BumpaStuff
Sunday, May 28, 2006
Now this is what Gramma's really like: baby watching! Every minute that Aria puts the baby down Gramma wants to be snuggling with her and cooing over her. It's great to watch. Sasha is the best baby! She smiles at everybody and lets anybody pick her up without a fuss. But if she's awake she's on the move, picking up anything in reach and rolling around and making crawling efforts.
I'm back!
Sorry that there hasn't been any posts since my return to Costa Rica... I got back to four home inspection jobs waiting, one after the other. This photo is one of the homes. (I'm still working on the report which, with photos and text, takes at least a full day to write.) This was one of the most beautifully designed and constructed homes I've seen here.
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
Here my last photo of my trip to Florida: David and Gianni's car and apartment in Hallandale Beach. They will soon be leaving both for their move to Costa Rica (August). Happy day that'll be!
David and Gianni: I send deepfelt gratitude and thanks for all your warm hospitality during my stay with you guys!
Next: blog pics from Aria and Sasha's visit to CR.
Friday, May 19, 2006
Heading back to Florida, via Atlanta
The adventure continues. This time we are heading out early (some rested, some not) in order to catch up with our great Costa Rican buddy, Jason Ighani. Jason will be meeting us in Atlanta where he is studying and teaching. He will soon be leaving for a Baha'i teaching and service adventure with his sister, Laila, in some Eastern-Block countries for the summer.
Thursday, May 18, 2006
While David and Vahid and Nathanial were jambing on their guitars and singing their composi- tions in the living room I took a little tour around the house with Marty's mom, Joy Hill. Here she is in her ambiente. Joy worked for years in the publishing world and now spends her time reading and water coloring and enjoying life with Marty and Buddy part of the year and the rest with her son, Kit Hill, and his family in Madison.
Joy's husband, and Marty and Kit's dad, was Lewis Hill, one of the founders of Pacifica Foundation, the first listener's sponsored radio (KPFA in Berkely, California).
Next, still in Nashville area, we went to visit my long lost sister, Marty Dehart, and her family. (Well, we'll call her my sister. Our family is so complicated that you don't wanna ask what's the connection...anyway, I 've known Marty since she was a newborn babe. She's still a babe, no?)
Marty is a wonderful artist and natural scientist! She can tell you every detail in the life of any given dog, cat, bird or creature you might want to ask about. I always recall her as a tiny girl with a fist full of frogs, pollywogs or crickets-- delighted with every one!
Marty is here with her son, Nathaniel, me, David and Gianni.
Our gang went out in the evening to meet Juliet and her husband, Sahba at the Cafe Coco in Nashville. This was an amazing meeting place for a diverse crowd. Open 24hrs, and we saw a steady stream of customers pouring in. Most were students from nearby universities.
Zoom in on the message board to get a better idea of the ambiente...
Saturday, May 13, 2006
Gianni with "Spanky" the pup, and Carmen Seals. Carmen is Ruby's daughter -in-law (her husband, Josh Seals, is currently on tour in Hawaii with his brother Sutherland and his dad, Jimmy, and uncle, Dan Seals. They have been playing gigs all around the U.S. and will return from Hawaii on Tuesday, unfortunately too late for us to meet them). This is the first time the two Costa Rican girls got to know each other.
Spanky is Carmen's doggie. He doesn't like the slippery wood floors and will wait on the rug for someone to pick him up rather than try walking around on them.
This is a shot of Ruby with her grandson, Charlie. (He just made a goal at the mornings socker game and was pretty happy about that.)
Ruby and Jimmy just moved into this new house, built to their specs, and the back yard was not completely finished yet.
The weather was perfect, as was Ruby's coffee! It was great hanging out with them in their Nashville environment. (We're totally used to them being in Santa Ana, Costa Rica.)
The five travellers with Juliet on her patio deck.
Afterwards, at our insistance, she treated us to a new song she had written and recorded with her brother Sutherland. She has some basic recording equipment in her little bedroom studio and claims that it would have sounded much better on her dad's equipment. Sounded great to me!
This is the coolest device which Darren brought for our Nashville trip. He uses this Global Positioning System (GPS) for his work with FEMA in hurricane relief. You can program your exact destination address and this program will guide you (visually on a US map, or by voice), right to it!
It guided us directly to Juliet Seals house in Nashville...(.5miles, 150 yards, 10 yards, etc.).
The speed indication was acurate, but no worries, surely we were in the passing lane (and the speed limit was 70).
Tuesday, May 09, 2006
A day at the VA
OK, just to see if anybody's watching the blog... (well, I don't see any comments!) Today I spent practically the whole day at the Veteran's Hospital in Miami. This is the main purpose of my coming up here--to get treatments every 6 months. In this case they were operating on both of my poor big tootsies. For some reason, probably related to too much "Oldic Acid" (as my buddy Tony Schmitz calls it) in my system, both toenails started becoming ingrown, but not at the end of the toe like normal. These were growing under the skin on the side of each toe. Gross, no? Well, the doctors were very kind, considerate and careful to make it as painless as possible. (The only pain was from the four shots in each toe to numb them.)
Most of the time I was waiting for doctors, picking up meds and setting up future appointments; that's why it took all day. My lovely daughter-in-law, Gianni, was so kind to insist on accompanying me, so the waiting wasn't at all tedious.
Monday, May 08, 2006
Bumpa with some amazing ladies. Mrs. Rezaie, Giannina and..... Agnes. I'm not sure which Latin American country she comes from, but I'm wondering is she might be related to the same Agnes with whom I used to chat when I was a three or four year old! (I told her this story that my mother related to me: that I was the only child in about a hundred miles, on the California Coast where we used to live--Big Sur--and I used to get under the table or near a hollow wall and start up a very serious conversation with "Agnes". She was my invisible friend.)
So, I've been searching for Agnes for years and this is the first one I've met... Hummmn...
Check out the variety of cultures: Next to Mr. Rezaie is Vahid Ndobe, from Cameroon. On his right is Talieh Vahdat, a Persian girl who was raised in Brazil. On her right is Vahid's brother, Shoghi. Shoghi lived in England and Germany and speaks English, German, French and some (pieces and parts of) the Camaroonese dialects.
I made a great new friend in meeting Ken (who is blind but that hasn't set him back any as an active and creative person). He's a Baha'i and is on the Local Spiritual Assembly of Miami. On the right is Mariam, the middle child of the Rezaies. She has a great spirit and a terrific sense of humor. Forget about getting any rest if you are around her! (She came over to D & G's place with her sister, May, and brother, Munib, and they stayed up talking and laughing until 3am!)
More Outtings: a tropical Devotional Gathering
We were all invited to attend a special Tropical theme devotional at the Rezaie home in Miami. The Rezaies are some pretty amazing hosts. They speak many languages, including Mandarin Chinese and Portugese, due to the areas where they have lived (after having escaped from Iran just prior to the revolution in the 70's).
To my great surprise and delight there were two Chinese families attending this night and they were the life of the party. (See here, sandwiched between Mr. and Mrs. Rezaie.)