This morning, I finally saw the flicker in our backyard, and he was kind enough to wait while I got my camera out. Beauty bird. My heart thumped a wildly enthusiastic welcome, thank you, please stay a while. I wonder if he felt it.
When I told dp I was reading Sweetness in the Belly, she suggested an Ethiopian restaurant on East Broadway called Fassil. As I read a passage about injera, a kind of bread that is eaten with almost every meal, my mouth watered, and I couldn't wait to try the restaurant out, so Bill and I enjoyed an excellent meal there this evening. Below is Deresse, the owner and very kind host. He and his wife, Lumlum, take good care of their customers. Deresse told me he comes from Harar, where much of the novel is set. He wanted to know more about the story, but I'm only about 70 pages into it. I promised to bring it with me the next time we go.This morning, Black Jack and I picked our way through a slushy walk in all its wet and more frozen forms. When we returned, I photographed a few birds in the yard. Later, I read a Peter McMartin newspaper column that described with great accuracy and wit the current walking experience in Vancouver.
I love the reds in this little finch.
The hostess tray is ugly but the birds accept function over aesthetics.
This little fellow must have a death wish. He's hanging around right at our back door. Black Jack tore out of the house so quickly today, I thought they might meet, but the squirrel was a step ahead of her.
Walking along 7th Avenue this afternoon, I chuckled several times as I remembered Peter McMartin's column. I stopped at Fir Street to look more closely at this mural under the overpass. I've walked or biked past here many times, but this was the first time I noticed some of the details in the painting. I love the perspective, the casual pose of the man looking at the painting, and the person coming through the doorway with their bike.
This little fellow must have a death wish. He's hanging around right at our back door. Black Jack tore out of the house so quickly today, I thought they might meet, but the squirrel was a step ahead of her.
Walking along 7th Avenue this afternoon, I chuckled several times as I remembered Peter McMartin's column. I stopped at Fir Street to look more closely at this mural under the overpass. I've walked or biked past here many times, but this was the first time I noticed some of the details in the painting. I love the perspective, the casual pose of the man looking at the painting, and the person coming through the doorway with their bike.