Monday, December 24, 2018

Merry Christmas Kitty Ornaments




                 Merry Christmas from my favorite Jack-in-the-box kitty ornament



                        Here's the new calico kitty addition to my tree thanks to my sister Lucia



                                   And here's another cutie from a few years back


Monday, December 10, 2018

A Rustic Christmas Eve/Hanukkah Table


Last year Christmas Eve and Hanukkah fell within a few days of each other, so our multi-denominational family was able to celebrate the two holidays together. The Seattle Stein family arrived in town just in time for our annual Christmas Eve crab extravaganza at Ricki's lovely Sea Cliff home. This rare religious coincidence allowed Ricki to pour her creativity into a table depicting the entire holiday season.


She combined winter greenery, berries and pine cones gathered in her San Francisco neighborhood, with elegantly arranged succulents and mosses spanning the length of the table. With flair she placed miniature wooden dreidels, horses, donkeys, ladders and other objects from her years of collecting.


          As usual, the tablecloth, napkins, china, glasses, silverware and serving pieces were perfection. Check out her beautiful  2018 Thanksgiving table Here and her Thanksgiving 2013 table  Here


I snapped photos from all angles before we assembled for dinner. Here you can see a miniature dreidel and goat

I can't wait to see this year's Christmas Eve table

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Thanksgiving '18 at Ricki's



             Another Thanksgiving---Another stunning table by Ricki. To best showcase the table, this photo is in the original size, so please forgive the sidebars that appear down the middle.

Here are some more decorative details


The Rustic Squash Centerpiece


A place setting with Italian Deruta Dinner plates

Another View of the table

        The table just before we sat down to the first course of Sande's crab, avocado and papaya salad

Thursday, November 22, 2018

Kauai's Hindu Monastery

Every time we visit Kauai we discover something new. Last time it was the Lawa'i Buddhist    
shrines. This November it was the Hindu Monastery. The sanctuary was founded by Gurudeva in the '70s and has since become a Hindu center and monastic order for many monks. Visitors are welcomed daily from 10:45 to noon and are allowed to wander through the grounds and gardens. It's a beautiful and peaceful place.


Guests are encouraged to dress in traditional Hindu clothing when visiting. Alternatively, modest clothing is permitted. No shorts, short dresses, t-shirts or tank tops. Dean was wearing shorts so he grabbed one of the sarongs offered at the entrance.



                   This lovely pool, with a Shiva statuette and fountain, sits near the entrance.



                                                               The pool reminded me of Bali




The Kadavul Hindu Temple  is open to all



A view across the valley





Iraivan Temple across the Wailua River


Across the Wailua River stands the Iraivan temple, a mammoth granite structure carved in India by master stone masons and shipped to Kauai block by block. Resident artisans from India are still at work fitting the last of 3000 blocks of stone in place and "erecting an edifice according to ancient agamic mystical injunctions."

Visitors are not allowed to visit this temple unless they take the two hour tour, which we didn't do, but we could see it from the grounds across the river.

After wandering around the monastery for an hour, we visited the gift shop and then headed to the nearby Opaeka'a falls.


Sunday, November 18, 2018

Clean Air in Kauai

Hiking the Mahaulepu Trail


                                       Just back from Kauai where the air is clean and bright

View from the Mahaulepu trail-this is where we spotted a manta ray

                                                           And the sea and sky are blue





Sunday, November 4, 2018

Excès de Vitesse (French Speeding Ticket)



Look what arrived in the mail yesterday! A speeding ticket sent from France for driving 89 km per hour in a zone authorized for 80 km/h. The date of our offense was Sept. 11th and we were driving towards the Chateau de Brissac, which I noticed when we crossed the Loire on our way to Poissonière.


Chateau de Brissac


Our speed must have been clocked by radar because we were never stopped and we weren't aware of anything until we received the notification by mail.

Here's a closer look

Description of the infraction. Good thing I can read French

Dean is all for not paying, but I think I'll take the option of sending a payment by Visa in the envelope they provided. I'm sure the French traffic administration would keep hounding us with ever steeper fines and then find a suitable punishment if we ignored them. What could that be? Possibly not allowing us to rent a car in France? or not letting us enter the country? It's not worth the 45 euros they are charging. Talk about "the long arm of the law," or the long arm of French bureaucracy.




Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Room on the Broom

There's always room on the broom for a cat

                                                              HAPPY HALLOWEEN



Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Rooms with a View in the Loire Valley

This view of the castle was taken from our room at the Anne d'Anjou shortly after arrival

We arrived in Saumur late Saturday afternoon and since the town was buzzing with a street fair, or brocante, we parked at the edge of all the activity and headed for the tourist office on foot so that we could locate our hotel Anne d'Anjou. We passed by all the colorful stalls and finally found ourselves at the Loire river and the Tourist Office. They said we were not far from the hotel, so we walked there along the river.

Photo of the castle in Saumur taken at dawn from our room at the Hotel Anne d'Anjou

At the reception we were given the "Children's suite" in the little building next to the garden because I had requested a "calm room" and because there were no children staying at the hotel. That meant we had a lovely suite with a stairway to another bedroom on the floor above. From the upper window we had this stunning view of the chateau on the rampart above the hotel. I crept up the stairs several times that night to view the illuminated chateau in the dark and at dawn.


The huge terrazzo of our hotel looking down on the beautiful gardens and the valley below

Leaving Saumur, we headed to Chateau Azay- le- Rideau via the nearby tufa caves and troglodyte dwellings. After chateau viewing and lunch, we were ready for our splurge hotel, Chateau de Rochecotte in tiny St. Patrice. The grounds were amazing and the pool was large and heated


This is the view from our room: pale hydrangeas in a formal park setting

Our room was lovely, but the dinner in the gorgeous formal dining room was disappointing. They made up for it with  the generous breakfast which included croissants and pastries made by the hotel chef. Those are always the best. The smaller hotels bring in baked goods from nearby bakeries.


Next stop was Montreuil- Bellay, which  the DK guidebook described as one of the most attractive towns in Anjou, combining an ancient village and a fascinating feudal chateau.

A poster in the stairway of our hotel


On our way, we passed by Fontevraud L'Abbaye and had to stop. I had read about this place, but it wasn't high on my list of sites to visit. Finding ourselves in Fontevraud, we decided to check out the abbey that dominates the town.  Founded in 1101 by a hermit, the abbey, for both women and men, is the largest and most extraordinary of its kind. It was run for nearly 700 years by aristocratic abbesses, almost half of them royal. So that allowed the abbey to be funded by royal coffers.
The grounds rest on 35 acres, so was impossible for us to see much, but we were impressed by the history and immensity of the abbey. There were very few tourists, so we  had a short private tour by a  sweet young docent.

The beautiful cloisters, said to be the largest in France


The cuisine (or kitchen) with 6 fireplaces was closed for renovation

It was late afternoon by the time we left Fontevraud. We never knew how long it would take to find  our next destination and how many times we would get lost. Our GPS was worthless, so I'm glad I came equipped with detailed regional maps. Actually, that afternoon from Fontevraud to Montreul-Bellay was the only time our GPS worked and it guided us right to the driveway of our hotel.


The hotel Relais de Bellay had a lovely heated pool and a manicured lawn and best of all, a stellar view of the castle


We checked into our room and gasped at the perfect view of the medieval castle outside our window. I snapped some photos and headed straight to the pool for a refreshing swim. When I swam on my back I could gaze up at the chateau and neighboring towers. What a life!

Montreuil-Bellay Chateau at dawn from our hotel room. Could this be Disneyland?

At dawn I snapped another photo because I wanted to capture the theatrical early morning light. I imagined I was back in the middle ages when the Plantagenets were battling the English for control of this part of Anjou.



Luckily, there was a market on Tuesday morning, so I trudged up the hill next to the castle after breakfast. The market was small but fun, but unfortunately the castle was closed on Tuesday.


A market flower stand next to the castle

Our next stop was Savennières, a tiny town in an area which produces an exceptional dry white wine. I'd read that it is one of the world's great whites, with an incredibly rich bouquet and taste, so I wanted to visit and do some tasting. As we entered the area, we stumbled upon a sign for Nicolas Joly and we headed up the dirt road to the small winery. We had a private tasting in French with a Belgian couple and we bought 2 of the 3 wines we tasted. Interestingly, the wines are made biodynamically and the winemaker was in the room above us, but was too nervous about the imminent harvest to talk to visitors.
The wines turned out to be quite expensive, and soon we found out that Joly is the most famous wine maker in the well-respected appellation of Savenièrres, and he makes one of France's "rarest and greatest white wines."

It was difficult to locate a place to stay near Savennières, but deep in the internet I came across Rousselière, a "chambres d'hôtes." The photos on "Booking" showed a charming country estate--just what I was looking for.




Above is the view from the bedroom window at Rousselière. The photo was taken at dawn and  Francois, the owner, was just about to arrive from a local boulangerie bearing a large box of breads and croissants for the petit-dejeuner. This was also minutes before I stepped on a giant wasp in the bathroom. My toes were paralyzed, and Dean woke up while I was crawling around the room in agony, unable to walk. Our kind host supplied a bag of ice at breakfast and soon I was better.




























Outside our bedroom door at Rousselière,  we could cross to the opposite side of the long hall and  see the pool and little chapel from the upstairs windows. I swam in that cold unheated pool the afternoon we arrived and walked up to the charming little chapel. We loved this country house. I'm so glad I discovered it.

We had one more chateau opportunity on the way from Possonnière to Angers. That would be Chateau de Serrant, which I had never heard of. Our hosts had mentioned it and we followed the signs on the auto route.  I found the chateau to be be heavy and foreboding, but Dean liked it.



Dean posing in front of Serrant

The moat around Chateau de Serrant without the swans we saw earlier

Entering the larger town of Angers was scary after all the narrow country lanes we had enjoyed. We had to find the train station where we would return our car, so we followed the signs to the center of town and eventually got the car to the underground return area. After settling into the Hotel du Mail we walked to the castle and viewed the grounds and famous tapestries.


Chateau in Angers

Dean on the draw bridge

It would have been nice to have a view of the castle in Angers but our hotel was situated  in a small alley and our room looked out onto the hotel parking lot crammed with cars in the late afternoon, and also onto a small stone patio with a few tables where guests sat and  smoked.

A view of our room on the 2nd floor of the typically French Hotel du Mail in Angers

The next morning we caught the train back to Paris and returned to our favorite Hôtel de Sêvres. From our room I photographed a woman clipping ivy on her balcony across Rue l'Abbé Gregoire.


A Parisian trimming ivy on her balcony in the 6th arrondisement




Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Treasures from the Auguste-Blanqui Market in Paris

On Friday mornings in Paris, the rambling Auguste-Blanqui Market is in full swing. When you get off the Metro at Place d'Italie you're immediately caught up in the swirl of activity, which extends for many, many blocks. The vendors mainly sell edibles, but there are other treasures to be found.

I'm contemplating the figues de Barbarie or prickly pears


One of many cheese stands

Dean admired these tomatoes

I happened upon a basket full of African bracelets and I had to have some. I should have bought more than three. C'est la vie.

The basket of colorful bracelets

                      Then I saw some typically French espadrilles and I had to have some.

Modeling my purchases from the market

Our plan was to walk up to the the nearby Butte aux Cailles after the market and sit in the lovely park we had discovered on a previous trip. The Butte aux Cailles (quails) was originally a tiny village on the outskirts of Paris. It's flowering gardens and cobblestone lanes dotted with convivial bars and restaurants is now an integral part of the 13th arrondissement. We enjoyed staying there when we went on a Yoga trip years ago.


Above is a typical view from our park. And then we decided to walk up Rue Gobelins to Rue Mouffetard, as we had done a few times on previous trips. But unfortunately we had left our maps at the hotel. This being the quaint Butte aux Cailles, we passed a dusty old newsstand and the proprietor found a couple of Paris maps buried deep in a dusty drawer. We bought one and it turned out to be the best "plan" we had ever seen. We kept it and we'll take it along next visit.



I'm working on a longer blog about the Loire Valley but in the meantime I decided to post this little ditty.