5

Share Your World 13 March 2018

Here are my answers to this week’s questions from Cee’s Share Your World

If a distant uncle dies and you were always his favorite and leaves you $50,000 (any currency) in his will, what would you do?

I’ll take the money in American Dollars please.  If the uncle is distant he would definitely be in the USA as some of the Greek side of the family emigrated there from Ithaca.  And the only way I could have been his favourite would be because he kept up with me via this blog!

Anyway – we’re in Share Your World Land so we can have some fun.  So I would use this lovely inheritance to take a Mediterranean Cruise – The Greek Islands, Spain, Italy, France etc.  I’d have a balcony suite which for my hubby and me would cost about $30 000 dollars for three weeks.   The rest I would use for the air fares and still have some spending money left over!   Yes – that would be the perfect way to blow $ 50 000.

What sound or sounds do you love?

The dawn chorus of birds on waking up.   Nothing more cheerful than that.  Children laughing, the school choir singing and the waves breaking on the shore are also rather lovely to hear.

What’s your middle name?  Why?

I think middle names are unnecessary and can be embarrassing if they’re somewhat unusual – or rather they were when I was a kid. Today strange names are the norm and in my experience as a teacher I seldom found kids being teased for having an odd name – first or middle.  I was given two middle names so that neither grandmother felt left out for not having me named after her. In the Greek tradition the first born daughter is supposed to be named after the Paternal Grandmother.  My mother who was not Greek refused to comply so instead of being named Maria – I was given an Anglicized version of the name – Mary – as my second name and Edwina after my Maternal grandmother as a third name.    I found these names cumbersome as a child but now I rather like them.

I did not want to give my child a second name but ended up doing so to placate her father who wanted it as a first.    She doesn’t like her second name but is perfectly happy with her first – so at least that was a good decision.

What did you appreciate or what made you smile this past week?  Feel free to use a quote, a photo, a story, or even a combination. 

Last week was busy and rather fun so I had a lot to smile about.   But the biggest thing that made me smile was the completion of my bedroom extension. Being able to move in after more than two weeks in alternate digs was lovely.

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The extension – would it ever be done?!

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Yes – At Last!

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The original section with new floors

Redecorating

6

Black and White Challenge – Large Subjects

This week Cee asks us to submit large subjects

“This week the topic is Large Subjects.  Large can be a matter of perspective.  Although I would assume large means bigger than a human being.  You can also show perspective of something real small and then something bigger than the small object.”

Here is my contribution,

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The Ground Hornbill is a big bird – but not when compared to an elephant

392 Opera House

Sydney Opera House

403 Looking down from the pylon

 

6

Cee’s Fun Photo Challenge – Leaves or Trees

Here is my contribution to this week’s Fun Photo Challenge from Cee

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The leaves of the Mopane Tree are butterfly shaped.  The wood of the mopane tree is hard and is used to build houses and also railway sleepers. It is termite resistant

2010-10-08 003 Baobab Tree Helen

Baobab Tree in Winter

Boabab Tree

Baobab Tree in Summer

 

044 Boys in tree

Grandsons climbing trees

 

6

Share Your World 5 March 2018

Here are my answers to this week’s questions from Cee’s Share Your World.

What did you or did not like about the first place you lived without your parents?

The first place I lived without my parents was at my college residence.   There were four houses and mine was called Lincoln.  To say that it was Spartan would not be an understatement but I thought it was amazing.   In my first year I had my own little ‘cell’, which was part of a partitioned dormitory which housed five of us.  The only private part about these cells was that you could not see each other but you certainly could hear each other!   My cell had a narrow single bed, a dressing table with three drawers and a curtained off hanging space.   It was tiny!   The bathrooms were also partitioned and there was but one loo per floor. But what fun we had in spite of the very strict rules of the establishment.  Today’s girls would be horrified at what we thought was perfectly normal.

What is your most favorite smell/scent?

I think that would be the sea.  Jasmine comes a close second.

Would you prefer snowy winters, or not, and why?

Snowy winters?  I have not had many of those but when I have been in a snowy environment I have absolutely loved it.  I grew up fantasizing about playing in the snow, building snowmen and skiing down steep mountain slopes and it only became a reality when I was forty years old!  I had only been in snow once before aged nineteen when  on a College educational trip in The Hogsback Mountains of the Eastern Cape. We were all hugely excited to wake to a snowy landscape and we all ran out in inadequate clothing to experience it.   By midday it had all melted.

But then my dream came true when I went on a skiing holiday to Verbier in Switzerland.  It was awesome!

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Me on the Alpine Slopes

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Not even falling snow will stop South Africans having their braai! – That’s me in pink hat and scarf!

But of course I have never had to deal with constantly clearing driveways of snow, being housebound because it’s too cold to go out without donning layers of furry clothing or braving icy roads in a motor car.   So – Yes – I think I am perfectly happy with the mild climate I am privileged to live in.

What did you appreciate or what made you smile this past week?  Feel free to use a quote, a photo, a story, or even a combination. 

I smiled this week when while visiting my friends, I was mobbed by a flock of Cape Sugar-birds.   They know that it’s humans that fill the sugar water feeder and so when they see someone who might be about to do that, they fly toward them in anticipation.   I feed the birds in my garden but have never been quite as warmly welcomed as I was when my friends’ birds came to greet me.

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7

Black and White Challenge – Double Letters

This week’s topic for the Black and White Challenge from Cee is words that contain double letters.

 

I have experimented with keeping just a touch of colour in the photographs.

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Fooling in the Pool

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Korhaan with Grasshopper

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Parrot eating berries

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Bee-Eater

079 Hippos at sunset dam

Pool of Hippo

 

20

Photo a Week Challenge – Out of this World

Here is my contribution to this week’s Daily Post Photo a Week Challenge

The brief is to share a photograph that looks and feels as if it is out of this world.

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An alien city? No – They’re Singapore’s super trees that light up the Garden by the Bay Botanical Gardens

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The Red Planet? No – The Namib Desert in Nabia

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Barren Moonscape? – No Dead Man’s Vlei – Soussesvlei Namibia

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A scene from another planet? Just the Namib  – not a UFO but a vapour trail from a Boeing.

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Barren Moonscape?   Just a Black and White take of the desert

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Alien footprints – Maybe but more likely these fairy circles are created by termites under the soil that clear vegetation in the area.

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This succulent flower in my garden has a truly out of this world look about it

12

Weekly Fun Photo Challenge – Wildlife

This week’s Fun Photo Challenge from Cee calls for Wild Life Photographs.  This should be easy for me as I have literally thousands of Wild photographs.  BUT what to choose – that is the question.  I have limited myself to ten! I hope you enjoy the ones that cracked the nod.

2010-10-03 037 African Darter Helen

African Darter with prey – Lake Panic, Kruger National Park

2010-10-02 011 Warthogs Helen

Piggy sun-downers at Sunset Dam, Kruger National Park

043 Brown Hyena Helen 2015-03-16 08-09-33 AM 2620x1961

Brown Hyaena at Kgalagadi Trans-frontier Park

2010-10-12 029 Giraffe Helen

Giraffe – Kruger National Park

2010-10-06 024 Elephant Earl

Kicking up dust while racing to the waterhole

134 Cheetah Earl 2015-03-29 07-02-019

Cheetah – Kgalagadi Trans-frontier Park

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Nothing beats coming upon this with not another car in sight – Kruger National Park

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Life is good in The Kgalagadi Trans-frontier Park

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I love you Mom

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A  cuddle of cubs

 

2

Share Your World – 26 February 2018

Here are my answers to this week’s Share Your World from Cee

What are you reading right now?

Mostly blogs and magazines including “go!”, “AFRICAN birdlife”and FAIRLADY.

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I have just finished “And Babies Make Seven” by V.J. Keelan.  It is a true story about raising natural quadruplets – 4 little boys born to a couple who already had a little girl aged three.    As a teenager the mother had almost lost her life in a car accident that left six of her friends dead. She had a long hard battle to recovery and was left with some mobility impairments.  Yet she managed to raise five children all of whom did well at school and graduated from College.   It was an inspiring read.

I then started another book, The Letter, by Kathryn Hughes. It is the type of book I have probably outgrown as it is light reading with a predictable story line.  Not really gripping but I will finish it.

What was your first adult job?

If this question refers to my first full time employment then it would be my first teaching post as an Itinerant Speech Correction Teacher.  I had three schools on my circuit – two English Medium and One Afrikaans.  I took individual or small groups of children and corrected their lisps and stutters etc.  I also did hearing tests with an audiometer and checked on learners with hearing impairments some of whom needed language enrichment.  I remained in this job for five years and then did a short spell in a school for the deaf before I started class teaching.  My checkered career lasted for forty years.

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However, my first ‘real’ job was at the age of 17 when I worked for a month as a nurse’s aid before I went to college.

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I grew up fast that month.  One of my patients was terminally ill and took a shine to me and when I was on duty called for my assistance all the time. She died toward the end of my time at the hospital which had a profound affect on me.  I also watched the birth of a baby which was totally amazing.

 What’s your favorite breakfast cereal?

I do not eat high carbohydrate or processed foods so cereals are a No-No.  However, Woolworth’s has a Carb Clever Range of products which includes a type of low carbohydrate cereal called Almond and Cocoa Nib Granola. I have this with Greek Yogurt if I can’t have a cooked breakfast.  It contains sunflower seeds, coconut flakes, linseed, almonds, pumpkin seeds and cocoa nibs.   It is delicious.

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What did you appreciate or what made you smile this past week?  Feel free to use a quote, a photo, a story, or even a combination.

It’s has been a struggle trying to get my garden back into shape after our long absence so when the gardener turned up up after we’d given up on ever seeing him again,  I appreciated all the hard work he put into helping it look just lovely again.

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7

Stream of Consciousness Saturday – Door

So today’s prompt for Stream of Consciousness Saturday is Door.  Write about a door you walked through this week that was not your own.

I have walked through a few doors this week . One door I walked through was to my friends for dinner.  I like their doors – they’re made of good wood and and are sturdy. They can keep people out or let them in – that’s what doors are for after all. No, I don’t think we’re supposed to write about door but rather what happened once passing through said door.

Well, it all started well. We were there for a good South African braai.  My friends are wonderful hosts and cook fabulous food.  Gareth was there too, and this was a kind of great to see you again old friend and have a good trip back to England on Friday, type of affair

I was having a stunning time, wonderful conversation, bonding with friends, sharing a bottle of excellent “Life from Stone’ wine with Perci – perhaps a glass too many?  No – not more than usual on such occasions.

We sat down to a wonderful meal – Mielies (corn on the cob) with lashings of butter to start followed by chops, wors and all the usual trimmings.   I ate a goodly amount and all was well.  But suddenly my head began to spin – right in the middle of the meal.  I excused myself and lay on the couch.  I felt sooo strange.  Perci gave me a cold compress to press to my hot head – and then uh oh – The proverbial talk with the great, white telephone!

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I was a sick as a dog

Not  good to take  ill at any time, but when you’re not in your own home it’s even worse.  But such is life and happily I recovered.  I found out later that a bug was roaring around our little town and had made a little stop with me too.

Now the doors I really want to talk about are the ones I have at home – I want them painted white – And I have the go ahead – Next week or the week after, when all the alterations are complete, my doors will get a fresh, new, face lift!

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3

Black and White Challenge – Structures

Here is my contribution to this week’s Black and White Challenge from Cee

The most interesting structures I ever saw were in Singapore and Thailand

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Singapore

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Singapore

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James Bond Island – Thailand

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Kho Samui – Thailand

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Kho Samui – Thailand

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Bangkok – Thailand

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Bangkok – Thailand

10

Fun Photo Challenge – Birds

This week’s Fun Photo Challenge’s Topic is Birds

Wow – what a challenge – I have literally thousands of bird photographs being the bird enthusiast that I am – so what to choose was my dilemma.   I decided to post the more unusual and interesting rather than the photographically perfect.

030 Vereaux's Eagle-owl

Verreaux’s Eagle-Owl with prey

129 A Bathing Secretary Bird IMG_5621

Secretary Bird taking a bath

234 red-crested korhaan

Red-crested Korhaan with crest up

449 Red-crested korhaan

Red-crested Korhaan in full voice

2010-10-03 030 African Darter Helen

African Darter at Lake Panic – Kruger National Park

2010-10-06 066 Bateleur on tortoise carcass Helen

Bateleur with tortoise prey

2010-10-09 028 Avian Murder Earl

Avian Murder?  A red-billed buffalo-weaver attacking his enemy.

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This young sugar-bird knocked himself out when he flew into a window.  The Earl revived him and ever since then he returns to say thank you

2

Share Your World – 19 February 2018

Here are my answers to this week’s Share your world from Cee

How do you like your eggs?

Breakfast is my favourite meal.  So yes – I love eggs.  Any style will do but I usually go for fried – medium please.  Soft poached on spinach is also delicious.  Hubby cooks brekkie most days. Our standard is medium fried eggs on black mushrooms with banana, bacon and fried tomato. But he also does scrambled with a variety of ingredients – bacon, mushroom, tomato, cheddar, blue cheese – very rich and totally delicious.  Sometimes I do omelettes filled with bacon, feta, tomato and sweet peppers – or whatever comes to hand.

Going out to eat breakfast is also something we do twice or three times a week.

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The Earl cooking breakfast in the bush

Have you ever met anyone famous?

I have! I met Charlene Surtie- Richards  and got to know her quite well when we were staying at The High Rustenberg Hydro some years ago.   We had tremendous fun with her. I have a non-digital photo but can’t put my hand on it right now as we have things packed in locked cupboards while the builders are busy with our renovations.   Charlene is a South African actress who I first saw perform on stage in a Pieter Dirk Uys play the name of which I  can’t recall.  She was also in a movie I saw called Fiela’s se kind.  (Fiela’s child) but at the time I met her she was playing the part of Nenna in a South African Soap Opera called Egoli – Place of Gold.

I have also met Pieter-Dirk Uys a South African satirist, author and political activist.  This was after a show I organised for a Cape Bird Club fundraiser.  He was kind enough to come out into the foyer and mix with the patrons.   He is great fun.

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Pieter-Dirk and Me

What was the first thing you bought with your own money?

I really don’t remember!   I used to get R 2.00 a month pocket money in my teens and I guess that was “my own money” I know I used it to go to a movie and buy magazines but other than that I simply can’t remember.  My first salary, I think, after paying a minimal amount of board and lodging to my parents went on clothes!

What did you appreciate or what made you smile this past week?  Feel free to use a quote, a photo, a story, or even a combination. 

There was so much to smile about this past week.  The Two Oceans Marlin Tournament took place here in Stuisbaai and with all those fishermen about who couldn’t smile or even laugh out loud.   The Earl and I were the official photographers and we hosted Andrew who was responsible for radio communication.   (I have blogged about it for those of you who are interested in fishing)

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