking more than two hours to get the rambunctious under-5s (no ironic reversal there, I fear) up, up, up to bed, the wife is a world expert on patience.








Wednesday, 19 August 2009

Motherhood means...No.16


Motherhood means...

...wondering why it is that on the day you want to go shopping, your 40-item list, lovingly and systematically compiled over a period of days, always goes missing.



Monday, 17 August 2009

New work by Danielle Eubank

Today's skies are blue, the sun is shining and there's a heavenly breeze.

I don't know. Since my first child was born I've barely turned a hand in my profession. Since Dani's first child was born, she's done nothing but create ever more beautiful work.

Check it out here.



Masts, Oil on linen canvas, 40 x 28

Sunday, 16 August 2009

The temperature of water

Hot and sunny today.

The lake is a delicious temperature - 25°C or thereabouts - and today even I was persuaded to take off my sunglasses and dive off the boat at a quiet spot close to the hanging monastery of Santa Caterina del Sasso. The water that flows into Carmine's old stone washtub, which usually comprises something of the temperature of icemelt, was clocked at 19°C last week.

Unusually warm this year.


Saturday, 15 August 2009

Oleander

After heavy rain in the early hours, this year's mid-August bank holiday has started damp and misty but still warm.



Pink oleander, a colourful counterpoint to the stark stone campanile of Carmine Superiore's Chiesa di San Gottardo.
Happy Ferragosto!

Friday, 14 August 2009

Yet another hot and sunny day. But for a couple of houses (G&G we miss you terribly), Carmine Superiore is full to bursting and looking forward to tomorrow's midsummer festivities.

Thursday, 13 August 2009

Le stelle di San Lorenzo

Hot and sunny once again. On the terrace there's a very large speckled hen eyeing a very large tabby cat. Don't ask.

One August night, back in oh my God, 1980, I was sweet sixteen. It was late. I was going home after the most dramatic evening of my young life. I was massively in love as only a 16-year-old can be, walking six feet above the ground, life vibrating through every nerve of my body. And other clichés.

Van Morrison's 'Moon Dance' spooled again and again through my mind. And above me, stars were falling, and I was wishing.

Fast forward to August 1988. A concert at Kenwood, where they played 'Scheherazade' hauntingly under the stars. The same stars that later rained down upon me as I lay in the arms of someone, swinging gently in a hammock strung across a Hampstead roof-garden. I remember clearly my wish that night. I'm still waiting.

And last night, lying on Carmine Superiore's ancient, darkened churchyard, experiencing a different kind of love. My three-year-old daughter asleep on my belly, and my 4-year-old son supine beside me, gazing upwards and asking impossible questions about the nature of stars, of space, of heaven, of eternity. Between sundown and moonrise, we saw San Lorenzo's stars whoosh across the sky, and on each and every one of them I wished the same secret wish.

And Carmine is a place where wishes come true.




Wednesday, 12 August 2009

Thirty-five degrees at 1:30pm. The kind of heat that burns, as my septuagenarian neighbour said. An afternoon for the garden.

Tuesday, 11 August 2009

Jazmin at the RA

Hot and sunny, blue skies, white clouds, a gentle breeze. A good day to clean the chimneys...

I know I'm late with the news.

But I've been on holiday.

That's my excuse.

And I'm sticking to it.




The news : printmaker, illustrator and martial artist Jazmin Velasco, is featured in this year's RA Summer Show (on at Piccadilly until the 16th, I understand). Congratulations, Jazmin. You must be just bursting with pride!

This is the piece - The Floating World II...





I have to say I love Jazmin's work. It's graphic, sexy, humorous and pointed. Seems the art establishment in England agrees with me! If you do too, check out the rest of her portfolio here.


But Jazmin, one question...exactly whose foot is that sticking out of the top of the 'ensemble'...?



Monday, 10 August 2009

Quote of the week No. 26 : On vacations

Hot, cloudy and pretty close back at Lago Maggiore.

Holidays abroad over. Holidays at home continue...and I feel very much that "No man [read in this case, mother] needs a vacation so much as the person who has just had one".

The quotation was from Elbert Hubbard.

Who he? as John Clarke, the man who taught me to edit non-fiction, would have scribbled in the margin next to a name left unexplained...

Well, it seems, quite an interesting person. Life dates 1856-1915. An American writer, philosopher, artist and publisher, and an influential name in the Arts and Crafts Movement. He set up a press inspired by William Morriss's Kelmscott Press, calling it the Roycroft Press, and founded a community in New York that produced Mission-style products. He also wrote lots of stuff I have just now added to my reading list.

For me, the most romantic thing about Hubbard was that he and his second wife died eight miles off the Old Head of Kinsale. Ring any bells? They were travelling on the Lusitania. When they understood that U-Boat 20 had done for the great ship, instead of slipping into a lifeboat or diving desperately into the unforgiving seas, they simply wandered into one of the ship's cabins arm in arm, determined not to be parted in death as they were not parted in life. They went down with the ship.

Through the flippant or the commonplace we sometimes come to espy something of the sublime.

Sunday, 9 August 2009

More meditations


An experience beyond words : Gregorian Laudes sung at dawn at Peterskirche Mistail, nr. Tiefencastel, Grigiona.



Picture : Benjamin Hofer, with thanks.

Friday, 7 August 2009

Motherhood means...No.15


Motherhood means...

...that performing a "walking meditation" now involves dragging a child in a brightly-coloured blow-up dinghy back and forth in the shallows of a lake - back and forth, back and forth, back and forth, light glinting on the water, back and forth, back and forth, breeze in my hair, back and forth, back and forth...

Concentration, mindfulness, tranquility and insight may all be achieved in this fashion - until you hit a rock and the child swaps floating for flying, that is.

Ah well, maybe the concentration-mindfulness-tranquility-and-insight will have to keep until they're a little older.



Thursday, 6 August 2009

No dumping!



"No dumping anywhere along this watercourse
(infractions will be reported to the judicial authorities)."
Carmine's summer flowers soften even the most stern of ordinances.

Tuesday, 4 August 2009

Castelli di Cannero - the work so far


A spot of pointing and a fabulous new tetto in piode
- a traditional stone roof -
at the medieval castle ruins on islands near Cannero.

Nice work!

Sunday, 2 August 2009

Immortality

After last night's two-hour thunderstorm (can I have a job as a weather-girl, please?), we are greeted this morning with raging torrents and blessed, cool air.



A crowd of people stand in adoration of St Ambrogio (Ambrosius).
Chiesa di San Gottardo, external wall, south side.

The father of an old schoolfriend of mine recently completed an illustrious career in the Church by modelling for a new stained glass window at the cathedral where he was latterly Dean. The old window lasted hundreds of years, and it's exciting to imagine his much-loved image could still be impressed on the fabric of the cathedral well into the 22nd century, as his work has doubtless left an impression on all who met him (including HM).

I sometimes wonder who the models were for the fresco above. Carmenites rich enough to pay for a spot of immortality, perhaps? The minor nobles of Cannobio? Those who paid for the frescoes? Maybe petty bureaucrats from St Ambrogio's entourage in need of a little stroking on the part of the Holy See.

I'm particularly taken by the woman at the top, nearest the angel. Could her proximity to the heavenly host be a comment on her status in the community? Or her outstanding piety? But why is she not modestly wearing a wimple? Floozie! Could her long, blonde braided hair have had some special significance for the artist...?

As ever, in the absence of fact, a multitude of possibilities come tumbling in...


Saturday, 1 August 2009

Pesante

Thirty-one degrees at high noon. Cloudy and oppressive. I predict thunderstorms within 24 hours...