The mountains & the lake, people & places, children & chickens, frescoes & felines, barbera & books.
Monday, 30 November 2009
The eye of the storm
But now I am watching the rain dribbling off the nearest piode rooftop and the trees bowing to the wind from the warmth of my kitchen. I have my back to a gently radiant Mathilda, and Allegri's 'Miserere' (the song of angels) pours from the speakers as I quietly consider the oeuvre on the screen before me.
Bliss.
Sunday, 29 November 2009
Levavi
Today is Levavi, the first Sunday of Advent. It's the first day of the four-week season of 'expectant waiting' before Christmas, when we celebrate the birth of the baby Jesus. Having 'expected' twice, I know what those last four weeks feel like, and the run-up to the modern Christmas celebration, even in Italy, is nothing like it.
Instead of becoming ever slower, ever more intent, ever more attuned to the signs that might presage a joyful arrival, I'm dashed off my feet with unexpected editorial and writing work, preparations for Cannobio's Christmas market next week, and trying to get the little buggers (oops) to sing 'We wish you a merry Christmas' without braining each other with the jingle bells. Oh yes, then there's Christmas shopping on a strict 100€ budget, trying to elicit from M what his 95-year-old grandmother might like and presiding over the childrens' Christmas card-making debacle.
In the middle of everything, last week I had pause for thought - a short moment amid all the non-waiting-like activity. Introducing some Christmas vocabulary to a bunch of 3-6-year-olds, I asked, 'Who/what are we waiting for in the next few weeks?' The immediate reply, which brought sunshine smiles into the classroom, was "Babbo Natale!". Think unison chorus at tops of tiny voices similar to the chorus of kids in Barney. When the excitement provoked by that magical name died down and I was catching a deep breath with which to push on, a little voice piped up. Deborah, aged just 3, with enormous brown eyes and russet cheeks, said, "I'm waiting for Bambino Gésu."
And this is why my children will not be receiving a Ben 10 advent calendar, nor one adorned with the pneumatic teenage breasts and breathtakingly long legs of the Winx, even though they've begged me for weeks now every time they've entered the supermarket and seen them on sale.
Amidst the brouhaha, Mama will be motoring to Ascona, just across the Swiss border in the search for something less Babbo Natale and more Bambino Gèsu.
Thanks to Deborah, aged 3, for the heads up!
Friday, 27 November 2009
Reported conversations No. 16 : parolace
This morning :
Mama (laughingly) : "B., you're a little bugger, yes you are, a little bugger."
B. (adamantly) : "No I'm not a little bugger. I'm a BIG bugger..."
B. then repeats herself three times just to see Mama fall off her chair with laughter all over again. And all the better to memorize the new vocabulary.
Dammit, I must be more careful with what falls out of my mouth at seven in the morning. Do you think social services will be knocking on my door because I'm teaching my children English swear words that originated as 16th-century ribaldry among the soldiery of the British Army?
Thursday, 26 November 2009
Speaking of ruins
After a night of coughing and vomitting, tummy pains and headaches, a night when the Calpol didn't work, the Paracodina ditto and the Ventolin barely, the nurse-(always)-on-duty is a bit frayed around the edges.
Thursday is cancelled.
Wednesday, 25 November 2009
In ruins
Monday, 23 November 2009
Monday morning blues
I sometimes wonder who's on that ferry. Whether there is someone who travels every day along to Cannobio, who always, habitually, looks up as Carmine Superiore comes into view through the mist, just as I habitually look down from the mulattierra as the boat passes by.
Perhaps it's the start of a story...
Sunday, 22 November 2009
2009 in the garden : the verdict
It may already be mid-November, and the children may already be counting down to Chrismas, but in the garden there still is plenty going on. Planted yesterday were ten Tulipa altaica, ten Tulipa sylvestris, fifty Tulipa turkestanica, ten Tulipa whittallii and a plantation containing fifty Crocus sativa. Thank-you to J and R for the gift of the bulbs - if the plants survive my tender ministrations, we'll share the saffron.
Cleaned up the remaining summer plants, and there is now a mountain of green chilli peppers drying on the top of Mathilda and a row of green tomatoes ripening on the mantelpiece. There are still a couple of roses battling on, and the pineapple sage is providing some autumn colour, a surprising fuchsia against the greens and yellows. Left among the vegetables are the broccoli and the leeks.
Almost all the less hardy plants have been given a good helping of mulch made up of chicken hay, doo-doo, feathers and leaf mould dolloped straight on at the base. I hope I haven't overdone it...
Judgement on this year's garden? A very good year, despite my having spent less time there than any year before. The weather was fairly good to us - rain and sun in the right proportions - and with the help of two composters and 18 chicken-bottoms, we now have soil that is much better structured and more fertile than that which we inherited.
Everything we planted seems to have done well! I seem to have understood finally what basil wants - warmth and light but not full, shrivelling sunlight - and this year we have enough homemade pesto to keep AJ happy for the whole winter. There is a 5-litre jar of dried red peppers in the pantry, and lots and lots of preserved rhubarb.
So now Mama is looking forward to a couple of cosy evenings with the Faithful Little Woodburner, a glass of Mr Lafarge's best, the seed catalogues and a procession of garden delights : chamomile for a good night's sleep, borage for the bees, lovage for the lettuce, bronze fennel per la bellezza, Good King Henry for the name and dog rose for the cats.
In 2009, how did your garden grow?
Friday, 20 November 2009
Not in wet and windy England
Thursday, 19 November 2009
Sermon
"Will the woman in the red dress please SIT DOWN!"
San Gottardo gives a sermon,
Chiesa di San Gottardo, Carmine Superiore.
Wednesday, 18 November 2009
HELP! HELP! HELP!
On the way
Monday, 16 November 2009
Quote of the week No. 31 : the middle ages
Recently, I had cause to spend an unhappy sixty minutes contemplating my own mortality. I had been summoned by telephone to the GP's surgery following some tests, and of course, between the call and the appointment, my mind, armed with all sorts of possibilities kindly supplied by NHS Direct, dwelt in the house of mortal terror. My future in that hour before I heard the words "Beh....niente! (oh....nothing!)" shrank to an imagined couple of years, a couple of months, a few weeks, a few days.
After I heard those words, my life grew and extended itself once more into a full four-score years and ten (that's inflation for you), and today I find myself celebrating what may or may not be mid-life. Plenty of people have had plenty of ruefully funny things to say about mid-life, and it's difficult to choose between them, so here's a selection to make my peers laugh...
and, finally, my personal favourite...
Happy Monday! (And don't do anything I wouldn't do!)
Sunday, 15 November 2009
Madonna in the clouds
Friday, 13 November 2009
Thursday, 12 November 2009
Early morning discovery
Hawk strike on palazzo pollo yesterday. Luckily, the chickens thought with their spinal cords and to a girl fled to the warm darkness of the coop, a place where not many right-thinking hawks will boldly go. "Luckily, no-one was hurt", but there were plenty of ruffled feathers - all over the floor of the run.
So this morning I was out and about in the 6am pre-dawn repairing the protective wiring (having had a rather disturbed night populated with dancing penguins, carnival transvestites on stilts and hawks with scimitar beaks). I found the chicks - like the sprogs I left behind in the house - still sleeping. As the pre-dawn painted the sky behind the mountains and studded it with a single star (God doodling), I worked away with little white widgets, green netting and near-frozen fingers.
Then I made a discovery. The only sound in the gloom was what has to be one of the most soothing sounds in the world (after a night of dancing penguins and carnival transvestites on stilts) : the gentle purr of chickens snoring...
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
Autumn in Piemonte No. 5
Monday, 9 November 2009
Quote of the week No. 30: Today in 1989
I guess Erich Honecker, when he pronounced these words on January 19, 1989 was either bluffing or hadn't reckoned with the "many small people who in many small places [did] many small things [and altered] the face of the world" (for source, see here).
Or, to be totally cynical, the surge of people across the Wall in those heady days may not so much have been down to fear of the Stasi or politcal idealism, but more to do with the pulling power of Coca Cola and electronic goods.
Cynicism aside...
On November 9 1989, I was sleeping fairly rough on the floor of a Bangkok guesthouse. This was not my first taste of Asia (I had already the previous year been in Hong Kong and Macao researching a book), but the months that followed took me on a great adventure inspired in part by the more idealistic elements of what was happening back in the heart of Europe.
And I returned home in time to see the German reunification celebrations. A different person. A different Europe. A different world.
So where were you when the Berlin Wall fell?
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Autumn in Piemonte No. 4
Saturday, 7 November 2009
Autumn in Piemonte No. 3
Friday, 6 November 2009
Firewood
Thursday, 5 November 2009
Remember, remember
No scarecrows in dolls' prams outside the church hall. No "Penny for the Guy".
Wednesday, 4 November 2009
A minute for Madeleine/Dedica un minuto per Madeleine
Please take one minute of your day today to watch this video...
Per favore dedica un minuto oggi per guardare questo video...
Learn about the work of CEOP, the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre.
Tuesday, 3 November 2009
Autumn in Piemonte No. 2
Monday, 2 November 2009
All Souls
The children are sick. The cats are sick. The chickens are moulting and definitely look sick. Oh yes, and Mama is sick. And we're now into our fourth week of continuous sickness, and I've counted at least five separate bugs.
When you're considering motherhood, why does no-one ever tell you about autumn term at kindergarten?
Sunday, 1 November 2009
Autumn in Piemonte No. 1
Monday, 30 November 2009
The eye of the storm
But now I am watching the rain dribbling off the nearest piode rooftop and the trees bowing to the wind from the warmth of my kitchen. I have my back to a gently radiant Mathilda, and Allegri's 'Miserere' (the song of angels) pours from the speakers as I quietly consider the oeuvre on the screen before me.
Bliss.
Sunday, 29 November 2009
Levavi
Today is Levavi, the first Sunday of Advent. It's the first day of the four-week season of 'expectant waiting' before Christmas, when we celebrate the birth of the baby Jesus. Having 'expected' twice, I know what those last four weeks feel like, and the run-up to the modern Christmas celebration, even in Italy, is nothing like it.
Instead of becoming ever slower, ever more intent, ever more attuned to the signs that might presage a joyful arrival, I'm dashed off my feet with unexpected editorial and writing work, preparations for Cannobio's Christmas market next week, and trying to get the little buggers (oops) to sing 'We wish you a merry Christmas' without braining each other with the jingle bells. Oh yes, then there's Christmas shopping on a strict 100€ budget, trying to elicit from M what his 95-year-old grandmother might like and presiding over the childrens' Christmas card-making debacle.
In the middle of everything, last week I had pause for thought - a short moment amid all the non-waiting-like activity. Introducing some Christmas vocabulary to a bunch of 3-6-year-olds, I asked, 'Who/what are we waiting for in the next few weeks?' The immediate reply, which brought sunshine smiles into the classroom, was "Babbo Natale!". Think unison chorus at tops of tiny voices similar to the chorus of kids in Barney. When the excitement provoked by that magical name died down and I was catching a deep breath with which to push on, a little voice piped up. Deborah, aged just 3, with enormous brown eyes and russet cheeks, said, "I'm waiting for Bambino Gésu."
And this is why my children will not be receiving a Ben 10 advent calendar, nor one adorned with the pneumatic teenage breasts and breathtakingly long legs of the Winx, even though they've begged me for weeks now every time they've entered the supermarket and seen them on sale.
Amidst the brouhaha, Mama will be motoring to Ascona, just across the Swiss border in the search for something less Babbo Natale and more Bambino Gèsu.
Thanks to Deborah, aged 3, for the heads up!
Friday, 27 November 2009
Reported conversations No. 16 : parolace
This morning :
Mama (laughingly) : "B., you're a little bugger, yes you are, a little bugger."
B. (adamantly) : "No I'm not a little bugger. I'm a BIG bugger..."
B. then repeats herself three times just to see Mama fall off her chair with laughter all over again. And all the better to memorize the new vocabulary.
Dammit, I must be more careful with what falls out of my mouth at seven in the morning. Do you think social services will be knocking on my door because I'm teaching my children English swear words that originated as 16th-century ribaldry among the soldiery of the British Army?
Thursday, 26 November 2009
Speaking of ruins
After a night of coughing and vomitting, tummy pains and headaches, a night when the Calpol didn't work, the Paracodina ditto and the Ventolin barely, the nurse-(always)-on-duty is a bit frayed around the edges.
Thursday is cancelled.
Wednesday, 25 November 2009
In ruins
Monday, 23 November 2009
Monday morning blues
I sometimes wonder who's on that ferry. Whether there is someone who travels every day along to Cannobio, who always, habitually, looks up as Carmine Superiore comes into view through the mist, just as I habitually look down from the mulattierra as the boat passes by.
Perhaps it's the start of a story...
Sunday, 22 November 2009
2009 in the garden : the verdict
It may already be mid-November, and the children may already be counting down to Chrismas, but in the garden there still is plenty going on. Planted yesterday were ten Tulipa altaica, ten Tulipa sylvestris, fifty Tulipa turkestanica, ten Tulipa whittallii and a plantation containing fifty Crocus sativa. Thank-you to J and R for the gift of the bulbs - if the plants survive my tender ministrations, we'll share the saffron.
Cleaned up the remaining summer plants, and there is now a mountain of green chilli peppers drying on the top of Mathilda and a row of green tomatoes ripening on the mantelpiece. There are still a couple of roses battling on, and the pineapple sage is providing some autumn colour, a surprising fuchsia against the greens and yellows. Left among the vegetables are the broccoli and the leeks.
Almost all the less hardy plants have been given a good helping of mulch made up of chicken hay, doo-doo, feathers and leaf mould dolloped straight on at the base. I hope I haven't overdone it...
Judgement on this year's garden? A very good year, despite my having spent less time there than any year before. The weather was fairly good to us - rain and sun in the right proportions - and with the help of two composters and 18 chicken-bottoms, we now have soil that is much better structured and more fertile than that which we inherited.
Everything we planted seems to have done well! I seem to have understood finally what basil wants - warmth and light but not full, shrivelling sunlight - and this year we have enough homemade pesto to keep AJ happy for the whole winter. There is a 5-litre jar of dried red peppers in the pantry, and lots and lots of preserved rhubarb.
So now Mama is looking forward to a couple of cosy evenings with the Faithful Little Woodburner, a glass of Mr Lafarge's best, the seed catalogues and a procession of garden delights : chamomile for a good night's sleep, borage for the bees, lovage for the lettuce, bronze fennel per la bellezza, Good King Henry for the name and dog rose for the cats.
In 2009, how did your garden grow?
Friday, 20 November 2009
Not in wet and windy England
Thursday, 19 November 2009
Sermon
"Will the woman in the red dress please SIT DOWN!"
San Gottardo gives a sermon,
Chiesa di San Gottardo, Carmine Superiore.
Wednesday, 18 November 2009
HELP! HELP! HELP!
On the way
Monday, 16 November 2009
Quote of the week No. 31 : the middle ages
Recently, I had cause to spend an unhappy sixty minutes contemplating my own mortality. I had been summoned by telephone to the GP's surgery following some tests, and of course, between the call and the appointment, my mind, armed with all sorts of possibilities kindly supplied by NHS Direct, dwelt in the house of mortal terror. My future in that hour before I heard the words "Beh....niente! (oh....nothing!)" shrank to an imagined couple of years, a couple of months, a few weeks, a few days.
After I heard those words, my life grew and extended itself once more into a full four-score years and ten (that's inflation for you), and today I find myself celebrating what may or may not be mid-life. Plenty of people have had plenty of ruefully funny things to say about mid-life, and it's difficult to choose between them, so here's a selection to make my peers laugh...
and, finally, my personal favourite...
Happy Monday! (And don't do anything I wouldn't do!)
Sunday, 15 November 2009
Madonna in the clouds
Friday, 13 November 2009
Thursday, 12 November 2009
Early morning discovery
Hawk strike on palazzo pollo yesterday. Luckily, the chickens thought with their spinal cords and to a girl fled to the warm darkness of the coop, a place where not many right-thinking hawks will boldly go. "Luckily, no-one was hurt", but there were plenty of ruffled feathers - all over the floor of the run.
So this morning I was out and about in the 6am pre-dawn repairing the protective wiring (having had a rather disturbed night populated with dancing penguins, carnival transvestites on stilts and hawks with scimitar beaks). I found the chicks - like the sprogs I left behind in the house - still sleeping. As the pre-dawn painted the sky behind the mountains and studded it with a single star (God doodling), I worked away with little white widgets, green netting and near-frozen fingers.
Then I made a discovery. The only sound in the gloom was what has to be one of the most soothing sounds in the world (after a night of dancing penguins and carnival transvestites on stilts) : the gentle purr of chickens snoring...
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
Autumn in Piemonte No. 5
Monday, 9 November 2009
Quote of the week No. 30: Today in 1989
I guess Erich Honecker, when he pronounced these words on January 19, 1989 was either bluffing or hadn't reckoned with the "many small people who in many small places [did] many small things [and altered] the face of the world" (for source, see here).
Or, to be totally cynical, the surge of people across the Wall in those heady days may not so much have been down to fear of the Stasi or politcal idealism, but more to do with the pulling power of Coca Cola and electronic goods.
Cynicism aside...
On November 9 1989, I was sleeping fairly rough on the floor of a Bangkok guesthouse. This was not my first taste of Asia (I had already the previous year been in Hong Kong and Macao researching a book), but the months that followed took me on a great adventure inspired in part by the more idealistic elements of what was happening back in the heart of Europe.
And I returned home in time to see the German reunification celebrations. A different person. A different Europe. A different world.
So where were you when the Berlin Wall fell?
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Autumn in Piemonte No. 4
Saturday, 7 November 2009
Autumn in Piemonte No. 3
Friday, 6 November 2009
Firewood
Thursday, 5 November 2009
Remember, remember
No scarecrows in dolls' prams outside the church hall. No "Penny for the Guy".
Wednesday, 4 November 2009
A minute for Madeleine/Dedica un minuto per Madeleine
Please take one minute of your day today to watch this video...
Per favore dedica un minuto oggi per guardare questo video...
Learn about the work of CEOP, the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre.
Tuesday, 3 November 2009
Autumn in Piemonte No. 2
Monday, 2 November 2009
All Souls
The children are sick. The cats are sick. The chickens are moulting and definitely look sick. Oh yes, and Mama is sick. And we're now into our fourth week of continuous sickness, and I've counted at least five separate bugs.
When you're considering motherhood, why does no-one ever tell you about autumn term at kindergarten?